Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Chris Used Bigger Leaner Stronger to Get Down to 15% Body Fat and Beat Depression
Episode Date: April 29, 2020In this episode, I interview Chris, who used my work to help turn his life around and even escape depression. When he first started working out, he didn’t know what he was doing with his training or... diet. But thanks to newbie gains, he made progress anyway and learned to enjoy lifting weights. Along the way, though, things started to turn sour outside the gym. Financial troubles mounted, his relationship began to unravel, and Chris stopped going to the gym. He gained more and more weight as stress and depression began to take their toll, and then things came to a head: Chris and his wife separated. That was the moment he decided to get back in shape. It was around this time his brother (who lost over 200 pounds following Bigger Leaner Stronger!) introduced him to my work. Chris started following the Bigger Leaner Stronger program inside and outside the gym and, well, it helped him completely transform his life. He lost a boatload of fat, getting down to 15% body fat, added a ton of strength to his big lifts, and perhaps most importantly, was able to stop taking medication for depression. In this interview, Chris and I discuss his story, how he originally fell off the rails, how stress and strained relationships impacted his physical fitness, and how he turned it all around, including the small changes he started making to build long-lasting habits, how he improved his mental health, and more. So if you’re looking for a jolt of inspiration and like motivational stories, I highly recommend you listen to Chris’s. 7:10 - Where were you before and after finding Legion? 8:08 - How much weight did you lose and what was your body fat percentage at the beginning? 12:39 - What was going on in your life before you started getting back into shape? 16:33 - At what point in your life did you come across Legion? 19:05 - How long did it take your brother to lose 200lbs? 19:52 - How has getting back into working out affect your headspace? 23:26 - How was it transitioning into a better diet? 27:47 - What does your current diet look like? 38:29 - What are your future plans? --- Mentioned on The Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ --- 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, hello, and welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews, and in this episode, I
chat with Chris, who is a dude who used my work to really turn his life around, even
escape depression. You see, when Chris first started working out, he didn't know what he
was doing in the kitchen or in the gym, but thanks to newbie gains,
he made some progress.
Of course, he got some results and he also learned to enjoy working out and enjoy lifting
weights.
But then things started to turn sour outside of the gym in his personal life.
Financial troubles started to mount.
His relationship with his wife began to unravel and ultimately he stopped
going to the gym because there were just too many other pressures. And then Chris gained more and
more weight and stress and depression really started to take their toll. And things really
came to a head for Chris when he and his wife separated. And that was a low point for Chris
and a point where he decided that he had to get back in shape. He had to start there. And that was a low point for Chris and a point where he decided that he had to get back in shape.
He had to start there. And it was around this time that his brother, who had lost over 200 pounds
already following Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, introduced Chris to my work, to Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger. And Chris started following the program, following the meal plans or the
diet guidelines, as well as the training plans and the training guidelines.
And it didn't just help Chris transform his body, but it really helped him transform his life.
Of course, he lost a bunch of fat.
He got down to about 11% body fat and he gained a bunch of strength and gained a lot of the muscle he lost.
Well, all of the muscle he lost back as well as
more. And he was stronger than ever on his big lifts. And perhaps most importantly, Chris was
able to stop taking medication for depression, which has a long list of side effects. If you
ever look at the inserts, it's a little bit disturbing actually to see some of the things
that you might experience while on these mind
altering drugs. And anyway, in this interview, Chris and I discuss his story, how he fell off
the rails and how stress and strained relationships impacted his physical fitness and then how he
turned it all around, including the small changes he started making that turned into long-lasting habits and how Chris
worked on improving his mental health and more. So if you could use a jolt of inspiration,
if you like motivational stories, then I think you'll like this episode.
Now, before we get to the show, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get into the
best shape of their lives, please consider picking up one of my best selling health and fitness
books. I have bigger, leaner, stronger for men, thinner, leaner, stronger for women. I have a
flexible dieting cookbook called the shredded chef, as well as a 100% practical hands-on blueprint for personal
transformation called The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. These books have sold well
over a million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can
find them on all major online retailers like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play,
as well as in select Barnes and Noble stores. So 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 my audio books for free when you sign up for an Audible account, which slash audible and it'll forward you over and then you can sign up for your account.
Hey, Chris, thanks for taking the time to do this.
Yeah. How are you doing, Mike?
Yeah, yeah. Good. Just, you know, staying busy, busy, busy. I wish I didn't have to sleep.
Yeah.
Life would be amazing if I didn't have to sleep. Yeah. Life would be amazing if I didn't have to sleep.
Yeah. Sleep gets in the way, honestly.
But you have to care about it. You have to, and I've learned to appreciate it more
because my sleep's fine now, but there was a period, I guess it was after my daughter was born
where I just was consistently having sleep issues. The thing was wakings. Like I would
rarely have any trouble falling asleep, but I would have trouble staying asleep. So I could be in bed for long enough, but I
wouldn't feel rested. Being chronically, I wouldn't say, I mean, sleep deprived sounds a bit extreme,
but let's just say have a chronic sleep insufficiency. It's just annoying. It gets in
the way of everything. And of course, that's something that you hear about or read about, but then to experience it firsthand, at least gave me
some more appreciation for sleep. And now that my sleep is better, I'm thankful for my body working
the way that it should. Yeah, definitely. I experienced the same thing with my son, Bentley.
He wasn't a very good sleeper either in the beginning. Like he was colicky and just woke up constantly and he was breastfed too. So it was
hard on all of us, but, um, you know, he's getting older now and he's sleeping great. You know,
he's sleeping like a stratton. So how old is he now? He's almost two. He'll be two in January,
January 3rd. Oh, cool. My daughter's two and she's still, she's gotten better, but there's still some nights where she's waking up quite a bit. And my son, he was the same way until he was about three. So we're hoping that that's the same with Romy, that once we get through basically next year, things will be normalized and she'll also then be okay sleeping by herself in her room
and not sleeping in our bed and stuff. Yeah, definitely. The co-sleeping, it's hard to break,
but it's super beneficial. I know. I mean, we tried it with her when she was a little bit younger,
but I didn't see that going anywhere. Even the cry it out method. I mean,
she just cried herself purple basically. And we're like, well, I guess that doesn't work.
Yeah. It doesn't always work for all of them, honestly. That's what we had to figure out with
Bentley. We had to go at his own pace. And I mean, he's great now. He goes right to bed.
Yeah. Same thing with my son. He was the same way. He didn't want it until one day he just
didn't care. And we had his little room and his bed and that was it. And he was like, okay,
I'll just sleep here now. And now he'll put himself to bed. He starts to get tired and he'll just go to bed himself.
That's awesome. That's a good feeling when they actually decide to go themselves.
Yeah.
You don't have to force them.
Yeah, totally. But that's not what we're here exactly to talk about today. We're here to talk and your fitness journey so far and how you found me and my work and what you have done with it,
really. So why don't we start with just a kind of a quick kind of before and after snapshot?
What are we looking at here? Yeah. So that's me right after my separation with my wife.
We had just gotten away from each other and I was not doing good healthfully wise.
I was getting fat, honestly, and I was not happy with the way I looked.
I used to follow you just like a freaking religion.
I did everything you taught.
I followed your teachings to the T and read your
book multiple times. And, you know, I said, I'm going to get back to the gym and start doing what
I used to do and get back into it. And then, you know, about, I think four months later,
it's about four months later, I got down to my lowest body fat percentage that I ever got to.
And that's 11%. And I had never achieved that
before. Like it was the first time I've ever gotten that low. How high did you start? Because
people listening, they obviously they don't see the pictures, but and then how much weight loss
was that? And then what about on the muscle and strength side of things? So, I started at around 26% body fat and a lot of that wasn't really, I mean,
I was around 210 to 215 and not a lot of that was muscle. I guess it was muscle, but it had like
really deflated since I got with her. So, I had a lot of building to do again. I started the program again and my muscle came back really fast. Within eight weeks, I to like, you know, I've spoken about this and written about this a number of times, but it really is true that
you can lose quite a bit and be surprised at how quickly you can gain it back if you just go about
it correctly. Yeah, it was super fast. You know, first day I started with bench and like, you know,
I was so mad at myself because I only started at like, you know, I think I was lifting 95 pounds total.
It was really depressing. You know, after like six to eight weeks, I was benching like 160,
175 again and I was just like super happy and it was just massive gains super fast.
The cutting was the first thing that I started though, because I knew that's what
I had to do in order to get to where I wanted to be. I really did need to cut a lot of fat.
It took a long time, but I got to where I needed to be. And now I'm bulking. I haven't taken any
measurements lately. But however, I know that I am gaining the right amount of weight because I've noticed differences in the
mirror and I've weighed myself quite a few times and my weight's going up at a good level.
That's great. You should also be seeing your strength going up in the gym too,
slowly but steadily. Maybe you're only gaining a rep or two on your big lifts every couple of weeks,
but then that turns into some weight on the bar every month,
four to six weeks or so. Oh yeah. Especially with like deadlifts. I'm so happy with how much I've
gone up for the lack of being able to do math very well at, you know, two 45s and a 25 on each side
with one time, like my one rep max. And now I'm three 45s on each side, I'm lifting my max. So
it's, it's going really good. I'm really happy. That's side. I'm lifting my max. So it's going really good.
I'm really happy.
That's great.
The three plate club you got there.
Yeah, the three plates.
I feel really good.
The first big milestone on bench, right, is two plates.
And then on squat and deadlift is three.
And then really the high end, I would say probably for at least natural strength for
most guys, including myself, is going to be three, four,
five. So three plates on bench, four plates on squat and five plates on deadlift is generally a
ceiling of sorts for most guys in terms of how strong they're going to get naturally without,
yeah, I'd say really to go beyond that, it's going to require first and foremost,
good genetics. Like you're going to have to have started out quite strong and you always were
quite strong. And oftentimes guys who get stronger than that started lifting when they were younger,
started in high school. And I don't know exactly why that is. And I've spoken to some other people
who know quite a bit more about all this than even I do, scientists and researchers,
and there isn't exactly an answer, but it's definitely been observed that guys who get into
lifting in their teens do tend to be able to gain more muscle and strength over time than guys who
get into it later. And it doesn't seem to be just a factor of time. That's obvious if you get into
lifting at 45, you're not going to gain as much
muscle period as you will if you started at 20. But we're talking about the difference of starting
at like 15 or 16 versus 20. That shouldn't make a difference in terms of just time to get bigger
and stronger. It does seem to be a thing. And so yeah, it'd be like good genetics, good levers,
like good anatomy for strength. And oftentimes got into lifting when they were young. I would say you
probably need a bit of that. You at least need the good genetics even to get there. That's great,
man. You're on your way. Yeah, definitely. Why don't we rewind to, because there's a bit more
to your story as to what was going on and why I wanted to get you on the podcast when you had
written to me. Why don't we go back to before you started getting back into shape
and what was happening in your life and how things have changed?
My whole journey started with getting a job at Harris Teeter. It's a popular grocery chain here
in North Carolina where I live. My dad helped me get the job and I started out in the
produce and I was liking it a lot. I was making money and I hadn't quite figured out what I wanted
to do for the rest of my life. I didn't really know what I wanted to do as a career-wise. So
it was my best option at the time. And soon I decided that I wanted to become a manager. So I started pushing to become a manager in my department.
During that time, I met this girl online using a dating app.
She kind of swept me off my feet.
I didn't really know what hit me.
It was great at first.
She was amazing.
I had a wonderful personality.
It was outgoing, friendly, happy, funny.
Yeah, I thought it was like love at first sight, honestly.
It just felt like that to me.
But, you know, not everything stays that way, unfortunately.
About a year after dating, no, not even that long.
It was like a few months.
Things just started to get weird, started to change. Our relationship wasn't like
it had began. Things in my life started to change. I stopped going to the gym as much.
I kind of actually went away for the most part. I hardly ever went. I went from going at least
four times a week to down to maybe once a month. It was all basically for the
sake of like trying to fix my relationship and get it back to where it was. But you know,
I didn't soon realize that after a year that I guess there was no fixing it. Honestly,
there was no end in sight, I guess is what you could say. My health started taking a toll. You
know, I was developing these boils all over my body. I got one on my finger and there was one underneath my bottom lip just from the stress of it all. Because I kind of just went into this relationship. I kind of threw myself into it, honestly.
thought that I was in love and that I was doing the right thing by trying as hard as I was,
but I didn't realize how bad of a job I was doing on my body. I was gaining weight constantly. I was eating like crap. Macros were out the window. It didn't even matter to me anymore.
It took me a long time to realize, but after getting on medications for anxiety and depression
and stuff and trying to manage all of these emotions I was
having. And I finally realized that no amount of medication or sleep or time was going to fix
the situation I was in. So I got out of it, thankfully, because there were a lot of issues
with it. And I won't get into details because it's a long story. But granted, I'm glad I got out of it when I did.
And I moved back in with my parents.
You know, they were happy to bring me back in here.
I was happy to be back because, you know, I'm with family again.
And it was nice being able to just relax for once and just like take it easy,
not be so freaking worked up over bills and how the hell I was going to pay rent a month or
two from now. Yeah. And I got so much needed rest. I slept for like two days straight and
just recovered from all the crap that went on. And it was April when I separated from her. So
till now, and I'm like a hundred times better and I'm recovering and I'm still recovering,
but I'm way, way better than what I was. I'm glad I stuck in there and came back from
what I came from. It was a hard journey.
So at what point along the way did you come across me? Was that before all this started
or was that in the middle of this?
So this was before all of this started. We, uh, yeah, I graduated high school. We moved out here to Wendell cause I used to live in Cary
at the time, but we moved out to Wendell cause my parents bought a house and I came along
obviously. And me and my brothers, we were just, you know, bored out of our minds. Like we weren't
really doing anything. We were just playing
video games. And one day, I just decided that I wanted to get back into the gym because I was
like, I used to do fitness in high school. I did weight training all throughout. And I never really
gave it my all, but I kind of want to see how big I can get or how... I didn't really have a goal in
mind. I just said, I'm going to go to the gym and see what happens. And I started just doing random stuff, doing curls, because
that's what everybody does is curls at the beginning. Like, yeah, let's get our arms big.
Then I started with bench. I was like, yeah, benching is good too. I see everybody doing
bench. So let's do some bench and started doing that. you know i started seeing some gains obviously
everybody sees gains because you're just you're doing something you know i plateaued really fast
and i wasn't seeing any results at all like i was like wow this is annoying so i started looking up
programs and then i came across jim stepani and his stuff was all right but like i don't know i
just i felt like i was doing a cookie cutter kind of thing.
Like, oh, I'm following what everybody follows.
Like, because it was from a phone app.
It was like the bodybuilding.com app.
You know, I was looking up how to do exercises.
And then I found like, oh, there's programs.
Cool.
I can follow a program.
And then, you know, Jim Stepani was way up there.
Like, okay, I'll see what he does.
And I found out later that he's not natural and stuff. And I didn't want to be a steroid user. I didn't want to do that. Like no
drugs for this guy. I moved on from that. And then Nick, my brother Nick, he at the time was
way bigger than I was. Like he was, and I'm not talking muscular. I'm talking like he was obese.
And I was like, he was, and I'm not talking muscular.
I'm talking like he was obese.
I want to say he was over 300 pounds.
He followed you for a while. And then I, you know, he got me on you.
I bought your book.
Since then, I mean, my brother's made huge gains.
I mean, like he's, he dropped 200 pounds.
Like, wow.
Yeah.
He's nuts.
Like he has lost so much weight.
I mean, he's got like loose skin is how much difference it is.
How long did it take him to lose 200 pounds?
I think it was two years.
Wow.
I think it was two years that he did all this. He was in it to win it and he did.
I'm really proud of him. He looks great. He's as I am. And like the amount of progress that he
has made, I don't really know what he's lifting. Like, I don't know what his maxes are, but I know
he like, he's a big guy now. Like he's got some, he's got big arms. So yeah, you know, he was kind
of my inspiration to get back into it too. Cause you too because I moved back in with my parents and he was here too.
So I was like, you know what, I'll give it another try.
And how has it impacted?
I mean, we know how it has impacted your body composition, but how has it impacted your headspace?
And where were you at when you first moved back in?
And so you first move back in.
What I'm getting at is there are always additional benefits that come with getting in shape that oftentimes people aren't thinking with when they go into it or are surprised by because
many people, and myself included, get into it more just from a point of vanity, whether
it's wanting to lose some weight or gain some weight, be more attractive, but then are often surprised at how it changes so many other things for the better as well.
Yeah. I mean, on all aspects of life, and it's not just with one thing, like, yeah,
you're going to look better and you're going to get stronger. Those are the big ones, but like,
Like, yeah, you're going to look better and you're going to get stronger.
Those are the big ones, but like, there's the little things really matter.
You know, your sleep gets so much better. You know, your energy levels get so much better.
What did you notice for you specifically?
Like, for example, are you still on any medications or were you able to come off medications?
Like, what were the issues that, what were the specific things that along the way
you've enjoyed?
Yeah, so like I've come off medications,
like the depression medications were a big one.
It got in the way.
Like it really was like, you know,
it's a popping a pill every day was, you know,
a big issue for me.
And when I was able to get off of them
and actually like move on from that,
it was awesome feeling that way. I can tell you from experience that if you really do give it
your all, exercise isn't just for getting bigger and getting in shape. It can also improve your
mental health ridiculously. And that was what I benefited from. If you have history in your family or whatever
of like mental illness or like, you know,
depression or anxiety, it helps drastically.
Yeah, absolutely.
Hey, before we continue,
if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast
and elsewhere, and if you wanna help me
help more people get
into the best shape of their lives, please do consider picking up one of my best-selling
health and fitness books. My most popular ones are Bigger, Leaner, Stronger for Men,
Thinner, Leaner, Stronger for Women, my flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef,
and my 100% practical hands-on blueprint for
personal transformation, The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. Now, these books have sold
well over 1 million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever.
And you can find them anywhere online where you can buy books like Amazon, Audible, iTunes,
anywhere online where you can buy books like Amazon, Audible, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play,
as well as in select Barnes and Noble stores. So again, that is Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men,
Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women, The Shredded Chef, and The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. Oh, and one other thing is you can get any one of those audio books 100% free when
you sign up for an Audible account. And that's
a great way to make those pockets of downtime, like commuting, meal prepping, and cleaning,
more interesting, entertaining, and productive. Now, if you want to take Audible up on that offer
and get one of my audio books for free, just go to legionathletics.com slash audible and sign up for your account.
What about on the diet side of things?
How was it to make the change from eating, as you were saying, very poorly before to
how you're eating now?
I started slow, obviously.
Like I wasn't cutting out everything at first.
I mean, I've never been a soda drinker.
Like just use that as an example, cutting out that at first. I mean, I've never been a soda drinker. Just use that as an example.
Cutting out that donut in the morning or that chicken sandwich in the afternoon or whatever.
I started slow so that I could move into the more drastic changes.
That's one of those things that sounds, of course, commonsensical, but many people don't
do it.
And there's a guy named BJ Fogg, two Gs, and he has a book
coming out, I think soon on habits. He is, where is he? He's a professor at somewhere. He's like
the habits guy. And he has a simple little method that he recommends. And you could tailor this to
your own, I guess, inclinations or your own needs, but a simple, simple way to incorporate a habit that you can't just plug and play.
It's going to require too much change that you can't do it wholesale is to start with something that's so easy that you just can't say no to it.
That when you think about it, you think, all right, yes, absolutely.
Like there's no way that
I'm not going to do that. So if it's exercising, it could start with going for, let's just say
it's pushups. It could start with literally doing one pushup a day if you wanted to.
Okay. You know that there's no way that you're not going to get your one pushup done,
or maybe it's five or maybe it's 10 or whatever, but then you do that. So in your case, okay,
you're going to get rid of one donut a day. That's it. You're just going to stop eating that one donut and you're
not going to change anything else. All right, cool. So you do that until it's just on automatic
until you don't feel any mental friction over it until you know, 100%, you are not going to have
the donut because it's just ingrained. And that may take a couple of weeks. It may take a couple
months. It really depends on the person and what we're talking about.
And then once you have that, okay, now increase the stakes a little bit. So if it's pushups,
if you'd say you started with 10 pushups a day, that's very easy. Okay, good. You're at that
point. Now make it 20 pushups a day, or maybe only 15 pushups a day. Again, you can personalize it.
He uses flossing as an example where start by
flossing one tooth a day, and you're actually not allowed to floss more than one tooth a day.
You have to floss just one tooth until you know that you've done it consistently every day for
a period of time. And you know that forevermore, you could floss your one tooth a day. Once you're
at that point, then increase it. It could be two teeth. It could be five teeth, but don't go to the whole mouth necessarily.
So that approach of just going, all right, I'll get rid of the donut. And I'm just going to do
that until I feel like that's easy, comfortable. And then maybe I'll get rid of the chicken
sandwich and I'm going to replace it with something a bit more nutritious. And you do enough of those rounds of slight improvements that you can't say no to, and you can get to a rather dramatic change without the ups and downs that many people experience by just trying to go at it whole hog right from the get-go?
I've noticed that, honestly. I'm on some groups and stuff on Facebook,
primarily yours, actually. And there are some people on there that are like, yeah, I'm just
going to cut out everything and then start fresh, brand new, make these huge, huge changes all at
once. And I'm just looking at my phone, shaking my head,
like, dude, good luck. You know, it's hard when you make changes like that, because your body
is just not going to agree with you. And like, it's not even just your body that's not going
to agree with you. It's like your mind is going to be like, what are you doing? Like, this is too
much. And then and that's when problems arise. And. And that's when problems arise and they'll go back
to their old bad habits. And I don't know, I've never been one to want to go back to what I was
doing. I want to make a permanent change and make a good change. And you speak it in your books,
and it makes sense. And that's just where I started. And I just made
those changes at my own pace and it worked. And now what does your diet look like these
days? How are you eating? Yeah. So like I eat really the same thing a lot, you know.
Which is common. Like once you understand the fundamentals of energy balance and macronutrient balance and nutritional needs,
and you start to build out a good meal plan and you might start with a lot of variety,
but then eventually you find that, well, if you get to eat foods that you like,
you don't need as much variety as you might have once thought that you actually can look forward
to the same foods every meal every day
for a while before you ever feel like even changing anything. And it's weird because like,
and I mentioned, I just started bulking and I'm actually fairly new to bulking still. So like,
I'm still tweaking things and seeing what works. And like, I've come to notice that I don't gain
weight very fast. Like it's not quick, which is making me very happy. So I'm like,
okay, this is good. I'm not gaining a lot of body fat. But like when I was cutting,
I had done it for so long that I was like, okay, this is like a formula now. Like this is
ridiculous. I've gotten this down to a science. But now like with bulking, I'm kind of still
trying things and I'm still like, like I said, I was tweaking my diet and
I think I've gotten it to a good point right now, but I'm still like changing it here and there.
I'm not a huge eater.
Which I guess is, that's a change from before, huh? Because it sounds like at one point you were.
My appetite was enormous when I was like going through all my mental stress. But like when I
came back to a regular state and
now like my appetite has gone down drastically, like, and that's where it used to be. It was
like, I didn't really, I never really had a huge appetite. I fill in calorie gaps with bulking
powders. That's how I do it, honestly, for right now. When I'm bulking, if I'm not making my
calories, like for carbs and stuff, cause I don't
know how people do it, stuffing that many carbs in their body. It's hard. So like I benefit a lot
from bulking powders and it works for me and I'm able to, you know, those meals that I'm
filling in with it is enough. Yeah. And that's why we created Legion. That's why we created a, you could call it a weight
gainer. A meal replacement is many people don't realize that if you don't have, you don't naturally
have a big appetite. It can be quite hard to eat enough when you're lean bulking. Even if it's
just, even if enough is it only, maybe it's 3,500 calories to some people they go, I could eat,
especially guys. Of course I could eat 3,500 calories a day without even thinking about it. That's not the case. That's not the case. For some people, that feels like a lot of food. It feels like you are force feeding yourself, which You're giving it more food than it actually wants. What it wants naturally is just, it basically just wants to stay the same. It just wants you to get more or less
the number of calories that you are burning and it wants the nutrition that it needs to keep
surviving and hopefully thriving. But it doesn't want to be in a consistent calorie surplus because
that comes with not just fat gain, but it also comes with
extra processing that's needed. And it comes with the body's metabolic machinery has to work harder
the more food that we eat. And so you feel that some people are more sensitive to that than others.
And that slight calorie surplus can be hard to maintain. I tend to be that way myself. I have a normal
appetite. I don't have necessarily a low or a high appetite. So I haven't done a proper lean
bulk in a while. But the last time I did, I was straight disgusted by the end. And not because
my body fat was not that high. It was maybe like 13% or something, maybe a little bit higher.
But it was just the amount of food I was having to eat about 4,000 calories a day by
the end, which it doesn't sound like that much food necessarily, but it is also when you're
eating mostly nutritious foods. Yeah. If I were eating a pizza every day for dinner, that makes
it a bit easier because it's not a ton of calories. It's not nearly as filling as trying to
get, let's say the pizza is 2000 calories.
Try to eat and you have a pizza and then put together a meal, 2000 calories of nutritious food.
So let's say it's a serving of lean protein and you have vegetables and you have whole
grains and you have relatively unprocessed things.
If that's all you can eat, you're probably going to feel twice as full.
It's going to feel great that you're eating so
nice and so clean, but towards the last grain that you're eating, you're not going to want
to put it in your mouth. Yeah. And that's where I got with me, where I was eating a big bowl of
pasta. I still wanted to make sure I was getting in some fruits and vegetables. So I would have
vegetables at dinner and then I'd eat a second dinner. I'd have my lean protein and vegetables. So I would have vegetables at dinner and then I'd eat like a second dinner. I'd have my kind of lean protein and vegetables. And then I would wait an hour or
two and eat a big bowl of pasta to get my final calories in. And anyway, so yeah, I know how that
can go. And I don't have any inherent objection to meal replacement or weight gainer powders.
But what I don't like about a lot of them is a lot of the carbs are just simple sugar. It's
just trash. It's maltodextrin or dextrose. And yeah, that's an easy way to getting carbs. But
if somebody is having 100 grams of maltodextrin or dextrose per day, that's probably not the best
for... It's going to be over. It's going to be limited, I understand. And you can mitigate some
of the negative effects, potential negative effects by exercising and eating well outside of
your weight gainer powders. But where it can become a problem is where people, they just don't
actually eat enough real food when they're lean bulking. They just kind of subsist on these weight
gainer powders, which do not provide your body with whole spectrum nutrition. It's just like usually a lot of
protein and a lot of carbs and not much else. Usually some fat as well, but it's certainly
not a nutritious food. And that's why the weight gain that we have at Legion, we tried to also make
it as nutritious as possible and not just fill it with cheap sugar basically and cheap protein.
Oh yeah. No, I,
that's why I use it.
Like,
and that's why I shop lesion is like,
I use all of your supplements.
They're great.
Like recharge is part of it.
I use your bulking powder for when I'm bulking.
And then when I'm not bulking,
I use your regular powder for filling in those protein gaps.
But like,
it tastes awesome.
Honestly, like I Like I've tried
bulking powders in the past and they all taste really like gunky and they have this weird
aftertaste to them. And it's just like really unappetizing and gross to swallow. But yours
is actually like pretty good. It tastes like melted ice cream. I was like, all right, I can
work with this. Yeah. Yeah. That's great. It's a niche product. It's obviously not one of our best sellers,
but it is a consistent seller just because there are people out there who
find it useful and who also, yeah, appreciate that if you don't want a bunch of simple sugars,
you're going to be limited in what there even is available to you. And then when you taste a lot of
them, you're going to appreciate ours. Similar to plant proteins.
So we have a plant protein called Thrive.
I mean, you know this, but for anybody listening, which we're actually changing the name of
to Plant Plus because there's a company that owns some trademarks related to Thrive and
they want us to change it.
It's fine.
It's not a big deal.
So anyway, it's going to be called Plant Plus going ahead.
However, that is a similar thing where if you've never had plant or vegan protein powder
before, we recently revamped the formulation and the flavor system and the sweetener as
well.
So the whole package got kind of overhauled.
And I thought it was pretty good where it was at before, but I really like it now.
However, for someone who's never had a plant protein before, they might have it now. Let's say they're used to whey, whether it's my
whey or anybody's whey, and they would have Thrive or Plant Plus, and they'd be like, oh,
yeah, that's not bad, actually. I could drink that. But then if they go taste some other
vegan protein powders, especially all natural ones, which probably most of them are just
inherently, then they would really appreciate what we've done with Thrive or Plant Plus,
because it is so much better than just about every other. The only other plant protein powder that
I've had that I think is even comparable is Vega. Some of Vega's stuff, some of their high-end,
more expensive stuff is comparable in ingredients and taste,
but I still think ours is better. And so, that's just something that people, anyone listening who,
if you've never tried a weight gainer or a plant protein before, something to keep in mind that
green supplements are the same thing. You taste ours, especially the acai berry one, and you go,
I mean, I think it's not bad. Sure, it It's, it's drinkable. It's not over the top delicious. You're not going to have it for dessert,
but it's totally drinkable. And then you try some other green supplements and then it's
very drinkable because the other ones will just taste like, like lawn clippings with like some
dirt basically as kind of the normal taste. And it takes a lot of work to get the flavoring right, especially when you are sticking to natural sweeteners and natural flavoring and it's
expensive too. So many people who are familiar with Legion know that and appreciate that. I mean,
we're paying a premium, some cases up to three or $4 per bottle just to flavor it the way that
we want. Whereas if we were to go with all artificial stuff, it could literally be as
low as like 50 cents. Yeah. But that's what we're going for is like, we don't want all those
artificial stuff. Like you've said, the artificial sweeteners and stuff, they actually up your,
your appetite. So it's like, it's detrimental and you're just kind of like, okay, well,
if I'm going to drink this, I filled in those gaps for the day, but you know, I'm going to want
more food after I just got
done drinking it. Yeah. Yeah. And that would probably be more so related to just drinking
a bunch of simple sugar more so than the artificial sweetening or sweeteners. In some people,
they have increased appetite, but the weight of the evidence is they probably don't have
that effect in most people. However, drinking a bunch of simple sugars absolutely can, because you can have that huge
sugar spike and then a sugar crash, and that can just drive you to want to bump your blood sugar
up. And that means just going back to food. Awesome. So what are your plans from here?
Where do you want to go with your fitness and what's your future looking like right now? to stay as healthy as I can and obviously cosmetically look great and just do the best
I can in the gym. I think honestly, right now, I'm just taking it day by day and trying to get the
maxes up as much as I can. I'm not sure. I'm really not entirely sure what I want to do right
now. But as far as fitness goes, you're in a spot where if you just keep showing up, you can kind of just enjoy the process. It definitely after your first
20 ish, probably pounds of muscle gain is when it starts to get more difficult. And bigger,
leaner, stronger can get you beyond that point. But there is a point where and that's why I mean,
I have the sequel beyond bigger, leaner, stronger, but I'm in the where, and that's why, I mean, I have the sequel beyond Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger, but I'm in the process of rewriting it. And so I'm going to, I think I'll
have the manuscript done by the end of the year, which means it'll be, I'm going to say a summer
next year release probably. And if it's going to be what BLS is for people who are new to proper
weightlifting, the new BBLS is going to be for the people who have read BLS and who
have used it to get to that point where it becomes a maintenance program. And you'll get there
eventually, mostly because it's just not enough volume. And eventually what you'll see is that
you're not progressing anymore. You're not losing and you might still enjoy your workouts and you're
strong and you're muscular, but the needle has stuck.
And you can cut and you can get lean and you can enjoy that.
But when it comes to like, okay, I want to get a bit bigger.
I want to gain that next five pounds of muscle or the next 30 pounds on my totals of the
big lifts.
You're not going to get there with BLS.
There's some people do, again, it mostly comes down to genetics.
Some people who are just high responders to weightlifting never needed anything more than BLS to gain like 40-ish pounds
of muscle and get their body fat where they want. And they're like, cool, well, I'm done now. I
guess I'll just maintain this because that's about all I've got genetically and it looks great. And
that was cool. But for most people, what you'll find is BLS is going to take you probably somewhere
between 20 and 30 pounds of muscle gain, and then to get the last that's available to you. And that might be as much as another 10 or 15 pounds, depending on your genetics. You need to know a bit more and you just have to change your programming a bit. And really what it comes down to is you have to work harder.
So where you're at now is you can kind of just enjoy the process and keep getting in there and getting in the gym and working on your numbers and making sure that you're spending most of your
time, most of the months of the year in a slight surplus. If you could have it,
I'd say perfectly, you'd probably be in a slight surplus up to nine months of the year and in a
deficit, just three months and not necessarily even three
months straight depends on what you're doing. You might lean bulk for four months and then
cut for a couple of months to get rid of the fat. Don't lose any muscle to speak of.
And then go back into your next lean bulk followed by a shorter cut or something like that.
And you just keep doing what you're doing until it's no longer working.
And I would say by then, the new book will be out.
And the current book is good, and it will give you some techniques and some know-how
that will help you move further.
But this new second edition is going to do a much better job of that just because I've
learned a lot since I wrote that
first edition. And I've also now had a lot of firsthand experience working with intermediate
and advanced weightlifters and really have seen firsthand what it takes to max out or at least
get to squeeze as much of our genetic potential out of our bodies as we can. And so I'm going to
make a few changes to the programming and going to be
touching on some different topics and some different things that aren't in the current
book that I am just commonly asked about that I really would not have foreseen without having
gone through the process, you know? Yeah, totally. And I'm looking forward to that.
Now that you say that I didn't even know you were doing that.
Yeah. Yeah. I've been chipping away at it for months now. I just haven't been able to give it a ton of my time for various reasons.
But now I've been able to give it more of my time and I'm getting there. I'm getting there. It's getting close.
Awesome. I'm looking forward to that then. And I'm looking forward to the Android version of Stacked.
to the Android version of Stacked.
Oh yeah, for sure.
No, that's definitely going to happen.
We are at the end of the beta testing for the iOS version and it's good.
I mean, there are some bugs
and little things that need to be fixed,
but it's solid.
The dev team and my brother-in-law
who's been managing the project,
they've done a great job.
And it's going to be a huge upgrade
over the current app.
It's going to be 100% free.
And for anyone listening,
if you don't know what I'm talking about, I have a workout app called Stacked.
And you can check it out at getstacked, S-T-A-C-K-E-D, app.com. And it's iOS only right
now. And what's currently live is not bad. It was kind of like a scratch my own itch. It was
something that I didn't need to do. And I probably shouldn't have done considering how much time and
money. I got into it thinking that it shouldn't take that much time. And I had gotten a quote for
like 50 grand to build it. And I was like, yeah, sure. Let's do it. Let's just see how it goes.
It's another way to reach people and get them into my ecosystem and maybe get them reading
articles and listening to the podcast, maybe read a book, stuff like that. I think I had
Legion at the time as well. So it's
like, yeah. And if they become Legion customers, that'd be cool too. Getting what's currently live,
I don't know, it probably ended up costing, I think, $200,000, taking way more of my time than
I ever would have wanted to put into it. But the reason why I didn't just pull the plug for anyone
listening who's thinking sunk cost fallacy, why would you do that? I actually do believe in,
I wanted to get the app done and out first because I do believe in it in terms of
its strategic value in that it is a great way to reach people who I wouldn't reach otherwise
and to get them on my email list so I can start communicating with them and to introduce them to the podcast and to articles and books and things that are actually going to help them reach their fitness goals.
It's not just an app for tracking your workouts because it plugs you into my little world, basically.
And I especially like the idea and why I'm doing this overhaul, which didn't cost that much, but it has been fairly expensive, is I'm just going to make it 100% free.
So this second edition of the app is going to be, I think, just as good as, let's say, Strong or any other popular weightlifting app that's out there.
And it will have a lot of the same functionality and we're going to continue developing it.
So in time, it will have all of the same functionality of the things I actually like about those apps, but we're probably
80% there already. And mine is just going to be free, no upgrades, no microtransactions,
no bullshit, just free. And I can do that because I have other ways of making money.
And I just want to have a really good app out there. It's free. People download it,
they get on my email list and they learn about all the other things that I have and I can recoup the
cost that way. And so, yeah, I'm pretty excited about it. I'm excited to be able to use it myself.
We're about to release another beta build. So when you're in beta, just everything gets wiped.
So I'm not able to consistently track my workouts with this new version because
every couple of weeks that everything just goes away, but looking forward to using myself
and in getting it out there and getting feedback.
And if the re-release goes well, which I will be very surprised if it doesn't, because a
lot of people have liked what's out there currently. And we've taken what
people like about the current app and made it a lot better and gotten rid of things that people
didn't really want or didn't use and fixed things that people just, they wanted it different.
And so I think it's, again, just very in line with what our users or customers have told us. And so then assuming that goes well,
and we get good feedback, then we're going to start the Android development right away.
And this new version of the app was built with that in mind. It was built to,
it looks like Zencastr dropped. Well, unfortunately, Zencastr exploded at this
point. Zencastr is the software
that I've been using, a web app that I've been using to record podcasts. And it's been having
problems over the last month or so, particularly with connection. It's losing connection to the
server, and then it blows up when it loses connection connection and then we couldn't get it back.
So unfortunately, that is the end of the interview, but we were basically done anyway. I was just
rambling about stacked. And the last thing I was going to say is that the work that we're doing
right now to fix up the iOS version is being done with Android in mind. So theoretically, we should be able to develop and roll out the Android
version fairly quickly. It's definitely going to be a lot faster than if we were starting from
scratch, that's for sure. So as far as a timeline goes, I'm not sure, but I know we're going to have
the iOS out this year. I think it's going to be out this month, but next month would be the latest.
And then I believe the developers were thinking three or four months for Android.
So let's double that and say six to eight months.
And so let's say summer next year.
That is very possible.
All right.
Well, everyone, thanks for listening to the interview and thank
you, Chris, for taking the time to do it. I appreciate it. Keep up the good work, man,
and definitely keep me posted. He originally emailed me, which anyone can do. If anybody
wants to reach out to me, mike at muscleforlife.com, muscleforlife.com. And I'm looking forward to
getting the next email from him and hearing about how things have changed even more for the better since having today's discussion.
All right.
Well, that's it for today's episode.
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