Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Do I Gain Strength But Not Size?
Episode Date: May 7, 2021I’ve churned through over 150,000 emails, social media comments and messages, and blog comments in the last 6 years. And that means I’ve fielded a ton of questions. As you can imagine, some questi...ons pop up more often than others, and I thought it might be helpful to take a little time every month to choose a few and record and share my answers. So, in this round, I answer the following question: How Do I Gain Strength But Not Size? If you have a question you’d like me to answer, leave a comment below or if you want a faster response, send an email to mike@muscleforlife.com. Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://buylegion.com/vip Strength Training: https://legionathletics.com/strength-training-plan/ Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
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Hey, Mike Matthews here, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life.
Thank you for joining me today.
Now, as you can imagine, I have fielded a lot of communication and a lot of questions
over the years.
I've easily gone through over 200,000 emails, social media comments and messages, and blog
comments since I got into the fitness racket back in 2012. And some questions pop up more often
than others. And some are very topical. Sometimes they are related to things that a lot of people
are talking about. And so I thought it would be helpful to take some time on the podcast now and
then and answer questions that people are asking me. On ones that I think all of you out there may
benefit from or may enjoy as well. So in this episode, I'm going to answer one question
instead of three like I normally do, because as I mentioned in the last Q&A, I'm trying a new
format based on feedback that I get from people, which is that the episodes are consistently too long.
Many people would like there to be some shorter episodes as well. And I thought that this would
be an easy way of doing that, breaking up the Q&A episodes into one topic each. So then each
are around 10 minutes and just releasing them more frequently. Let me know what you think. Do you like this new way of going about it or do you prefer the old way? One episode longer, you know,
30, 40 minutes, three topics or three questions answered in each. Email me mike at muscleforlife.com
and today's question is how do I get stronger without getting bigger, without gaining more muscle. And you may be wondering
why somebody would want to do this, but this is something that I've been asked many times over the
years. Sometimes the question comes from women who want to get stronger, want to get fitter,
but don't want to get any more muscular. These women often have already gained a fair amount
of muscle and they like where their
muscularity is at but they would like to also continue progressing and have something to strive
for in their training in this case though the person is asking because they are into climbing
and in that case of course you want to be as light and strong as possible so you want a very low body
weight and a very high amount of relative strength. But other people who
have asked this have been athletes because in many cases, the less body weight you have, the less
wear and tear on your body. Or in certain endurance sports, having a lighter weight is just generally
better, like cycling, for example. And then, of course, you have sports where there are weight
classes, like wrestling, for example, where you want to not necessarily be as light as you can be, but you
need to hit very specific weight targets. And sometimes that means weighing a bit less than
you would if you were simply optimizing your body composition. And so many of these types of people
have asked me this, how do you get stronger without getting bigger and heavier? And so in this podcast, I'm going to share what I tell them.
because my team and I have helped people of all ages and all circumstances lose fat,
build muscle, and get into the best shape of their life faster than they ever thought possible.
And we can do the same for you. We make getting fitter, leaner, and stronger paint by numbers simple by carefully managing every aspect of your training and your diet for you. Basically,
we take out all of the guesswork. So
all you have to do is follow the plan and watch your body change day after day, week after week,
and month after month. What's more, we've found that people are often missing just one or two
crucial pieces of the puzzle. And I'd bet a shiny shekel it's the same with you. You're probably
doing a lot of things right, but dollars to the same with you. You're probably doing a lot
of things right, but dollars to donuts, there's something you're not doing correctly or at all
that's giving you the most grief. Maybe it's your calories or your macros. Maybe it's your exercise
selection. Maybe it's your food choices. Maybe you're not progressively overloading your muscles
or maybe it's something else. And whatever it is, here's what's important.
Once you identify those one or two things you're missing, once you figure it out, that's
when everything finally clicks.
That's when you start making serious progress.
And that's exactly what we do for our clients.
To learn more, head over to www.buylegion.com.
That's buylegion.com slash VIP and schedule your free consultation call, which by the
way, is not a high pressure sales call.
It's really just a discovery call where we get to know you better and see if you're a
good fit for the service.
And if you're not, for any reason, we will be able to share resources that'll point you
in the right direction.
So again, if you appreciate
my work and if you want to see more of it, and if you also want to finally stop spinning your wheels
and make more progress in the next few months than you did in the last few years,
check out my VIP coaching service at www.buylegion.com slash VIP.
www.buylegion.com slash VIP. Now you may be wondering why people ask this question. Don't you just do strength training as opposed to hypertrophy training or bodybuilding training?
Don't you just pick a popular strength program, maybe like starting strength or one of Wendler's
programs or one of the other many time-proven strength training programs out there, which by the way,
if you want to learn more about, head over to legionathletics.com, search for strength training,
and you'll find a very comprehensive article that talks about not just the theory of strength
training, what makes strength training work, but also gives an overview of the most popular
programs and how to follow them. And so while that approach of just picking a strength
training program and following it may seem reasonable, chances are it will result in muscle
gain, which again is what we're trying to avoid. Now, we may not be able to avoid it altogether
because once you are an intermediate or advanced weightlifter, once you are fairly strong and
you've gained a fair amount of muscle, the most reliable way to continue gaining strength is to
continue gaining muscle. The correlation between muscle gain and strength gain becomes a lot
stronger as you get stronger. When you're a newbie, for example, you gain quite a bit of strength
initially without gaining all that much muscle because you're learning the exercises and your skill at the exercises is improving. But after your first
three to six months, you're going to be good enough at the exercises unless you are very
unathletic or unless you did not learn them properly in the first place, you are going to
have reaped most of your skill gains, so to speak. Not all of them. You can
continue to refine your ability to squat and press and deadlift and thereby get stronger on the
exercises, thereby be able to move more weight. But most of the strength you're going to gain
from, let's say, year two or three and on is going to be from gaining muscle. Now, that is why many
popular and effective strength training
programs, they have you lift a lot of heavy weight. You do a lot of sets of five, four, three, two,
even one rep maxes, but they also include volume in higher rep ranges, sometimes with the same
exercises, the primary exercises, sometimes with accessory exercises, other exercises that aren't
as difficult and that
allow you to target specific muscle groups as opposed to just your entire lower body with a
squat, for example. And the reason for that is to continue gaining muscle, you need to get in a fair
amount of volume as an intermediate or advanced weightlifter, something around probably about 15
hard sets per major muscle group per week. And you
simply can't do that if you are only lifting very heavy weights. If you are only doing sets of,
let's say five and below, you are just not going to be able to consistently do enough of those
heavy sets per week, about 15 for each major muscle group that you want to progress on before things start to go
wrong, before the wheels start to fall off. And specifically with your joints, that's what you're
going to find is that your joints just start to hurt more and more. If you consistently try to do,
again, let's just call it 15. Some people need to do a bit more, 16, 17, even upward of 18 hard
sets for a major muscle group to continue progressing. Some people can to do a bit more, 16, 17, even upward of 18 hard sets for a major muscle group
to continue progressing. Some people can get away with a little bit less, but let's just call it 15
hard sets per week for, let's say, a squat movement, a bench press, an overhead press,
and I will exclude deadlifting because we're talking about pulling here. So of course you would never want to do 15 hard sets of deadlifting per week, at least
not with heavy weight.
I mean, if you're doing very light stuff and moving the bar very quickly and just practicing
the movement and getting used to exploding off the ground, stuff like that is fine.
But muscle building sets, hard sets, no, no, I would not recommend probably more than four
or five hard sets of
deadlifting per week, but we can include other pulling exercises in there. So let's say between
deadlifts and barbell rows and dumbbell rows. And if you're going to do about 15 hard sets of
pulling per week, if you are only working in, let's say the rep range of four to six reps,
again, you are going to run into problems. And a very simple workaround to this is
to periodize your training, to work in different rep ranges, to use higher rep ranges, to accumulate
effective volume without beating up your joints and without stressing your body to the same degree
as with lower rep ranges and heavier weights. And that is one of the reasons why my programming for intermediate
and advanced weightlifters is periodized. Why, for example, over the course of a 16-week macro
cycle, you progress on your primary exercises from starting at doing sets of 10, so hard sets
of 10 on the squat, on the deadlift. Yes, those are very hard things to do. They are not fun.
Bench press and overhead press, and then you progress into eights and sixes and fours and twos. And then the macro cycle culminates
with a set of 95% of your one rep max as calculated at the beginning of the macro cycle for as many
reps as you can do an AMRAP set to see how much strength you have gained over the course of that
macro cycle to see what four
months of work has produced. And the primary reason I set it up that way is it allows you to
get in enough volume per major muscle group per week to continue progressing in both your muscle
building and your strength gain without burning you out physically or psychologically. And so,
what does all of that have to do with
gaining strength and not muscle? Well, the key to getting stronger without getting bigger is
high intensity. So high weight, low frequency, and therefore low volume training. And specifically,
I'm talking about just one or two strength training workouts per week. If it's one workout,
obviously it would be a full body workout. If it's two, it could be two strength training workouts per week. If it's one workout, obviously it would
be a full body workout. If it's two, it could be two full body workouts, or it could be an upper
workout and a lower workout. It just depends on where you're at and what you need to do to get
the result you are after. And of course, you still have to focus on progressive overload. You still
have to focus on adding weight to the bar over time. That's how you get stronger, right? And research
shows that you can train like that and maintain your current level of lean mass while slowly
gaining strength. So for example, in one study that was conducted by scientists at the University of
Alabama at Birmingham, participants lifted weights three times per week and did nine sets per workout
for five months and then were assigned to one of three groups for the next eight months. One group
was no exercise at all. Another group did one weightlifting workout per week that consisted of
nine sets. And then another group did one workout per week that consisted of three sets. Now, over
the course of the next eight months, the first group lost
muscle, of course, but both groups two and three were able to maintain most of the muscle they had
gained in the first part of the study and increase their strength as well. So let's get to some
specific recommendations here. If you can train twice per week, that is going to be better than
once per week. If you are wanting to gain
strength, if all you are wanting to do is maintain your lean mass or most of it and maintain as much
strength as you can, then you could get away with one workout per week. Two would be better. So in
either case, I recommend two. And if you can do two workouts, I would recommend that you blend
the upper, lower and full body approach. So what I mean is, and this is what I would recommend that you blend the upper, lower, and full body approach. So what I
mean is, and this is what I would do, I would do an upper body workout that is pushing and pulling,
and then I would do a lower body workout that has some extra upper body work. Not much. It would
mostly be a lower body workout, but there would be a few additional upper body sets at the end
of the workout. Now, what would that look like exactly? Well, it would change over time. I wouldn't do the same workouts indefinitely, but for example, a push-pull workout
could start with a deadlift. That's where I'd start that one. And I would warm up and I would
do three sets of four to six reps. So that would be 80 to 85% of one rep max. And then I would move
on to the bench press, warm up there, do the exact same thing. And then I would go back to a pull. I would do a barbell row, for example, and same approach, three sets,
four to six, bigger, leaner, stronger style, basically. And then I'd go back to a push,
or in this case, a press, right? A military press. It could be seated. It could be standing.
I like to alternate between those. And again, bigger, leaner, stronger style, three sets,
four to six. And then we move on to a legs slash push
workout. If you wanted to emphasize your push muscles, if you wanted to work on those more
than your pull muscles, or it could be a legs slash pull. If you want to emphasize your pull
muscles, your back and your biceps more than your push muscles. And that workout could look like
this. Start off on the squat, back squat,
front squat, safety bar squat, whatever squat variation you're doing. Warm up, three sets,
four to six, 80 to 85. Then move on to the bench press, warm up and do the same. Move on to
something like the hack squat, the sled, not the barbell exercise. That's a good accessory leg
exercise, so to speak, or it could be the leg
press, or it could be walking lunges, or it could be a split squat or a Bulgarian split squat.
And again, three sets of four to six, and then end with some hamstring targeting. Do an exercise
that emphasizes the hamstrings because so far we've done exercises that have emphasized the
quads. And so maybe it's a Romanian deadlift,
three sets of four to six, 80 to 85% of one rep max. And I would use double progression,
of course, because we're working in rep ranges now, as opposed to specific amounts of weight
on the bar based on percentages of one rep max, which is how Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger
handles the primary exercises, for example. So in this case,
what I would do is I would work up to two sets of the top of the rep range, two sets of six before
adding weight to the bar or to the dumbbells. Now in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, I recommend working
up to one set at the top of the rep range. And the reason being is that book is primarily for
people who are new to this style of training.
It's for people who have a lot of muscle and strength to gain.
And when that's the case, it's easier to make progress stick.
It's easier to increase weight and then be able to continue working in your rep range.
So for example, let's say somebody who is relatively new to proper weightlifting is
benching 185 pounds and he gets one set of six reps and
then he goes up to 195 pounds. Most of the time he's going to get four reps with 195 and he can
then continue working with 195 until he can get one set of six there and then he can go up to 205.
And if that doesn't work, he can probably decrease the increase to
five pounds instead of 10. So in the case of 185, go up to 190 and then get four versus 195.
Now, if we fast forward a couple of years and this guy is quite a bit bigger and he is quite
a bit stronger, what is probably going to happen is if he continues the same way, he's going
to get his one set of six. He's going to add weight to the bar, five pounds, 10 pounds, and he's only
going to get, let's say three reps or maybe even two reps. And if he tries to just stick it out,
stick with that heavier weight, there's a good chance that the next time he does that exercise,
he's only going to get two or three reps. And so now he's not really working in the four to six rep range, right? So what does this guy do? Pretty
simple. Instead of adding weight to the bar when he can get one set of six, he can add weight to
the bar when he gets two sets of six, which of course requires a bit more fitness. It requires
a bit more strength. And if that doesn't work, he could work up to three sets of six,
and that is certainly going to be enough. Now, that is not how I would program all instances
of double progression in Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. For example, I recommend that you don't
increase weight on your accessory exercises until you get four sets of the top of the rep range that you are working in. But that's only
because of how much I'm asking of you in the primary exercises where you're lifting heavy
weights and you are doing a lot of volume and what I'm asking of you globally in the program.
It is a fairly difficult program. It is not the most difficult that you could find, certainly not,
difficult program. It is not the most difficult that you could find, certainly not, but it is quite a bit harder than bigger, leaner, stronger. And so what I didn't want is for people to get
overly zealous in progressing in their accessory exercises because that could get in the way of
progressing in their primary exercises. Anyway, coming back to the workouts here,
these strength workouts for gaining strength but
not muscle or at least gaining as little muscle as possible if you can only train once per week
you could set it up like this you could start with a squat warm up three sets of four to six
and then you could do a deadlift warm up three sets of four to six and then move over to the
bench press same thing warm up three sets four to six come back to move over to the bench press. Same thing, warm up three sets, four to six, come back to a pull, do like a barbell row, three sets of four to six,
and then end with a military and overhead press, three sets of four to six.
Now, one other important component of this plan to gain strength and not muscle is going to be
diet. So if you want to maintain your weight really is what we're talking
about, right? You need to keep your calories around maintenance. I would recommend calculating
your maintenance calories and just eating that amount each day. And if your physical activity
fluctuates a lot day to day, then your caloric intake should match that. It should reflect that.
So on the days that you are very active, you should be eating more. And again, the goal is to just be around the amount of calories burned for the day.
Then on the days where you are moving a lot less, those days should entail less food intake. What
you don't want to do is to be in a calorie surplus. You don't want to be consistently
in a significant calorie surplus is probably a better
way of putting it because of course, when you are trying to eat maintenance, you are not eating
exactly the amount of energy you are burning every day because you don't know exactly how much energy
you're burning every day. No matter how thorough you are on your calculations, it's still just an
informed guess. And so what happens in practice is some days you're going to be a little
bit over, some days you're going to be a little bit under, and that's fine. That's the art of
eating at maintenance, right? But what you don't want to do is, for example, be in a 5% to 10%
surplus five days per week, and then a 20% to 25% deficit two days per week. That is a good way to lean gain, so to
speak. That works well if you're trying to gain muscle and minimize fat gain. But in this case,
that's not the goal, right? It's to minimize muscle gain and continue gaining strength.
And again, for that, as far as your diet is concerned, the safest way to go about it is to
just shoot for maintenance calories every day. So that's calories. And as far as macros go,
there's really nothing special to note here. Eat plenty of protein, eat plenty of carbs to fuel
your training and whatever other physical activities you're doing and eat enough fat
to stay healthy. All right. Well, that's all I've got for you today.
Thanks again for joining me.
I hope you liked the episode.
And next week, I'm gonna be talking
about the best supplements for women.
I have an interview coming
with one of Legion's newest athletes, Adam Fow,
who shares his thoughts on program hopping,
finding reliable information, reliable experts,
and staying motivated, particularly as
an advanced weightlifter who doesn't really have any muscle or strength left to gain.
And then I have a couple of Q&A episodes coming. One is going to be regarding fitness for shift
workers, how to make it work, and the other, how to increase the sense of urgency and necessity.
All right, well, that's it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting
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hold of me, mikeatmusclefullife.com. And that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode,
and I hope to hear from you soon.