Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Lisa Transformed Her Physique & Doubled Her Strength in 9 Months
Episode Date: September 16, 2016In this podcast, I interview Lisa J., who followed my Thinner Leaner Stronger program for 9 months and lost just 3 pounds but completely upgraded her physique. Before finding TLS, Lisa had felt "skinn...y fat" for as long as she could remember, and now she has guys coming up to compliment her on her strength and ask for weightlifting advice. Hah! In the interview, we talk about Lisa's journey and what key lessons she learned along the way, what obstacles she had to overcome as a working mom and how she made it work, how she overcame a wrist injury, and more. 6:25 - How was your training and diet before BLS? 8:34 - What is your exercise and fitness history? 9:35 - How did you hear about Mike Matthews? 10:19 - What were your expectations for the program? 12:30 - What were your thoughts after a few weeks? 14:27 - What have the results been up until now? 19:03 - What obstacles did you run into on the program? 21:03 - How do you make time for your workouts? 23:06 - Were there any sticking points on the program? 25:20 - How did you mentally get over your injury? 27:30 - What has helped you stay motivated? 29:30 - What are your goals from here? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
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Hey, hey, this is Mike, and welcome to another episode of my podcast.
In this episode, I interview Lisa Jensen about her experience on my Thinner, Leaner, Stronger
program.
Now, I had done an interview like this a couple months ago with Jordan and he had talked about
his experience on my men's program, which is Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, and a lot of
people liked it and asked if I would interview a woman about her experiences with weightlifting, flexible dieting, cardio, and so forth. And Lisa
is that interview. And as you'll see, this isn't meant to be just a commercial for my program.
What I really wanted to do is dig into the details. I wanted to find out from Lisa what
worked well for her, what didn't work so well, what kind of adjustments did she make, what were the obstacles she went into and how did she overcome them
and so on.
And in Lisa's case, she's a working professional, she's a mom and she even ran into an injury.
So she definitely had some things she had to work around.
So I think all of us can take something away from her story and from the interview and
let's get to it.
Hey Lisa, thanks for taking the time to come on the podcast.
Yeah. Thanks for having me. I appreciate it.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm excited to talk to you because the last, let's see, I did, it was a little bit
ago. I did an interview with a guy named Jordan who similar type of thing, but he was doing the
guys program. So that got good feedback. So I thought it would be nice to talk to a girl.
Happy to represent.
uh, that got good feedback. So I thought it would be nice to talk to a girl.
Happy to represent.
So just so everybody can get a sense of you and your lifestyle and what, uh, what it's like to be Lisa every day. Can you just give us a synopsis? Yeah, sure. Um, it's busy. So I'm 37,
married. I have two kids. Um, I work full time, so i have a career in um corporate finance so i work
you know normal hours eight to five ish my husband travels quite a bit too for work so
between work and his travel and the kids you know getting workouts in is is a little challenging
um very busy but i've always been active um even, even as a kid. So I'm used to fitting
it in, um, into my life. So yeah, that's me. Cool. Yeah. I want to talk more about how exactly you
go about fitting in because, um, I would say probably my, my, the biggest demographics for,
for me are kind of split between the college crowd and then people in their
late twenties, early, mid, late thirties that, you know, have a fully packed life. And they
run into that problem of between there. I mean, there's on like the meal, meal planning and
prepping side, and then also on the exercise side. So I definitely want to hear about how
you've been able to make it work.
But before we talk about that, why don't you just tell us a bit about how things were previously before you had found any of my work and, you know, followed my program and stuff like that?
Yeah, sure. So the term skinny fat was completely accurate for me. So I was at about 125 pounds, 17% body fat. So not huge, you know,
pretty scrawny person. I was working out five, six days a week, mostly running. I had just finished
my third half marathon before I started this program. So, you know, I was pretty active running
20, 30 miles a week, eating pretty healthy, not a lot of protein.
We'll get into that later, I'm sure.
Right, right.
You can just talk about that now, really.
I mean, so what was, so you're doing a lot of running, and do you know, like, approximately what round-race calories were?
What did your macros look like?
I actually have no idea, and that was part of the problem.
So I'm, you know, working out five days a week, six days a week.
You know, my stomach started feeling kind of jiggly.
So I thought, you know, I'm doing something completely wrong.
I'm eating wrong.
Even though, you know, I didn't eat red meat, so I eat pretty healthy, eat a lot of vegetables.
But I'm Italian, so I eat a lot of pasta, a lot of carbs,
or I did anyway, I don't anymore. So I was just frustrated. I was tired. I felt like I was
constantly in the gym, constantly running, and I just looked bleh, like nothing exciting,
like nothing exciting definitely had no definition um so i see you know see all these people online with all these muscles and abs and i'm like if i'm working out five days a week i'm not getting
i'm not looking like that at all what are these people doing you know they must be doing something
right yeah and then you look and then you also like a lot of them are showcasing their most uh the top kind of if it fits your macros type of meals, then you're really confused.
Like, what is this?
Yeah, exactly.
And so the what were in terms of like in the past.
So how long had you been running for?
Did you play sports growing up?
Like, were you always into, you know, physical fitness or what's that what's the history
there like was there was there a time previously where you're like i just wanted to look like how
i was you know when i was whatever 25 no i've always looked you know pretty skinny but no
definition totally skinny fat my whole life um i played soccer growing up so for
like 16 17 years um and in college i was running going to the gym doing you know what i thought
was heavy weights you know tossing around 15 pounds um you know thinking i was doing it kind
of just gets boring basically like yeah exactly and then I guess I'll stop now. And then the older I got, I felt like I had to put more and more effort in at the gym to look the same.
So I wanted to do something different to kind of get over the hump.
Yeah.
And so then how did you hear about me and my work?
Well, as I said, I knew I wasn't doing something right. So I started actually looking online, just Googling how to build muscle for women, how to get a lean look without looking like a guy.
And I actually came across Thinner, Leaner, Stronger on Amazon.
Oh, cool.
And I read the little synopsis and I thought, okay, this sounds legit.
I'm going to buy it and see what it's like.
I finished it in like a day and
a half. I loved it. I liked that it wasn't gimmicky. It was based on science. There was no BS.
It was something I could understand and it made sense. So I thought I'd give it a shot.
Cool. And so then what did you kind of expect in the beginning there? Because I've worked with so
many people now and it's one of the more common things that
it's just kind of cliche, but that is just a roadblock for women is the idea that you're
going to touch weight and you're just going to end up getting bulky.
Did you worry about that?
I totally worried about that.
And I told myself that I would try it for two weeks. And if I hated it or I started to look bulky, then I would stop.
So I kind of made a deal with myself. I gave myself a two-week trial period. And nine months,
a year later, here I am. That's great. And what was it like? Was it uncomfortable at first? Because
I mean, obviously, you're new to weightlifting.
Yeah. I can't tell you how big of a tool I felt. I mean, like walking into the gym,
I didn't even know how to adjust the seat on the benches. So I'm trying to learn how to do things.
I looked up a lot of YouTube videos, which actually helped a lot. But just trying to lift
the bar, doing the bench press, I just felt super self-conscious. Actually, I mean, that makes me,
I don't know how I'm going to be doing a whole series of videos on a proper form and stuff.
And actually I don't never, I mean, there's a lot of those out there, but I know that
a lot of people that like my stuff would just like to see me explaining things. And there are
certain things I would probably explain maybe better than some of the other videos that would
come up for you to search.
But that makes me think of, because I've heard, of course, the same thing from a lot of people, that a series of videos to go with it on how to not look like an idiot in the gym probably would be useful as well.
That would be amazing.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah.
And then I realized that nobody was paying attention to me.
Everybody's paying attention themselves.
They're all watching themselves in the mirror. Yeah. They're too busy taking selfies and staring at themselves. Yeah, exactly. Recording themselves, doing all that. So after the first week, once I
got through all the exercises, I was like, okay, I can do this. I made it. I didn't drop a weight
on myself. I survived the first week. So I kept going.
Nice. And so, okay, so you're like a couple weeks in now. And what are your thoughts at that point?
Because that was your trial period.
I loved it. I mean, I was hooked from the beginning. It just made me feel like I could
accomplish something. I mean, I know that sounds completely cheesy, but you know, just getting over
that initial hump, I kind of felt proud of myself. And then I started seeing, you know,
it didn't take long. It took maybe two, three weeks to start seeing a difference. You know,
I could feel it in my energy level. I could start to see it in my muscles. You know, as I said,
I lifted, you know, very light weights before. So I had some muscle, but, you know, very light weights before. Um, so I had some muscle, but you know, it didn't take
a whole lot of time for the, for the definition to start showing, which was, you know, made it
even more addictive. Right. Yeah, totally. And that's the case with, um, if, if you are relatively
lean and you just don't have enough muscle, then you're in a, you're in a good place to,
to see fast results. And I mean, similarly,
I guess that everyone can see fast results. It just kind of depends on what those results are
going to, what those results are going to be kind of depends on where they're starting. So
in your case, you were starting relatively lean. You just didn't have a lot of muscle. So you see
that change fairly quickly because if you're doing things right and you're eating right, you know,
your body responds quickly as you see. And then if somebody's overweight, then, you know, if they can start out losing two pounds a week, maybe they don't, depending on how overweight they are, maybe they don't see that in the mirror as much as they would hope.
Or, you know, maybe they're not going to see a dramatic transformation in two weeks, but they can see it on the scale.
Similarly with guys, if guys start out too skinny.
So that's the nice thing, just to your point of just where it's just motivating.
Because even from a marketing perspective, if you want to, the best thing you can do to sell people on something is give them instant results.
And it's nice that, you know, if it doesn't take long, if you know what you're doing to get instant results or what feels like instant results if you've been grinding away for a long time.
Yeah, definitely.
And so fast forward now to today.
So what have the results been like up until now?
I mean, in how is it not just in the gym, but you had mentioned, you know, obviously
there's spillover to other areas of your life.
So how do things look now?
areas of your life. So how do things look now? Yeah. So numbers wise, now I'm at about 122,
123 pounds and just under 14% body fat. So, um, I lost a little bit of weight, you know,
honestly, I didn't really want to lose a whole lot. Um, if any, I just kind of wanted to transform what I had into, um, muscle so I can see a little bit more definition. I actually like what I look like.
For my age, my weight, I'm pretty happy. I definitely feel like I'm just starting and
I have a long way to go. But things that I didn't expect happened. Like I said, I was
such a newbie at first and I felt like everyone was staring at me. I went from that to, you know, guys coming up to me asking, you know, what I think about them doing, you know, different things in the gym.
Like the T-bar row I was doing.
I'd never seen anybody do it before.
I had to look it up on YouTube.
So I'm doing it, and this guy comes up to me, and I'm like, and he's like, hey, do you have a second?
I'm looking around like, is he talking to me?
And he's like, yeah, you know. You're like waiting for the line me um and he's like yeah you know what you're
like waiting for the line yeah like yeah i was like okay what do you got um he's like no you
know do you just wrap your towel around the bar do you what what kind of grip do you use on that
and i'm like wow this is kind of cool he's actually asking me for advice yeah um from that
too i had a guy come up to me after i was doing pull-ups and he's like, I just want to let you know for a scrawny girl, you sure are strong. And I was like, yes.
You said you mentioned you could, what, you do like 15 pull-ups?
Yeah.
Do I remember that great?
Yeah.
That's impressive. That's strong.
So, you know, things like that, that I just never would have expected. I have like,
I did not really think about having a, having a butt before having legs before.
Um, I've always, always focused on arms and abs.
Um, but like body parts that I didn't know that I even wanted.
I was like, this is awesome.
That's so that's, that's, that's like the guy thing.
Like, oh, I just want big biceps and I just want abs and one big chest.
Usually, usually it's the other way around.
Usually it's that's of like secondary
importance to to women that i speak with yeah i mean i'm so like scrawny that i just never thought
i could have that um but now i do so it's pretty cool so yeah things i didn't expect
kind of happened that ended up being really cool um and like you said it started to bleed into
other areas like you know even with my kids um into other areas, like, you know, even with my kids,
um, trying to instill in them, you can do hard things, you know, put in the work. Now you will
get results. Um, just little by little, I got a big project at work, um, about six months ago,
you know, and just that mentality of, you know, constantly grinding at something, even if it's
hard, you will get the results if you're constantly working on it,
and, you know, doing your best work. So it's definitely helped.
Yeah, totally. I mean, it's, what is it? I think it's, I think it's James Altucher,
how he pronounces his name. He's a writer guy that, I mean, he's just paraphrasing what somebody
else has said, I'm sure. But he'd say that like, you know, a lot of success is just showing up.
There's, there's truth in that. It's, If you just show up every day and put in at least halfway sensible work, then eventually
you get there.
And that's cool with your kids too.
I mean, I can relate to that because I have a four-year-old son.
So setting a good example in that way is something that, you know, is going to pay off for both of you later down the line.
I think especially in today's overly politically correct culture where it's
like, Oh, you finished 30th. Here's a gold star.
Yeah. No, you finished 30th. You suck. You need to get better.
I think there's value in having to do hard things and uh not being
coddled but i guess that's a different discussion that's a whole other conversation fitness though
fitness though is is is uh almost therapeutic i think in that sense that it forces you to do
hard things every day that uh you may not want to, but you have a purpose for it. And, you know,
I think that just getting into that habit of overriding your momentary desires with your,
you know, long-term goals is just a valuable, it's almost like a skill that you learn, I guess.
Yeah, definitely.
So what obstacles have you run into while on the program?
Like, because, and this is also, this is also just an opportunity for me to get feedback
because I'm always looking for feedback and, you know, I've done several updates to, to
pretty much all of my books actually, and all of my stuff.
And so I always like to hear with what did I not think of basically, or what was just
kind of unique to your situation that other people, you know, were similar where they might be having similar issues
and how did you overcome those, those, uh, problems? Yeah. So I had the benefit of having
some newbie gains with, um, not having lifted weights a whole lot before. Um, so I feel like I,
I had that at first, then I plateaued some.
And then I just started totally psyching myself out.
So I was like, am I eating the right amount?
Am I getting enough protein?
I was reading articles online, and I was just confusing myself.
So that's actually when I got your meal plan.
Oh, okay.
And I realized I was eating generally the right amount of calories, but I was not eating nearly enough protein. So I made the changes to my diet and I mean, that made a huge, huge difference.
What, what differences did you see like before and after fixing that?
Just like the definition of my muscles. I mean, it made a huge difference between that and the,
um, your, is it recharge? Yeah. Um, so I started taking that too. Nice. And that just,
I mean, I feel like I, my muscles like popped a little bit more, um, after that. And I definitely
felt like with the protein, I just, I just looked leaner, you know, in the mirror. I could just,
I just could tell it made a big difference. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's, uh, that's, I've heard
that many times and the, the low protein thing is very common among
women in particular, just because I guess a lot of women I speak with are not really inclined to
eating a lot of meat. And you can get enough protein if you don't really eat meat, but you
have to really try. It's not easy to do, you know? And then regarding making time for your
workout. So you mentioned earlier, you're very busy and your schedule's packed and you have
two kids and et cetera, et cetera. So how do you do that? So I have been on the three-day program
and then I do cardio on one day on the weekend. So my schedule at work varies. I mean, I have
meetings, you know, all day, like pretty much everybody else. I have the benefit of having a huge gym at work with personal trainers. And I mean, it's, it's
awesome. Um, so I try to go at lunch a couple of days a week. So I sometimes have to go in the
morning. Um, but I said, my husband is, um, he runs marathons, so he has to run, you know,
some of whatever God awful number of miles he runs a week.
So we're just constantly trying to balance, you know, his time and my workout time.
But you have to plan it.
Like I look at my calendar every Sunday and I look at my meetings and I set a meeting for myself.
I know that sounds kind of ridiculous, but I block off my calendar.
That's important.
And I set it for myself
and I didn't miss a single workout for nine months.
So it works, but I obviously had to definitely work at it.
I mean, sometimes I was in the gym at five in the morning,
sometimes in the afternoons,
trying to squeeze it in between meetings,
that kind of thing. Yeah, yeah, that's awesome in the afternoons, trying to squeeze it in between meetings, that kind of thing.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's awesome.
And I think it just speaks to that it's more a matter of priority and just making the decision that I'm going to do this one way or another than anything else, I think.
Absolutely.
I mean, I similarly have, I mean, I get up at 5.30 and I have nonstop work and whatever.
And I also have a son and blah, blah, blah. So I totally know where you're coming from,
where you're just like, this is how it's going to be this week. This is going to be the times.
And the only thing that's going to stop me is someone that I care about is in the hospital
or something. Yeah, exactly. Yep.
Yeah. So that's cool. Were there any other sticking points or anything that you ran into on the program?
Yeah, I got a case of wrist tendonitis. Um, so trying to stay as strong as I possibly could with,
you know, an injury was, was tough. And honestly, trying to stay mentally strong was even harder.
Um, you know, still going to the gym,
still working out what I could, um, my legs got stronger. Um, um, but now I'm back at, you know,
pretty close to the strength I was at before, but that was a pretty big setback. So, you know,
trying to get my, my brain around that and my, my mind, right, that this will end, this will pass.
I just need to keep at it, keep my nutrition right, which was, you know,
it's easy to just, okay, well, my wrist hurts, so I'm just going to go eat lasagna, you know.
So trying to keep what I could control in line was kind of challenging.
Yeah, and how did that happen?
Was it just like a freak type of thing or?
I don't know.
I think it was doing bicep curls on a straight bar.
Oh, okay.
But it wasn't, you know, one day it suddenly had hurt.
It was just kind of gradually over time.
Yeah, that's how it goes.
I actually was running, I ran into some of that recently in my biceps tendon where, um, I mean, I talked about it on the, actually, I don't know if you're the podcast,
but I spoke with the sports doctor Adam on the podcast who has helped me now it's more or less
gone. So I know how annoying that can be where it just creeps up. And like, you think maybe it's
just a tight muscle or something that'll just go away and then it doesn't go away. And then once
it's there, it's like, you just wonder, are you ever going to feel normal again?
Yeah, exactly. And it was actually your podcast about the ART. I went to a sports chiropractor
and had some ART and it worked like a charm. So yeah, thanks to you.
Yeah, I've tried quite a few things and that was the one.
So now I'm fully sold on it.
I mean, also mechanically, it makes sense.
It was just, I hadn't heard of it.
It's not very mainstream, I guess.
Yeah, I hadn't heard of it before either.
Yeah.
So with the injury, what were like mentally,
how did you kind of just resolve to,
how did you get over that point where now it's like precarious? Like maybe you're going to
continue. Maybe you're just going to use this as an excuse to, uh, indulge our, you know,
the person in us that just wants to like sit on the couch and do nothing and eat ice cream.
Yeah. So I thought about just going back to running. I thought,
you know, this isn't for me. I'm too old for this. You know, my, my wrists aren't, you know,
and I just kept kind of like the two week thing. I'm like, I'm going to give it one more week. I'm going to give it one more week. And if it's not feeling any better after this week,
I'm going to stop doing everything for, you know, three weeks and let it heal. And slowly,
you know, week by week, I'm like, okay, okay it felt better and as i was able to add on weight and exercises um you know my confidence that i could that i was
going to get better um came back nice and then where uh in the timeline did you get art and it
was that something that like finally kind of handled it or yeah so i this is actually pretty recent so i injured myself
in june so it was like four weeks in into the injury where i had the art and then i had
maybe six sessions six or seven sessions it after about two sessions i could get back to doing
you know the big lifts you might get the dead lifts and the squats and the not at the same weights.
But so then after about five, six, you know, now I'm probably about 90%, 95%.
That's great.
And that's funny on the, just I'm going to give it one more week or two weeks.
It reminds me of even on an individual task where if you're just kind of running up
against a lot of internal resistance on something,
something that's simple for me,
I don't know, I picked this up in a book somewhere
and it just kind of stuck with me,
is that if there's something I don't want to do,
then I kind of trick myself by,
okay, I'll give it 10 minutes.
If after 10 minutes I hate doing this,
then I'm just not going to do it.
And then inevitably you get going on it and you're like, ah, this isn't so bad.
Yep. That's exactly it.
So is there anything else that has kind of helped you stay motivated to, to kind of keep at it now
for nine months? And, and then, I mean, what are your, what are your plans going forward from here?
What are your, cause it sounds like you've kind of maybe achieved a lot of your initial goals. So what's, where do you go from here? What are your, cause it sounds like you've kind of maybe achieved a lot of your
initial goals. So what's, where do you go from here? Yeah. So as far as motivation, you know,
I actually, I physically and mentally like need it now, um, which is bizarre. Um, it's kind of
gives me a mental release, a physical release. Um, you know, and every time I think, oh, I just don't want to go to the gym today. It's raining or it's cold oh i just don't want to go to the gym today
it's raining or it's cold i just don't want to go over there i always think i've never worked out
and regretted it but i have not worked out and regretted it um so you know just trying to take
it kind of one workout at a time the deload weeks actually helped a lot in the beginning
now i kind of dread them i look forward to them and I'm like, oh yeah, if I can just make it to
the deload week and then they come and I'm like, oh, now I have to wait a week. But it's just
improved my mood, my sleep. You know, if I come home stressed, my husband's like, did you not
work out today? You know, what's wrong with you? So it's just, just kind of, it's how I feel,
you know, right now. You know, if I'm stressed,
if I'm feeling anxious about anything, it definitely takes care of it. It's kind of,
it's just weird that it's, you know, worked out that way.
Yeah. Which is to be expected. I mean, that's one of those things, just like many things in
this space where there is a lot of scientific research that says that and a lot of anecdotal where,
you know, a lot of people say the same thing, but it doesn't, it just doesn't really sink in.
It's not really real until you experience it for yourself. You know, like even people hearing it,
if they haven't experienced that yet, they will at some point. And, and then it's one of those
things that it sounds cliche, but you know, it's, uh, there's a lot of truth in it.
Yeah.
I, I, I wouldn't have believed it before either.
I know.
And, and so now what are your goals from here?
Because now, uh, I mean, you're in great shape.
So is it, do you, are there certain areas of your body that you're looking to improve now?
Or are you looking more to just maintain or what's the plan?
No, I mean, I'm still pretty little as far as, um, my physique, you know, lean, um, and muscular,
but, but pretty little. Um, so, you know, I'm still, I still like the continuous challenge of,
you know, how strong can I get, you know, can I get to my next PR? So once I'm at a hundred percent
with my wrist, which I mean, I'm, I'm probably a week or two out, I'm going to bulk a little bit probably, get some more muscle on me through the winter, and then do another cut probably late winter, early spring.
Nice.
I like it.
I mean I don't want to be huge, but I would like to be a little bit bigger, a little bit more defined.
Yeah. And as you'll see, I mean, there is no, oops, I accidentally got huge.
Right.
Especially not for women. I mean, women generally can gain muscle like pretty effectively, but most women start with so little muscle that that's really one of the big differences between guys and girls with lifting is that guys just start with a lot more muscle and strength. So, uh,
if you put 10 pounds of muscle on the average guy, it just visually is more striking than 10 pounds
on, you know, a girl, especially if, if the girl's starting skinny. Right. Yeah. Awesome. Well, um,
this has been great and I don't, I'm out of questions. So is there anything else that
you would like to say or add? I don't think so. I mean, it's just,
it's been a life changer. So if anybody's thinking about it on the fence, give it two weeks,
give it a try. If you hate it, stop doing it. Yeah, I like that. And it's, you know, hey,
you can even get the Kindle version of the book and if you don't like it and it's you know hey you can even get the Kindle
version of the book
and if you don't like it
and it doesn't work for you
you can just refund it
so you don't even pay anything
yeah see
that's actually
how I bought it
so
yeah
okay awesome
well thanks a lot
for being willing
to do this Lisa
I really appreciate it
and
I hope people like it
I think they will
and definitely
keep me posted
on how everything goes
you can always
you know
write anytime
you have any questions or whatever especially with bulkingking. Anyways. Yeah. It's not,
I've written a lot about, it's not complicated, but it's similar with cutting. You need to stick
to your diet or just the fat gain gets out of control. Basically. That's the only caveat.
All right. Well, thanks for having me. I appreciate it.
Yeah, definitely.
Hey, it's Mike again. Hope you liked the podcast. If you did go ahead and subscribe. I put out new
episodes every week or two where I talk about all kinds of things related to health and fitness and
general wellness. Also head over to my website at www.muscleforlife.com where you'll find not
only past episodes of the podcast, but you'll also find a bunch of different articles that I've
written. I release
a new one almost every day, actually. I release kind of four to six new articles a week. And you
can also find my books and everything else that I'm involved in over at muscleforlife.com. All
right. Thanks again. Bye.