Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How My Coaching Helped Luke Lose 43 Lbs in 8 Months
Episode Date: April 10, 2024In this episode, I talk with Luke, who achieved a dramatic body transformation through Legion’s one-on-one coaching program. Luke had struggled with his weight for over a decade, experiencing shor...t-term success through extreme dieting and cardio, only to regain the weight. However, working with his Legion coach, he learned to focus on consistency and adherence through a personalized nutrition and training plan. Over 36 weeks, Luke shed an impressive 43 pounds, 17% body fat, and 11 inches off his waist by mastering the basics: a balanced diet, compound training, moderate cardio, and effective rest and recovery strategies. During the program, Luke also navigated challenges such as managing weight fluctuations, learning to be patient and trust the process, and mastering proper training intensity. In this podcast, he shares valuable insights on enjoying holidays and meals guilt-free, finding an enjoyable meal plan, and understanding true training intensity. Luke's story highlights the power of an evidence-based, sustainable approach to achieve remarkable results while building healthy, long-term habits. So, press play to learn how expert coaching and a commitment to the process can lead to life-changing transformations. Timestamps: (0:00) Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (3:05) My free quiz to answer all your diet questions: www.muscleforlife.show/dietquiz (06:00) Luke's early struggles and approach to weight management. (11:21) The dramatic transformation Luke experienced: 43 pounds down and significant body composition changes. (16:41) What Luke’s fitness regimen looked like before my coaching. (23:48) Luke's diet strategy and how it evolved over time to focus on satiety and sustainable eating habits. (30:47) Luke’s surprise regarding his meal plan. (32:50) Did you incorporate treat meals? (36:10) Balancing enjoyment and diet discipline during holidays and special occasions without derailing progress. (43:10) Please share the podcast with a friend! www.muscleforlife.show (43:45) Adapting the Bigger Leaner Stronger training program to fit Luke's lifestyle and focusing on compound movements. (48:01) How training intensity and understanding of failure contributed to Luke's success. (59:12) What obstacles or “a-ha moments” did you experience during these 8 months? The realization that less can be more: focusing on quality over quantity in training. (01:02:12) Cardio strategy: Prioritizing walking and rucking without overemphasizing high-intensity cardio. Mentioned on the Show: Legion One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip Take this free quiz to get science-based answers to all of your diet questions: www.muscleforlife.show/dietquiz Luke’s Transformation: https://legionathletics.com/luke-w-legion-coaching-transformation/
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Discussion (0)
practicing some of those intensity techniques definitely was a game changer for me as well
because I feel like in the past, I just wasn't actually pushing it nearly as hard as I thought
I was. All of those things came together to really produce the results that I didn't think
I would be able to accomplish before. If I could go back in time and tell myself something, it was
be willing to try new things, whether it be focus on those compound exercises,
be willing to try new things, whether it be focus on those compound exercises,
try the rest periods, try something like the BLS philosophy, and then just be patient.
If you're being honest with yourself, you're tracking accurately, and you're showing up and doing the work, you will get the results. It feels like instead of fighting my body,
I'm working with my body, and it is definitely a huge relief.
body and it is definitely a huge relief. Oh, hello there and welcome to a new episode of Muscle for Life. I am your host, Mike, and in this episode, you are going to hear from Luke,
who worked with my one-on-one coaching team over at Legion and who lost 43 pounds in eight months, and of course gained a lot of muscle and
strength as well. And as you will hear in this episode, before working with us, Luke's story was
like many other people's, struggling with his weight for over a decade, experiencing short-term success through brute force, you know, extreme dieting, lots of
cardio, lose a bunch of weight, and then regain the weight, and then rinse and repeat. Until Luke found
his way to me and to Legion and learned how to master the basics, how to create a lifestyle that produces health,
that produces fitness, and that you can sustain for the rest of your life.
And in this episode, Luke not only shares the highlights from his journey, but also the
obstacles that he had to overcome and how he overcame them, like managing
weight fluctuations, learning to be patient, learning to trust the process, especially a
process that was very different than what he was used to doing when he wanted to lose weight. So
much so that he was skeptical at first that something so moderate compared to the extreme measures he was used to taking that it would actually work.
And so if your personal transformation is still a work in progress, if you are still working toward your ideal fitness, your ideal body composition, ideal body health.
your ideal fitness, your ideal body composition, ideal body health. And if you want to hear a story about how someone else who might be very similar to you did it and minimally get a little
bit of motivation, a little bit of confidence that Luke did it and you can too, then this episode's
for you. Before we sink our teeth into it, how many calories should you
eat to reach your fitness goals faster? What about your macros? What types of food should you eat?
And how many meals should you eat every day? Well, I created a free 60-second diet quiz that'll
answer those questions for you and others, including how much alcohol you should
drink, whether you should eat more fatty fish to get enough omega-3 fatty acids, what supplements
are worth taking and why, and more. To take the quiz and get your free personalized diet plan,
go to muscleforlife.show slash diet quiz, muscleforlife.show slash diet quiz muscle for life dot show slash diet quiz now answer the questions and
learn what you need to do in the kitchen to lose fat build muscle and get healthy
hey luke a fellow floridian nice to meet you hey mike nice to meet you as well
thanks for taking the time to come and talk with me and talk with the listeners
or i guess it's more talk with me and at the listeners.
Yeah, absolutely.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we're going to be talking about your fitness journey.
So for people listening, Luke did 36 weeks of one-on-one coaching that my sports nutrition
company Legion offers.
And Luke, I'll let you share your results
and get into the details. I like to hear the specific obstacles that people had to overcome
and the key takeaways that people learned. Because as I was saying offline, I think it's helpful for listeners to hear how other people
have put the pieces together. Because if you have a good theoretical understanding of how to get into
good shape, you realize that there are certain things that aren't negotiable. If you want to
lose fat, you got to understand energy balance. You got to maintain a calorie deficit,
not negotiable. But what is negotiable is how you go about doing that. There are many ways of going about doing that that are perfectly valid. And the same concept applies to training. There
are certain things that if you want to gain muscle and strength, you got to achieve one way or
another, but there are many different ways of getting there. And so I think it's helpful for people to hear the specific blueprints of other people other than me, because what has worked well for me, certainly exactly how I've chosen to do everything, certainly works for many other people, but there are parts of how I go about health and fitness that really is not optimal for other people only because they wouldn't enjoy it enough.
They may have issues with compliance.
It may just not fit their lifestyle, their preferences and so forth.
And so that's why we're here to hear about you.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Like you said, I'm actually in a fourth block now, but initially for these results, it was the first 36 weeks of coaching.
To go back to the beginning of my fitness journey, I probably started a little over a decade ago.
Back in high school, I always struggled a bit with my weight.
I had trouble with weight management,
didn't necessarily grow up in a family
that was ever very active,
didn't have solid nutritional foundations.
So I think I did what everybody does at the start
and just learned to starve and do a ton of cardio.
And that will only get you so far.
It's always unsustainable in the long run.
From there, did a lot of kind of you just
just go straight to the chainsaw yeah exactly right and you understand and it kind of gets
a little bit too addicting because like okay this works i see the scale dropping i'm not thinking
about where does this end up and how do i actually do this for you know a lifelong commitment um so
definitely went through you know that phase, continued on, did some various other
at-home stuff, did some of the Beachbody, the P90X, the T25, Body Beast, had some success in
doing those, followed some other people's plans. And I was able to get some results,
but it was always very unsustainable. And even though I would be able
to get lean, so I had been able to get down to like 190 pounds, which for me at the time was
like, okay, this is cool. And I can have some visible abs and have some of that success.
But a lot of times now looking back with the new information I have, it seems like I was
kind of successful in spite of some of the
training modalities I was doing and the nutritional principles I was adopting,
not really because of them. So that was one of the biggest takeaways for me was I finally had
gotten back up to kind of like the heaviest point in my life, I would still be, I would consistently work out.
I definitely did.
It was not, I can say I was consistent with my diet.
It was just a very poor diet as well.
So I kind of, you know.
You had one of the boxes, Chad.
Yeah, yeah.
I was definitely consistent.
I was consistently doing the wrong things.
And, you know, I had tried a bunch of the different diet fads.
I did, you know, a lot of low carb keto stuff. I didn't put any fasting here or there, but again, was just kind of out there looking for something that I was like, you know, there has to be a way to, you know, get in shape and actually stay in shape, right? Have a sustainable lifestyle.
picking up a copy of Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, and just reading through it.
And just even some of the paragraphs, you're like, hey, I got to this level of body composition and it's good, but I feel like there's more out here for me.
It feels like I'm working really hard, but not seeing the results.
And I really was reading that.
I was like, yeah, at the time I was definitely, like I said, the heaviest I had ever been
in terms of weight, but I knew I could kind of do some stuff to get some of that weight down, but I knew I was going to just keep spinning my wheels and always get back in the same spot.
get some actual coaching, you know, and really learn the, the ins and outs of how to do this over a long period of time, as well as just how to successfully implement, you know, the,
the bigger, leaner, stronger philosophy. And like we talked about really tailor it to,
to me, to my lifestyle, to, you know, my home gym, right? So I have a squat rack and a barbell,
but I might not have access to all the machines. So that's really where that unique coaching came in and made the world of difference. Yeah, it really is a powerful shortcut
if you use it the way you've used it. And especially at this point, and this was something I
wanted to incorporate into our coaching from the beginning is I wanted to make sure that people
didn't feel like they were dependent on us. I wanted them to not only get results, but also
understand why these things work and understand how to do them without us. Because ultimately,
I want to see people, I want to see them find the lifestyle that allows them to not just get into great shape, but stay that way for the rest of their lives. well, what do I need to do? Show me and then I'll go and do it. But because they get great results
and because they like the accountability and because they like the convenience of having
somebody there that they can ask questions of at any time, they can get diet meal plan
adjustments made as needed, training adjustments. And they find that it just becomes part of their regimen that works for them. It's
part of their success. And so inevitably, many, many clients stay on longer than the first
three or six months. And so that's always appreciated as well. And if we look at your results here, so eight months, 43 pounds down,
17% body fat down. And so that's in an absolute, not relative for people wondering.
So basically, I mean, it looks like you about cut your body fat almost in half is probably for
people can't see what I can see here. You lost 11 inches from your waist. And so this is
just one of those striking transformations. You did such a good job. I'm sure people that hadn't
seen you in the interim, they had to do a double take. Not that, and I don't say that to say that
you looked horrible before. It's such a big difference before and after.
looked horrible before it's just such a it's such a big difference before and after yeah yeah and it's definitely one of those things where i think the um they're not that anybody i think would look
and say hey losing 43 pounds isn't a large amount and i think the pictures really are what do it
justice um and you know when you think like 11 inches off the waist that's 30 plus percent of
my total so that's really where I think it's like the biggest,
right? It's really one of those things where the numbers on the scale, they matter, but they don't matter so much as the picture you see in the mirror every day. I think that really tells the
real story. And that was actually one of the big differences that my coaching helped me understand.
So I was with Ash and very early on, I had even shared some of the pictures from when I had
moderate success in the past. And I had this weight in my mind. I was like, okay, before I
was able to cut down almost like starve myself down to like 170 pounds and a little bit over
six foot just to see some abs. Then I did
kind of like a bulk and maybe around the 190, I could still kind of see some abs. In my mind,
I was like, I need to lose 70 pounds because I was starting at close to 270 pounds and that's
where I really need to go. Ash kind of talked me off the ledge and he said okay let's just start focusing on the
basics you know let's work on your diet let's work on your you know your rest let's make sure we get
a solid exercise plan let's manage your stress let's make sure you're sleeping and just cover
those you know big items to really get your lifestyle in line and then as we start seeing
the results we can go from there and you know when And when I quote unquote finished this nine months, 36 weeks of a
cut, I have the best abs I ever had and I'm at 220 pounds. So that really goes to show how much
of a difference a proper diet and training can make in your life and how much more sustainable
it is. I feel really healthy sitting at 220 pounds. And even now as we kind of reverse diet back up and go
into a bit of a lean bulk, my calories are so much higher, right? I'm not starving under 2000
calories. I'm at 3000 calories and not weight. So that's really where it's a lifetime sustainable
thing. And that is like nothing I've been able to experience in the past decade.
Yeah. It's an important point for people who are experiencing a dramatic change in their body composition for the first time. It is hard to predict what body weight represents the goal that you have in your mind, especially if you have done a bunch of cardio in the past and starved yourself in the past.
And over the years, I've heard from many, many people, probably in this sense, more women than
men who have done especially that. And women seem to be more indoctrinated to care a lot about body
weight than men just generally versus body composition. And so just an important point
for people listening, if you are starting out and you know that you need to lose a fair amount of
fat and you know that you need and you want to gain a fair amount of muscle, you can actually
just count on weighing quite a bit more at a great look. Like what you see in the mirror is probably going to weigh
a fair amount more than what you would think when, uh, when that day comes and you look in the mirror
and you think, wow, that looks really good. But I'm, I'm at least 80% to my, uh, absolute best
body composition that I could ever imagine getting to, um, you're
going to, you're probably going to weigh a fair amount more than you think.
Yeah.
And that was definitely one of the biggest surprises to me.
Like, you know, I, I really thought, okay, maybe, maybe 205 is, you know, where, where
I can still see abs and I was just kept being like, you know, how about we just, you know,
show up and execute the plan and, plan and we'll see where we get. So that was, you know, an amazing portion of this whole coaching experience.
on it. It seems like you succeeded in spite or despite what you're doing rather than because of it. I wanted to come back to that because that's also an important point that it confuses a lot
of people who are relatively new to learning evidence-based diet and exercise and so on.
Can you explain what you meant by that and maybe even share some examples
for you specifically? You shared some of the things that you were doing in the past and
I'm just curious, which of those things did seem to work to some degree? And
now with hindsight, how do you interpret that? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. So there are tons of
different examples,, definitely not eating
enough is one of my key problems. Not being patient enough. You know, sometimes if you
don't really have any true nutritional knowledge, right, you're just kind of reading out of a
booklet that kind of came off a program you purchased and it's okay. Well, if you don't
see a weight drop in, you know, two weeks, then you absolutely have to keep dropping your calories. Um, and you know, I would just drop calories so quickly that I would on starvation study. That's almost prisoner, prisoner of war territory.
Yeah.
And you, and you don't feel good.
You can't perform at all.
Right.
There was no, it would get to where I couldn't weightlift, which is obviously not beneficial
at all.
Cause now I'm losing just as much of the lean body mass that I had as I would be fat.
Um, so I would, you know, do a lot of HIIT training.
I would do, you know, 25 minutes of HIIT a day, and then I'd go for like an hour walk
at night.
Um, and I would attempt to do some types of circuit training and stuff where my energy
levels would be so low that there was no way I could actually perform or build any muscle.
Um, so I would get to a, a unsustainable, um, body weight, even if I could get lean enough that I could see some
definition. And I'm like, oh, this is great. I can see my abs or see some definition in my arms,
but it would always just be like, okay, well, in six months, this is going to be gone because
this isn't a sustainable thing. I can't do two hours of cardio a day and eat less than 2000
calories. So just really being patient with my progress,
really prioritizing weightlifting and not cardio multiple times.
Even kind of I knew having read your books
and listened to your podcast and stuff,
I knew I'm like, no, cardio is not always the thing
that's going to move the needle.
So at least a couple of times I came to Ash
and I was like, you know, Ash, I don't know.
It seems like my weight stalled a little bit. Can I add some pit? And he'd be like, no, you're just gonna, you're gonna do exactly the program. Right. And every single time he did that, then it would be like the next week I would see, you know, the drop of weight and the scale.
to trust that if you show up and execute the plan, it will work. Not being so intimidated by those daily fluctuations or weekly fluctuations, right? Being a 250 pound guy, it's nothing to see
a 2% weight fluctuation, but five pounds feels like the end of the world, especially if it's
in the wrong direction while you're on a diet. So having that coaching just to be like, hey,
it's okay. It's less than 2% of a fluctuation.
Just keep on your diet.
We don't need to drop calories any lower.
And then inevitably, two or three weeks later, I would have a fat whooshing effect or something
like that and see all that progress.
So I can't tell you how many times that happened.
It's kind of funny to look at the nine months if you pull you know the trainerize application and see all the weight logins and it's just this nice mountain
down um but when you're in it right week to week it can feel like it's the end of the world when
you're not seeing it yeah yeah that uh that that makes a lot of sense and that um that that that
point of reaching these uh either it's plateaus or even seeing weight moving in the wrong direction, it also can help when you do have a fundamental understanding of what's going on and you understand why these things work the way they do.
emotional response to it is maybe even a little bit of panic. It helps to understand intellectually,
okay, so my weight went up five pounds and that would represent probably close to,
realistically speaking, a 20,000 calorie surplus. It's like 20,000 calories of body fat or so.
And if I think about my diet, no, I've been pretty good. I don't have to be perfect, but, um, I, you know, I've been a hundred calories up,
a hundred calories down sometimes here and there, but I, but there's no way in the last week that I
ate 20,000 more calories than I burned. So I know this five pound increase is not all body fat. I know that. And it's not all
body fat and it's not even mostly body fat. Well, then it has to be some of these other things.
And then as you go through this experience of seeing the following week, you get a bit of that
whoosh effect, which for people listening is, it just refers to a
sudden decrease in body weight, usually that follows one, maybe two-week period where there's
little change. And weight loss is never perfectly linear. Like Luke said, if you look at your graph,
if you're doing it right, it trends downward over time. Look at your graph of your average
body weight over time, it trends downward, but it's not a little bit lower every week until you finally reach your goal. It goes
up, it goes down, it goes back up, it flattens out, it goes way down, it goes way up. And so
it's just part of the process. And I'm sure, Luke, for you, once you saw this pattern repeat
a couple of times, then as you said, the daily fluctuations, you just don't even care anymore
because you know that if you just focus on execution, you're going to get the results.
The results factually are happening, even though they're not always perfectly reflected on the scale or even in the
mirror. Because you look at yourself every day and it gets a little bit distorted in your mind's eye.
You're not actually even seeing the changes until they're dramatic.
Yeah. Yeah. And that's also, I think, another benefit of really focusing on those pictures and taking high quality progress pictures, even at the start when you don't want to, right? I'm so glad I took those pictures and now I look back. I'm like, wow. And it's really cool to go monthly and I have them all in a folder.
see even when you would still look in the mirror and be like, oh, I don't know. But if you compared that to a month before, you're like, okay, yep, now I see my arms maybe are a little bit more
defined. I have less lower back fat. So just finding wins in places like that was hugely
helpful. And also, again, having the coaching because you might overlook some of those,
but a good coach is going to look at those and point out to where they're seeing
the most progress as well. Yeah. Yeah. That's a good point.
Can you talk to us about your diet? How did you approach that part of this equation? What
specifically worked for you? And I'm curious if you had to make any changes along the way,
did you start out thinking that one approach
would work and then you found that certain parts of it actually weren't right for you?
And so then you had to adapt?
Yeah.
So I'll definitely say starting out because I was so overweight and I really wasn't super
hungry even despite being in a caloric deficit, because it was fine. I was working out, and I'd say my intensity probably actually, the more fit I got, the higher intensity I um you know i i definitely had a macronutrient
based diet um you know i had used uh one of the sample meal plans and kind of adapted it to to
what made sense to me um just found some meals that i liked uh and once i kind of dialed those
in i was like hey i know i can have you know say 10 ounces of you know lean ground turkey
and x number you know of grams of rice for lunch or whatever.
I'm kind of simple in that I can eat the same thing five, six, seven days a week.
So it's fairly simple for me to be like, okay, well, I know this is the macronutrients present
in this lunch or this dinner and so forth.
And then I just kind of built them with like they're rebuilding blocks.
But for me, I don't need a ton of variety.
The, it was simple to pick a handful of meals that worked for me and then just keep executing
on this.
And was that different?
Sorry, just to interject the question.
Was that different though, then?
Cause, cause previously you said we were joking or, I mean, you were joking that, yeah, you
were consistent, but you were consistently doing the bad wrong things and i'm assuming that that that included eating probably relatively high
process highly processed foods that are very calorically dense and very tasty and probably
too much snacking and so forth i doubt you were just eating too much ground
turkey and rice, right?
Yeah, I don't think anyone's ever eaten too much ground turkey, rice, and broccoli.
Exactly.
It's not a diet anybody gains weight on.
Yeah, nobody gets fat on ground turkey and rice.
Yeah, absolutely.
And in some ways that actually even helped to manage the stress a little bit better,
doing some of that meal planning because you didn't have to think about it um it wasn't like a oh man i've
been on a work conference all morning um i only have 30 minutes until now i'm starving right now
i'm in fight or flight mode already so i'm gonna grab crap or i'm gonna run to you know like a
local like wawa or you know fast food joint and grab whenever i can um it actually made it almost
easier right because it was like no i i know what my lunch is and I'm going to eat a healthy, nutritious lunch and
that's going to fuel me throughout the day. So that part actually made my life more simple,
not having to always think about those things. In terms of kind of how that adapted, I will say as
the more weight I lost, the deeper into the cut i got the bigger into the
deficit um you know something my ash and i worked on was uh food selection right um so picking some
of the more voluminous things um you know really focusing heavier on those vegetables making sure
i got adequate fiber and um just to keep there's the feeling of fullness and not feel like i'm
starving all the time.
And that was actually a major change. That's not something I ever really thought about before.
Before it was kind of just like, okay, yeah, I'm feeling like I'm starving, but I'm like,
oh, the suffering's kind of required. Working with a proper coach, he was like, look, you're going to feel hungry at times. We're in a deficit, but you really don't need to feel like you're
starving and you can eat damn near as much broccoli as you want, as long as you're not coating it with cheese, right?
A little asterisk, minor detail.
Yeah. So that's definitely one of, what is the other evolution was, you know,
finding those things like, you know, do you like potatoes, like white potatoes? Do you like sweet
potatoes? You know, instead of just using all rice for your
carb sources, you can sub in some of those things. You can eat vegetables. So that was definitely
expanding the dietary preferences and understanding and being a lot more in tune with how do I feel,
right? So I'd keep a little food journal where, hey, I ate this for lunch and by 4 p.m. I was
starving or, hey, I ate this. And at 4 p.m. I was starving or hey I ate this and at 4 p.m. I really wasn't
that hungry and then kind of modeling my diet around how it was making me feel.
That's smart to try just different combinations like starting with a basic food satiety scale
you can find online or you can find over on our blog over at Lesion. We've written about it
in a number of different articles and contexts and then picking out which foods you like and then mixing and just making some meals
and then seeing uh how it works for you and being i guess it's not maybe rigorous but like you said
actually writing it down and rating your your hunger on a scale of one to five with uh five being absolutely starving
and one being you you wouldn't even be interested in eating your favorite cheat meal wouldn't even
be appealing to you or whatever right um and and then and then just seeing from from those those
different combinations that make sense to you which which works best. And as you mentioned that once you find the meals that you like, and this is a very common
experience, and I don't know if this was a little bit surprising to you, maybe not if you have done
it before, but I've heard from many people over the years who started in a place that is similar
to where you started, where they, they were not eating well. They were eating a lot of fast food.
They were eating a lot of prepackaged food. It was a lot of just in the moment decisions.
I'm starving. What do I want? How much time do I have? What's convenient?
And they went from that. And then with that thinking that variety was really important to them, and they were used to making these on-the-fly food decisions that often started with, what do I want to eat right now? What sounds delicious to me right now?
And then they transition to a much more structured approach where they get to eat the foods that they like. But like you said, there's some planning, there's some prep. Now they have it all worked out. They know even the time that, cool, at 9 a.m. I eat this. And then at 11 a.m. I have my little snack. And then at 2 p.m. I eat my salad. And they don't have to think about it anymore. And like you said, I've just heard from many people over the years that
were surprised that they actually enjoyed that and that variety wasn't as important as they
thought. Was that the case for you? Or did you already know that putting some pretty
thick guardrails on your eating or on your diet was going to work out.
I'd say it was probably a little bit surprising. I'd say how much I didn't need any variety.
I kind of figured, oh, I'd get tired of eating the same ground turkey and rice every day for lunch,
but I really didn't.
Yeah. And then after four months of eating the same thing, you still look forward to it. You're
like, ooh, I'm going to eat my turkey and rice soon.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Especially if you've been deep enough in the cut ground turkey tastes great.
So that's true.
That's true.
Yeah.
And, and, you know, finding again, back to some of that sustainability, right.
Um, finding, you know, seasonings that you like, um, you know, it doesn't, it doesn't
just have to be hot sauce, right.
It used to just be like chicken breast and hot sauce and rice, and that's all I can eat.
So finding different seasonings you like that make sure they're actually no calorie or low calorie and they're not doing some trickery on the labeling.
But finding different seasonings. stuff on the market like you know so you know reduced sugar um like barbecue sauces and ketchups
and stuff and different condiments like that um that you know a decade ago either i didn't know
existed or you know this has just come uh more more into the main stage now that i'm back and
was looking at these things um so there's a lot of those things you can do um you know picking up
like you have you know the shredded cookbook and like, okay, so there's simple substitutions you can make to meals that you really like and then make them a lot more macro friendly.
So you can still kind of get that hit of, oh, I want to try something like this.
And instead of being like, oh, well, I can have a cheap meal once a month or something like that.
You can be like, okay, well, here's a much more reasonable um adaptation of that that still tastes 90 of it and hits the spot
how did you deal with cheat meals treat meals however however people want to call them free
meals yeah i never i never i think some of the is almost like a moral panic over cheat meals as if
as if people are going to feel bad because
they're cheating yeah i i get i get the sentiment but i have to say in speaking with particularly
emailing with tens of thousands of people over the years i i don't know if i've ever actually
met someone who had a problem with that in in fact, they never cared. They were excited because they had a
system that worked and they looked forward to their cheat meal. They felt great afterward
because it was delicious. But regardless, in the latest editions of Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, I changed the terminology to treat meal just for fun.
Okay. Again, I'm not concerned about calling it a cheat meal
um but i think treat meal actually captures the essence of it even even better anyway um but how
did you deal with that is that something you did on a regular basis irregular basis not at all
yeah um so i wouldn't say uh we didn't have it like scheduled in, right. Um, it wasn't like,
uh, Oh, every third week we do something like that.
Which is how some people, some people like to do it and they, and it becomes even a little event
that they look forward to and then they go to their favorite restaurant and they, they get
whatever they like and it's like a nice reward for the week and a reset.
Yeah. Yeah. So I, I didn't have anything like that. Um, but you know, I would
basically, um, for me, it kind of worked out, especially cause I was on this long enough.
And, uh, one of, one of the things that really helped me, especially being on coaching for a
little bit longer than just the 12 weeks was, um, you know, holidays were going to come up,
you know, there was Memorial day, there was July 4th, there was labor day. Um, you know,
we worked through, um, we worked through Thanksgiving and Christmas.
So having that support and having that person to talk to of how do I approach these holidays.
And actually, in a lot of ways, it was even, again, talking off the ledger.
Ash was like, you can enjoy Christmas.
You can enjoy your holidays.
You can still have the big meals.
And we talked about some strategies on how, on what we can do, you know, if we feel better because we just had this great
meal, then yeah, go for, you know, a little extra walk or something like that. Um, but you know,
one of the things we focused on was enjoying what I wanted to eat. Um, you know, still having those
meals, being guilt-free about it, and then just making sure that I'm right back on my exercise
schedule. And even if we see a slight fluctuation, weight, you might have a couple pounds from the extra sodium or so forth. But like we talked about earlier, it's like you didn't eat 20,000 extra calories. You might have eaten 2,000. You didn't even gain a pound of fat.
all of those things definitely played a huge role in, in my, just like the mentally thinking through these things. Um, so while I didn't necessarily have like a scheduled, uh, you know,
treat meal, cheat meal, whatever, um, since I was on it long enough, there was holidays and so forth.
So I kind of just ate what I wanted on the holidays, you know, within reason. But if I
wanted to have, you know, barbecue or a beer or two, we just did it. I, you know, I tracked it
like normally. And then, you And then we got right back on the
schedule in the following days. Yeah. I've joked on social media,
paraphrasing myself. I don't remember exactly how I said it, but basically that yes, people who eat
a lot of food, drink a fair amount of alcohol on the holidays. This was during the Christmas holiday season.
They typically gain some fat, but they also have a lot of fun. So that matters too. And you can
always lose the fat. And as you do this for enough years, you see that fully enjoying yourself.
And once you get to where you've gotten to, you've achieved great body composition.
You've learned how to keep it.
You've also developed a very healthy relationship with food.
healthy relationship with food. And so I, again, if I think back to all the years, I can't think of anybody who has gone through the experience that you've gone through and then has a problem
with binge eating, for example. As I'd say, it can't happen. It's just not, it's definitely not
the norm. And so what I see is with people like you in the holidays, like you said, what are we
talking about here? We're talking about eating some barbecue, eating a couple thousand calories of barbecue, maybe in
that, and maybe for the day you're in a little bit of a surplus and you have a couple beers and you
do that a few times here and there. And so doing that a few times over the course of whatever
period of time, depending on the holiday, that's you having a
great time. That's not feeling restrained at all. And what's the worst case scenario? You
eat a bit less for one or two weeks, maybe. And maybe you don't even have to, but if you really
feel compelled to, maybe that's the price you have to pay. And so again, once you've experienced that
a couple of times, similar to with weight loss plateaus and so forth, you really understand that,
oh no, this is just how it works. You don't have to feel guilty for eating the barbecue or
drinking the beer.
And even if you want to do that, you want to do that multiple times a week over a holiday period.
The consequences are just negligible.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'll say that's definitely, I think one of the, again, I can't speak to enough about the coaching, right?
It was very BLS philosophy, the workouts and so forth.
But the ability to talk to a coach that really understands that and can help equip you and
listen to your concerns and like, oh, am I going to ruin everything if I eat 2,000 calories
on July 4th?
And Ash was like, no, I want you to enjoy yourself, eat whatever you want. And then July 5th, go right back to the diet and you'll see that a week from now, it'll be like nothing happened. And just doing that enough times to be like, okay, yeah, this isn't a big deal.
myself with the, you know, the habits and so forth that, yeah, it's really interesting too. Cause one of the things we talked about, she was like, you know, Luke, to get to the weight you
were at, you were doing this crap six days a week for years on end. And I was like, you know,
that's actually a really good point. Like I was consistently doing the wrong thing for years to
get the results that I had. So now it's flipped. So, so, your mindset for things like that is definitely super powerful.
And the general strategy too of just sticking to your meal plan and more or less sticking
to your diet and then eating off plan, so to speak, on holidays, which occur every few
months, every couple of months, whatever, is if that's an example of something that may not work for some people because they like the
regularity of eating off plan or in the case of people, I think of people who travel a lot for
their work and they have to go to meetings that are at restaurants and so forth. It makes it a
little bit more difficult to where it gets actually kind of obnoxious if they were really trying to just stick to their
macros or their calories. And so they have to work in some flexibility. Otherwise,
they're just the weirdo asking for, they need the asparagus, but it can't have any butter or it can't have any, any oil or, you know, um, and, uh, but in your
case, by not eating off plan regularly, it, it also, then if we think about it in terms of,
if you want to zoom out and look at your calorie intake for the entire year and how that would,
uh, map to your body composition goals and how active you've been
and so forth, then it allows you even more flexibility really during those holiday periods
to eat whatever you want to eat. And it sounds like that's kind of moderate anyway,
but by not overeating on a regular basis. Not that there's anything wrong with that
so long as it's controlled.
And that's really what people are doing
when they go out,
even if it's once a week when they're cutting
and they're moderate about it,
but they basically erase their calorie deficit for that day
or maybe they go into a slight surplus
for that one day per week
and that's what works well for them.
But by not doing that,
you are in a sense kind of saving up
the quote unquote freedom
to eat quite a bit if it's infrequently every couple of months and then still accomplish your
goals when viewed over that longer timeframe, if that makes sense.
Yeah. Yeah. And it definitely does. And if anybody wants to see kind of like the actual graph of my weight loss,
it is in that article on legionathletics.com.
And I think a big thing to talk about here is
because that was over such a period of time, right?
I had multiple holidays, right?
I had vacations in there where I did go on vacation.
I tried to eat moderately,
but it's certainly not a controlled environment
or you're eating out a lot, you're having a few alcoholic drinks. So all of this was accomplished
not being super strict every single day. It was being strict enough most of the time that the
results still came. So that was a huge mental shift as well. It's like, nope, you can take a
vacation. And if you gain, even say you do gain, you have
an extra 7,000 calories, right? Gain two pounds. Okay. Like, you know, we were kind of already
building that deficit in. So in a week or two, you'll be right back to where you were, you know,
and being able to have that flexibility in lifestyle and realize that, yeah, there's no
issues with having holidays, with going on vacation, and with good, solid habits.
You just kind of auto-regulate and get right back to where you wanted to be.
Hey there.
If you are hearing this, you are still listening, which is awesome.
Thank you.
And if you are enjoying this podcast or if you just like my podcast in general and you are getting at least something out of it, would you mind sharing it with a friend or a loved one or a not-so-loved one even
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Let's shift and talk training. So how did you approach your training? How many days per week? And did you modify with, with Ash, the,
the kind of basic BLS programming and what, what did you guys find worked best for you?
And what, what did you guys find worked best for you? Yeah.
Um, so we did, um, five days a week for lifting.
I found that the, the more days for me, the easier it is to stay on schedule.
Right.
Yep.
Um, so we did, you know, five days a week lifts, um, really, really focused on the,
the main BLS, um, you know, uh, programming, um, really focused on the compound movements,
which is something that in the past I haven't done super well. And as well as one of the rest periods, I don't think I'd ever rested
three minutes before in my life. I was like, if I'm here in the gym, I got to be sweating. I got
to be moving. 90 seconds is the most rest I'd ever take. I remember that many years ago when i started to train like this i i was very skeptical actually
in the beginning that this was going to work the way that it was supposed to because even this
point i felt like half of my time i was just standing around yeah yeah and and sometimes i
still kind of feel like that but the results are so incredible in terms of the unless you're
squatting or deadlifting.
Then at three minutes, you're like, really?
It's already been, it's already been three minutes.
I got to go.
Yeah.
I'll say even some of the times, um, you know, eight months into a cut and my deadlift
increased like 180 pounds.
Um, and that's, you know, within that four to six rep range, not even the one rep range.
So it's actually probably slightly more than that.
Um, but yeah, by, by the end of eight months of a cut, down 40 pounds and an extra close to 200 pounds
on your deadlift, the timer would go off for three minutes. I'm like, I think I'm going to
sit here another 30, 40 seconds. I'm just going to regroup. Exactly. It's like those mornings
when you've slept horribly and the alarm goes off. You're like, I know, I know, but give me a minute. Give me a minute. Yeah. I think, you know, I was never lifting enough
weight that, that it made sense to, to rest three minutes. And the big difference was,
uh, you know, actually focusing on being fully rested, recovered, um, doing low enough, um,
rep ranges to, to build that strength. Um, focusing on the, you know, barbell movements as a skill,
um, you know, instead of being like, oh, I can't do
the same workout for three weeks in a row. How dare I? I need muscle confusion, right?
And it's like, no, you just need to actually get good at deadlifting. So there's so many things
that I had never done properly before. Definitely, again, working with a coach, getting the form
checks was fantastic because there's so many little things that you might not really catch.
Your hips move a little bit in a way, doing pull-ups and stuff to where, okay, maybe you put your thumbs outside and make sure you engage those lats a little bit more.
So those little minute details add up to a huge difference.
Before, I was never scared of a barbell, but I never really lifted lots
of weight.
Right.
And now, you know, when you're loading up four or five on the, for the deadlift bar
and doing multiple reps, you're like, yeah, this is actually really fun.
You know, I didn't think I would be able to see these numbers.
Yeah.
That's always been my favorite exercise.
Sometimes hate it, especially when a couple of years ago, years ago uh well i guess it hasn't
been that long so i i changed my training so i was doing what's basically in my book beyond
bigger leaner stronger i was doing the five-day program for probably at least three years if i
include the all the way back to the starts with sets of 10 on squat,
on deadlift. Those were not so fun, especially the final sets because sets of 10 close to failure,
not to failure, but ending sets probably within one or two reps or so let's say one or two good reps still
in the tank i didn't push much further than that was utterly exhausting but once you get below
six reps on the deadlift i think that's when it gets more fun yeah above six not so fun yeah yeah
and and speaking of um that's another thing I think this program really helped me do is what actually is failure, you know, because you're like, hey, if you're not super well trained and you come in like one to three reps in reserve, you don't really know that for yourself.
learning to push yourself on lifts too and be like, hey, was I actually tired? Was I really within three reps of failure or was I just tired of doing deadlifts? Because it's, oh, it's this
big, heavy thing I got to pick up. So really being able to push myself, understand what does failure
actually look like for me or am I just being lazy and don't want to finish the set? So practicing
some of those intensity techniques that definitely was
a game changer for me as well because i feel like in the past both from not resting long enough but
no i just wasn't actually pushing it nearly as hard as i thought i was and the more weight i
lost the more fit i got the higher the intensity got so all those things came together to really
produce the the results that i didn't think I would be able to accomplish
before. Yeah, that's a major point. I think that to just generalize, most people, they're not
training hard enough in each individual set. Now, I'm thinking even of people who actually spend a lot of time in the
gym and they do a lot of sets. I mean, it can be two or three hour workout. And in some cases,
I'm thinking of people who are in very good shape, but they are, I mean, I wouldn't say
it's a bunch of warmup sets, but it's something in between a bunch of warm-up sets and true hard sets taken close to failure.
And if you want to spend a few hours in the gym doing a lot of submaxim an hour or so, then that's when that intensity set to set has to increase. And so if I think to the gyms I've been in over the years, there always are people who know this and they train hard, they train intense, they're pushing close to failure. Some people overdo it and they're always training to failure. Every set, every exercise, really pushing it to where the spotter is having to finish the final rep for them. And that's not a practical and intelligent way to train.
But I think that on average, people could benefit from a lot more intensity in their workouts.
I don't see it the other way. I don't see most people pushing to failure too often and benefiting from less intensity.
Yeah, and that was definitely a key thing that's changed for me now is being able to much more accurately gauge how much intensity I am capable of and definitely pushing a little bit harder there.
Help me find those.
You probably actually have to get really close to failure at least a couple times to be like, okay, yep, that's what this feels like.
And you can still do that in a safe
manner right um you know even even as far as like ash even helped me make sure how do i how do i
set up um you know like the safety bar i'm in the squat rack that i'm benching in right i work out
at home so i i need to be be safe um but just those little things right where you're like nope
it's okay if i fail i'm actually safe i have these you know safety bars set up um and they're just a couple times take it there just to to feel okay
that's what actual failure feels like and not you know be seven reps away when when you're finishing
a set yep and uh two other tips for for people listening is one paying attention to how quickly the bar is moving or dumbbell or machine.
And it also can help to video yourself because take deadlifting, you're deeper into a set,
it's getting pretty hard and you're mostly focusing on just maintaining your form and
getting that weight off the ground. But what you will always see is once
you really start to approach failure, that barbell is going to slow down significantly.
And it can help to video yourself so then you can see what did you perceive in terms of that speed
and what actually happened. And so if you're doing a set and that barbell didn't slow down at all, regardless of
how hard it fell, your perception of the effort, it might've been a 10 out of 10, but the barbell
didn't slow down at all. Then you could have gotten at least a couple more reps and it might
not be seven, but it might be five. And sometimes it can be surprising with something like the deadlift or the squat, how many more reps you can do if you're willing to try.
And paying attention to that barbell speed or dumbbell or machine speed can help though, because it is fairly easy to just keep a little bit of attention on that.
And if it feels like, nope, that bar still moved pretty quickly. I had to work for it,
but I still got it up pretty quickly. Then you can feel safe, so to speak,
in trying another rep and then seeing, nope, still moved pretty quickly. I had to try even harder.
That's really hard, but it's not slowing down yet. Then you go for another one. And then
that's probably where you will start to notice it. Uh, if, if again, you're, you're, you're feeling
like you're giving it everything you've got just to keep that, uh, that, that barbell coming off
the ground or keep that squat moving quickly. You can do that for a few reps
until it starts to slow down, but it's going to slow down a little bit. And then you're going to
go for another one and it's going to slow down a little bit more. And then you go for another one
and now you're entering probably grinder territory. But if you really wanted to go for everything,
not that you necessarily have to, you probably can still get at least one
or maybe two more grinders. And so that's something that can help people just get an
understanding of how close to failure they are. And then also, like you mentioned, pushing to
failure. And you could save that for a machine as well. If you don't
feel comfortable barbell squatting to failure. I mean, I would never program that just for
even myself really, but has it happened to me over the years? Yes, absolutely. And so,
especially when now I'm kind of in maintenance mode. I still like to train intensely, but not as intensely as necessarily 10 years ago.
And so I then was willing to,
I wanted to get to a true zero RIR.
Well, sometimes like zero good reps left
for people listening
where I just barely got the final rep map,
sometimes miscalculated and couldn't
get it up and had to set it down so if if you don't want to do that and i understand you can
do that on different machines though where you can push especially with upper body you can push to
failure with safety a true failure just you know you're a, some sort of chest press machine and you, you want to feel just the localized and the systemic effect effects of failure. What does that really feel like in your pecs, in your triceps, in your shoulders, and also just in your body on the whole? What do it on a machine because it feels about the same
or do it with dumbbells if that's a little bit more comfortable. And you can repeat that with
every muscle group. If it's lower body, maybe you want to do that on a leg press or maybe you want
to do that on any sort of real squat mimicking kind of machine, a pendulum squat if your gym has that, maybe a belt squat
if your gym has that. Or even with a dumbbell exercise, maybe it's a Bulgarian split squat,
maybe it's a lunge, again, where you just feel a bit safer because you can just drop the dumbbells.
But if you do that, it doesn't have to be frequently, but if you do that semi-frequently, not only will you learn what it feels like really when you actually have zero good reps left, if you go for another rep, you are not going to make it.
frequently. It helps just keep your understanding calibrated. Otherwise, what can happen is you can lose your sense of it. And then some of that intensity, some of your training intensity is
going to depend on how you feel that day. And that's inevitable and that's going to happen to
some degree, but it is nice to maintain that objective understanding and that objective standard.
So if you're not feeling great because maybe you didn't sleep great or whatever is going on
and you're not inclined to train with the normal amount of intensity that you train with,
then you understand that when you're in the gym and you're deeper into a set and now you would like
to just end the set you've had enough of this set of uh squats but you know objectively that barbell
has not slowed down at all i'm gonna and then you just force yourself all right that's it do do do
two more you can do two more yeah yeah and that's definitely um something that we worked on a lot um really
integrated kind of everything you said there even you know um stuff like bulgarian switch squats
with dumbbells um there would even like some foam roller hack squat with dumbbells so we got to do
a a lot of different um intensity techniques and stuff so it felt like we really started with the
first 12 weeks was the exact program as laid out.
And then as we continued on, you know, we, we modified and, you know, different movements I
wanted to hit. Now even we're, we're working on in the fourth block where, you know, just looking
to round out my physique. So we're looking at some of the weak spots. So, you know, more inclined
benching, I'm really trying to hit the upper chest, more dealt, you know, centered exercises,
things like that. But yeah, really
understanding intensity, understanding what failure feels like, managing some of those things,
like just actual fatigue of, hey, we've just been squatting just normal squats or barbells for so
long that let's back off, let's do some rows, let's add some deficit rows, things like that
to just give the body a bit of a break. So all of those things are super interesting.
And again, I can't speak highly enough of the coaches.
Were there any obstacles, any other obstacles?
I guess the intensity could be, that can be viewed as an obstacle.
Were there any other major obstacles or aha moments that occurred over these eight, nine
months on the training side?
Yeah. It's funny when Ash and I were kind of reviewing from the first three blocks,
he was like, what do you think was the biggest takeaways? And we kind of sat down and we thought
of a couple of them. But he was like, I think one of the biggest that for me, he was like, yeah,
I gave you the permission to actually do less. So instead of forcing myself,
you know, two cardio sessions a day, you know, or, and, you know, a weight training, always trying
to feel like I'm dying from a hit workout, you know, it's okay to just go in, you know, do my
pool day and go for a 20, 30 minute walk and not feel like I'm absolutely dead. Uh, especially when
you look at that over, Hey, I need to do five, to do five you know workouts a day over the next
12 weeks i had never done a deload week in my life even though prior i've been consistent and
not skipped a workout for you know a year plus so i've done that consistency before but never
actually deloaded so even having the faith that like yep i'm gonna follow this as laid out right
did a deload came back and i'm like oh I'm lifting more weight the week after I deload.
This is weird, and I actually feel good, and my hunger is more manageable.
So for me, it was really finding more optimal programming and trusting it
and not always just trying to run myself under the ground.
It's funny.
That makes me think of even, so not today's workout,
but Monday's workout. So I go to a local gym and I go at the same time. I'm lifting Monday,
Wednesday, and Friday. Then I'm doing cardio on the other days. And there's a guy who's always
there at the same time. His name's Howard. Nice guy. You get to know some of the people who are friendlier, you inevitably get to know them. And he's a bodybuilder. So he's in there, I mean, his Monday
workout, it's three and a half hours, I think. And he's a big dude and that's what he likes to do.
And so my workout was probably an hour. And it's just funny because he's in there for hours and he's bigger than I am for sure.
But my workouts to him seem like warmups, basically.
Like, you're already done?
Like, I just got warmed up.
Yeah.
And it's definitely, that's like something we definitely talked about. You hit a point of diminishing returns that you can get 90% of the results from this set of effort, and the extra 100% effort is only going to get you maybe 5% more, and it's going to run you into the ground a lot quicker.
room rate like I had, losing 50 pounds, it's far better to really focus on, can I do this for 10 months in a diet? And then can I adopt a program that's going to help me stay fit for the rest of
my life? What about cardio? What was the plan there? Yeah. So initially all we did was just
walking, right? He really, especially because of that background, if I was like, oh, let's do a
hit, let's just do a tons of cardio. he purposely made me focus and prioritize on the weight lifting and really judge my success there um so we actually just did
30 minute walks every day um and he said you know if you want to go from your walks you can do that
but you know really make sure that we prioritize the diet and the weight lifting and that's what's
going to get us you know moving the needle in the right direction i like rucking so we were you know
give me some some extra leeway
to go do some of those. I ended up doing two go-ruck events during the time, which is really
cool because I actually did one just a couple of months into the program and it was 13 or 14 miles.
And then I did the same exact ruck with an extra 30% weight and cut 45 minutes off my time near the end of it. So even though I wasn't necessarily training for that specific event, just like the general physical preparedness and health benefits just transfer across your whole life.
Absolutely. And so that was it for the whole period. It was walking and rucking.
Absolutely. And so, so that was it for the whole period. It was walking and rucking.
Yeah. You know, he said, you know, if I really want to do hit, he can help me program, you know, a day or two in, or if I really wanted to run or something like that, you know, he was willing to
do that. But when we talked about what are my actual goals and it was like, you know, gain
strength, you know, get lean. He was like, I, we can do that managing the cardio and not doing too
much. Um, and I think that also helps knowing yourself, right?
Because of my history in the past, I'm just like, yeah, run yourself, do as much cardio
as possible.
It made more sense for me to back off that, really just focus on some basic cardiovascular
health, but use the weightlifting and then use the diet as the tool to move the scale.
Yeah, exactly.
diet as the tool to move the scale. Yeah, exactly. And that's a good example in the exercise domain of modifications that people will make in the dietary domain. Like,
for example, maybe not having a treat meal on a regular basis because they find that when they do,
they just tend to overdo it. It doesn't mean
that much to them. And so they'd rather just not, or they just avoid certain things when they're
going to eat off plan. They just avoid ice cream, for example, because they know that if they get
that pint of ice cream, eating 300 calories of it, it's just not satisfying. So
they're going to eat the whole pint. And so things like that are in your case, not doing as much
cardio as maybe emotionally you felt compelled to do was actually the right decision. And just
staying cognizant of, okay, well, what am I trying to do here? Am I trying to just do a bunch of cardio because I want to do a bunch of cardio or even because I like doing a bunch of cardio? Is that the goal? Or is the goal to gain muscle, gain strength, get my body fat down to the level I want it to be at?
level I want it to be at. Okay. So if that's the goal, then how does that then interface with this cardio desire? Okay. Well, it's time to turn the volume down on that.
Yeah. Yeah. And I think that that was, again, another one of those really powerful coaching
moments was what is the latent purpose of us choosing an exercise, whether it be a weight
lifting exercise or a cardio modality.
What is the actual latent purpose of us choosing that?
And then what do we hope the result to be?
And then make sure that we have some meaningful metric to track it by.
So really thinking about it in those terms helped me understand better the exercise selection and why am I going to plan out my week like this.
It definitely changed my mindset as to
not just do as much work physically as possible within some period of time to why choose this
exercise because we want to develop this end result. Makes sense. Well, this was a great
discussion. I think that that's everything that I had on my list. Is there anything that I should have asked that I didn't ask?
Anything else kind of bounce around in your head that you want to share before we wrap up?
I would say different people have different goals.
But for me, if I could go back in time and tell myself something, it was be willing to try new things, whether it be focus on those compound exercises, try the rest periods, try something
like the BLS philosophy, and then just be patient. Show up and do the work, but don't expect just
because the weight didn't move that day or that week, it's okay. If you're being honest with
yourself, you're tracking accurately, and you're showing up and doing the work, you will get the
results. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. I mean, it's really that simple. And it's also cool that
once you have experienced it, certainly once you've achieved the amount of success with it
that you have, then it has all crystallized for you. And there just are no more concerns about body composition, at least in terms of what to do and what not to do.
And once you see these things work, at least I experienced this and I've heard from many people over the years, where in some cases, in many cases, probably there's a relief to it because it's like, finally, you have a solution
that makes sense logically. It makes sense empirically and it makes sense for you personally.
And it's something that you can sustain and you can do indefinitely and there's there's no going back to before and you're no longer going
to be kind of lost at sea trying to find a direction to go in which unfortunately is uh
it's it's very easy to find yourself in that position in the body composition space in particular because there's so much bad information out there.
So many people, in some cases, who are very highly credentialed and well-spoken, and they really seem to know what they're talking about.
And sometimes they're even referencing research, but they're complete frauds.
And they know it.
I mean, they know that what they're saying is not true. And've worked it out for themselves one way or another, why that's okay
and why it's for the greater good. That's usually what it comes down to. It's some form of that
thinking where I'm lying. I'm telling noble lies. Yeah, it's a lie. But if I were to tell people the
truth, then most of them wouldn't listen to me because
they don't want to hear it.
So it's actually better for them that I'm lying and getting them two results, not for
the reasons that I'm giving, but two results nonetheless and so on.
And so there's just so much of that, so much of that in fitness.
And so I don't know if you experienced that,
that moment of relief, but I remember as things really started to come together
and I realized that, oh, this is, this is how it works. This is how dieting works. And this
is how training works. And I just have to keep doing these things this way and then I'll reach my goal.
Oh, cool.
And that is very motivating, at least to me, even if I knew it's going to take a couple of years to reach my goal.
But all I have to do is just show up and do these things and I'll get there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I definitely, definitely feel that sense of relief, right?
It feels like instead of like fighting my body, I'm working with my body and it is
definitely a huge relief. And, you know, just again, the knowledge of just master the basics,
right? Know how to choose a proper diet, make sure you're resting, make sure you have a,
you know, solid programming and exercising, sleeping enough, right? And then stress
management. And if you can handle those five things, you'll get the results. Just do it
consistently. I love it. Well, thanks again, Luke, for taking the time to do this. I really appreciate it.
Yeah. Thanks for having me, Mike.
Absolutely.
Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And if you did,
subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes.
And it also helps me because it increases the rankings of the show a little bit, which, an email, mike at muscleforlife.com,
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to hear from you soon.