Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How Often Should You Switch Exercises?

Episode Date: May 24, 2021

I’ve churned through over 150,000 emails, social media comments and messages, and blog comments in the last 6 years. And that means I’ve fielded a ton of questions. As you can imagine, some questi...ons pop up more often than others, and I thought it might be helpful to take a little time every month to choose a few and record and share my answers. So, in this round, I answer the following question: How Often Should You Switch Exercises? If you have a question you’d like me to answer, leave a comment below or if you want a faster response, send an email to mike@muscleforlife.com. Mentioned on the Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, Mike Matthews here, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today. Now, as you can imagine, I have fielded a lot of communication and a lot of questions over the years. I've easily gone through over 200,000 emails, social media comments and messages, and blog comments since I got into the fitness racket back in 2012. And some questions pop up more often than others. And some are very topical. Sometimes they are related to things that a lot of people are talking about. And so I thought it would be helpful to take some time on the podcast now and
Starting point is 00:00:39 then and answer questions that people are asking me. On ones that I think all of you out there may benefit from or may enjoy as well. So in this episode, I'm going to answer the question, how often should you be switching exercises? Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health and fitness books, including the number one bestselling weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger, as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef. Now, these books have sold well over 1 million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can find them on all
Starting point is 00:01:26 major online retailers like Audible, Amazon, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play, as well as in select Barnes and Noble stores. And I should also mention that you can get any of the audiobooks 100% free when you sign up for an Audible account. And this is a great way to make those pockets of downtime, like commuting, meal prepping, and cleaning, more interesting, entertaining, and productive. And so if you want to take Audible up on this offer, and if you want to get one of my audio books for free, just go to www.buylegion.com
Starting point is 00:02:00 slash Audible and sign up for your account. So again, if you appreciate my work, and if you want to see more of it, and if you want to learn time-proven and evidence-based strategies for losing fat, building muscle and getting healthy and strategies that work for anyone and everyone, regardless of age or circumstances, please do consider picking up one of my best-selling books, Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women, and The Shredded Chef for my favorite fitness-friendly recipes. All right. So for quite a long time now, for at least a few decades, many people have thought
Starting point is 00:02:39 that changing your exercises, and I'm talking resistance training here, that changing up your routine was an important part of proper workout programming. That if you did the same exercises too often, your body would get used to them, quote unquote, or would adapt to them so much so that nothing you could do, so long as you were still doing those exercises, would cause you to gain more muscle and strength. No matter what you did in terms of volume or frequency or intensity, if you were still doing the same exercises, your body wasn't going to respond well to that training. And another school thought was that it wasn't that dramatic, but if you were to change the exercises frequently and manipulate volume, frequency, and intensity properly, you would get better results. And one of those theories was
Starting point is 00:03:33 often used to promote the muscle confusion technique. Now, of course, the confusion part was an analogy. It was metaphorical. People weren't saying that muscles literally have cognitive abilities and you can confuse them. And if you confuse them, they will respond more anabolically to training. At least I never came across that. But the idea was, and it still is because muscle confusion is still a thing. It's not as popular as it was when I first started lifting weights like 20 years ago, but it's still around. It's still promoted by various experts and gurus and influencers. Anyway, the idea is by continually exposing your muscles to different stimuli in the form of different exercises, you are going to gain muscle and gain strength faster than doing
Starting point is 00:04:20 the same exercises, exposing them to the same type of stimulus again and again for extended periods of time, even if you work to progressively overload your muscles, even if you work with that same exercise to add weight to the bar or add weight to the dumbbells or gain reps. Now, this is not true. The muscle confusion theory has not panned out. You are not going to gain muscle faster simply by changing up your exercises more frequently. Now, what is also true, though, is if you keep doing the same exercises and using the same amount of weight and doing the same amount of reps, then nothing much is going to change. You are not going to gain muscle and strength doing that. You're going to have to continually challenge your muscles more and more over time. And what
Starting point is 00:05:10 that comes down to for intermediate and advanced weightlifters is you're going to have to continue getting stronger over time. You're going to have to continue gaining whole body strength. And you will see that in your one rep maxes on your big lifts. Most, you will see that in your one rep maxes on your big lifts most. You will see that in your 1RM on your squat, whether it's a back or front or safety bar or whatever other variation you're doing. You're going to see that on your 1RM on your deadlift, whether it's conventional, trap bar, sumo, whatever, on your bench press, on your overhead press. So long as those 1RMs are going up over time, you are going to continue gaining muscle. And so that's why every strength training program that has proven the test of time, that has
Starting point is 00:05:52 been with us for a while and proven its effectiveness, focuses on those exercises. You do those exercises every week, usually several times per week, and sometimes to the exclusion of everything else. Sometimes that's all you're doing. Other programs focus on those exercises and then supplement them with accessory exercises, sometimes just for aesthetic purposes. Like for example, if you were to only do those exercises, if you're a guy, you're probably not going to get the biceps you want. If you want to get the big biceps, you're probably going to have to do some biceps curls in addition to your heavy pulls. And so a strength training program may have you do the pulling and then also allow you to do some barbell curling, for example.
Starting point is 00:06:35 So just to make myself clear here, so long as you are progressing on an exercise, so long as you are gaining reps with your working weights and then eventually kind of cashing in that progress for more weight. So for example, if you are using double progression and it doesn't really matter what exercise you're doing, let's say you're working in the rep range of six to eight, or maybe it's four to six, like you do a lot of in bigger, leaner, stronger. And if you hit one, two, or three sets of let's say six, depending on the programming, you then add weight to the bar or the dumbbell or the machine, and you work now with that new heavier weight until you can hit the progression target for that, add weight, and so forth. And so as long as that is occurring, you are training productively, even if you're doing the same exercise for one, two, three, four months. So long as you're getting stronger on that exercise, you are accomplishing what you want to accomplish. Now, maybe you could do better with a different exercise. For example,
Starting point is 00:07:31 if you were only doing the leg press for your lower body and you were progressing, I would say that's great, but you can probably do even better if we include a barbell squat in there, a back squat or a front squat or a safety bar squat. And so if you were doing, let's say six or eight sets of leg press per week, and maybe additional sets of some other exercises I would propose, why don't we split that leg press volume in half? Let's do three or maybe four sets per week. And then let's do three or four sets of barbell squatting as well. And if we were to do that, you probably would make progress a bit faster. But we're not changing the exercise simply to change the exercise. We're not changing because
Starting point is 00:08:12 we think that the leg press is going to become less and less effective simply because it's the same exercise again and again. We're changing more strategically. We are taking some of that volume and replacing it with volume on an exercise that is even more effective for training the lower body. And so just to make sure that I've made my point here, I just want to say this one more time. It's true that if you keep providing your muscles with the same stimulus, the same exercise, the same amount of weight, the same amount of reps, you are going to stagnate. Things do have to change. The stimulus does have to change over time to continue gaining
Starting point is 00:08:52 muscle and strength. But the key changes are in load and volume. Number of hard sets per major muscle group per week is a very practical way to look at volume. Just changing exercises isn't enough. Even if an exercise feels more difficult than the one that you're doing, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's going to be more effective for gaining muscle and strength. But what is certainly effective for gaining more muscle is getting stronger, is adding weight to the exercise, to the bar, to the dumbbells, to the machine. And so intensity is something that does need to change. And it needs to change as often as you can change it, right? You want to add weight to the exercises as frequently as you can. Now, of course, as you become more experienced, it gets
Starting point is 00:09:36 harder and harder to do that. You may have to work a month just to add weight to an exercise, but that's of course just part of the game. And once you have added weight to it, you have progressed a little bit further. You have made it a little bit closer to your genetic potential for overall muscularity and strength. And another training factor that you can manipulate profitably that you can use to provide additional stimulus for muscle growth is volume. And you can look at volume in a couple of different ways, but hard sets per major muscle group per week and total reps per major muscle group per week are two of the more useful methods. And I don't want to go off on a long tangent on that. If you want to learn more about that in particular, pick up my book Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which is specifically for intermediate and advanced weightlifters.
Starting point is 00:10:29 Obviously, it is skewed toward men. The title gives that away, but the fundamentals apply just as much to women as men, and I will create a female version of that book. However, the fundamental principles are not going to change. The examples are going to change, and probably the wording of different things is going to change when I know I'm speaking specifically to women. And the programming is going to change because the Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger program has more upper body volume than most women would like, and not enough lower body volume. And so I will be flipping those things when I create the female book, but women can read beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, learn a lot. And by the end of the book, they'll probably be able to just tweak the programming themselves without any
Starting point is 00:11:14 issue, especially if they are an experienced weightlifter, which they should be to follow that program. They don't have to be. And same thing for men to read the book and to learn, but the programming is inappropriately difficult for people who are new. That's all. Anyway, coming back to this point regarding volume, that is something that you can manipulate. You can change it over the course of training cycles to gain muscle faster than if you made no changes. If you just did the same number of sets per major muscle group per week and you worked in the same rep ranges by changing rep ranges, for example, you can gain strength faster in particular. That's been shown in research. And because we know that gaining
Starting point is 00:11:56 strength leads to gaining muscle, especially in intermediate and advanced weightlifters, it is reasonable to assume that setting up your training like that, if you're an experienced weightlifter, is going to be better for building muscle. So I think all of that serves as a useful preamble for just directly answering the question now of how often you should switch exercises. So I'm going to say every month to four months, depending on where you're at in your training and what your programming looks like and what you're trying to accomplish. For example, I'm following my Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger program, and you do the same
Starting point is 00:12:33 exercises every week for four months. And what does change over the four months is the intensity and the volume. So for example, in the beginning of the program, your first month starts with 70% of one rep max on primary exercises on the squat, deadlift, bench press, overhead press, four sets of 10. And that's very hard. That is almost cardio sets of 10 of deadlifts, for example, with one or two good reps left in the tank and same thing for squats, which I have to do tomorrow. Yay. And then the following week you add some weight to the bar, you go up to 75% and now you're doing sets of eight and then you go up to 80%. You're doing sets of six and the
Starting point is 00:13:18 program progressively goes then from the 10 reps in the beginning of a macro cycle. And if we fast forward to the end of this four month macro cycle, now you're doing sets of four sets of two, and you're ending with 95% on the bar and doing AMRAP as many reps as possible sets. So you start with higher volume in the sense of the number of reps you're doing to lower volume, but the volume in terms of total hard sets per major muscle group per week does not change at all. You're still doing the same number, which is 12 to 15, maybe as much as 18, actually, in the case of a couple of smaller muscle groups, hard sets per major muscle group per week. That stays the same, but your total reps are higher at the beginning of the macro cycle and then higher at the beginning of the macro cycle and
Starting point is 00:14:06 then lower at the end of the macro cycle. And conversely, the load is lower at the beginning and higher at the end. And in the book, I explain why I set it up like that and why I think that is a very productive way to train. Now, that doesn't mean that you have to do the same exercises for four months on end. Like I said a few minutes ago, you can change your exercises every month, two months, three or four months. I mean, I suppose you could actually go even longer. For example, when you're new to training, there's no real need to change anything much in your routine for the first three to six months, probably,
Starting point is 00:14:45 unless you run into some problems, unless an exercise is causing you pain, or if you're feeling pain or strange when you are training, heed that because that can precede an injury or minimally just precede a nagging problem that gets in the way of progress. But so long as there are no issues, you can do the same thing in the gym, same exercises. And of course you want to be working to add weight to those exercises, but same number of sets, a very structured routine. You can do that for again, six months. I mean, I've come across people over the years who have done the same basic, like bigger, leaner, stronger routine. I give people a year of bigger,
Starting point is 00:15:25 leaner, stronger workouts with the book and they are split up into different phases. I've heard from many people over the years who just really liked the first phase and so they never bothered with the second, third or beyond. They just did the first phase again and again and again for their first year and they were thrilled with it. I've heard from many guys that were able to gain 15, 20, 25 pounds of muscle, lose a bunch of fat doing that. And that's fantastic, right? Because why make something harder than it needs to be? Why make something more work than it needs to be? Now, as you get more experienced and weights get heavier, I think it makes sense to make changes to your exercises
Starting point is 00:16:00 every eight to 10 weeks or so. And that includes the big compound lifts. Now, what I don't recommend is that you replace a compound exercise, like let's say you're doing the back squat, the barbell back squat for eight weeks. I don't recommend that you replace that with an accessory exercise or even a pair of accessory exercises. For example, I would not recommend that you then start doing leg extensions and leg curls to start your lower body workout and don't do any squatting. What I would recommend instead is that you use a variation of that squat. So maybe you go from the back squat to the front squat. That's something that I've been doing for a long time. Or to the safety bar squat. That's what I'm going to be
Starting point is 00:16:40 doing in this macro cycle. And many gyms don't have a safety bar, but if your gym does, give it a try. It's a very back-friendly and quadriceps-dominant form of the barbell squat. And so then, if you're going from, let's say, the back squat for eight weeks to the front squat, that's good. And then you should also be doing a hip hinge. You should be doing some sort of big pull, a big deadlift. It could be a conventional deadlift to a trap bar deadlift, or maybe to a sumo deadlift. If that works for your body, the sumo deadlift doesn't play nicely with my anatomy. It's just uncomfortable. It's just awkward. So I don't do it at all, but I do alternate between conventional pulling and trap bar pulling. And as far as the bench press goes, you can go from the flat barbell bench press to the incline barbell bench
Starting point is 00:17:25 press. That can help also make sure that the upper part of your chest develops nicely. If you only do flat pressing and decline pressing like many guys, particularly in the gym, what you may find, and I once had this problem, is that you build a big chest, but it's very bottom heavy. A lot of the mass is in the lower portion of the pecs and the upper portion looks almost like you don't even lift. Well, a simple way to make sure that doesn't happen to you or fix it if it does happen to you is to include regular incline pressing, close grip pressing, and or reverse grip pressing in your routine. Most people can do one or two, if not all three of those comfortably. Some people, for example, can't get the reverse grip bench press
Starting point is 00:18:12 in particular to feel good for them. And that's okay. If you're one of those people, don't worry about it. You don't have to do it. You can get all of the upper chest development you want out of really just incline pressing, but you might as well also do some close grip pressing because it's great for your triceps as well. And so that would be how you could change your horizontal pressing. And now for vertical pressing, you could go from a standing press. It could be a standing military to maybe a push press or just a traditional overhead press. And then you could go to a seated, like a seated military press. That's what I'm doing for this macro cycle. And I like
Starting point is 00:18:45 that the seated press allows you to really overload your shoulders in particular, whereas a standing press is more of a whole body exercise, which is great. But again, I just like to alternate between these exercises. Now, as far as the accessory exercises go, the exercises that you use to rack up additional volume in the muscle groups that just aren't adequately trained by primary, by compound exercises alone, you have more leeway there. So whereas I'm recommending that you switch between really just a handful of exercises for these key movements, for your pressing, you know, your horizontal and your vertical pressing, for your squatting, for your hip hinging, you know, your horizontal and your vertical pressing, for your squatting,
Starting point is 00:19:25 for your hip hinging, you know, your big pulling, your deadlifting. With accessory exercises, let's say with something for the biceps, you could go from an easy bar curl to a barbell curl, to a cable curl, to a dumbbell curl, to a hammer curl, to a machine curl, and on and on. And the same thing goes for really any other accessory exercise. Anything that you do to directly train your triceps or to train your delts, aside from your front delts, which of course are trained in your pressing. But if you're doing side raises or rear raises, you could do them with dumbbells, you can do them on machines, you can do them with cables, and you should be doing more pulling than just deadlifting to make sure that your pressing volume isn't way more than your pulling volume. Ideally, on a weekly basis,
Starting point is 00:20:14 they are comparable. They don't have to be exactly the same. But if you're doing twice as much pressing as pulling, that's not good for your shoulders and that may cause problems in time. And so you have a lot of options there. You could do a barbell row. You could do a dumbbell row. You could do a cable row. You could do a lat pull down. You could do a chin up. You can do a pull up and so on and so forth. And so then what you would do is every eight to 10 weeks, let's say, or maybe longer, if you have a good reason to stick with exercises longer, like with my Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger program. You are changing everything, but you're following the rules that I just gave you.
Starting point is 00:20:50 You are still starting your workouts with big compound movements, which require the most energy and the most focus. And you are just alternating between a few variations of those big movements. And then you're moving into your isolation or accessory work. And you may want to change up those exercises in such a way that you don't repeat a single accessory exercise for months. It could be four, six, eight, or even 10 months. Now, what most people do though is they find the accessory exercises that work best for them. And there is individual variation in terms of how well our muscles respond to a given exercise. How much of a pump do we get from that exercise? How much of a drop in performance from set to set do we see? Which is a good sign. It's showing that
Starting point is 00:21:37 it's stimulating that muscle group. How much do we feel the target muscle group working? How much muscle soreness do we get from the exercise? Those are all things to consider when you're finding the exercises that work best for you, and particularly the accessory exercises. So what many people who are relatively new to this do is they will rotate through quite a few different accessory exercises, and they will just make notes of the ones that seem to work best for them and then alternate between those. For most of us, we find four to six exercises for each major muscle group that really seem to stimulate those muscles best. And we just stick to those and we don't go back to the ones that are just clearly inferior. And if you want to learn more about that in particular,
Starting point is 00:22:22 listen to the interview I did with Dr. Mike Isretel. It got posted a few months ago now, and it's all on that topic, finding the best exercises for you. Just go over to legionathletics.com, search for Is just gave, I suppose, is if you want to change accessory exercises more often than every eight to 10 weeks, that's okay. For example, if you just like variety and some people really find that it keeps them interested in their training when they're doing new things at least every month or two, and that then helps them have better workouts and look forward to their workouts, then I say, great, do that. But I would not recommend making changes more than once every four weeks. And if you are going to make changes every month or so, stick to the accessory exercises, try to do just one type of compound movement for at least eight to 10 weeks before making a change. least eight to 10 weeks before making a change. All right, well, that's it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing
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Starting point is 00:24:18 life.com, and share your thoughts on how I can do this better. I read everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback, even if it is criticism. I'm open to it. And of course, you can email me if you have positive feedback as well, or if you have questions really relating to anything that you think I could help you with, definitely send me an email. That is the best way to get ahold of me, mikeatmusclefullife.com. And that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode. And I hope to hear from you soon.

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