Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Kurtis Frank on Improving Your Metabolic Flexibility
Episode Date: August 14, 2019One of the problems with rigidly following a restrictive or narrowly focused dietary protocol like low-carb or low-fat is when you go off-plan for whatever reason, you can get slapped. For instance, i...f you’re a high-carber and miss a meal, you might find your energy levels plummeting, or if you’re a low-carber and indulge in some cake at a party, you might find yourself craving—and eating—every carb in sight. Ideally, these things wouldn’t happen—our bodies would be able to adapt to varying dietary circumstances and maintain an even physiological keel. In other words, ideally our bodies would possess a fair amount of “metabolic flexibility.” If you haven’t heard of metabolic flexibility, that’s understandable because few people have, and in this episode, Kurtis Frank explains what it is and how to improve it so our bodies can better shift between different fuel types and thus be more adaptable to whatever situations we find ourselves in. In case you’re not familiar with Kurtis, he’s the co-founder and former lead researcher and writer of Examine.com and the current Director of Research and Development for my supplement company Legion Athletics,. Here’s a sneak peek of what we talk about in this interview. - Insulin resistance and carb sensitivity as you age. - The signs that you lack metabolic flexibility. - How to avoid sugar crashes or carb-triggered binges. - And more... 5:01 - What does metabolic flexibility mean? 6:36 - Do genetics play a role on whether the body will burn carbs or fats for energy? 7:45 - Are high carb diets still the go-to for endurance athletes? 9:31 - Does the body have an easier time processing carbs if you’re active? 15:44 - What are some signs that show lack of metabolic flexibility? 42:59 - Do certain exercises affect the way your body burns carbs? 58:48 - What’s new and interesting in the formulation front? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
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Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service where we can help you get in the best shape of your life. My team and I have helped people of all ages, circumstances, and needs. So no matter how
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legionathletics.com slash coaching. Hello, boys and girls. Welcome. Welcome to another episode
of the Muscle Life Podcast. I am Mike Matthews, and we are here to talk about metabolic flexibility. What is that? Well, one of the problems with rigidly following
a restrictive or even just a narrowly focused dietary protocol like low carb, which I would
say is more of a restrictive protocol, or even low fat, high carb, which is more just narrowly
focused, right? And the reason why I'd say low carb is more restrictive is in actual
practice, it's more restrictive, there are just a lot more foods that you can't eat that you
probably want to eat than when you are following a low or lower fat and higher carb diet. Anyways,
so the problem is when you do that, very rigidly for a long time, when you do go off plan,
for whatever reason, you can get slapped. For instance, if you are a high carber
and you miss a meal, you might find that your energy levels plummet. Or if you're a low carber
and let's say you splurge on some cake, let's just have a piece of cake at a party, you might
then find yourself craving and probably eating every other carb in sight.
Now, ideally, these things wouldn't happen. Ideally, our bodies would be able to adapt to
varying dietary circumstances to maintain an even physiological keel. In other words,
our bodies ideally would possess a fair amount of metabolic flexibility. Now, if you haven't
heard of this term before, I understand because few people have. And in this episode, Curtis Frank,
the one and only Curtis, returns to explain what it is and how to improve it so our bodies can
better shift between different fuel types, which as he explains
is really what this comes down to. Because if our bodies can do that, they can be more adaptable to
whatever situations we find ourselves in. And in case you are not familiar with Curtis, he is the
co-founder and the former lead researcher and writer of examine.com. And he is the current
director of research and development
for my supplement company, Legion Athletics. So here's a quick sneak peek of some of the things
that we talk about in this interview. We talk about insulin resistance and carb sensitivity.
As you age, we talk about the signs that you lack metabolic flexibility and could benefit from some of the tips he's going to share. He talks about
how to avoid sugar crashes or carb triggered food binges and more. Curtis has returned or is it beef
chungus has returned. That is my name today. I am the chungus. Good. And you know, I had to Google
that. And then apparently according to urban Urban Dictionary, that it includes but is not limited to a chunky anus is the definition. And you didn't know that.
So you learned something.
I did not. But if we redefine that as beefy glutes, then I shall partake in that definition.
Striated, beefy glutes.
Oh, man, I need two chairs. My glutes are that chungus.
Imagine. Imagine you're on an airplane and that's the complaint.
My glutes are too large. Give me two seats.
Just put the armrest up and you're good. Or just spill over, invade their safe space.
We're not here to talk about chunky anuses or glutes. We're here to talk about metabolic flexibility. Now, what does that mean? Is that a term that you just made up? I feel like it's
something that gets thrown around at all. Do other people talk about this?
It's a somewhat niche term and it's technically non-legitimate. So it's not a scientific
terminology. It's kind of like how in the past when I talked about pseudovitamins,
pseudovitamins is not a
legitimate term at all so if you try to like look through scientific evidence for pseudovitamins you
won't find anything because it's a non-legitimate term that if it gets enough popularity maybe it
becomes legitimate and metabolic flexibility is also one of those things but whether it's
legitimate or not we can still talk about the concepts behind it. And at least when it comes to metabolic flexibility, that particular operationalization has been like temporary definition.
That's what operationalization means.
Has been usually for coaches that deal with athletes.
They know this and people who are trying to just cause weight loss or weight gain in people who are athletic.
At the end of the day, the entire initial premise of metabolic flexibility was
we could use carbs as fuel or we could use fats as fuel. But sometimes we come across people who
really easily use carbs as fuel, but for some reason they never use fats. And there are some
people who very preferentially use fats as fuel, but if you give them carbs, they never use fats. And there are some people who very preferentially use fats
as fuel. But if you give them carbs, they don't get extra fuel. They just can't utilize it that
well. So the concept of can we switch between these two fuel sources is what led to the idea
of metabolic flexibility. And you just mean genetically, you're saying that their bodies
are more suited to burning carbs versus fats and vice versa?
It's not necessarily genetic, although that is a component. It is also just habituation.
If you have a diet that's like, say, 30% proteins, 50% carbs, and then 20% fats,
that's a very high carb diet. So if you have that every day for a few months,
your body will be forced to adapt to a high carb diet. But then if you have that every day for a few months, your body will be forced to adapt to a high-carb diet.
But then if you immediately switch to a ketosis diet, where you have no carbs and just a bunch of fats,
your body was just forced to adapt to using carbs as a fuel source.
And now you're going to be temporarily unable to find enough glycogen to actually use as fuel,
and you're going to go through some hell for a short period of time until your body adapts once more and furthermore if you're adapted using carbohydrates
as a fuel source you may be a bit stronger when it comes to anaerobic exercises but your aerobic
exercises are going to just fucking suck but if you are adapted to fats then you could be like
an incredible jogger and all that, but you're going
to be weak as hell. Is that the case though with, don't you find high carb diets are still the go-to
for endurance athletes? It's because they have metabolic flexibility. They can balance between
the two things. They're not eating that high carb diet for like two months straight then. They're,
I guess you could say cycling through their macros i guess essentially but like the entire idea behind metabolic flexibility is that if you can have
carbs and fats in your diet and utilize both of them efficiently you're going to be top grade like
top notch and all that stuff but if for some reason there is an impairment that prevents you
from switching between the two on an as needed basis, you can
only unlock the bioenergetic potential of one of them, but not both. So I guess it kind of depends
what you're doing. Like if you're just an everyday person who's lifting weights and doing a little
bit of cardio here and there, a high carb diet probably generally is just going to be the way
to go, right? Depends. Like as long as you're not insulin resistant like for me i generally go by the
idea where you want a higher protein and carb diet maybe lower fat diet in youth until you get to that
point where carbs start making you fat and then you start transitioning over to a lower carb higher
fat diet but if you do that transition well like just to clarify when you say carbs making you fat, obviously, I mean, you're not saying
that eating carbs equals getting fatter, but you just mean as insulin resistance goes up,
your body just gets worse and worse at processing the carbs that you eat, right?
Correct.
The carbs inherently do not make you fat, but as you age, different changes occur to
your body.
And there may very well be a day where the carbs are not processed as well as they should be.
And they're more obesogenic than when you're like 18 or 20 or so.
And is that the case if you do a good job taking care of yourself, though?
If you stay active and you are, let's say, an above average in terms of muscularity and you have a healthy body fat level and so forth?
of muscularity and you have a healthy body fat level and so forth? It is my personal belief that the change from carbs to fat during the aging process will be inevitable. But by being active,
by having a high muscularity and just take care of your health, you can delay that day for as long
as you can. But that being said, like it's not a specific topic of research where there's too much
evidence on it.
Just seeing people who were in their 20s and monitoring their diets for 80 years kind of thing,
that's not something we have direct evidence on.
It's always going to be theoretical.
That's interesting. I haven't heard of that before.
Well, it's just more of a health theory and all that
because all the fat old people I've seen still eat a ton of carbs.
The more healthy old people I see tend to have lower carb diets while at the same time
being athletic.
The ones I talked to, at least, they all mentioned that they always ate carbs until one day carbs
just didn't sit well with them.
And then they started reducing them.
Yeah, I've had people mention that to me, actually.
People who were always into fitness.
So it's not like these weren't sedentary people and they weren't just ignorant and they just noticed
a difference. Yeah. People will say that there was a point, I want to say 40s would probably be
the earliest, probably more in the 50s where I've had people mention that to me where they're just
like, yeah, there was a point when their body just didn't seem to do as well with carbs as it once did, even though they are still doing
everything they've always been doing. They're staying in shape. They're exercising. They
couldn't do anything better, actually. They're doing everything they can.
Yeah. So it's just a natural consequence of aging. When you age, this stuff's going to happen
eventually and nothing's permanent. We're all going to die one day.
I don't want to get too nihilistic on everyone listening here.
But the best we can do is to sort of delay that.
And the reason I believe personally that these people were able to handle carbs so well for so long
is because through just a balance of athleticism, a good diet, and just good rest and all that,
they preserve metabolic flexibility for as much as they reasonably could. And then the aging process
started to kick in. And then they started to have to respect the limitations of their body.
Yeah, that's a good way to put it.
Yeah. The main problem that I see is when there's people who are far younger, say people who are like 25 years old or so, and they're already reporting like,
oh, I can have like a nice carby breakfast, but then I have a sugar crash an hour later. It's
like, no, you're 25. That should not be happening. And in that case, I mean, obviously there are
many different reasons why that could be happening. But if we're assuming that they are generally taking care of themselves, I guess that's
where this point of metabolic flexibility could come into play.
Yes, because when it comes to a sugar crash, you're basically saying that you put carbohydrates
in your body and they energized you and you felt good.
But then you went along your day or whatever and eventually your body metabolized
all those carbohydrates and at this point it should have shifted the load for energy towards
the fat stored in your abdomen or wherever on your body like there should have been a transient
shift towards okay the carbs are done fats pick up the slack and then it should have been smooth
going on from there but when you come to a sugar rush like excluding any potent drugs like if you take sugars laced with amphetamines
like obviously you're going to feel a crash but if it's just sugar then you should have just been
cruising for the next few hours if you feel a crash because of that, it's because your body was unable to mobilize fatty acids to provide
energy in a sufficient manner, which means that for one reason or another, your body just preferred
to utilize carbs and did not pass the buck over to fats what it needed to be. And if your body is
in such a state, then well, at the very least, you're going to have sugar crashes every time you eat carbs.
And that's just not a good way to live.
And you're probably also going to have a very hard time following any sort of intermittent
fasting type diet.
And if you miss a meal, you're not going to feel great.
And those are also things that I'm sure are natural consequences of lacking that metabolic
flexibility.
Yeah.
are natural consequences of lacking that metabolic flexibility. Yeah, because if you're, say, an 18 year old Olympian level athlete, you could temporarily deal with the lack of metabolic
flexibility as long as you just keep on pumping carbs in your face. If the sugar rush goes high,
then as it's about to go down, you just eat more sugars, it's going to be high again. So as long as you have that whole six to eight meals a day, all high carb stuff,
you can mitigate this stuff, even though you have no metabolic flexibility.
But you become obscenely dependent on the foods that you're eating.
But when it comes to just somebody who has a day job and has to have a breakfast and get out of the office,
it's no longer a practical option for them. They need to train their body
to hop between carbohydrates and fats for energy
and get the body used to the idea that,
you know, they're both available energy sources.
You can't just use one over the other.
You have to kind of use both.
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And maybe a good place to start in terms of practicality would be what are some signs,
just things that people could go, oh yeah, that's me, that you lack metabolic flexibility. So you've mentioned sugar highs and sugar crashes. What are some other signs? Because I'll take myself
as an example. I don't know. I think
I'm pretty good in terms of, even though I do follow a higher carb diet, it's not super high
carb, but like right now I'm eating in a slight surplus on my training days and then a larger
deficit on my rest days just to mitigate some of the fat gain. And so on my training days,
I'm eating a fair amount of carbs. I'm eating probably 450 grams or so. So it's not crazy, but it's quite a bit. But then take,
let's say on the weekends, because I'm eating about 2000 calories per day on Saturday and Sunday,
I'll usually skip breakfast just so I can get the calories in. I'll skip breakfast and I'll
eat light throughout the day, mostly just some protein, maybe in some fruit and then just have a bigger dinner. Cause I
just enjoy it more that way. And so I find that I'm fine. I feel good on my training days. It's
nice to have a bit more energy and I don't have any energy highs or energy lows unless maybe I
didn't sleep well. And on the weekends when I'm fasting for that, really, I'm just skipping
breakfast, but like, it's totally fine. I'm not hungry. I don't get energy. So someone like me, it sounds like I probably am fine in the
metabolic flexibility department and wouldn't have anything to gain from maybe cycling my carbs up or
my fats up or down or doing anything other than what I'm doing, right? Yeah, it seems like you're
pretty much in the clear. So when it comes to seeing whether or not you're susceptible to stuff,
it depends on whether you're high carb or high fat,
because the symptoms are different.
For somebody who's on a high carb diet, the main factor is,
well, first, before I get into anything,
I need to mention that carbohydrates in and of themselves
do have the ability to cause euphoria, ton of energy,
and I would say almost, well, to someone who's never had a carb in their life, it would definitely
have a drug-like effect for how potent they can be, but we've all had carbs in our life,
so we're kind of used to it. So to us, carbs just seem like a food source. To somebody who is on a high-carb diet, they will feel none of these acute effects of carbohydrates.
They'll just feel energy.
But they become very reliant on food frequency and meal frequency, I should say is the better term.
And so if they don't eat frequently, they have the sugar crashes.
They all of a sudden have reduced energy between meals.
And they feel that they can
never get something done unless they eat. It's fine for like a 19 year old Olympian. But when
you're a 35 year old house mother trying to lose weight, and the only way you can get energy is by
eating more food, that's not a good situation. So I would say that the main thing, if you're too carb dependent,
is if you have a high carb diet
and the meal frequency
and the timing around the meals you have carbs,
particularly also the glycemic index,
just how fast the carbs hit you,
if that has a very high relation
with your mood state and your energy levels,
you may be too reliant on carbs.
And of course,
if you go for like five hours without eating and you just turn into like a puddle of laziness and
apathy upon the ground, you're probably too reliant on carbs. Conversely, when it comes to
people who are like super low carb dieters or keto dieters, they're becoming very adapted to using
both fatty acids as well as ketone bodies to fuel their bodies, but they
become susceptible to carbohydrates. And if a keto dieter is able to, you know, go to a party with a
few family friends, have a cupcake and just enjoy the party and go home, they're in a good position.
But if a keto dieter, it has some sort of high glycemic carbohydrate
and then they immediately go into binge mode where they just as i mentioned before our podcast
started turn into the hulk and destroy every bakery within the city then they're not in good
state of metabolic flexibility because carbohydrates are hitting them too hard.
They become pretty much subject to the carbohydrates that go in their face.
The food has more power over them than their own thoughts do.
Too horny for carbs.
They're horny for the carbs.
That's what I'm saying.
Too horny for carbs.
It's too much, man.
Yeah, pretty much. At the end of the day, it's all about your lifestyle and just how you feel about this stuff.
Have you ever feel that by deviating from your diet a little bit, particularly when it comes to energy providing macronutrients, if you deviate and you suffer from that, then the plan that you're on is not suited towards your body.
Because after all, a diet plan is supposed to support your body, support your lifestyle and support whatever you do. But if you are condemned to your lifestyle plan, and the
moment you step out of it, then you just suffer because you deviated just the slightest, then
the diet plan has more power over you than you have over yourself. So it's a shitty diet plan.
And it's also shitty diet plan. And any deviation from it is not enjoyable, but it gives you that tiny extra edge that can make all the difference in a high level sports.
Okay, I guess that could be an argument for it.
But for everyday person who just wants to look good, feel good, why go through that?
Yeah, there's really no reason aside from the fact like going into an extreme can at least some who just started the diet, provide rapid and drastic results.
But then they just kind of get used to the fact that this diet did me a benefit,
thus I should stay on this diet. And they don't change it at all.
Carnivore diet, for example.
Yeah, pretty much. Which is, honestly, I have to say,
it's one of the stupidest things I've ever heard.
Yeah, I wrote a long article about it and recorded a podcast on it.
And it just makes no sense unless you need to do a true elimination diet, I guess.
And that's a good way is to eliminate literally everything and just have some meat and start
there and see what is messing your body up.
Yeah.
But even then, do you mind if I sidetrack a little bit?
I'm all about tangents.
Oh, sweet.
So because one of the intellectuals that i follow the most that i
adore the works of is jordan peterson so you're a racist nazi oh totally definitely racist not
all right perfect liberal nazis they're a plague but yeah like the entire thing with jordan peterson
is like whenever he speaks about his own field psychology i'm not in a position to screw with
him because the expertise is that much when it comes to political i'm not in a position to disagree with him because the
expertise is that much when it comes to political issues i am in a position to disagree because
neither of us are politicians but i don't want to disagree because he seems right and all that stuff
and then he mentions like yeah i'm on an all beef diet i don't eat vegetables or anything and i'm
just sitting there raging on my computer's like no you were the chosen one you're supposed
to bring intelligence to the world not to be a fucking dietary charlatan at the end of the day
his next book will be a diet book and he'll start selling he'll turn into a stephen gundry dude
he'll start selling fake fake supplements and shit jordan peterson and the midichlorians how
he became anakin skywalker that kind of shit. Like,
and you just got to take the supplements.
But the entire thing is like,
he had health problems,
which is fine.
Like, you know,
we all have health problems every now and then.
And he went into a phase one of an elimination diet where all he ate was meat.
And,
you know,
that's a decent start to an elimination diet.
But the entire point of an elimination diet is after you've proven that
for week one there's no health side effects with what you're eating, you're supposed to start adding
in more to see what the problems are. Oh, you can eat beef and chicken. That's great. Let's add in
broccoli and see if that harms you. Broccoli did not harm you? Congratulations, you're allowed in
the diet. Next week, bring some onions.
How do you feel?
Oh, you kind of feel bad.
I guess onions don't treat you that well.
So you leave the onions out.
That's the entire point of elimination diet.
But he's been on this completely meat eating diet for like almost a year now, I believe,
probably even more than that.
It's amazing how resilient the body is that's amazing that it can survive
on such a nutritionally bankrupt diet yeah and like the other thing is the friend when it comes
to peterson it's when you talk about diet or whatever like he admits that he's not an expert
in diet so at the very least i appreciate that but you mentioned how he had like apple cider once and it damn near incapacitated him for a
month and it's like dude you're literally a glass house right now and there's a little crack and
you're incapacitated because of a fermented apple humans are evolutionary designed to be trash
compactors who can eat literally anything and a fermented apple ko'd you for a month not only ko you're
not in a good state right now but didn't he said that like he didn't sleep for 30 days or something
and i think that was oh he was just he was just aggrandizing it i forget who was interviewing
him they were like wait a minute you're saying you literally he's like yo if he truly did not
sleep for 30 days he'd be dead of course no but he you literally, he's like. No, if he truly did not sleep for 30 days, he'd be dead.
Of course.
No, but he was saying that.
He was like, literally, I think it was, I drank the apple cider and then I didn't sleep for 30 days.
Like, no, actually that didn't happen.
I'm sorry.
That didn't happen.
So why are you even saying this?
I think a better interpretation would be, I did not sleep well for 30 days.
Because I have met people in the past who.
I mean, if if i remember he emphasized
like not even a wink literally did not sleep that was the point like his joe rogan interview when he
said that before that was it rogan i remember seeing a clip and i was like uh he was on the
joe rogan show when he said that but that was quite literally the point where i stopped being
a diehard fanboy and only became a regular fanboy.
See, as soon as he started talking about die, it's like, bro, I respect you because you're a field.
But this is my field.
So with all due respect, shut the fuck up.
Yeah, just go back to refusing to use people's pronouns.
Yeah, exactly.
Like that stuff I can understand and all that.
Go back to OG Peterson.
Get away from this
this new this new age og peterson on the other note i have met people who had for their entire
lives had no problems with sleeping because they define themselves as people who went to bed and
then just sort of fell asleep for eight hours head hits the pillow boom it's the morning now
honestly that's a superpower i want that i used to have it
dude i lost it i used to have it but once i had kids i don't know if it's ever coming back yeah
like i've never had that but i've met some people who had it and lost it and when they wake up three
times in a single night they've come to me panicking saying oh my god i'm getting like
literally no sleep i just can't sleep at all how long just sleep eight hours but i never slept you can't sleep for eight hours and then not sleep
for eight hours okay maybe i woke up for one hour so you slept for seven hours well yes but it was
hard no it wasn't yeah no try waking up every hour and a half. Try that. Or just laying in bed, staring at the ceilings,
thinking, God damn, it would be nice
if the sun rose right now so I can leave this place.
Yeah, that's no fun.
Anyways, I need to like segue back
into metabolic flexibility.
So the last thing I think what you were laying out
is like some signs that you might be lacking
in this department and could benefit
from changing up your diet a bit
and not eating
such a maybe a high carb or such a high fat, low carb diet exclusively forever.
If you're on a high carb diet, but there is no abnormalities to your lifestyle whatsoever,
then feel free to continue with a high carb diet. But be aware that if you are on a high carb diet
for too long, you could be susceptible to sugar crashes and you
could become over reliant on meal frequency. If as a high carb dieter, you can't go just half a day
without eating food, your body's probably not in the best health state. It's got too adapted to
using carbs, not enough to fats. Yep. Conversely, if you're on a high fat diet like keto, for example, or just if carbohydrates
are below 20% to your caloric intake and you have a high glycemic index carb, say a cupcake
or a sliced cake or whatever, and that turns you into some raging binge eating monster,
your body's not in a healthy state.
Again, that's not a good thing.
But of course,
if you are on a ketosis diet and you have a muffin and you're fine, continue on as normal.
There's nothing wrong with that. But for people who are accustomed to these two diets and they figure out that their body just can't handle the other energy source all that well, it may be
prudent to go into some sort of cyclic manner of a diet, would be the
best way to say it. There's two ways to do this. The first is intermittent fasting, which would
probably be more, I guess, enticing to people who have a high carb diet, because to do an intermittent
fasting, you need to just fast for half your waking hours, about eight hours straight. That alone will train your
body to go without carbs for a while, and then the last eight hours when you work out, you can just
eat all the carbs you want, and the meal sizes get a bit bigger. For people who want a high-fat diet
and want to go through a cyclic approach, I would recommend doing an approach that has different
dietary requirements each day of the week, but you define
two days in the week as high carbohydrate days. Now, high carbohydrates does not need to be too
high overall, just high relative to what you're taking in. So if you're on a keto diet, 30% carbs
may be high for you, and that's fine for the cyclic approach but then the other days the medium ones
would be like 10 carbs maybe 15 carbs and then the low days which would take the majority of it so
like let's do a three low days two medium two high approach and you just try to do like a little sign
curve throughout the week the low days would be true ketosis. The moderate days would be 10% low glycemic index
carbs. Then the high days, you can have a little treat. But it gets you some sort of cyclic
approach where your body can start getting accustomed to using fats and carbohydrates
as resources. And this doesn't need to be a permanent.
Yeah, I was just going to say, I guess it would be, you could think of this
And this doesn't need to be a permanent. Yeah, I was just going to say, I guess it would be, you could think of this as it's kind of in your toolbox.
And if you notice some of the negative effects that courtesy you've been out, it's like this is you pull this out of the toolbox and do this for a couple of weeks and see how you feel.
Yeah, pretty much.
So like just because some people on keto just love the lifestyle, but they love the lifestyle so much that they stick with it even when it hurts them.
Because for as long as they're in the keto mindset, they feel like they can push forward.
So in a way, taking them away from the keto mindset wouldn't actually be to their benefit.
So you just want to give them a small break from the keto mindset, like a sort of week-long dietary vacation.
In my preference, it'd be a month or so, especially with the cyclic manner that I just
mentioned.
A month would probably be best.
But then they just get back into the keto lifestyle after and see if they feel more
comfortable, feel more competent.
And also then, I guess, get back into it.
And after a month or so, now have that carb again and see how do you feel this time?
Does it still send you into a tailspin or you feel all right exactly the entire thing is like just
you're supposed to make these diets work to your benefit and if they're not working to your benefit
you may need to bring in a few tips and tricks to try to titrate the diet to your benefit and doing
a cyclical carb approach would be a nice tip or trick for people
on keto diet, whereas intermittent fasting could be a very nice trick for people on a high carb diet
who feel that they've become too reliant on frequent meals. Like I know personally speaking,
like in my teenage years, I used to suffer from binge eating disorder, but it was all emotional
stuff. So no matter what I did with,
you know, my actual diet, the emotions were still there. So I had to like, you know, just work that
shit up myself. But after the emotions set aside, I still had the physical repercussions of binge
eating disorder, which was very parallel to, I guess, in a way, both of them. When I had any high glycemic carb, I just want more.
There have been times in my life where I've had 3,000 calories over the course of 30 minutes.
Nice.
No, I'm talking like a daily endeavor.
I used to be a football player, so I didn't care about body weight back then.
It wasn't a good thing.
But intermittent fasting did sort of train me.
That's impressive. And that was train me that's impressive and that was
mostly carbs that when you eat that many calories carbs and peanut butter it was basically peanut
butter and jelly sandwiches for the most part nice like it's just dangerous how much peanut
butter you can eat in a short period of time that's true yeah it doesn't even satisfy you
that's the worst part it's not a food that I recommend for when people are cutting.
Leave the nut butters out. They suck. Again, for 17 year olds who are just like, I try eating 3000 calories a day and I'm not getting weight. You're just like, oh boy, you love peanut butter.
They love it. But yeah, for me, intermittent fasting really helped with my whole binge eating
stuff as soon as I got the emotions aside because it didn't help
with the emotions at all that's something I had to do on my own and you know I'd rather not talk
about it right now but you know that's more of a thing you need to see a psychologist for if the
root of your binge eating is emotional but as long as it's physiological then intermittent fasting is
your cure well the cure for I'd say 60 of you still worth a try though
and it's also easy to incorporate it's easy to incorporate like for me because like you wake up
in the morning and you have adrenaline cortisol pretty high so you don't need to eat food to get
energy and then you just think maybe i should have breakfast but then you just like grab an energy
drink down it in your throat like you know, sugar free because no calories and all that stuff.
Or just hit some espresso.
That's what I would do.
Yeah, like espresso, sugar free energy drink, maybe some ephedrine or whatever.
Or maybe some pulse.
Yeah, you just pulse definitely.
Top recommendation.
Yeah, that's the key.
But yeah, you just like shove a stimulant in your face while your cortisol and adrenaline high and then you just get the hell away from your kitchen and
start doing work. And eight hours can pass pretty easily once you're amped on the desire to do work.
And after those eight hours, you think, oh, my fast is done. I can actually eat now. And then
you just enjoy a meal. Obviously, you don't go like complete
binge mode, but you can have a nice sizable meal because you didn't eat for the previous eight
hours. And you just do this for a few months and your body gets used to not eating. And when your
body gets used to not eating, it sort of gets desensitized the idea of eating too much. So it
really helps with binge eating stuff from my experience. Again, I do that twice a week. Usually I'll just skip breakfast on the weekends on my non-trainers.
I usually do some cardio, but I'm not lifting on the weekends and I'm in a deficit. So I'll just
skip breakfast and start eating, I don't know, maybe around noon or one or something.
Yeah. Even my mother does intermittent fasting and she's an italian
chef so if she can do it anyone can if an italian chef can just go yeah i'm just not going to eat
right now then what's your excuse strong woman oh yeah totally out of all the uh women of her
age group that i've seen i've seen women who like i don't know they like play checkers and stuff
and then i've seen some women just like i'm just gonna read a book and then maybe cook some beans
and then my mom's just like yeah i just got done with my work and i'm gonna throw some axes now
do you want to join me it's like yes ma'am that's what we need for uh it's a little bit too viking
for an italian for the upcoming conflagration that's going to need for uh she's a little bit too viking for an italian for the upcoming
conflagration that's going to consume everything she'll be useful we need the viking italians
she can swoop down south and maybe save us in our impending civil war you americans can't complain
about that come on canada is just like worse but you know that's another topic for another day in some ways of course but in terms of just
social and racial tensions and division probably not right i mean pretty extreme we have a human
rights tribunal up here and yes tribunal like the warhammer 40k stuff that's a good choice of word
i like it it's the legal word like it's literally tribunal
they should just go all in and call it an inquisition they probably will like there's
some guy like in bc regardless of our listeners views on transgenderism because i know it's a
somewhat hot topic there is a politician who is a transgender woman so male body female mind she was running for political
office and this guy said i refuse to acknowledge this person's a woman which is you know falls
into free speech and so then he started posting up you mean hate speech bigot and eventually fell
under hate speech because uh this person then made posters saying, this politician claims that they are a woman, but they are a man because blah, blah, blah, maybe a little bit of Christian mentality in there.
And all they did was just staple these posters to telephone poles in their town.
So they obeyed all laws.
They were fined $55,000 for a hate crime.
By the tribunal. The Inquisisition got him and then there's
another case i think it might have been ontario but i might be wrong about that where somebody
wore shoes into a muslim's house and just to clarify for american viewers if you go up to
canada do not wear shoes in our houses it's actually like a social sin up here. You're just walking around like mud and grass and shit and all that.
And you don't wear those shoes inside the house.
You take them off before you enter.
That should be kind of obvious.
I know it's not here and most people do that, but it's kind of still bad etiquette even here.
But it's hardcore in Canada.
You take one step with your dirty boots in your Canadian house.
And like the idea of politeness
just evaporate bruv the fuck you doing it's like all the canadian rage and like the freaking
the sauce spiked hockey sticks covered in barbed wire start coming out and it's like
take off your shoes mate first you get doused in maple syrup yeah so oh yeah because it's
inflamed definitely but like
so he wore shoes into a family's house and the family happened to be muslim and apparently like
he said like whoops my bad or whatever but he didn't say it in a polite way he was kind of
confrontational because he was a dick but he was fined twelve thousand, not because he wore shoes in a house, but because he was religiously offensive.
So yeah. Do you have these tribunals down in America? Because-
Not yet. They're coming though.
Oh man. Don't allow that to happen.
I mean, now it's the court of public opinion. I mean, that's how it is right now. It's coming.
Oh yeah.
It's not formalized, but it's
getting to a point where it's like a de facto tribunals where you have, if you think the wrong
thoughts or say the wrong words, you could be effectively unpersoned. Ah, yes. The Jones thing,
as you call it. I wonder if he'll, if he ever get back on those platforms, that'll be a big day for
him if that ever happens.
No, I feel like Jones is probably going to go through
like a whole Phoenix thing
where he's not going to get back on the platforms
or even if he did, the option he'd probably refuse it.
But there's probably going to be some platform in the future
that goes onto the market by saying,
hey, everyone, we got Alex Jones.
And then he's just going to like explode from like his egg of oppression is like gay frogs.
And then everyone flocks to the platform because of it.
The rallying cry.
There's not just him.
There are quite a few people that you already see that where obviously markets move slowly,
but that is what will happen.
And that's one of the kind of libertarian arguments, right? Of like,
oh, just make your own Facebook, bro, if you don't like it and make your own YouTube. Like,
yeah, okay. It's not that easy anymore. I mean, between Facebook, Twitter,
Google and their different properties, there is the modern public square really.
But you'd think that given enough time, if free markets are allowed to work at least semi efficiently,
that is what will happen is the reaction will be true open and free platforms, not necessarily even
because obviously existing platforms skew very left. We don't necessarily even need platforms
that are skewing right. We just need to go back to the pre-
The neutral stuff.
Yeah, exactly. The pre-psychotic phaseotic phase yeah i remember seeing a comic or whatever
i don't remember the artist's name i think it was stonewall or something but it was basically
just a picture of a guy who was like unplugging one website it's like oh you don't like us i'm
plugging this website why don't you make your own website next panel oh you don't like us i'm
plugging your social media why don't you make your
own social media then the other one was uh in commentary to patreon and mastercard uh pulling
on some of this stuff oh you don't like this why don't you make your own bank then it's like oh
you don't like this why don't you make your own government shit exactly
sweating bullets at the end exactly taken to its logical extreme
yeah pretty much that requires like forethought and whatever dude you just you know you just
live just do whatever feels right in the moment if it feels right to ban you just ban the more
i learn about politics the more i'm interested in just like getting into hunting culture it's like
oh look at all these things that the rich people are doing and lying about and i'm i'm just gonna go into the forest get my own
food now but i'm just gonna shoot an elk and eat it it's like that's a good retort i guess after
the conflagration you'll be able to yeah like once everything crashes and burning i'll know how to get
my own food it's like hey you guys want elk? Too bad.
What do you got for me?
Yeah.
One other topic I wanted to mention when it comes to metabolic flexibility.
Yeah, I was going to say, okay, so segue back to metabolic flexibility.
It'd be like, see, if you're only eating elk, then eventually you'd need to improve your
metabolic flexibility.
There's one other topic that I don't know too much about it but i've
seen some studies investigating it is when it comes to exercise in and of itself because anaerobic
stuff uses carbohydrates primarily and aerobic stuff uses fatty acids primarily so you might
theoretically have somebody who is great at lifting weights, and then they have, like, really bad cardio,
but it's not due to their cardiorespiratory capacities,
but their metabolic flexibility,
because they just can't have enough energy for a long run.
Or they just, like, you know, slay behind a lot.
Then you have people who are, like, amazing endurance runners,
and it's like, oh, I can run 100 miles in one day at like an
incredible pace. Oh, I can't even lift 30 pound dumbbells. And of course, like there's a lot of
variables here. There could just be the actual muscularity of the person. There could be the,
you know, training specificity of the person. But I will send you the links later so you can put it in the description but fish oil supplementation
has in a few studies shown that the rate of which the muscle cells can go from carbohydrate
utilization to fat utilization and vice versa is increased if you have a sport say hockey which
every now and then you just have to go through like really rapid bursts, like just all completely anaerobic stuff that you can't keep up for more than 15 seconds.
And then you need to keep active for the next 30 seconds or whatever, just cruising, like say if you're on defense or you're a goalie or whatever, then you need to be able to switch the two energy sources on the fly for your athletics.
And fish oil seems to actually be a viable supplement for that.
Interesting. How much do you need to take?
It was definitely more than the super low doses of the 180-120 blend,
like the 300 milligram stuff.
That's the lowest dose.
But I don't think it was the highest dose either.
I'll send you the studies, but I think it was around one gram either like i'll send you the studies but i think it was around
one gram of epa plus dha very doable what you should be i guess that's like it's almost just
a basic health dose right when it comes to athletes yes but when it comes to just like
the average person the basic health dose is the 180 120 milligram or 300 milligrams epa plus dha
like that's the lowest supplemental dose and it's the one that's recommended to everybody
with some medical doctors saying,
eh, maybe not go higher.
But for athletes,
usually athletes always have over a gram of EPA plus DHA.
Yep.
Neat.
Another reason to just take fish oil every day.
Or I don't know, krill oil,
or I guess those are probably two best sources.
When you get into ALA sources you run into absorption difficulties right for ALA stuff yeah but krill
oil stuff is really weird I don't like krill oil at all to be honest really well because it's the
exact same as EPA plus DHA except it's faster. But absorption speed is not an issue when it comes
to fish oils. You just want it in your body. You want the overall absorption rate. It's the exact
same. So if krill oil and fish oil were the exact same price, then you can choose either one you
want. But krill oil is like three times the price of fish oil. Yep.
I don't know if we ever bothered even getting quotes on krill oil because we decided early
on, you remember when you were working on fish oil with me, we decided on fish oil right
away.
So I don't know if it's like a collagen protein thing where collagen protein is cheap as fuck.
It's just a scam.
They sell it for a bunch of money.
So is it just a margins thing or?
I guess the opposite
it's just expensive to produce then as well so like our costs would be you know quite a bit higher
and then we just have to pass that on to customers yeah sort of like because when it comes to say a
protein whey protein is one of the standards another standard could be soy concentrate and
then egg protein could also be a standard they have different parameters for
being called standard but they're all a reference point they're a starting point and if you want to
sell something and say like it's better than whey you need to use whey as the standard and then
prove it's better than whey but fish oil from like cold water low predatory fish, sardines, herring, all that stuff, that's the standard.
And so you have all these other things like krill oil and seal oil coming forward,
and they fail to prove that they're better than fish oil.
They don't have any evidence.
They don't have any logic.
They just have a bunch of nonsensical buzzwords,
and they try to say that they're a premium fish oil which warrants a higher price
but they failed to prove that there are actually better than fish oil so we use fish oil in its
cheapest form because it works and nothing works better than that we have an expensive form the
re-esterified ethyl ester is expensive.
Just straight ethyl ester form is the cheapest, which we decided not to use.
Yeah, I forgot about that.
I meant the actual fish that we're hunting down.
We did modify it a little bit.
That did raise price a wee bit, but we're still using the cheap fish.
We're not using krill and we're not using seals.
Whoever the hell marketed steel oil i need to
hunt down and i'm a canadian when it comes to seals and hunting i'm getting my club i know how
to do this gonna get your shekels selling seal oil uh no man you have to protect the seals now
is that a thing now is the seal bashing has it come to an end there's a meme about seal bashing has it come to an end? There's a meme about seal bashing, of course. The actual bashing part of seals
is not really allowed on international
or even national markets,
but we will allow it when it comes to some Inuit populations
up in the territories who need to actually kill something
to eat for the night.
So they can bash seals and all that,
but we don't allow any large industries to come in and collectively bash thousands of
baby seals.
We did that in the past and it was not good because it turns out that seals are kind of
cute.
They're the puppy dogs of the ocean and bashing them in the back of the head does not give
off good PR vibes.
Was it like a tourist almost type thing where people
would pay to go out to bash seals? It almost got to that point. It became so prominent for a while
because when it first became prominent, no one in Canada knew that this stuff was going on because
the territories are incredibly sparse. The entire territories of Yukon, Northwest Territories,
Nunavut, they have very low populations.
And frankly speaking, no one in Canada cares about them, unfortunately.
So when they do stuff, we don't really pay attention to them.
So when they were bashing seals and making industries off of it, we didn't care.
And then they started to like, you know, say, hey, you want to bash baby seals?
Come up here.
We can have a bunch of baby seals.
We've got a club. We can teach how to bash things. Yeah, baby seals come up here we can have a bunch of baby seals we got a club
we can teach how to bash things yeah baby seals they go I guess you like you graduate you know
I've seen these things in Japan where I'm sure they're elsewhere but I remember seeing them in
Japan where you go to a place and you can just break stuff to like release your rage you can
just break faces have you seen that in plates and just random shit no but i reminded
the legend of zelda all of a sudden why so legend of zelda is a video game right maybe i played one
of the zelda games a while ago okay but you know how link goes around and breaks all the pots right
all right yes exactly yeah there's a lot of jokes about how link is just actually a psychopath and
he just like runs in people's houses breaks everything steals all their money he's runs away then everyone's like the heck is the hero of time doing links is like
i got my rupees they just like breaks more pots and stuff so like i immediately think of american
psycho you know the in the end when he's chasing the hooker with the chainsaw and he gets her he's ah yeah that that would be link perfect but yeah so as soon as the
actual majority of canadians knew that we were bashing seals up north we put a stop to it but
of course there's the whole um people need to sometimes bash seals survive so that still goes
on but the fact that they're trying to sell seal oil as a supplement
means that seal fat can once again be an industry meaning that especially if it's sold in america
where else are you going to get your seals from russia that's way too far away so you're also
going to get canadian seals and it's just going to like lead to major hunting and now all of a sudden all of Canadians
really love the northern sea puppies and so we don't like it when people hunt seals indiscriminately
so yeah the other reason that I don't like seal oil has DPA. It's another fatty acid.
News flash, all fish have DPA. We literally just didn't care about it. We still shouldn't care
about it. Every single fish that has EPA and DHA will have DPA. It's not unique to seals.
A freaking herring or a sardine.
Like, you go to the grocery store,
pop open a can, just down to your face,
you got a bunch of DPA.
There's nothing about the seals you need to take down.
But yet, some companies are like,
well, we need another word aside from fish.
What should we do?
There's fish, and there's krill.
That's taken.
Seals, yes. Murdering seals is definitely going to go over well for a company it's like well if you can get your dpa i mean
come on i know right like do you even know what dpa does i didn't and then i learned and i still
bloody know what it does because it just turns into dha that's not what dave asprey said
though i know right it's like fucking uh i put you said i put it in my coffee coffee man said
to kill all the innocent animals so i guess i have to and to get all the dpas but yeah to all
you people listening please don't hunt our glorious sea puppies.
They're cute.
Just get your oil from ugly fish like anchovies and mackerel and stuff.
Oh, if we can ever farm lampreys, that'd be amazing.
Or blobfish.
Like, oh my god, blobfish are so ugly.
I have no sympathy for them whatsoever.
I just recently learned about the bobbit worm.
You know about the bobbit worm? Vagu worm vaguely yes just check it out wait is that the uh tongue one no it's a sandworm that i mean these
things can grow up to like i don't know 30 meters long they burrow it's like a sarlacc monster from
star wars they burrow themselves down in the sand they have no brains
and they have these hooked jaws that open up and kind of like click into place they have some
antennae that are in the middle and when fish that they can sense the movement of fish and i think
also shadows so if there's you know if the light gets obstructed and then they shoot out of the
sand i guess yeah and then they're hooked bony almost they're like long hooks of jaws just grab the fish and just pull them down
into the sand and the fish is just gone that's kind of cool actually i like that they can grab
some bigger fish too have you heard about the uh i don't know the species name but it's the tongue
replacing parasite basically there's some parasites in the ocean that they will pretend to be prey so a fish
eats them but then they do that just so they get in the fish's mouth and then they chew off the
fish's tongue and then they become the fish's tongue is this a tongue eating louse i don't
know what a louse is a disgusting little bug very similarly then yes because like
there are some people who hunt at the deep sea and they like find fish and they open the fish's
mouth there was just an insect on the tongue like it became the tongue so the entire thing is they
want to be there because once the fish eats more food it gets first grabs at all the foods that
goes into the oral cavity. So it will survive.
And it also is kind of cutting off bleeding from the actual fish.
And it allows the fish to retain function.
So it's a mutually symbiotic relationship.
It's just fucking creepy as hell.
Like imagine some bug replacing your tongue.
And it's like, no, I would rather that not happen.
That's a good would you rather right there
would you rather that or or something else that's option a have an insect replace your tongue eating
louse replaces your tongue i've seen some stupid would you rathers lately there's ones like would
you rather become the most hideous thing in existence but get the superpower your choice
and it's like bro just choose shape-shifting
yeah but that that'd be cheating they'd be like now come on you're not playing in good faith oh
come on man good faith is manipulative that's true when it comes to superpowers depends how
you define faith you know faith is what i can bend to my way exactly the strong do it they well
and the weak suffer what they must right also i have to say that when I'm looking at my notes for this interview, I do have
an entire section about Bruce Lee.
Flow like a river is metabolic flexibility.
Break like a brick is metabolic insensitivity.
That's deep.
I like that.
Yeah, I don't know what I was thinking when I said that, but yeah.
It's always good to include metaphors.
People like metaphors.
Should have done that the first hour.
Who knows if anyone's even listening at this point, this point? This is where we can turn it loose.
We might be alone by now. But no, this was actually a great discussion. Is there anything
else that you had on your outline? Anything else that you want to cover before we wrap up?
No, the major thing was basically just realizing when your diet is going against you and the fact
that even though you plan for X, you're not always going to run into X.
You may run into Y.
You have to be ready for both of them.
So if you focus on metabolic flexibility a bit, you focus on just partaking in different areas of athleticism, you can be prepared for anything.
But beyond that, it's not something that supplements can handle all that much it's just don't do the same shit each day be a bit different
and that's pretty much it intermittent fasting and cycling your macronutrients calories can help
perfect don't be boring don't have a boring diet don't have a boring diet. Don't have a boring life. And you're good. Thanks, dad. You are welcome, son.
Now do your homework.
All right, Curtis.
Well, it's been great as always.
Is there anything that is new and interesting that we should give people a heads up on?
Maybe on the formulation front, like I'm excited, for example, for the new recharge that's coming.
I'm excited for the men and women's multivitamins. I think
that's going to be a smart bifurcation as smart people say, but I hate that word. Actually,
when people say they'll use that word instead of just like divide or split, like, I think we
should bifurcate these people into two groups. Like, okay, buddy. Yes. And then synergize them
after. I'm excited for the men and women's multivitamins.
What else we got?
What do we got coming?
Make people horny to buy things.
The first reformulation should be Fortify, which is pretty much the exact same formulation,
except the curcumin has been enhanced for absorption.
And we don't need black pepper anymore after that.
So there may have been some
instances where people did not take fortified because they thought piperine or the black pepper
extract could interfere with pharmaceuticals no longer the case because piperine is getting
dropped because we actually managed to find a better and not outrageously overpriced curcumin
source and then we added in something for neuropathic pain.
Everything we had at this point in time was just for muscular pain,
but if you do have any pain related to, say, the spine or the neck or just bones and nerves,
Mortify can now actually start to help you a little bit.
And then beyond that, we added in a few other goodies that just could overall help a
certain amount of people and didn't increase the price too much should be pretty much the exact
same price but it's twice as good heading forward there is of course the male and female formulation
split for triumph which i'm looking forward to because there's not as many random herbs in there anymore. They're more well thought out,
specifically chosen herbs, as well as non-herbal components that just benefit everybody regardless
of their demographic. We were a little bit too haphazardous on our first formulation,
and we've learned from that, and we've just made improvements henceforth. And then finally, Phoenix, our fat burner.
We are taking a bit of a change with that,
and we're making it so it's more along the lines of something you take every day
and don't need to cycle off of,
something that just cleanly but slowly increases the metabolic rate.
But it may also end up being a fat burner that you end up having to take with food
which is fine because if you want a fat burner that you take fasted you do have forge on the
side that's not going to be changing anytime soon but yeah phoenix is going to be a pretty
atypical and novel fat burner in the next few months because it's taken approach no other fat
burner has before one One that you simply
take with a meal to increase overall daily caloric expenditure. We have to get something that works
and if we don't have ephedrine with us then what can we do? All we can do is look at the evidence
and say what actually increases basal metabolic rate and why and try to put them into a pill.
increases basal metabolic rate and why, and try to put them into a pill. And all the stuff I found,
it doesn't matter if it's taken before or after exercise. It doesn't matter whether it's taken twice or once a day. It's just put this in your mouth, your basal metabolic rate increases a
little bit. And since some of them are fat soluble, you just kind of put them in your mouth with a
meal. I like it yeah
because in the past like it was always fat burners paired with exercise but this one literally has no
need for it if you want to pair a fat birth exercise go for forged get the ohim bean in you
maybe get some over-the-counter effort journey and pair that with the forge that would be the
optimal approach if you can handle the stimulation you probably
will be able to but have to give the warning anyways makes sense all right man well there's
a bit more also like i said that we have a new recharge formulation coming we have also we have
the new pulse formulation that's rolling out now which is cool that's with the alpha gpc we have
the immunity product that's it was tabledled previously, but I wanted to, I wanted
to discuss that again, actually, because I think the reason why I think it was when it was being
discussed by the board, it was mostly, I believe Spencer who was like meh about it, but I still
thought it was interesting. So anyways, we have more things, more things always in the works.
I can't wait till the immunity product actually
hits the market because we are bringing in a compound that is not really sold in North America
and yet it has enough evidence to rival pharmaceuticals and is obscenely potent.
So as soon as that gets on the shelves... You can get it. It's just hard to get and it's
very expensive. You have to order from Germany or something like that. All right, my friend,
thanks again for taking the time. It's always a pleasure and I'll talk to you soon. Talk to you
soon. Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service where we can help you get in the best shape of your life.
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