Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Layne Norton on Training at Home, Pandemic Dieting, Overcoming Fear, and More
Episode Date: March 30, 2020Coronavirus. The only thing anybody is talking about right now as it continues to upend life as we knew it and highlight all the things we’ve been taking for granted, like eating at the local pizza ...joint, walking more than 100 steps per day, and oh, I don’t know, being able to leave the fucking house. And then there’s the fitness fallout, what with lifters everywhere yearning for their usual diet and training routines, driven to boredom and overeating by lame home workouts with soup cans and small children for resistance. If all that weren’t enough, there’s also the scumpot of scammers and losers clogging our Instagram feeds with posts about pills, powders, and potions that’ll purportedly ward off infection and disease. And so understandably, you have questions about stuff like what to do with your diet, how to best work out at home, and how to help your immune system, and that’s why I wanted to bring Dr. Layne Norton back on the podcast. Not only is he a pro bodybuilder, accomplished powerlifter, and published scientist, but he’s also an all-around knowledgeable dude who’s known for putting things in context and putting diet and exercise gurus and zealots in their place. In this podcast, Layne answers questions people have been asking me quite a bit, including . . . - Am I going to lose all my gains if I can’t go to the gym? - How can I make my home workouts more effective? - How can I support my immune system? Will the carnivore diet help? - Should I cut right now? - And more . . . Let’s dig in! 4:04 - What are your thoughts on COVID-19? 5:20 - Where can people find your resources for online learning? 5:49 - How can we get a good workout from home? 13:26 - Why is heath and nutrition important during this time? 21:16 - How do you deal with fear of the unknown? 24:49 - What do you think about scammers capitalizing on the COVID-19 outbreak? 34:27 - How can we enhance immune function? Should I be cutting right now? 36:55 - Where can people find you and your work? --- Mentioned on The Show: Layne Norton's Carbon Diet Coach App: https://joincarbon.com/ Layne Norton's Books & More: https://www.biolayne.com/ Layne Norton's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/biolayne/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://legionathletics.com/shop/ --- 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/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another episode of Muscle For Life. I'm your host,
Michael Matthews. All right, enough of that. Hello. Hello. Here we are. Coronavirus,
the only thing anybody is talking about right now as it continues to upend life as we know it and
highlight all the things we've been taking for granted.
Things that we are all looking forward to getting back to, like, I don't know,
eating at the local pizza joint, or walking more than a couple hundred steps per day,
and, I don't know, maybe leaving the fucking house.
And then, of course, there's the fitness fallout. What with lifters
everywhere yearning for their usual diet and training routines, I do understand, driven to
boredom and overeating by lame home workouts with soup cans and small children for resistance. And if all that weren't enough, there's also the scum pot of
scammers and losers clogging up Instagram with pills, powders, and potions that will purportedly
ward off COVID-19 and prevent the virus from even infecting you. And so understandably, you
have questions about stuff like what to do with your diet right now, how to best work out at home, accomplished powerlifter, and published scientist, and also an all my gains if I can't go to the gym?
How can I make my home workouts more effective?
How can I support my immune system?
Will the carnivore diet help?
Should I cut right now?
And more.
Now, before we get to the show, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get
into the best shape of their lives, please do consider supporting my sports nutrition company,
Legion Athletics, which produces 100% natural evidence-based health and fitness supplements,
including protein powders and protein bars, pre-workout and post-workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more.
Every ingredient and dose in every product of mine is backed by peer-reviewed scientific research.
Every formulation is 100% transparent, no proprietary blends, and everything is naturally
sweetened and flavored. To check it out, just head over to legionathletics.com
and just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code MFL at checkout and
you will save 20% on your entire order if it is your first purchase with us. And if it is not your
first purchase, then you will get double reward points on your entire order, which is essentially getting 10% cash back in rewards points. So again, that URL is
legionathletics.com. And if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it,
please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what I love, like producing podcasts like
this. Hey, Lane, it's been a while, man. I'm looking forward to catching up and hearing your thoughts on some topical things. Yeah, well, I think we were originally trying
to schedule this, what, back in December? Something like that.
The landscape has changed quite a bit, so I'm sure we'll have a lot to discuss.
And now we're both sitting at home and, hey, here we are, we can do it.
Exactly. Now, all of a sudden, I have time for podcasts.
You could be doing less productive things with your time. So, hey.
That is true. So I wanted to bring you on to talk about, of course, coronavirus-related things.
Not so much the state of things. I think there are a million different places to get that
information right now. And with any luck, we'll see maybe some positive developments. Maybe this
isolation phase will have worked fairly well. We can have hope, right?
Sure. I mean, I think that if people do what they're supposed to do based on what the experts
are saying should make a decent impact on this. The downside is we're probably not going to see
that for a month in terms of getting the actual data back. So I guess this is one of those things
where I don't really think there's a playbook for it. We just got to trust the people who are
the experts and hopefully things will work out. I think it's going to work out one way or another. I don't
think this is the end of civilization or society. Thinking the other direction doesn't really help
us very much. We still got the internet. We still got running water. I'm not going to panic just
yet. Whole Foods is full of food. I saw a meme the other day that said, everyone calm down.
Your grandparents were called to fight
and die for their country. You're being called to sit on the couch. Calm down.
With endless entertainment and calories on demand.
I said, this is literally happening in the best time it could possibly happen.
It's true.
Think about if our economy had already been repressed or something like that. We were at
all-time high. Further, you got Netflix, you got Hulu, you got video games.
If you want to learn some stuff, you have endless resources online to learn literally
anything you want to learn.
Absolutely.
I probably should have led with that since I sell online learning stuff.
But hey, I've never been a real good salesman.
I teed it up for you.
Yeah, I appreciate that.
Yes, we do sell eBooks and books and whatnot.
And actually, I just released my first online nutrition course.
Nice.
Where can people find that?
That was a collaboration I did with Clean Health Fitness Institute. If you just Google
Lane Norton, science of nutrition, clean health, it'll come up.
All right. So let's give some more good news. Let's talk about some at-home workout stuff. Now,
I did just do a Q&A. It was a synopsis of like a 10,000-word article I wrote on at-home training
and gave a bunch of workouts, beginner, intermediate,
advanced, bodyweight, bands, dumbbells. So some of this might be a little bit redundant,
but you're probably going to explain things a little bit differently than I did and make some
different points. And this is something you were commenting on before we started recording that
you're seeing, I guess you could kind of summarize it as maybe a bit too much of an all or nothing
mentality, right? So, okay, we're not in the gym doing the workouts that we want to be doing, sure. But that doesn't mean that we can't get in good workouts. It
doesn't mean that we can't maintain muscle and strength and burn calories and get the health
benefits of exercise, right? Sure. I mean, if we're talking health benefits, there's a lot of
ways to skin a cat. Look, I get it. I love to lift heavy weights. I think a lot of people who go to
the gym love the feeling of going hard, going heavy, and they're used to having a lot
of options. Now you kind of have that taken away from you, but now isn't the time to just give up.
You've done all this work. Are you going to make gains during this time? Obviously,
people with home gyms, like I have a home gym. It's pretty basic, squat rack, bench press,
deadlift platform. I do have a belt squat, which is nice. Some adjustable dumbbells and bands.
I'm actually able to do quite a bit of stuff with that, getting creative. But most people can get
exercise bands. And I'm not talking about the little ones that you see in fitness videos.
I'm talking about kind of more so the powerlifting style or pull-up assist bands.
And for anyone listening, if you can find them in stock on Amazon, you'll see that they're
the same thing over and over with random nonsensical brands slapped on them, but it's the same products. And so they go from like 25 pounds
up to 125 pounds, right, Lane? Right, exactly. You can get a lot of resistance with that. Now,
obviously it's variable resistance, but there's endless ways that you can use those. There's also,
especially for females, they're seeing a lot of glute bands. My wife actually has a glute band
company, myglutefactory.com, and they sell different variable resistance for bands. You can do quite
a bit with those as well in terms of lower body stuff. Those are only 25 bucks. And then if you
get those resistance bands, I think those can be anywhere from getting a few for 40 bucks up to
maybe 100 for a big set of them. I mean, that's $125 right there potentially. And now you've got quite
a bit of options to be honest. Yeah. I mean, you combine what you can do with body weight and then
how you can make it harder with bands, right? Exactly. And then if you can go and actually
get some adjustable dumbbells, I mean, you're talking less than 500 bucks and now you actually
have a pretty feasible way to create some progressive overload. So are you going to
make gains during this period? It just depends on what you have access to and what you're willing to do. Now, obviously there's
body weight stuff. Even if you're somebody who's pretty strong, like for me, a pistol squat is
pretty challenging. I actually have to do an assistant. The technique of it is hard. I do
assistant as well. It's just hard. But there's no reason you can't create progressive overload
that way. Russian hamstring curl. If you have somebody that's, that's a hard exercise. Very hard. You can get those doorframe pull up things.
I can't speak to the quality of some of them. There's a lot of different things you can do.
And here's the thing to take heart with. The first thing to encourage people out there is that what
it takes to build muscle is way more than what it takes to maintain it. I don't want to say
specifically and say this is a hundred percent accurate, but I think effort and volume needed to maintain muscle is something like a quarter
or less than the amount of effort and volume it takes to build that muscle.
Like let's say you didn't have access to anything, no bands, no dumbbells, nothing.
If you just did a few sets of pushups and you did five sets of push-ups to failure or close to failure every other day,
you did some kind of pull-up to failure or close to failure, and you did some kind of pistol squat
to failure almost every other day for a few sets, you're probably not going to lose a whole lot,
to be quite honest. As long as you give your body a reason to hang on to it, it typically will.
Are you going to build much during this time? If you have access to
equipment at your house, a little bit easier, obviously. It also depends on where you are in
your training journey, right? Like if you're a beginner, if you just started training, you've
only been doing it for, let's just say four weeks and this thing hit. If you continue to do some of
those things at home, you'll continue to make progress because the dosage that's required of
exercise to induce adaptation is so low that you'll
continue to progress.
Now, take somebody like me.
I've been training for over 20 years.
If I start doing at-home bodyweight stuff, am I going to progress?
No, most definitely not.
But could I maintain a big portion of what I have?
Absolutely.
In fact, we were talking earlier, there was a study from Jeremy Lineke where they showed
people who were untrained just flexing really hard for long periods of time actually caused hypertrophy.
Have you come across the research showing that just thinking about doing sets in your mind can prevent strength loss to some degree?
I think yes, but I do think that that was with smaller muscles? Oh, sure. I'm not saying that's going to be nearly as effective as training, but it just goes to show that under certain circumstances, simply thinking about training
can influence your muscles. What about actually doing a little bit of training?
Exactly. What I would recommend is for people, if you have a routine that you had before,
try to stick to it as close as you can in terms of time of the day that you train,
put your music on, don't have the TV going, do it in an area of your house where you're
easily distracted or anything like that. Try to make it. Yeah. Treat it like a real
workout, right? Yeah, exactly. Put your music on, go hard. And if you're willing to spend a little
bit of money at this time, you don't need an elaborate setup to make progress. If you're
willing to spend, you know, up to several hundred or a thousand dollars, they've got squat racks
that fold up into the side of your garage. I can't remember the name of the company that makes it. Oh, I've seen that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So it's got like some arms and
a cage that kind of folds down. And then if you've got a bench, there's a pull-up bar with it, man,
you can do a lot of stuff for those with home gyms. Another idea is getting a landmine apparatus.
So something where you can attach a barbell to it, especially if you've got a dip belt that
can function like a belt squat actually. And now you can do landmine presses, rows, you got all kinds of options. So there's a lot of stuff out
there. Even if you've just got access to minimal stuff, just do what you can with what you got
right now. We are all in the same boat. It's not the time to just tank on your goals.
The other thing is too, is like if you're a competitor or somebody who really wants to
push yourself, this is where you separate the wheat
from the chaff. Winnow out the weak. Right. The cream will rise to the top because here's what's
going to happen. The people who aren't serious about it or don't have the same level of discipline
as those who are, those who are, they're going to find a way and they're going to get it done.
Those who aren't real serious about it aren't going to get it done. So when it comes back for
competition time, whether it's powerlifting or weightlifting or bodybuilding, whatever it is, hey, those of you who are really hard workers, you're going to have a leg up on everybody else.
This is actually a time where you're going to separate yourself from other people because you're not going to quit.
You're going to get it done.
And the other thing I'll tell people is like we have a coaching company, so obviously we're biased.
We mostly do nutrition coaching, not even programming necessarily.
And people say, oh, well, can I put my coaching on pause, this and that? What we're telling people is, hey,
listen, if you can't train or you can't train the same way, nutrition doesn't suddenly become
less important. It actually becomes more important now than ever.
I think that's worth elaborating on. I just saw a headline. Now, this wouldn't apply to
most of my listeners and followers and your followers. But I don't know if you saw that
there's like a nationwide Oreo shortage. And now what they're seeing is a dip in traditionally
like quote unquote healthy foods, right? Organic foods and stuff that is actually in many cases
more nutritious. And they're seeing a surge in junk food and comfort food.
That doesn't necessarily surprise me. I think that feelings and people are stressed and that kind of stuff. And I'm not here to shame anybody about their
habits. It's worth elaborating on that point of like, why do you say that now is not the time
to just eat a box of Oreos a day? Well, only if you want to end up in a much worse place than you
started this thing at. Yes. Right. I've never really understood that mentality, but I'm a
little bit different. I realized that everybody's wired the same way. But for those of you who struggle with like emotional eating or binge eating or
comfort eating, that sort of thing, you're just going to have to practice a lot of mindfulness
during this period and really try to keep yourself busy. Everybody's been told to stock up on food,
right? So being at home with a lot of food available is a big trigger for some people.
Now is the time to really try and keep yourself busy, whether it be through training,
educating yourself. Now is really a great time for self-development as well. If you can't work,
a lot of us can work from home, thankfully, but if you can't work, now's the time for
self-development. Now's the time to take that online course of something that you were wanting
to do, science and nutrition, shameless plug, whatever you wanted to do, right? Because now's
the time to do it because you might not have the opportunity in the future. If you're just sitting at home bored all day and
there's a bunch of food, yeah, that can be a problem. There's a lot of anxiety with people
right now. I'm not worried about myself with regards to this virus. I don't think if I got
it, it's going to kill me, but I would be worried about infecting other people. I'd be worried about
people who are susceptible. I'm worried about overall herd immunity. And what I'm really worried about is when can we get back to kind of life as normal,
right? Because everybody's business is taking a hit unless you're in the toilet paper or hand
sanitization industry. There's the conspiracy. That's it. Big TP organized this, created the
virus. Procter and Gamble. Yeah, I get it. It does suck. But trying to find the positive,
what's the silver lining?
What can you do with this time?
I think that a lot of people really should be asking themselves that question.
I agree.
I mean, that's how you get through any hard times.
I can attest to that personally.
Same here.
Some hard times in my business.
I've gone through hard times in my personal life.
And that's the mentality that has always worked for me.
I'm sure there are other ways to get through it.
But in the end, I'm sure there are other ways to get through it, but in the end,
I'm most interested in results. That approach has always gotten me through and allowed me to
not just maintain what I had before, but continue moving ahead.
I've talked about this a lot. In 2017, it actually was about a two-year period.
I was going through a divorce. I had lost my supplement company and I had gotten kicked out
of another company by my business partners. Then was engaged in a pretty, I had lost my supplement company and I had gotten kicked out of another
company by my business partners. Then was engaged in a pretty, I don't want to say lengthy, but it
was over six months, a legal battle with them trying to get them to pay me what my shares were
worth because you can't just kick somebody out of equity. And that was a really, really hard time.
Things were so bad financially. I owed more to attorneys than I could write a check for,
which was extremely
scary, especially as somebody who had been kind of financially secure previously. My personal
business was aired out online by various people. I made mistakes. I handled things poorly, but
having to go through that was very, very difficult. But during that time, what I kind of kept telling
myself was, okay, there is going to come a day where you're going to be on the other side of this. It's going to happen. This isn't going to last forever. But
what I need to keep doing, and I remember like literally verbally saying this out loud to myself,
you need to keep your feet moving. Because when this passes, if you just quit and give up and go,
woe is me, you know, cry about it or whatever it is. Hey, I did cry about it a couple of times.
But if you just sit and wallow, once you get to the other side of it, now you're going to be so far behind the curve of
where you could have been if you had just kept your feet churning, right? It's kind of like that
running back who hits the hole and he immediately gets stuffed by like five guys and you choose to
go down. Or some of the times you see like a Marshawn Lynch where he just keeps his feet
moving. He just keeps his feet moving, just keeps his feet moving. And then all of a sudden you see
him burst through the other side. And that's kind of how I
visualized it. It was like, all right, I'm just going to keep my feet moving. And then when I get
to the other side of this, boom, I'm gone. And that's kind of what happened. I eventually did
get to the other side of it. Legal stuff got settled. And then I started launching our books,
which have done extremely well. We expanded our business and now things were great up until last
month. So I always approach
something like this or something that's hard like this as what is this going to teach me? What am I
going to learn from this? And I think if you have kind of that attitude, you're going to be fine in
the long run. And keep in mind too, like don't be a victim. First off, there are real victims out
there and people who are really dying. So if you're complaining about having to sit at home
on your couch, you're probably not going to get a lot of sympathy from me. Secondly, we're all in
the same boat. Everybody's been asked to do the same thing. Again, chill out. Most people are
happy. 80% of people don't like their jobs and are happy when they get to miss a day of work.
I think I saw a meme that was like people before the coronavirus. And it was like everybody's
staying at home, like watching Netflix, playing video games. People asked through the coronavirus
and everybody's outside walking, like interacting. Yeah. I was joking with my neighbor yesterday because I work a lot. I'm
usually out early, come back late. A number of my neighbors are the same way. I was out walking with
my family yesterday saying hi to neighbors I hadn't spoke to in a while. We were laughing.
This is kind of unique, actually. We don't really see each other all that often.
But I do encourage people to get outside. You can still practice social distancing while being outside. I spoke to him at a distance of about 10 feet. I actually
think getting outside is probably a good thing for most people, but they're just saying,
don't go to a concert. Don't do what people are doing in DC right now. I just saw a picture where
I guess it was a food market and it was packed. Like, come on, just mind your own business.
They're just asking for two weeks. Come on.
Yeah, well, that's the thing is like I tell people like we can all sacrifice a little
bit right now, kind of really hit this thing hard, flatten the curve, as they're saying,
and then we can get back to our lives.
Or we can screw around with this thing for several months, kind of doing half measures
and stuff.
And then it might get bad enough to where they've really got to shut everything down
and we're in martial law.
Like, do y'all want that?
Just stay home. I understand if you got to go to the grocery store,
that sort of thing. Just be smart about it. I'm with you. Just play the game. Be reasonable.
Miami, like a week ago, they had a large amount of young people who were just getting drunk on the beach and chanting about how they were scared and stuff. And it's like, you idiots.
Did you see Clearwater Beach? I mean, I think it finally got closed.
It did.
I took my boat out this weekend, took the kids out.
We went to a small beach that's private, but the business was closed and we were very nice and we handled with care.
There was nobody there.
It was great.
We just had the whole beach to ourselves.
Private beach, living large.
Yeah, exactly.
The bright side.
Yeah, exactly.
There's some white clouds in the sky.
Yeah, all the introverts are very happy right now.
Yeah, exactly.
This is a win.
Hey, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
please do consider supporting my sports nutrition company, Legion Athletics,
which produces 100% natural evidence
based health and fitness supplements, including protein powders and bars, pre-workout and post
workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more. Every ingredient and
every dose in every product is backed by peer-reviewed scientific research. Every formulation
is 100% transparent. There are no proprietary blends and everything is naturally sweetened
and flavored. To check everything out, just head over to legionathletics.com. And just to show how
much I appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code MFL at checkout and you will save 20% on your entire order if it is your first purchase with us.
And if it is not your first purchase with us, you will get double reward points on your entire order.
That's essentially 10% cash back in rewards points.
So again, the URL is legionathletics.com. And if you appreciate my
work and want to see more of it, please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what I love,
like producing podcasts like this. I wonder about something you were saying when you were going
through that rough period, how did you deal with fear of the unknown, which is a lot of what people are dealing
with right now? And that to me is the most annoying part of all of this is because there's
been so little testing. There's just this big looming unknown of what happens next. It's human
nature. How have you dealt with that personally? And this is all of us. We all have this inclination
toward catastrophizing things. You know what I mean? I'm just curious. I mean, I'm not going to pretend like I haven't had moments where I'm like, oh my God, if this
thing drags on for six months, we're going to have cashflow problems and that sort of thing.
Like, of course. Yeah, of course. I mean, I'm in that same position. Sure. Things are fine now,
and I've taken precautions and I've managed my finance as well. But yes, there is a point where
all of us are like, I guess I'll be living on credit cards now. Yeah. So I think the first
thing is that let's play out the worst case scenario. Well, the worst case scenario is the complete and utter collapse of the US
economy, which means anarchy, chaos, and without rule of law. That's bad. But in that case, there's
not a whole lot I can do to prevent that, right? Like I'm not going to be the person that prevents
that. That is a large scale and that's kind of out of my control. So what can I do? Well, what I can
do is I can do the best to try and keep my business afloat during this time and provide value to
people, right? So for example, we've already pivoted. I have what we call our workout builder
on biolane.com where people pay a membership fee of $12.99 a month and they get customized training
templates and whatnot. Well, obviously a lot of people now don't have access to a gym. So we've created new training templates that are either basic home gym setup or no weights,
nothing, or bands or bands plus dumbbells or dumbbells or whatever. So we're creating a lot
of different training templates for our members. And then we're also going to provide some free
to the public as well. It's like, okay, I'm going to try and provide value and also keep business
afloat. I'm not
going to pretend like I don't want to make money. Of course I do. I've also got 12 employees whose
mouths need to be fed. It's not just me because I don't want to lay off people. You know what I
mean? As a business owner, you probably will drastically cut your pay before you would touch
theirs. Last month, I didn't take a paycheck. Yeah. Well, there you go. I'm very sure that
everybody in the business took home a more net than I did last month. So it's not always like that. Obviously,
like I've had a few real good years and whatnot. But no, that's the thing. That's what you need
to do as a business. That's the right thing to do. I mean, I totally understand. I've worked it
out with my guys. This is what's going to happen. If we get to this point, then my income is going
to go from this to this. And some of the more higher compensated executive people in my
organization, like we're all going to be taking a pay, guys, if we need to. I'm not going to be
laying anybody off. I'm not going to be cutting pay. We're going to take the pay cut. Let me just
make it clear. It's so funny when people say, well, look at these business owners that make
this much and their employees that make this much. And it's like, yeah, but they also take
all the risk. You know what I mean? Totally. I've had good months where I've taken a huge
dividend, which is awesome. I've also had months where I've had to put money back into my business for my personal account,
right? I always say that I think everybody should have to own a business for at least two years
before they can vote. You know what I mean? Full franchise democracy is an unmitigated failure.
Maybe we can at least start with pay taxes. You have to pay taxes and then you can vote.
There's no perfect solution. I think that again, like using this time to try and pivot, whatever it is you do, right?
If you're an entrepreneur, obviously you're worried.
My advice is don't give into the inclination to use a pandemic to use fear to sell things,
unless you're already a POS.
And in that case, you know, you're just doing what you do.
There's a lot of people out there.
The first sign of things go bad. They're like, oh, well, hey, this thing can help with COVID-19
or whatever. And I'm just sitting here shaking my head. That's a good segue. And that was the
next thing I wanted to get your thoughts on. I'll lead with, and this is funny timing. So
over at Legion, you're familiar with Legion. We've been working on an immune support supplement. And
I stand by the formulation where we've been working on this product for nine months, right? I would say mostly conceived by
Curtis Frank, who's the co-founder and former lead researcher and writer over at examine.com.
I don't know if I'll meet somebody else who understands biology and supplementation like
he does. His level of knowledge and expertise is truly impressive. It had been on our calendar to
release this product in March for months now, and it had been nine months in the making, right? And so I released it and I didn't say that it's
going to treat COVID-19. I didn't even say it's going to prevent you from getting infected with
the virus. When I write these emails, half it's to amuse myself and half it's maybe a bit of a
strategy, but I make jokes and try to make people laugh as part of the process, right?
So it came off a bit tone deaf and I got a lot of positive responses where people thought it was hilarious and it was a nice reprieve from
all the gloom and doom. And then some people got upset about it because they thought it was
insensitive, which I understand. Looking back, I could have done a better job. I was kind of just
looking at the situation through my eyes. And then other people though were attacking it on the
grounds of, it is not possible to boost your immune system,
period. There's no evidence at all that you can do anything to boost your immune system.
And to that, I was like, what are you talking about? So, okay, if you deprive yourself of sleep,
let's say you sleep four hours a night for two weeks, you're going to impair your immune system.
And then you sleep enough, you're going to boost your immune system. Dictionary definition here,
enhance or support, increase the activity
of, right? Yes. Okay. So now look at the available evidence on garlic. If you eat a clove or two of
garlic per day, and if you disagree with me, then I would be curious to hear your thoughts.
But my understanding of the evidence is what we currently have available strongly suggests that
eating a clove or two of garlic every day literally boosts your immune system, like enhances NK
cell activity and NK cell activity
and enhances T cell activity. I didn't know this. Immune boosting has kind of been stigmatized by
scammers who just sell like vitamin C and lysine pills and immune support or immune assistance
helping the immune system. I guess those are more palatable ways of phrasing things. But if you say
anything, boost the immune system, you're a scammer.
I'll be honest.
People had messaged me and said, have you seen what Mike said and this and that?
I said, well, no, I haven't seen what I said, so I'm not going to comment on it.
People don't understand this.
They think I seek this stuff out.
Most of the stuff that I talk about, it's sent to me.
But nobody had sent me the specific comments.
You've always come across to me as somebody who is pretty genuine and tries to
do the right thing. I think it's all about how it's marketed. What I'm concerned with when it
comes to people who are talking about, well, this diet could help you or this supplement could help
you is people thinking that they're protected when they're not. So I think the most important
thing is to say, this is not a treatment for this virus. You still need to practice the major
things, which is hygiene, social distancing,
all this kind of stuff. This isn't bulletproofing your immune system. Can you increase the activity
of some of these things? Sure, maybe. Does that mean you should just go out and walk into an
infectious disease wing at a hospital? No. Sadly, that's what a lot of people think. One of the
people I really went after was Paul Saladino, carnivore MD. He never clearly came out and said, do the carnivore diet, buy my book, it will protect
you against COVID-19.
But it was very cleverly worded.
But basically, and I'm paraphrasing, it was something to the effect of the conversation
around the coronavirus is all wrong.
We need to be focused on building the most robust human being possible.
And you're not going to do that with plants.
Now, of course, he doesn't provide any evidence. Such a ridiculous statement.
It's just kind of like a, rawr, eat me. So he's like, you're not going to do that with plants.
And then he kind of parlays that into, I wrote this book about the carnivore diet,
which will make you a robust human being. Now, he never says it's going to protect you from
cloven. He's very smart. Implication.
But then at the end, he says, I'm a doctor and I'm not afraid. Well, he's actually a psychiatrist.
So, all right, you're a doctor, like kind of, I'm a doctor.
It's like the chiropractors when they don't want you to notice that DC, they want you to.
Exactly. People were like, well, he didn't actually say it. I'm like,
look at the comments on his post. And there were people saying, I'm not scared of the virus. I eat
only meat and my immune system has never been better. And I'm thinking, did you go get your
lymphocyte count and your white blood cell count done or something? Because I kind of doubt it.
You made a comment on this earlier. That's also not the point. I'm with you.
I'm not concerned about getting the virus myself. If I get it, I get it,
but I don't want to be spreading it around. That's the point.
Someone like you and me, we might get it and have no symptoms. We might not even realize it,
but we can still be passing it around. I've talked to a few doctor friends of mine who are saying that there are actually some
young people who are getting sick. And I think in Italy, some young people have actually died
from it as well. I looked at numbers this morning. It's very rare. It's very small,
but there is a possibility. It's like, do you want to take that chance? Is it worth it for
you to go down to the bar and get a beer? The other thing that I think it's important to point
out is people are strawmanning my argument. They're saying, well, Lane's saying there's nothing you can do nutritionally that will
strengthen your immune system. That's not what I'm saying at all. What I'm saying is that if
you haven't been doing it for the last six months or practicing good habits for the last six months,
there's nothing you're going to do inside of a week that's going to make a huge difference.
That's what I'm saying. Am I saying you can't have a strong immune system while eating, say, a keto diet or carnivore diet? I'm not saying that. I think if
your overall lifestyle is good in terms of you get enough sleep, you exercise, I would argue that
it's probably better with plants than it is without it. I'm not saying that you can't have
some of these other nutritional protocols and be healthy. At least for a time, I would challenge
anybody following a carnivore diet
to remain healthy for like 10 years. Then that's the thing. It's like, well,
I feel so much better. It's like, you need to go study the placebo effect, my friend.
I will say if you're somebody who's been unhealthy and now you're like, this was kind
of the thing that's like, I want to do everything I can. Okay. Well, eating a healthy diet,
exercising, getting enough sleep, those same healthy habits that we've been talking about for a long time, those can still help you, but understand you're
not going to see like a complete 180 in a week.
That's like saying, I want to build a 600 pound squat and you go in and you're like,
what squat boosting workout can I do this week to get a 600 pound squat?
Get a forklift.
It's not going to happen, right?
But if you put in the work over time, it can get better. Even if this two-week kind of lockdown thing works, it flattens the curve,
and we can kind of start getting back to life as normal. It's not like this thing is just going to
suddenly drop off the face of the planet. We're going to be dealing with this for a while.
I mean, it's probably just a part of the viral ecosystem now, if that's even a term,
but it took over a year, I think, with SARS for the WHO to
declare the pandemic over. And I haven't looked at cases since then, but I highly doubt it's just
now part of stuff that comes and goes. At least from what I understand, again,
I'm not an immunologist expert. Oh, did it mutate out of existence?
That's exactly what happened. Yeah, that's right. That's right.
A virus can mutate and become worse, but typically they actually mutate and just
stop being so contagious. That's actually one of the more likely ways that they say this will end
is it will likely be that this will mutate into something that's no longer contagious and be done.
It's also possible it can mutate into something worse, but let's hope that doesn't happen.
But yeah, if you start doing those healthy habits now, and again, this is just completely
theoretical. So nobody quote me on this
as like, this is the way it's going to happen. Hey, maybe you're somebody who's obese. You don't
sleep well. You have an unhealthy lifestyle, but you start today and you start making good habits,
good choices. You do that for six months and hey, you come in contact with this virus. Well,
maybe now instead of being hospitalized, now your body's able to fight it off on itself.
If nothing else, your body will do better.
Well, the other thing is you'll have less comorbidities. So it's not always that this virus kills you. It's also that a lot of these people
have other comorbidities that now they're not able to fight off because of this virus, because their
immune system is so overwhelmed. So now if you get healthier, you're going to have less comorbidity.
And honestly, it's just a good idea overall. But I think most people, again, they want a quick fix
and the scammers out there are taking the opportunity to capitalize on it. I just hope when the tide goes back out, everyone remembers who was skinny
dipping. Everybody remembers who tried to game the system or who tried to use this to make a
bunch of money, right? There was another popular supplement person who I called out on Instagram.
And again, it was the way it was marketed. It was an immune booster. Just the post itself,
I didn't like it, but I wasn't ready to go bare my teeth.
But then there was a comment under it.
One of their followers said, this COVID-19 has nothing on this stack.
And the supplement owner under that says, damn right.
And I'm like, holy shit, dude.
Are you fucking kidding me?
You're going to have people thinking that they can take this supplement and they're protected.
And this is somebody who is well-respected and who I respected previously.
And yeah, I called them out.
Then they threatened to sue me.
And then you know how that goes.
I was going to ask, are you sure it was him?
Or was it somebody that runs his account for him?
But it sounds like he stands by...
No, it was him because this person said,
well, how would you like me to let everybody know a phone call we had a few years ago?
Which I called this person a few years ago when I was going to start my company with bodybuilding.com
because they had been affiliated with bodybuilding.com. And I wanted to know, hey, what was
your experience working with them? That was the phone call. He claims that I said I was going to
cash in. I don't think I used that verbiage. And if I did, I'd have to hear the context I used it,
but I kind of doubt I said that. You want to pick out a private phone call from six years ago as your gotcha?
Okay, good luck with that.
Yeah, totally.
Now I think I know exactly who you're talking about.
In any case, it's just been really disappointing to see how some people have handled this.
I'm hoping things will get better.
You know, again, are there things you can do?
Yes.
But just like anything else, it's going to take time.
It's going to take consistency and it's nothing that's going to take time. It's going to take consistency
and it's nothing that's going to happen overnight.
Agreed. On the immune point in particular, are there any other thoughts that you have in terms
of enhancing immune function? And the reason why I'm following up is this is just something that
I've been asked. For example, here's a question I'm getting a lot. I don't know if you are,
should I be cutting right now? Is that smart?
Great question. I'm glad you brought this up. So I'm going to give you what the data says and also my opinion.
If you are somebody who is overweight or obese, the research shows that actually being a caloric deficit may actually enhance your immune function slightly.
That being said, I would make sure you are in a gradual deficit. Now is not the time to start a protein sparing modified three-day fast.
It's not a good idea. Or just water fasting. Like,
I'm just not going to eat for five days. There is some data to suggest that extreme
calorie deficits can impair immune function. Now, if you're someone who's normal weight and
you just want to trim up a little bit, like you've got a little bit of fluff, again,
I think that's probably fine. I would just go slow. Make sure you're doing it smart,
gradual, that sort of thing. If you are somebody who's already lean and you're going to say,
I'm going to use this time to get shredded and do three days and all that kind of stuff,
I would not do that. Getting obese to non-obese or getting normal to lean is a whole different
ballgame than getting lean to fucking shredded. That's a whole
different ballgame. There's not research necessarily that I know of in competitors,
but I would be shocked if it did not negatively impact immune function. So for those of you out
there who'd been prepping for shows, now's probably the time to kind of maybe hit the
maintenance button, unless you're just not that lean yet. But if you're getting to a point where you're pretty darn lean, and I have several clients
who are in prep right now, and one of them I've actually told, hey, you're lean enough.
Let's hit the maintenance button. Let's stay here and let's wait until these shows start
coming back on the radar and then let's push forward. Let's not do it now. Now's not the time.
Yep. That's great advice. And I think of some research, you've probably seen this with
marathon runners and triathletes
that shows that they tend to get sick more often after their events because they've just
pushed themselves so hard.
So there's something to be said for easing off the gas right now if you're just going
balls to the wall.
No purposeful phases of overreaching.
Like if you're sore after a workout, don't get freaked out.
If your sleep's constantly bad, you're always sore, your workout performance is declining,
all that kind of stuff, pump the brakes just a little bit.
I like it.
All right, my friend, I know you have to run.
You have another call to jump off to.
I really appreciate you again taking the time.
It's always fun chatting with you.
I look forward to the next one.
And let's just wrap up with where people can find you
and your work.
And again, let's just let everybody know
what cool and neat things of yours can they check out while they are sitting on the couch for the next week or so.
Totally. So the most exciting thing we got coming up is our app that's going to be dropping.
It's called Carbon Diet Coach. That should be in a few weeks time.
So this app, it's for iOS and Android. Basically, when you sign up, you plug in your goals, your current metrics like body weight and some other things, and it generates customized nutrition recommendations based on your goals.
And then every week you check in just like you would a coach, and it will adjust you
based on your progress and optimize your performance.
We understand there's other apps out there that do that now, but ours is the best.
It was designed by myself, my wife, Holly Baxter, Keith Crocker, who's a registered dietitian,
one of our coaches. We've been working on it for a long time. It's very good. I've been using it.
A lot of people have been seeing on my story, on my Instagram, I've been getting a lot leaner.
I've been using it to coach me for the last six months and it's been fabulous. I don't want to
give away everything, but there's like a diet planner. So you could do, for example, we operate
on a weekly macro budget. So you can do high and low calorie days.
So if you go in and let's say you want more calories on Monday because it's a harder training
day and you up those calories, it'll automatically adjust all your other days so that your weekly
balance is still the same.
That's great.
So you don't have to do any thinking.
It takes the guesswork out of it.
In the back end of things, it's a lot less volatile than some of the other apps out there.
Like for example, if you drop two or three pounds in a week, a lot of that could be from
water.
Some of the other apps will have you overcorrect because it looks like you're losing way too
much weight and your calorie deficit is way too steep.
The way we've built ours, it's not going to have big overreactions like that.
It's going to moderate it and wash some of that noise out.
It's very good and it has a built-in food tracker, food diary as well with barcode scanner, the whole deal. Super easy to use food diary. I actually love the food diary.
I never used a tracking app before this. I would start one and I hated it. I was just happier to
do it in Excel. And this is the first one I actually use. So I love it. There's something
to be said for that. I understand. I've always just stuck to Excel myself. And it'll be $9.99 a month. Super affordable for people and it works great.
Obviously, we've got our books. We've got Fat Loss Forever, The Reverse Dieting Guide,
The Complete Contest Prep Guide. Our educational books are phenomenal. We get great reviews about
them all the time. We've actually got people messaging us now who have lost over 100 pounds
using Fat Loss Forever. Pretty cool to see that. You can find all this stuff at biolane.com. Whenever carbon comes out, you can find that at joincarbon.com.
And obviously in the iOS and the Android store, we've got a bunch of other stuff coming too.
We've got the science of nutrition, my short course on nutrition. We've got another course
coming out called training the physique athlete. And then next year I'm going to have a actual
like full on certification coming out. It'll be called the Physique Coaching Academy.
And it's between myself and Professor Bill Campbell.
And it's going to be a complete, utter certification.
If you want to be a physique coach, this is going to teach you everything you need to know.
That's awesome.
That's going to be a super amazing high-end product for people.
We're going to have a research review that's going to be coming out for Biolane.com as well.
That's a few months in the future.
Then I may be joining you back in the supplement game here before too long.
Yeah, I heard that. I heard that.
A lot of stuff going on. You can find everything at biolane.com other than carbon,
which you can find at joincarbon.com. My social media is all biolane. So I hope to see you guys
out there and thanks for listening and thanks for having me on, Mike.
Absolutely. My pleasure. I look forward to the next one.
Thanks, buddy.
Thanks for having me on.
Absolutely.
My pleasure.
I look forward to the next one.
Thanks, buddy.
All right.
Well, that's it for today's episode.
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always looking for constructive feedback. All right. Thanks again for listening to this episode
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