Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Live Q&A: Concurrent Training, Vegetarian Muscle Building, Refeeding, and More…
Episode Date: August 26, 2016This episode of the podcast is a recording of my last live Q&A, and in it I answer questions on things like the limits of newbie gains, how to improve posture, teenage weightlifting and stunting growt...h, training for strength, hypertrophy, and endurance, and more. If you want to get in on the next live QA, go here: https://www.legionathletics.com/qa. 03:05 - Is there an age when newbie gains won't happen? 06:53 - How can I improve my posture? 10:34 - You say that newbies can gain muscle and lose at the same time, how does this work and why can't seasoned gym warriors do this as well? 11:57 - I'm 16 yrs old should i be lifting heavy or just focus on getting taller/growing? Will doing squats with 150lbs stunt growth for a 16 yr old? 14:22 - When doing a shoulder press should I keep my elbows pointing towards the front or is it okay be opening them up? 16:28 - When are you releasing your app? 17:35 - How do you get so much work done? 20:00 - How can I train for strength as well as hypertrophy, while doing cardio? 23:00 - Being a 16 yr old girl how much cardio/weight training do you recommend per week? 23:44 - My gym has no free barbell, just smith machine- why you don't recommend it for squatting & deadlifting? 24:58 - Is it possible to gain muscle and lose fat while on a vegetarian diet or is it a myth? 25:42 - What do you say to people who believe the benefits of fasted cardio are a myth? 28:36 - I'm down to 8% and vascular everywhere but with just a 4 pack, should I start bulking again and focus on ab training? 29:50 - Some people say dips are dangerous, what do you think about this? 30:51 - Do you drink any alcohol? If so what kind? 31:40 - Why don't you want to get bigger? 33:05 - How do we know your products ain't crap like you say others' are? 36:20 - What is your life philosophy? 39:40 - What are some tips for sticking with a diet? 40:25 - What are your thoughts about Logan Franklin and could it be possible that a physique like his is natural? 41:25 - Would you recommend high volume training following a cut? 41:45 - What is the next Legion product? 45:25 - Is a coach's course still something in the pipeline? 47:45 - Is there an application process to get on the Legion team? 47:43 - What's Mike's current stance on a weekly refeed for hormone levels? 51:46 - When training fasted I get dizzy nauseous and weak, what can do to avoid this? 52:20 - Any chance you might provide mobility for and core training, especially for golf players? 56:17 - Once a person has been obese and lost the fat, is it easier for that person to put that fat back on? 58:22 - When I do 4-6 rep range on calves, i easily lift max weight. Do you have any advice on how to increase weight but stay in the 4-6 range? 59:45 - If I want to do a general check on my hormones, bones, etc. what test do you recommend? 60:52 - Im having SI joint issues, any stretches you'd recommend to look up? 1:02:55 - Who is there with you? Do you have many partners that help you behind the scenes? When you started did you have help? 1:05:45 - Is there any difference between 4-6 reps or 6-8 reps? 1:07:10 - I'm about 10% body fat and still feel I have a bit of a belly when I sit down. Will this always be the case? 1:010:02 - Can you recommend any good books on starting your own business? 1:15:00 - I'm having trouble increasing my leg strength, what should I do? 1:16:20 - Do you get tired of people's compliments of your physique? 1:18:12 - How lo
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's Mike, and this podcast is brought to you by my books.
Seriously, though, it actually is.
I make my living as a writer, so as long as I keep selling books,
I can keep writing articles over at Muscle for Life and Legion
and recording podcasts and videos like this and all that fun stuff.
Now, I have several books, but the place to start is
Bigger Leaner Stronger if you're a guy and Thinner Leaner Stronger if you're a girl.
Now, these books, they basically teach you everything you need to know about dieting, training, and supplementation to build
muscle, lose fat, and look and feel great without having to give up all the foods you love or grind
away in the gym every day doing workouts that you hate. Now you can find my books everywhere. You
can buy books online like Amazon, Audible, iBooks, Google Play, Barnes & Noble,
Kobo, and so forth. And if you're into audiobooks like me, you can actually get one of my books for
free, one of my audiobooks for free with a 30-day free trial of Audible. To do that, go to
muscleforlife.com forward slash audiobooks. That's www.muscleforlife.com forward slash audiobooks.
And you can see how to do this. Now also, if you like my work in
general, then I really think you're going to like what I'm doing with my supplement company, Legion.
Now, as you probably know, I'm not a fan of the supplement industry. I mean, I've wasted who knows
how many thousands of dollars over the years on worthless supplements that really do nothing.
And I've always had trouble finding products that I actually thought were worth buying and recommending. And well, basically I had been complaining about this
for years and I decided to finally do something about it and start making my own products.
And not just any products, but really the exact products that I myself have always wanted. So a
few of the things that make my supplements unique are one, they're a hundred percent naturally
sweetened and flavored. Two, all
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studies. So you can go dive in and check it out for yourself. Three, all ingredients are also
included at clinically effective dosages, which are the exact dosages used in the studies proving their
effectiveness. This is important, of course, because while something like creatine is proven
to help improve strength and help you build muscle faster, if you don't take enough, then you're not
going to see the benefits that are seen in scientific research. And four, there are no
proprietary blends, which means that you know exactly what you're buying. All our formulations
are 100% transparent, both with the ingredients and the dosages. So you can learn more
about my supplements at www.legionathletics.com. And if you like what you see and you want to buy
something, use the coupon code podcast, P O D C A S T, and you'll save 10% on your order.
All right. Thanks again for taking the
time to listen to my podcast and let's get to the show. Okay. So the first question.
Is there an age when newbie gains won't happen?
That's a good question.
And no, you're going to have, though, I mean,
really what it is is that your body is just hyper responsive to weightlifting.
For the first, I would say anywhere from three to four months would be on the low end.
Probably most people, it lasts about six months and it can be, I've seen like where it definitely tapers off is,
is about a year. I'd say probably most people start to see that, uh, they're just not responding.
They're not, they're not gaining strength and size nearly as quickly as they were when they
started at about probably the eight month mark. So for the first three months, it's crazy. If you, if your diet is halfway sensible and if you have a halfway decently
programmed workout routine, then you're going to, you're going to, you know, respond like gang
busters for the first three months. And then it slows down a bit for the next three months. And
then it's, you're kind of entering the twilight of your newbie gains in those last three months.
But, you know, I've worked with thousands of people at this point, men, women, all ages and
circumstances, and people, you know, in, I've seen people, I've actually seen people in their
forties and fifties respond better in the beginning than people in their twenties.
And you can chalk that up to genetics. Some people are just genetically hardwired to respond really well to weightlifting and resistance training, whereas other people
are, uh, you know, low responders. And, um, we, we kind of know this anecdotally. And if you've
spent any time in gyms and just kind of, if you've known people over the years that were into working
out, you've seen this, but it's also been, um, there's, there's, it's been seen in scientific research as well, and it can be pretty dramatic.
So, uh, regardless of your age, you are going to respond very well in the beginning. Um, and you
know, if you do everything right, you can expect to be on the fast track for let's say six to nine
months. And then just to quickly kind of throw this out there, because this is something I was talking with, uh, Kareem who heads up my coaching program.
Um, and just something we were talking about, cause he, you know, he's working with more and
more people now that when, once your newbie gains are behind you, it's very important that you
really get your diet on point in the beginning, you can kind of mess around and your protein
intake can be up and down and your carbs can be up and down and your calories can be up and down, but your body just keeps responding.
But once you have that, uh, behind you, once your body isn't hyper responsive to the stimulus
anymore of weightlifting, then diet and consistency becomes super important. Making sure that your
macros are where they need to be. Your calories are where they need to be seven days a week, and you're not doing funky things where you're
going very low calorie three days a week to compensate for the very high calorie three or
four days a week. It makes a big difference in not just how your body responds in terms of
changes in body composition, but also in your
training, it keeps it when you keep your diet, where it needs to be, you're able to smoothly
continue progressing on your lifts and progressing on in terms of both weight and reps. But if you
start getting screwy with your diet, it makes it really hard. And so I've just seen that a lot with
people where in the beginning, they can see they realize they can be a bit loose and they kind of want to push the envelope in terms of, uh, I wouldn't say, I mean, it's just being loose and they, and they go, well, I mean, I guess if, uh, Hey, if I, if I can keep on gaining strength and size without really having to pay attention to what I eat, if I just follow loose guidelines, uh, that sounds pretty good.
And then eventually they get stuck
and they wonder why. So long-winded answer, but I thought, uh, just something worth throwing out
there for, for anybody that's new to weightlifting. Keep that in mind. Okay. Next question. I was
wondering how I can improve my posture. I've noticed the way I stand makes me look fatter.
Um, well, it kind of depends. I mean, if you're talking about in this case, is this, uh, uh,
sticking your stomach out, like overarching your back, or it could just be. I mean, if you're talking about, in this case, is this sticking your stomach out, like over-arching your back?
Or it could just be slumping, like if you're kind of just like this and sticking your stomach out.
And, I mean, again, it depends what's going on.
But most posture-related issues that any of us really run into is the hunchy shoulders.
And, you know, because working on a computer sitting all the
time, uh, we tend to just get slouched forward. And for that, I mean, there are some simple
shoulder mobility and, uh, exercises and stretches that you can do. If you go on muscle for life and
search for shoulder mobility or just mobility, you'll find an article I wrote on it. Um, and
that is gonna, that's gonna really help just, you know, like if, if you want to get a
feeling for what proper posture is when your arms are at your side, your thumbs should be pointing
out in front of you. And, uh, so you, you know, if you, if you get like that, it almost to me,
I mean, I was kind of digging into my own posture like a year ago. I wasn't, I wasn't really hunched,
but you know, my natural, when I would just put my arms down at my sides, my thumbs would be turned more in, I would say somewhere around
45 degrees or, or even, or even, uh, you know, maybe closer to 30 degrees or so, as opposed to
a more 90 degree straight out, uh, you know, pointing, pointing in, in line with your knees
or your feet. Um, and it'll feel like you're kind of puffing your chest out. If you're used to slunching,
slouching, and if you're used to rolling your shoulders in, but that's proper posture is your,
I mean, your, your shoulder blades are not pinched, but everything is pulled back a little
bit. And this is important, not just for how it looks, but it's also important for preventing injury.
I recorded a podcast today with a sports doctor.
He's a chiropractor and PT, and mainly he just deals in physical medicine that I've been seeing
because I've been running into some on and off bicep tendonitis over the last couple months.
And I've tried different things myself, and it helped a little bit, but it didn't really make it go away. And, um, so we talk a bit about this in
the podcast. It's going to be up next week. So I definitely recommend that everybody listened to
it because he covers some very important things that I'm learning now more. I mean, it's something
that, uh, there are some simple preventative things that you can do. And this is a good
example, correcting posture that will prevent, uh, the,
the risk of injury. Um, even in my case, it's not really an acute injury is more just a repetitive
use. Tissues get stuck. Things start, stop moving the way that they should. It causes tissues to
rub on each other as opposed to slide friction over time. And eventually it hurts. So, um,
I would say do the stretches and also I
will say, where's my thing. I've been using this as well. This is a cause posture, medic usa.com
and you put it on like a backpack. Um, and for people just listening to this as a podcast,
you're gonna have to visualize it's basically it's, it's like this, and then it forces you to keep your shoulders back.
So it's kind of like an elastic backpack, basically, that keeps tension on your shoulders
and pulls them back.
And I've been wearing this for several hours a day, and I've found that it just helps train
in proper posture, where it may not be so much that you have mobility issues
and you couldn't maintain proper posture.
You've just gotten used to improper posture.
So posturamedicusa.com, this thing helps too.
Question, you say that newbies can build muscle and lose fat at the same time.
How does this work and why can't seasoned gym warriors do it either?
I would, I mean, I don't know.
If you go to legionathletics.com, go to the blog and search for body recomposition.
And I really, I break it all down in that article.
Again, what it basically boils down to is people, when you're new to weightlifting or
you don't even necessarily have to be new to weightlifting, but if you're new to proper
weightlifting, if you're new to heavy compound weightlifting, like if you take someone that
just is kind of dicked around on machines and done a bunch
of high rep circuit training type of stuff for a long time, and then you put them on
a proper strength training program, they're going to see a bit of that, uh, of the, the,
the newbie gains as well, even though they're not necessarily new to weightlifting or new
to resistance training.
Um, but basically it's that the, um, overcompensation of the, that you experienced in the beginning
outweighs the, uh, hindrances that are associated in terms of muscle growth that are associated
with being in a, in a caloric deficit.
Um, but anyways, go to legionathletics.com, go to the blog, search for recomposition and
read the article I wrote on body recomposition.
And I, I break it all down there and link a bunch of science.
And, um, I think I do a
pretty good job explaining it there. So next question. So I'm 16 years old. Should I be
lifting heavy or just focus on getting taller and growing? And then this is a two-sum, and there's
another similar question. Well, doing squats with 150 pounds stunt growth for a 16-year-old. So
first off, it's a myth that weightlifting is going to stunt growth.
If you go on my YouTube channel and if you search for teenager, I think, or search for
bodybuilding, you'll see an article or sorry, a podcast.
I think it was a podcast or just a shorter video.
No, it was a podcast where I talk about teenage bodybuilding. And basically, I would say at 16,
you're in a perfect place to start lifting heavy
and start following a normal strength training type of program.
You just are going to want to, like anybody else,
make sure that you are really paying attention to your form
and not getting into ego lifting with your buddies
and trying to see who can squat the
most weight with the worst form and who can pull the most weight at the worst form and stuff like
that. Um, but it's not going to stunt your growth. That's a myth. Um, in extreme, I mean,
the thing is, it's not that it wouldn't be the heavy weightlifting that would cause the issue
where you see stunted growth is if it's excessive exercise, excessive training, like with gymnastics, for instance, where these kids, their exercise routines and their workout routines and the frequency and the volume is insane.
Yeah, that's not good.
But if you're talking about your normal moderate volume, plenty of rest and recovery type of program, there are no problems there.
volume, plenty of rest and recovery type of program. There are no problems there. Um, and you know, in, in fact, heavy weightlifting may even help with growth because of the hormonal
responses, um, like with growth hormone, for example. So, um, yeah, this 16 is a perfect age.
I would say if you were 13, I would probably say you could get into weightlifting. I would
probably recommend that you start with some lighter weights. Um, just cause we, as you're, as you're getting used to your body,
uh, there's a point where like, I mean, these are athletic movements, a squat, a deadlift,
an overhead press, and you want to make sure that you can do them properly. Um, and before you
really start loading weight. So, um, you know,, if you were even younger, if you were,
this wouldn't be a teenager, but if you were 10, 11, 12, maybe 13, I would say you could also start
with body weight stuff and build some basic strength there and then transition into the
weightlifting, which, you know, that also works well. All right, next question. When doing a
shoulder press, should I keep my elbows pointing toward the front or is it okay to open them up?
Um, well, I mean, so you basically want to be keeping your elbows pointing forward. You don't,
you don't want to, especially when you're down in this position. And this is similar on,
on a bench press really, you know, we all, if you've, if you've been following my stuff or if you read anybody that really knows anything in terms of form, you've heard that in the bench press, you should keep your elbows tucked in.
And that's true.
And that's particularly important when you are – once you kind of break that 90 degree with your arms, that's when it becomes particularly important because your rotator cuff is in a compromised position there. So if you're getting down deep and then
you start flaring your elbows, that's when you can run into impingements and other problems.
So similarly, when you're doing your overhead pressing, it's important at the bottom that you
don't flare your elbows out right away and try to press up like this. Cause
then you're going to get into where you can impinge. You have an AC joint right here and you
can get into impingements there. And it also puts a undue stress on the rotator cuff muscles. And,
um, you know, that those, the, these are the muscles that keep your shoulder stable,
keep everything working, keep the joint function the way that it's supposed to function. So
at the bottom, your elbows are pointing forward as you're pressing up their forward. And then at
the top, obviously, I mean, you can't keep them forward the entire time because that, what are
you supposed to do? I mean, that gets really awkward, but you're, you're, you're, they're,
they're pointing forward until you get to, I would say until your elbows are about at your chin,
they're pointing forward. And then it's, then it's starting to rotate. And this is really, I mean, if this is how it,
this is the natural movement. If you're, if you, uh, you know, you kind of have to unnaturally
force your shoulders out this way. That's not, if you want it, if you want to press up and make
sure and keep your body stable, it almost forces you to do what I'm saying.
But that's basically the form.
I have to do faster answers because we have a lot of questions.
So here we go.
When you're releasing, is that this?
Yes.
So when you're releasing your app.
Good question. So basically, I have a build to test.
This is with the log functionality fully implemented.
I'm going to say I know there are some things they're going to fix.
They're going to need another week for that.
They're going to need another week to fix some body section stuff,
another week to put together the freemium model.
So basically, I want everyone to be able to use it for free for about a month
before having to pay anything.
And there are going to be no recurring fees. It's just going to be a one-time fee, but I want it to be a free app that you can
use in its entirety for about a month. And then you can decide, is this worth $5 or not?
So let's say a minimum of four weeks left in terms of development and testing, because the
beta testing has started and it's going well. We're just kind of, it's focusing on the, on the whole training section of the app because that that's really the heart and soul of
it. So let's say four weeks it would be on the low end and probably eight weeks would be on the
high end. So in the middle, six weeks ish, I would be happy if it were live rolling in six weeks.
I would be happy if it were live rolling in six weeks. Um, question, how do you get so much work done? Um, well, I mean, it's, uh, it's just a, it's just a function of time putting in the time
and being consistent. And, and I have, uh, I mean, I, I like to work on a, on a fixed schedule in
terms of time. So I wake up at the same time every day. I get to the office at the same time every day within a 15 minute window. Um, and I, I work more or less on the same
schedule. I don't really take a long lunch. I go to the gym more or less at the same time. I try
to get home at about the same time, make my, I make the same dinner every day. So I get back on
the computer about the same time. So there's that there's just being, being, uh, consistent in my, in my schedule.
And then there's, um, good habits when I'm working. Uh, like for example, um, you know, I'm not
big on the Pomodoro technique where you work for like 20 minutes to take a five minute break
because a lot of my work tends to be deeper work where I have to really get in the zone. Like
it may take me 15, 20 minutes if I'm writing an
article to really feel like I've, uh, kind of got my stride and I'm fully focused on, on, and I'm,
well, I mean, I have, I'm, I'm good at focusing on things, but I mean like where I'm really,
I, I just get into a zone basically, and it can take 15 minutes just to get into a zone.
So it would actually be disruptive for me to like every 15, 20 minutes, take a five minute break. It would be not, it would be counterproductive.
But I, I, I don't, I don't have any, I don't have my email open.
I don't have social media open.
I don't pay attention to my phone.
So I kind of eliminate all distractions, just focus on what I'm doing for, in some cases,
rather long periods of time.
And then, you know, maybe after an hour, hour and a half of writing or something like that,
I'll come up for a break. I'll get some water, you know, if I have to go pee. So I have little
breaks in there. And, um, you know, that's, I, that's, that's really the, the, the, it's just,
it's just the basics. It's like, it's like with weightlifting or diet, there's no secret to
losing weight. You eat fewer calories than you burn and you make sure that your macros are set
up properly. And if you want to gain muscle and strength, you go and you lift heavy shit and you make
sure that you're not overtraining or under training and, uh, you're patient and you know,
there you go. Uh, very similar with work. You show up at the right time. You, you know, um,
sit at the desk and, and you put in the time and you focus on what you're doing when you're doing it and voila,
you know, the work gets done. So next question, how can I manage like a million goals? I guess
what I'm saying, I want to train for strength as well as hypertrophy whilst also throwing in the
occasional run and cycle, not enough days in the week. Stu, big fan from UK, PT, teaches your
preaching. Thanks for the support, Stu. And yeah, I understand
if I were you, I probably would look at periodizing my training, just periodizing my, my
exercise as a whole, where, you know, maybe for two months, you're going to be focusing on your
strength where in keeping your, your running and cycling on a maintenance. So in that,
in that example, I don't know what your preferred strength program is. Uh, maybe it's my program,
which is kind of a hybrid strength bodybuilding program, or maybe it's a more pure strength,
like a, you know, starting strength or a five by five or whatever. And so for that time,
you're doing that. And maybe you're only running or cycling once or twice a week,
uh, maybe just doing some high intensity stuff once or twice a week, just to maintain your endurance. So you don't come back, you know, a couple months later,
way behind the eight ball. And then you're, if you're going to focus more on, let's say
in the gym, you want to focus more on, on, on hypertrophy. If, I mean, when I say that,
I would say that's just increasing your volume really. So if you want to then go two months and,
and lighten the load a
bit and go higher rep and really pump out volume. Uh, and then from there you might want to, if you
want to be doing more cardio, then you're going to have to scale back your lifting. So maybe you go
to a, just an upper lower work. Maybe it's just two lifting workouts a week, maybe three, you
do upper lower, you do a push pull legs where it's moderate volume. Um, It's not as much squatting and deadlifting as you would find in a strength program
because that's going to mess with your cycling and running.
And then you can easily fit in maybe three or four cardio sessions a week.
And then there's also the dietary factors involved too
where if you're going to be doing a lot of exercise,
like if you were to – let's say you wanted to cut in that scheme of things, I would say cut while you're doing the strength training,
because that's going to be the higher rep, higher volume training is just going to be harder on your
body. And if you're doing a bunch of cardio, being in a caloric deficit is generally not a good idea.
It's going to be harder to preserve your muscle that way. So, but if you're doing a bunch of cardio, being in a, in a caloric deficit is generally not a good idea. It's going to be harder to preserve your muscle that way. So, um, but if you don't care about that, then I would say if you could just stay around maintenance, uh, the whole time,
or maybe you're bulking during the strength and hypertrophy phases of your exercise,
and then you're kind of just maintaining, uh, during the cardio that would work as well.
So that's probably how I would look at it. Um, you know, because otherwise,
yeah, you just, you're just going to end up over training basically. And you maybe won't notice it,
uh, for quite some time and until it really hits you. And then you're going to have to
take a bit of time off and, you know, recover. So, so being a 16 year old girl,
how much cardio weight training do you recommend per week? Uh, I would say, um,
three to five hours of weightlifting and no more than an hour to maybe an hour and a half of cardio
per week is all you need on the cardio. I would stick more with high intensities interval stuff
because you can just get more bang for your buck in terms of time and fat loss. So if you want to learn more about that, I would say head over to,
I think I have an article over at Legion, legionathletics.com. Go to the blog and search
for women. And I believe I have an article there on just like the, here's a, here, the overall,
you know, a fitness plan for women. And if it's not there, go to muscle for life,
because it's definitely there. So if you search for women, you'll find it.
Next question.
Hey, Mike.
I've read BLS, and I'm going through the first round of the workout,
but my gym has no free barbell, just a Smith machine.
That sucks.
Can you expand on why you don't recommend it for squatting and if I should make any adjustments?
Same question for deadlifting.
Yeah, so you can squat on a Smith machine.
It's just not as effective as a free weight squat,
and if all you did was squat on a Smith machine and then you went to a free weight, you'd have to drop the weight a lot,
and it would be really awkward. And the same thing goes for overhead pressing and bench pressing.
For years ago, I used to only work on the Smith machine. And the most I'd ever gotten up to on
bench was like 245 for a few reps. And when I finally stopped using the Smith machine and went to the free weight bench, I was struggling with 185. Um, and you'll find that with, with, uh, squatting and,
and, and overhead pressing, and you can't really deadlift on a Smith machine safely and properly
because it's not the, it's just not a natural range of motion. Um, you could maybe Romanian
deadlift or straight leg deadlift, but the, you really need a free barbell. Um, now if your gym, I mean, you could start, I would say don't deadlift on it at all. If you,
if this is, if you have to start on this gym and you have to be there for now, then that's fine.
Um, but if not, I would say find another gym, find one with a proper setup.
Okay. Next question. Due to various reasons, I'm going vegetarian, uh, gaining muscles and
gaining muscle size and burning fat while on a vegetarian diet.
Is it a myth?
Is it really possible with protein supplements?
Of course.
Absolutely.
You can do great on a vegetarian diet.
You can do great on a vegan diet.
If you go to Muscle for Life and you search for vegan, you'll see an article I wrote on it on vegan bodybuilding.
I would say that there are, of course, disadvantages, but you can compensate for them.
And vegetarian are, I mean, the main disadvantages of the vegan diet don't really even apply to the vegetarian diet.
So, yeah, you can do fantastic.
If you go to Most Wife and you read the article on vegan bodybuilding, you'll see how it applies to you as well.
So, yeah, you'll be fine.
So next question.
You mentioned inside a few sources that fasted cardio actually increases the blood flow to
stubborn fat areas.
What do you say to people who believe fasted cardio is a myth?
Well, I mean, I lay it all out.
I have an article both on Muscle for Life and Legion.
Both those articles are pretty long, and I reference a lot of research.
And I would say that if you just take fasted cardio just by itself and you don't add in
supplements, the benefits are probably negligible over, over fed cardio.
I would say that when you are lean, wanting to get really lean, any help you can get getting,
you know, getting rid of stubborn fat is welcome.
So even if there were no supplements involved, I probably would recommend that someone try
it because after working with a lot of people, and I mean, I've seen this in myself, but just because something works well for me doesn't necessarily mean that everyone else is going to respond as well.
But in working with a lot of people, though, a lot of people, especially people that are experienced weightlifters and have dieted down very lean before and now are doing it. And they added fasted cardio in, uh, they'll
a lot of, I've heard from a lot of people that have noticed the effects that especially, you
know, with for us guys, it's, it's the abs and love handled that whole region is, can be very
stubborn for girls. It's hips and, and, uh, thighs and butt. And, um, now if you add in supplementation, which specifically I would say caffeine,
yohimbine and sinephrine, and ideally a couple other molecules that make sinephrine more
effective, which are in our fat burner Phoenix. If you want to go read about it, it's on the
website here. And I kind of break it down when you add in pro like some good supplementation,
uh, with fasted cardio, the effects are, the effects are pretty dramatic for most people.
Again, I've done it myself.
I've cut down to the 6% or 7% body fat range both with and without fasted training and supplementation.
And I can say that it is noticeably faster to go from, let's say, 8% or 9% to 7% with, uh, you know, with the supplements and fast
training. And, um, I've, I've seen the same working with a lot of people. So I think when
you factor in supplements, which in, in the case of your him being, for example, it doesn't work
unless you're fasted or unless your insulin levels are right around fasted. I mean, if you ate a
couple of grapes, yeah, you'd be fine. But if you had a big meal, it has no, uh, the, the fat loss benefits
are, are, are negated because of the, the large spike in, in insulin. Um, so yeah, when you,
when you take that into account and the fact that, uh, caffeine and when you, when you add
caffeine and synephrine and a couple other things in the mix where they all kind of work together
synergistically, um, I think, uh, I mean the, you can look at the science and it makes sense on paper,
and then you can look at the results practically and look at the anecdotal evidence and see that
it works very well for a lot of people. And I know that's my answer. And, you know.
Okay, next question. I'm down to 8% body fat, very vascular, ripped everywhere, but only a
four pack. I have very underdeveloped abs. Should I start bulking
again and focus on ab training? Uh, well, you might be dealing with an issue of muscle insertions,
which is just genetic. Like for instance, I kind of have a gimpy four pack, five pack thing
because that's, that's just the way that my abs are formed. Unfortunately. Um, I, I, there's
nothing I can ever do to get a perfectly symmetrical six pack or eight pack, like how some guys get.
So if you're running into where it's just, you know, the, the muscles are just formed the way that they are, then it doesn't matter how much you train abs. That's just the way that it is.
But if your abs are small and underdeveloped where they're not like, you know, cause you can make
your abs bigger, blockier and, and better developed, but you can make your abs bigger, blockier, um, and, and better developed,
but you can't change how they look and you can't add, like if you're missing, if you don't see
the final ab at the bottom, if it's not protruding, you can't add it. There's not,
doesn't matter how many, uh, you know, leg raises you do. So, um, that's, uh, maybe not the answer
you were hoping to hear, but I feel your pain. I'm in the same boat.
All right, next question. So there's some people out there that states that dips are really dangerous. What do you think about this? I would say that if you are doing dips and you're trying
to go very deep, you're trying to go very much past 90 degrees, that's probably a bad idea
because again, you're putting your shoulder in that compromised position, especially when you're
loading it. And that, you know, it's again, you're really your shoulder in that compromised position, especially when you're loading it. Um, and that, you know, it's, again, you're, you're really wanting to protect your
rotator cuff muscles. And, um, if you go to muscle for life and you search for rotator cuff, you'll
see an article I wrote on this that kind of explains what these muscles are, how they work
and some exercises you can do to keep them strong. Some people never run into this issue because they
have very strong shoulders and very strong rotator cuff muscles. And some people are more prone to injury due to muscle weaknesses, dysfunctional movement, even if they don't necessarily realize it.
So no, I'd say dips are not a dangerous movement.
They're not a dangerous movement, but if you do them incorrectly and you have something preexisting that makes you more inclined to injury, then yes, they can be dangerous.
Question, do you drink any alcohol?
If so, what kind and how often?
Yeah, I'm just a fucking drunk.
No, I don't drink at all.
I just never got into it.
Like I literally don't drink at all.
I've never even been drunk in my life, which is strange. Um, and I'm saving, I'm saving my, my alcohol Hyman for something special. I don't know. We'll see. I've told my, my guys that all the guys that work with
me, they want to see me drunk. They're kind of curious what I'm going to be like drunk.
So maybe at some point I just, uh, never got into it. And then it was like,
I got past the point where I was young and trying to be cool, and I hadn't done it yet.
So now that I'm older and I don't care about being cool, I found like, well, I guess there's no point to it.
That's not a habit to pick up.
It's not something where I won't wake up.
I don't think it's a good idea to wake up and be like, I think I'm going to start drinking and just see where that goes.
So, yeah, I'm boring.
Question, why don't you want to get bigger?
That's a good question. I know I've been saying that. And sometimes I actually do think about it
and I'm like, I mean, it might be cool if I were like 15 pounds bigger. I don't even know if I
could get 15 pounds bigger, but, um, no, I mean, basically because all in all I'm, I'm happy with
my size. Um, and when I was like, I don't know, the biggest I've ever been is like 205 pounds,
I think. And that was when I was younger and I was fatter, I was probably like 16, 17%.
And you know, whatever. Um, I just didn't like how it felt. I didn't like how my clothes fit
and it would be different now because I, I would, I would be, if I were whatever, I don't, I couldn't,
I don't think I could get back to 205 lean. Maybe it would
take a lot of work if it's possible. I'm like 195 right now and I'm pretty lean. I'm maybe about 8%,
no higher than 9%. So I don't know if I could gain a good eight to 10 pounds of muscles. I don't
know if that's left in me, maybe. But basically because I'm happy with my physique the way that
it is, I would like certain things get bigger so which is why i kind of prioritize them in my training i like a bit
more shoulders a bit more calves and a bit more uh lats but otherwise i'm pretty happy with where
my physique is at um and you know that's it next question how do we know your products ain't crap
like you say others are um well it's a good's a good question. Uh, one, I mean,
if you, there's in some cases you'll know it because you'll know it like take a serving of
pulse and I guarantee you it's going to be different than any other pre-workout that you've
tried. Um, and it's not, not because you're going to feel like your heart is exploding out of your
chest. Uh, to the contrary, you are not going to feel like that.
You're actually probably going to feel good, and you're going to have a smooth rush of energy,
and you're going to definitely get beta-alanine tingles.
So you know that there's not just beta-alanine in it, but there's good beta-alanine in it.
Because I could buy crap beta-alanine.
We get contacted from Chinese manufacturers all the time.
We could pay very little for our beta alanine that still technically it, like if the FDA were to look into, look into it, they would say, yep,
that's a bit alanine, but it's very low quality beta alanine. It doesn't really have effects in
the body or the, or anywhere near the effects that good quality beta alanine, which is the
patented carnosine. And that's what we use in pulse. Um, you know, so, so there's a difference there. And then, and then there's also, uh,
we are, I mean, obviously there's, there's, whenever you're buying anything in this,
in this space, there's, um, you're taking a leap of faith as a, as a consumer.
And, you know, if you look at our sales pages, we're very open, we're very transparent in,
in what is in our products, why we've included these, include these things in our products. But also we've, we've had quite a bit of third-party testing done on our products,
which again, in the case of pulse, if you go to lab door.com, you'll see that it's their number
one ranked pre-workout, uh, because when they do all the, they do third-party testing, I'm not
affiliated with lab door. Uh, I like them. I like what they're doing. And it's cool that, um, you know, they, it's cool
that they're, they're testing my products and, and, and validating, uh, you know, what I'm doing.
Um, so, so there's that. And then I've also gotten quite a bit of third-party testing done myself,
which if you email us, we can, we'll send it to you. Uh, we use the lab Euro fins is who we've,
we've used. And if you look them up, they're a massive, uh, probably the,
one of the biggest, if not the biggest and most well-respected third-party labs. They do a lot
of pharmaceutical work, but they also do stuff in the, in the supplement space. Um, and, and,
and then finally, we're going to be putting up, um, on our website, we're going to be putting up
our certificate of analyses, which is, um, you know, whenever you get something manufactured, you get
a certificate of analysis from your manufacturer that states, here's what you put in it here. Like
here's what you ordered. Here's what we put in it. And then here are the testing results to, uh,
prove or to certify that, you know, this is what is in it. So we're going to start putting those
up on the website, which is something, um which is something I think all supplement companies should do. And I'm not sure exactly when they're going
to go up. We have them, which again, if you just email us, we'll send those to you as well,
which is probably like Eurofins we do intermittently because it takes time, but we
like to just have that third-party testing in place and do it once every quarter or once every six months
just to make sure everything is good. And then the COAs we get with every batch that we order.
So email us, we can send you COAs and we are going to be putting them up on the website
just for everyone to see. So you can see like this is really what is in this product. So
going deep, going deep. Mike, what's your life philosophy and those are these are these are
hard questions to answer because there's so many ways this could go jeremy said he's testing me for
okay so um well i mean, I guess my philosophy is, um,
beat. What's that Jerry? Yeah. Yeah. Right. Swing hard in case you hit it. No, the buddy of mine,
that's one of his jokes is that he says, well, anyways. Um, so I would say that, I mean, it's,
it's such a broad question. It's hard for me to answer. I mean, I would say the way that I, if we're talking about a philosophy in terms of an attitude or a way to
look at life or a way to approach life, I mean, my focuses are, um, you know, very much, obviously
I'm very work oriented. And I think that, um, the pursuit of happiness is like, that's not a big thing for me.
I'm not trying to quote unquote be happy.
There's a quote from Joseph Campbell who is a comparative mythologist
and I'm a fan of his work where basically, I'm going to paraphrase it,
but basically he says that he doesn't think that people are so much looking for the meaning to life or a meaning for being alive as the experience of being alive.
And so for me, I mean, that just resonates with me in that, you know, I am very much like I try to do things and I try to orient myself toward things that engage me, that make me feel alive.
I don't like doing things that deaden me or that make me feel like I am or that disengage me from life.
So I don't watch a lot of TV.
I don't play video games. I don't just spend my time idly doing worthless things because I know
that those things would have bad effects on me and make me less effective in my life. So, you know,
I would say that there's that and then work and productivity are big for me and being a
giver and not a taker. I think this is so relevant to the political climate
and the social climate, socioeconomic climate,
I think that we're in right now,
where we have, you know, you can go through life
playing the victim and trying to see
what you can take from other people
and what you can get given to you,
or you can go through life
with a sense of
personal responsibility and, uh, with, uh, the idea that you have things to offer. What can you give
to, you know, your fellow people, your society? What can you, what can you make? What can you
create that, that adds value to not just your life, but, but the lives of others and to society in general.
And, um, so, you know, I don't know, this is, this is one I could just ramble on. I could,
for who knows, 45 minutes, but, uh, if you have a more specific, uh, question,
maybe I can answer it better. Next question, tips for sticking with diet. Do you cook once a week,
make meals for numerous days? Um, I mean, I, I cook,
uh, every day. I mean, I make the same meal. It's kind of a vegetable medley with chicken and stuff
just because, I mean, these days, uh, I just don't, I'm not really going to take the time
to get fancy with my cooking right now with, with my work. And when I get home and stuff,
it'll just take too much time. Um, but if you're running into the problem of like, you know, you are not sure if, if, if it's like you end up just hitting
restaurants or, or you don't, you're not able to, to track your numbers with your meals, then yeah,
if you do like, uh, go, go on most for life and search for meal prep or meal prepping,
and you'll see a whole article I wrote on this. And that's what I recommend you do.
Let's keep it simple. Next question. Hey, what are your thoughts about Logan Franklin? And
could it be possible to physique like his, not mirror image, but similar. And you guys think
he's natural. Logan Franklin. Let me see who this is. It looks, this picture looks a lot like Jeff
side. Um, I don't know. I mean, is this the right? Yeah, no, no. He's an, I, Oh, this guy's an IFBB
pro. No, you're not going to guy's an ifbb pro no you're
not going to look like an ifbb pro naturally ever just forget about it so that's that um
you could look like a smaller fatter version yes naturally so like if you look at the pictures
where he looks kind of natty and bad like there there you could look like that and then if you look at the pictures where he looks kind of natty and bad, there you could look like that.
And then if you look at his pictures where he looks huge and shredded, no, you can't look like that basically.
But in general, I don't like to get into who's natty and who's not just because I think it's childish and who cares.
But I mean, I don't know.
If he's saying he's natty, I don't know why IFB pros would even say that, but anyways.
So next question, would you recommend high volume following a cut high volume training
following cut?
I mean, as a standard rule of thumb, no, I don't, I don't quite understand the question.
If maybe you can elaborate, what's the next Legion product?
Ah, good question.
So we're working on two products right now.
Actually, we're working on a vegan protein, which is going to be a pea and rice blend.
And we just got a sample that we actually all really like that we can finally approve,
which reminds me, I have to email them.
Jeremy, don't let me forget.
I have to email them that we liked it.
Yeah, I forgot to email Shannon.
Anyways, so that took a bit of work. It took like,
I don't know, seven iterations finally to get it tasting right, but I was very surprised.
I thought Shannon, Shannon is our manufacturer. He's the flavor wizard. I thought he was like
messing with me with this sample. Like, this is really good. This tastes a lot better. This is
almost like, did he just put Nesquik in a bag and then he's going to tell me like, oh yeah,
okay. No, no. It still tastes like shit. Sorry. Um, but no,
it actually tastes really good. So we're going to have chocolate. It's going to be a chocolate
vegan protein, which, uh, also is going to have some select nutrients in it that it's not just
going to be protein. It's going to, it's going to be something in between like just a protein powder.
I wouldn't say a mule placement, but a protein powder slash nutritional supplement
is kind of the idea. So there's that. And then we're also working on what you could say is a
weight gainer, but I would say meal replacement is probably a more accurate term, although we
might have to end up calling it a weight gainer because in most people's minds, those products,
meal replacement and weight gainer are very different.'s minds, those products, mural placement and weight gainer
are very different. And this is kind of more fitting the meal, the, the weight gainer, uh,
need than it is the mural placement need. And, um, so that one like is, is theoretically it's
close. We had it, um, the way that we liked it actually was tasting good. Everything was good,
but then we, then we had to tweak the formulation a little bit and then that messed with the taste. And now we're back to the drawing
board trying to get back to what we had previously. So I would say, um, the vegan protein, which now
that we have a sample that we can actually approve and we can roll forward with, um, we'll be
emailing out like now Jeremy and I have to put our heads together and come up with some name ideas
and do that whole process. So you'll be, you'll be hearing from us on that. And then the weight gainer, once, uh, once we can
get to, um, a sample that we like, uh, then we'll be rolling on that. So both of those should be
out this year. Um, vegan protein for sure. Weight gainer really shouldn't be an issue. We should be
close. And then we also have an unflavored protein, uh, whey protein coming for everybody
that likes to kind of, I mean, whey protein coming for everybody that likes to
kind of, I think it's mainly people that like to make smoothies. So it doesn't add any, you know,
there's no chocolate or vanilla. It's just a clean, simple protein. Um, and we also have, uh,
watermelon flavored recharge coming, which people have been asking for and a tropical punch flavor
pulse coming, which is actually going at, it's going
to be a bit different in that we're changing from a one-to-one citrulline malate to a two-to-one
citrulline malate, which is actually probably better for performance. I'd say it's definitely
not worse. I mean, you'll find one-to-one in most studies because that's just the most commonly
used. But then you also, there are also performance studies with two-to-one, which has a bit more,
obviously a bit more citrulline than malic acid
and the reason we're switching
is because the malic acid
is what is very tart
and we've been really trying
to bring down the tartness of pulse
and that's the solution
because you start getting into
when you put things
that block the tartness
it then also blunts the flavor
so then you just
you get into this
like chicken and egg problem
where you want more flavor which means you have to take down the bitter blocker,
but then that makes it, you just go back and forth. So, um, you know, I'll be curious what
everybody thinks when our tropical punts, tropical punch pulse comes out, because that's going to be
basically our new flavor profile, our new base, um, that we're going to be rolling out with all
the flavors. Next question. I think you're
saying something about a coach's course. Is that still a possible thing in the pipeline? Yes,
absolutely. So if you go to mostoflife.com forward slash coaching, you'll see the sales page for our
one-on-one coaching service, which I'm actually going to be emailing out on soon because we've run, I would say 30 or 40 people, maybe as much as 45 people through it. And we've gotten some
great success stories. And, you know, these are, these are three month transformation coaching
programs basically. And what we want to do in the immediate is we want to build it up to probably about a hundred active people would be great.
And then, um, once it's, I mean, at this point now we've kind of worked out the kinks, we're
ready to really roll it out.
So we're bringing on more coaches and making sure that, um, you know, we're just very picky,
obviously with the people that we're working with and we want to make sure that we really
can, can maintain this, the high level of, cause it's a real, like high touch personal
service and that's what people really like about it. So I don't want to lose that. But then going
forward, uh, once we've really established that, I think it would make sense to put together a
certification program for PTs, uh, to, uh, not, not only, I mean, they're going to learn things
as well. Like I'd want to, I'd want to make it very, very, uh, I'd want to make it better than, than what you, the, the normal type of PT certification training
that you would get just to get your PT license. Um, but then also that would make, that would
allow people to be basically certified MFL coaches and then participate not in, not only in our
online coaching, but I get asked all the time for people about, about offline coaches, like people saying, Hey, I live in, you know, Los Angeles. Do you have
any trainers that you could recommend that I work with? And unfortunately I don't really have that.
I haven't built a Rolodex of, of trainers that I know. And I trust they're going to do a good
enough job where I would just send them people. So,'s also one of the reasons why we put together this online service
as kind of a stopgap type measure until we can really build it out.
So we are going to do that, yes.
That's the answer.
I can't say when yet.
We just have to see how everything goes.
But if we could have it up next year, that would be cool.
Next question. Is there an application process to get on the Legion team?
Um, I mean, if you, if you mean to work with us, no, uh, if you're interested in working with us, just send us an email and, um, you know, we're, we're, we actually do need to hire a few people
right now. Um, but we have, uh, several prospects lined up for what we need to hire for.
But I'll just throw it out here right now.
I mean, Jeremy and I were just talking about it today.
We were kind of working out today, like looking forward over the next year to year and a half.
What do we need to be doing?
What are our potential obstacles and roadblocks that are going to get in our way?
what are our potential obstacles and roadblocks that are going to get in our way and what can we start doing or what do we need to start doing about that now
or in the near future to prevent them.
And one of the things is Jeremy is going to need an assistant,
essentially a marketing assistant to help with.
And by assistant, I don't mean like to get him coffee and like rub his back and shit,
but to help him with his like rub his back and shit, but, but to, to, to help him with his work
because, um, he, as, as things are growing, his more and more of his time is being consumed with
analytical type work and maintenance type work that has to be done. And it has to be done,
right. You need to be smart. You need to understand what you're doing and it makes a lot
of money. And there's no, uh, even if it's not necessarily the most thrilling type of thing to, you know,
spend two hours, uh, tweaking, uh, your ads, uh, you know, it's worth it because it makes
a considerable amount of money.
So he's going to need help with essentially offloading a lot of that stuff.
And, and also there are just other various tasks that can be taken off his plate.
So then he can focus, can focus more of his time
on finding new opportunities for Legion and MFL and we'll be getting into Stacked soon
to make money. And that's really kind of what we want is we want,
and not just with Jeremy, but really as each person on the team is kind of over their own
thing, like their own,
they have their area, they're going to have their people and it's going to be on them to really grow
that area of the business, uh, where they need to have enough bandwidth available to, uh, be able
to step back and go, okay, good. I have all this in place. What's the next thing? What, what's,
what can we do? How can I make this bigger?
So send us an email, and there may be something worth talking about.
And if you're talking about sponsored athletes, we're not really doing that right now.
Jeremy's working with some people, some girls that have massive followings, and we want to see how that goes because from a branding perspective, it could go well.
It may not go well.
We're throwing some money at it and seeing what happens.
But before we really focus more on the Instagram model, the sponsored athlete, we kind of want to do that.
Next question.
What's Mike's current stance on a weekly refeed for hormone levels?
Any change in the current research?
It's a good idea. I mean,
I don't think there's anything that will ever change on that. I mean, cause if you, if you
go to muscle for life and you just search for refeed and you just read, um, it was actually
a guest post from somebody else that I edited and doctored up and kind of performed surgery on
really, and, but made it basically my article. But, uh, it is, it's just a great way to mainly to boost leptin levels.
And then that as a consequence, uh, has, has other, has other positive effects in the body.
So, um, if you are very lean and you're cutting and you've been cutting for a period of time,
uh, I would say if you're, you know, four or five, six plus weeks into a cut, um, and
you, I mean, some people don't need to refeed at all. They don't
care. They don't notice difference. They feel great. It's no problem. And other people, uh,
like I, I definitely do notice a difference when I'm cutting, especially as I am getting,
you know, if I were to start, if I were to cut now go from eight, 9% to, let's say I wanted to
get to 6%, I would definitely be doing refeeds. Um, because they just, they just make a difference.
They, uh, and I explained why in the article. So next question,
every once in a while when training fasted, I get dizzy, nauseous, and weak. What can I do to avoid
this? It sounds like a blood pressure issue. Some people just don't respond well to fasted training.
They just don't. And if you can't get used to it, I would say don't do it. And I know that's kind of
lame, but I've run into
that before where there's in the end, there was nothing we could really do. It just, it didn't
work well for them. And if you are taking any supplements, I would cut those out first and see,
because like some people, for example, don't, don't do well with yohimbine. They just don't,
it just hits them hard. So yeah. Next question. Any chance you might
provide mobility and core training specifically for golf players? That's funny that you, yeah.
So, um, a couple of things. One, uh, I definitely, you know, I've, I've mentioned a couple of times
that I have started working on a series of digital courses for MFL, which MFL is getting a full
revamp. That's, um, Jeremy's been working on that and that's going to become more and more of his thing over the next couple of months. So we're going to be
launching, it's going to have a whole new look and it's going to be better in many ways. And
it's going to have a store and blah, blah, blah. Um, and then what I'm going to be working on
over the next year or so a lot is, uh, is digital courses. So I'm wrapping up one that's kind of a deep dive into diet and nutrition that is almost done, actually.
I would say I'll probably,
I'm on my second edit through it.
So I've written it, I've done my first edit,
now on my second edit, I hope that this is,
I think I, once I'm done with this edit,
I can send it to an editor, get it back,
do one final run through,
and then I think it'll be
ready to go. And in that, you know, interim, I can set up this, get the sales page written and
Jeremy can do his thing on it and we can get it going. And then we're going to do, um, I don't
know if it's going to be next, but I'm definitely going to do a digital course on mobility and
prehab. Uh, and my vision for it is basically take what, you know, Starrett has done with
becoming a supple leopard, but make it a bit more accessible and make it a bit more prescriptive.
So if any, I'm sure any of you, if you have checked out Becoming a Supple Leopard, it's a great book.
It's high quality.
You know, there's no question that, you know, myofascial release, it works.
no question that, that, you know, myofascial release, it works. If you work with a foam roller, if you work with the bands, if you work with the, with the lacrosse ball, um, you know, you can,
you can really extend, you can keep your tissues, you can prevent soft tissue injuries really is
what, is what it boils down to. And again, you'll hear more about this in this podcast that I
recorded today. That'll be going up next week. Um. So I will have a digital course on this subject
specifically that breaks down. This is the why, this is the, the what, this is the why, and this
is the how just do this. So here, 15 minutes a week, three times, 15 minutes a day, three times
a week. Here are your exercises. You know, if you're following a strength training program,
you're doing heavy benching, heavy overhead, pressing, heavy squatting, and heavy deadlifting. Great. Here's your routine.
Do this alongside and you will prevent, you will go, it'll go far in preventing injury
and, and, and also improving performance because when, when, when movement is impaired,
you may not realize it, but then compensations occur, which can even cause plateaus
because if a big muscle, for example, is not contracting or not moving the way that it should,
then it shifts that to smaller muscles that are normally more of an estabilizing role,
and then you can get stuck. So that's that aspect of it. And in terms of golf, I'm actually
very interested in creating sports specific, uh, sports specific
courses. So I'm talking with Mark Ripito about that actually. And I would like to work with him
and he's very interested in putting together, um, a series of courses for, uh, I mean, golf
is a place that I would start because I myself play golf and I, and I like golf, but it's also
a good, it's a good
market because golfers are, are obsessive about getting better at golf. And it may be the case
in many other sports, but I just know from playing a lot of golf that a lot of these people, I mean,
it's almost like a religion to these, to these guys and girls. Um, and, and you know, it's, uh,
usually it's generally an older crowd that has money to spend. So from a marketing perspective,
it's a good, it's a good place to be in whatever.
So yeah, actually, the answer is a long answer,
but the answer is it's something we're definitely going to be looking at.
And I can say for sure the mobility course is going to be coming.
The golf one I would like to do, and there's a good chance that it will come as well.
Next question.
Once a person has been obese and
then lost the fat, is it easier for that person to put fat back on? I'd lost about a hundred pounds
and can't seem to get a decent, get to a decent caloric level to bulk without putting on tons of
fat again. Just curious about the propensity for putting back on body fat after a person has lost
a great deal. To me, it's almost like the fat has a built-in pathway to return to the belly. Thanks. Yeah, there's no question. Some people are just more genetically predisposed
to gaining fat than others. There are various reasons for this. I mean, hormones definitely
play a role. Body composition plays a role. So the good news is though, you, regardless of how
The good news is, though, you, regardless of how predisposed you are, how inclined you are toward fat gain, you can definitely bulk successfully.
Now, the thing is, though, I would say go to Muscle for Life and search for bulking and check out that article and make sure that you are doing it right, basically, is kind of what I'm saying. Because if you are eating too much food, if you're in too much of a caloric surplus, that's a problem. If you are good five days a week, but then the weekends come, and then there's little mini binges, that's a problem.
And ultimately, you are just going to have to find that my guess is you're going to have to be very tight on your calories and very tight on your diet.
And if you are predisposed to fat gain, especially if you are wanting to bulk, then my guess is you are fairly lean.
And if you're not, then you want to first get to be fairly lean, which is also covered in that article.
Like if you're 16%, 17% body fat, you shouldn't be bulking.
You should be cutting because the fatter you are, the easier it is to continue gaining
fat.
And I break it down in that article.
So I know it's kind of a half answer, but I would say go check out that article and
see if you're doing all that and it's still an issue, then shoot me an email and we can
go from there.
See if you're doing all that and it's still an issue, then shoot me an email and we can go from there.
Hey, Mike, every week when I do a four to six rep range on the standing calf raise on the machine in the gym,
I almost easily lift the max weight that the machine can handle, 800 pounds.
Do you have any advice for when I need to go higher in weight to stay in the four to six range?
No, I mean, that's a lot of weight in your calves. All right. I would, I would first like, is your, how is your form?
Are you full range of motion?
Not just like, you know, the little two inch, uh, Bob that a lot of people do.
Cause you know, the bat at the bottom, you want, you want your, your calves fully stretched.
Think of it as like a, like, like a one arm row.
You know what I mean?
Like fully stretched at the bottom and then fully contracted at the top.
what I mean? Like fully stretched to the bottom and then fully contracted at the top. So if you're full range of motion with max weight, um, then I would say, I mean, there's, there's no real way
to go heavier, right? Unless, unless you can load up on a leg press and do, I like doing calf presses
on the leg press. Um, but if that's not an option, then I would say just work in a higher rep range.
I mean, with calves, uh, similar to abs, you kind of just beat the shit
out of them, uh, and force them to grow and they recover very well. So, um, I would say it's fine.
Like, let's say all you could do, let's say you had to train in the eight to 10 rep range simply
because your calves are so strong. There's nothing wrong with that. And honestly, your calves are
probably pretty juicy if, um, if you could do eight to 10 reps with that much weight. So next question,
uh, if I want to do a general checkup to see my hormones, bones, and everything is all right,
what tests do you recommend? Well, I mean, you could do like a metabolic panel, um, like a blood,
you know, it'd be blood work. Um, and, and in terms of bones, I mean, I don't know exactly
what it is that you'd want to know. Uh, I mean, if you can, what kind of test you,
if it's like bone density, I would think I, I mean, Dexa, yeah, Dexa should be able to tell
you your bone density. I've never even gotten Dexa scanned actually, because it's not nearly
as accurate as many people think it is. And I, you know, ultimately what matters is the mirror
more than anything else. Um, but you know, yeah, for hormones, it's just a standard, a standard blood test. If you go to a, what, what's a,
what's a good company, Jeremy, for that, do you know, just if you want to get blood testing done,
that, you know, is there like a good national one? Do you know? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I guess,
you could see an endo if you had something, if you wanted to really dive into it, but if you just
kind of want to generally
know where things are at, you could just see an MD and, uh, work through them. Next question.
Uh, Hey Mike, sacroiliac joint question. Remember in a previous video, you talk about breathing to
help with your SI joint issues. I'm having issues, which have been occurring off and on for a while.
Any stretches you recommend to look up? Um, it really depends on, on what the issue is. And it's hard. It's hard to like what
I ran into, uh, basically was, and what he's referring to is it was, I was dead lifting and I,
at the top, uh, let out my breath and let out my tension in my core, which is a bad idea. Don't do
that. And it caused my SI joint
to kind of lock up and you know, it's fine. I have a chiropractor, uh, that I was seeing at the time
that just kind of helped adjust it. And then it just kind of was not a problem anymore. Um, but
that's, that's what I ran into. And if you're, I mean, again, you're not really, the point isn't
so much to stretch a joint.
Obviously it kind of depends on what muscular issues are you running into, but if it's hip
related, um, if you search for go almost for life, search for mobility and there's a, there's
an article on like a mobility for squatting and there are some good hip stretches in there,
particularly for the psoas. I know that like,, for instance, I mean, the psoas muscle wraps around to the back.
So if you're having issues in the hip flexor area and you kind of are feeling it referring
to the back, psoas stretches are good.
There's also, I believe in that article, there's a simple, yeah, I'm almost positive it's in
there.
There's a simple stretch, Kelly Starrett.
It's a video from Starrett where he's demonstrating it. Uh, that is just very good for opening up the hip.
And if you have access to some bands or some good stuff you can do as well. Um, if you,
I don't think it's not in that article because I didn't want to tell people they have to buy
bands. I wanted to give people some simple stuff you could do at home. But if you search for,
if you go look at mobility, WOD, go look at Starrett stuff and look at some of his banded work for opening up the hips. And that works really
well. Um, you, I was personally surprised when I started doing banded stuff, mainly for my upper
body, uh, how big of a difference it makes over just trying to, you know, grab onto something
and hold a stretch. Next question. Hey Mike, who is there with you? Do you have many partners that help you behind
the scenes? I know I often get emails from Jeremy when you start out in this endeavor,
where you totally loaned as you have helped them as well. So, um, there are eight of us, um, eight
of us here, huh, Jeremy? And then, and then there are a couple of people that work with us remotely.
there are a couple of people that work with us remotely. And, um, in terms of, uh, I mean,
those are in terms of like partners in the strict sense of the word, Jeremy's my business partner and that we own everything together. Um, but everybody else, um, are, you know, that everybody
works hard and is very committed to what we do. And, um, you know, they're, so I would say that they, in many ways, uh, are, are partners
in that, in that sense of like, they work hard, they really care. They really, you know, uh,
put their, put their heart into, into their work. And, um, so when I started, um, I mean,
when it all, when it started really, really in the beginning, I wrote, it was really just,
I wrote the book bigger, leaner, stronger, published it. And then that started to gain some traction. And then from
there I wrote another book, I might've been muscle myths. And then from there, um, was the shredded
chef, which actually Jeremy helped on the first one back in the day. I don't know if you remember
that Jeremy, but, and, uh, and then, you know, so, um, Jeremy was involved early on in that way.
And then from the beginning of like, when this was like, okay, this is going to be my
full-time thing.
Jeremy was there from the beginning as that as well.
Cause originally, originally we were going to do a publishing company.
We weren't even going to get into all the fitness stuff.
We were going to take what I had learned, um, in, and just experienced with my, uh, book sales. And we were just going to do
that for other people. And then in looking at it, we decided to kind of pivot and we said,
you know what, like with the, with the books, with the, um, fitness stuff taking off the way
that it was, we just said, this is, this is a better opportunity. And it's something that,
you know, I, I personally am passionate about books and I like to read, but I'm also passionate about fitness and writing and I can do that as well.
So, uh, and Jeremy wanted to learn marketing. So for him, it was like, I mean, he could,
he could learn to market on, in terms of publishing and, and help and how to sell more
books or he could, you know, learn, uh, in, in, in terms of everything that we, we didn't quite
know what we were going to get into in the beginning.
Like it wasn't necessarily the plan
from the beginning to do a supplement company.
We knew that that was going to be an option,
but we had to get to a point where it was going to make sense.
So it was more just let's build a website
and let's learn content marketing
and see if we can build enough of a following
to build a real business.
So that's kind of how it went.
Four to six reps or six to eight reps.
Any difference? Um, I mean, practically speaking, not, well, it depends. Like, here's the thing as,
as you get into, uh, higher and higher rep ranges, you're moving more into the muscle endurance,
uh, side of things. And then also you're going to find it harder because you don't necessarily
need to go to absolute muscle failure every set. And it's probably a going to find it harder because you don't necessarily need to go
to absolute muscle failure every set. And it's probably a bad idea. It'd be a bad idea to try
to do that, especially with exercises like the squat and deadlift. Um, but you need to come close
to muscle failure where ideally you're a rep or two, uh, short of where you would not be able to
get the rep. Like you would just stall out. And when you increase the rep range,
that gets harder to really even know where that point is because you start getting all that lactic
acid buildup and it gets, it just gets fucking painful. And you just, you don't know, like,
are you wanting to stop the set because you are running out of gas or is it just because it hurts
so much? You don't want to do it anymore. Um, so, you know, given no context,
I would say that there's not that big of a difference between four to six reps and six to
eight reps. Um, but I would say that like, I would not recommend you do no four to six rep work. I
mean, if you're, you know, certain exercises, if you prefer to do six to eight, that's fine.
Um, but you know, I would say there definitely is a difference
between like four to six and eight to 10.
All right, next question.
Hey, Mike, I'm about 10% body fat
and I still feel like I have a bit of belly
when I sit down and lean forward.
Yeah, it sounds about right.
At 10 or 11%, you still will.
Fat folds seem to reappear out of nowhere.
Do those super shredded fitness models
still have some belly sticking out when they sit down?
Please give me some hope they don't always look that good in all positions.
That's funny.
I can totally relate.
This is one of those weird like OCD neurotic things that everybody experiences once you start getting lean where you just – if anything jiggles, you're just like, I just want to get rid of that.
And it's true. Right. And, uh, so, so then, then yeah, like Matt, and then you're just on a never ending cut basically. Uh, and, and so, so I actually, I actually do, I do understand. And
so the answer is, um, so like at the leanest that I've been, which is probably about 6%
realistically where, I mean, there, I couldn't pinch, I really was kind of just skin.
I mean, it wasn't like the, the super paper thin, like you see with guys are about to
go on stage, but it was pretty, pretty thin.
And, uh, you know, sitting down, I would say it wasn't so much like fat, but the skin
folds and you say, yeah, yeah.
You don't look super shredded in all
positions at all times, no matter how lean you are. But, um, you know, it sounds that where you're at
is at about 10%. It sounds about right. And I would say if you got down to 8%, even though it's
just 2%, every bit of fat that you lose from here is going to make a disproportionately large difference in your
physique because it's going to be coming from the last kind of stubborn fat holdouts that we all
tend to focus on. Like we're looking at our abs, we're looking, especially at our lower abs,
we're looking at our, our obliques and those are the last areas to, to, to lean out. So
if you were to drop 2%, you would might be
surprised at how much tighter things look. And, um, it, you can also maintain that fairly easily.
I would say, you know, maintaining eight or 9% is, is not hard at all. It's not unhealthy.
If you want to actually learn about that, there's an article up at muscle for life,
uh, which is, um, well, if you search for healthy body fat percentage,
it'll come up and you can read a bit about that. Um, but you know, trying to maintain the super
shredded, you know, five, 6% where your skin is grainy, you have, you know, ab veins everywhere
and you know, veins coming out of your armpits and stuff. You just can't, you can't maintain
that healthily. Eventually, uh, it's going to
catch up with you. And the guys that do that maintain that for long periods of time are
generally on drugs. And so they can compensate for their, uh, you know, what would normally be
a pretty awful hormone profile with exogenous by just injecting hormones. So next question,
can you recommend any good books on starting your own business? And
then the next question, do you plan to write a book on how you started your own business?
Yeah. I mean, I really want to, it's funny. I'm getting more and more requests for book
recommendations these days, and I really want to do them justice. I was doing for a short period,
like a books of the month thing where I would just basically say, here are the books I read
last month and here are my takeaways from them.
And I'm still reading books, but the reason why I stopped doing those posts
is because they just, like, as I've got, I've had more and more things on my plate with,
I have a book launch coming up for this updated cookbook,
which has been an ongoing pain in my ass.
I've had Stacked, which has been an ongoing pain in my ass, eating up time.
I've done a lot of things that have been eating up time where unfortunately some of the things I
kind of want to just do for fun, like write about books, I can't justify when I need to get this
digital course done. I need to give, Jeremy needs stuff from me for Legion. I have to ramp up the
content on Legion MFL. I want to get it up to three to five articles per week per site. That's more important than me talking about books. But I'm going to get back to it. I am
getting it. My life is coming back. There's some semblance of there's light at the end of this
tunnel. So I am going to start putting that in. So to get to the question, good books on starting
your own business. I've read a lot of books on just business in general.
I can't honestly say nothing comes to mind specifically for starting a business.
Like, for instance, I have not read The Lean Startup.
It's on my list.
It's something maybe I should have read by now, maybe not.
Maybe it doesn't apply to where I'm at at this point.
But there's also Chris Gillibute, what is it, The $100 Startup. That's supposed to be really good. I mean, I have a lot of these books on my list that the type of books that business books that I'm reading are, I guess, more pertain
to where I'm at, which is we have a, a, a going concern. We have a viable business and really
like, you know, Jeremy and I were looking at is how do we, how do we get legion to a hundred
million dollars a year? Like that, That's what we want to do.
So the stuff that I'm reading, like, for example, Good to Great is a very good business book,
obviously a classic, but it wouldn't hurt to read that whether you're new in business
or whether you have something already.
I really liked Peak by Chip Conley.
I really liked Tony Hsieh's book.
I like his philosophy. I like his approach to business. And we really try to embody that ourselves. And really, we are going to be
rolling out more and more cool stuff for customer service. So let me take a rain check on that.
With the new MFL in the recommendations section, it's going to get revamped, and I'm going to, with the new MFL, uh, in the recommendation section, I'm going to, it's going to get revamped and I'm going to start adding books there. Even if it's
individually, maybe I can't, maybe I won't necessarily get the full books of the month
and get something on every one, but I'm going to start, I'm going to start populating that.
Um, and you know, if you want, you can also shoot me an email and I'll look through my reading list.
I keep a spreadsheet of all the books that I read and all my links to all my takeaways. I'm OCD about it. Um, and, but it's
a, it's a useful OCD. Um, and, and I, and I might also have some, I have to look over my list and I
might, and if you give me a little bit more of where you're at, then I might, I might have some
good recommendations too. And then do I plan to write a book on how you started your own business?
Um, no, probably not how I, I mean, how I started that would almost like, it sounds like
a memoirs and that's to me, and I've had people ask me about that. It seems very pretentious and
self-indulgent. So that really wouldn't be my thing. Um, but I, I do like the,
I don't like to call it self-help because there's so much nonsense in self-help.
But maybe self-development.
I like to read it.
I like to think about it.
So maybe something – I mean I did write a book called Awakening Your Inner Genius, which is kind of a cheesy title.
Maybe I would market it differently if I were to do it again now.
But I do like that.
If you check that book out, I wrote under a pen
name because I wanted to just keep that separate from my fitness stuff. Um, and you know, if you
check that out, I do like that kind of stuff where it's a historical anecdotes and what can we learn
from this? And, you know, um, with, with an eye to practicality or pragmatism. So, you know,
I could see, I could see maybe writing some of that stuff in the future. I'd probably start with blog posts. Again, this is right now I have to have some
higher priority things I have to do, but once those are in place, I would like to get back to,
cause I was writing some stuff like that every week. Um, and, and I enjoy it. I enjoy, again,
it also, it's nice for me because I read a lot of this stuff, writing about it helps me
internalize what I read because it,
you know, it's that point of, you've probably heard that, you know, if you want to really,
um, retain something that you've learned, teach it to somebody else. So, um, I will have more
coming on these lines. Um, it just will probably be later in the year. Hmm. So, so yeah. So,
so the question is somebody who's like, he's having trouble bringing his legs up and, you know,
he wants to squat a couple of times a week, but he's having trouble doing that with the deadlifting.
And, yeah, because, I mean, like if you look – I mean I would tell them to just look at like a strength program.
Like go to Legion Athletics and go to the blog and search for strength, and you'll see a pretty in-depth article I wrote on strength training.
And I kind of just give synopses of various popular strength training programs because a lot of strength training programs, you're squatting three times a week
and deadlifting once, maybe twice. And it's like one set of five. They're very squat centric. And
the reason being is because, um, you don't want to, I mean, the deadlift is very taxing and you don't want to be putting
too much stress on your spine over time.
I mean, you could go pretty ham on deadlifts and squats for a couple of weeks and be fine.
But if you tried to do it for a couple of months, you know, you might hurt yourself.
So I would say just go look at a, go look at, you know, something even like starting
strength or go look at if you're a bit more advanced and also just comfortable with programming, um, check out the Texas, Texas method,
um, is, is, is great. Uh, but yeah, go to Legion athletic total blog, look for, look at strength
and pick one of those programs. And you know, you might, you might, uh, really like it.
Question. Do you get tired of people's compliments of your physique?
Honestly, I don't get very many compliments,
legitimately.
I don't care.
I don't look.
It's just not something that really matters to me.
I think I can say that I objectively have a good physique.
There are much better physiques out there.
I mean, even just doesn't matter how hard I'm willing to work.
There are people with better genetics, better muscle insertions that, you know, you look over
Instagram and then you add in drugs and there are people I could never, I could never hold a candle
to. So I'm not even trying to necessarily win that side of the game. I'm just trying to show that,
you know, you can be strong, you can be muscular, lean. You can really achieve your genetic potential and look the best that you can look and feel great.
And, you know, without having to sacrifice your life to working out or without having to follow crazy diets and stuff.
So I don't get very many compliments, but, yeah.
All right. So we're going to do one last question,
and then also Jeremy's going to pick some people,
and he's going to be giving away some gift cards,
which is a thank you for spending time with us.
And as you know, we appreciate it.
And we have some ideas too.
I mean, well, hopefully, again, it's just been kind of crazy.
But by the next
life, by the next Q and a, which we want to get back to monthly, um, you know, Jeremy and I do
have some ideas on how we can just make this better and make it more fun and stuff. It's just,
uh, again, it's been tough with this move and shit, but at least that's done now. And our lives
are back to at least, at least some sense there, there's some sense of normality. Um, but this is
one of the things we want to do is start giving
away just do fun giveaways throughout it and just you know make it make it more engaging next
question all right here it is here's the last one how long did it take you to write bls that's a
good question um i want to say like four months five months maybe because i was working on it at
night so i'd work on it about because i had a job at a full-time job at the time so i'd work on it on average maybe an hour and a half or two
hours a night after i'd get home and eat and do all that stuff and then i would write um so yeah
it was maybe it was maybe three months or so three and a half i don't quite remember working on it
that way and um you know that's uh and now i, uh, and now, I mean, I've written
just on the blogs alone, I've written probably like over a million words at this point and that's
excluding books. Uh, so obviously I, I mean, I, I, my output is higher now than it was then,
but I mean, something just to, to, to say on that is, uh, I feel like my writing pace is maybe a bit higher than usual.
I don't really run into writer's block, and I usually can just get in the zone, and it just kind of flows.
That comes with practice.
That's not just because I have some great talent or I'm super special or something like that.
But after doing it for a while, I've just kind of grooved myself into that. But what I want to say is if you are working on writing a book, there's a little story that comes to mind.
And the person who wrote the book, House of Sand and Fog, I think is the name of it.
It was made into a movie.
I didn't see the movie or read the book.
But I don't know.
People liked it.
But that book was written.
The guy wrote it at 20 minutes a day.
So I think it was, he would drive,
it was like on his way home from work
because he had a family
and he would park his car at like a cemetery or something,
if I remember,
and he would write on a notepad, longhand,
20, 25 minutes a day, that's it.
And then he would go home
and he'd be a father and husband,
do all that stuff and that was it. And then he would go home and he, you know, I'd be a father and husband, do all that stuff. And that was it. And then he eventually finished the book and it, you know,
went on to, to achieve, uh, at least a relative measure of success. Um, so don't think that,
you know, just don't, uh, there was a, I think I heard on a podcast or it was in a book or something where I just like the concept of don't, a lot of people, they, they, they overestimate what they can accomplish in a year and they underestimate what they can accomplish in 10 years.
And I really liked that concept.
And it's kind of a, almost like a consoling thought.
Cause I've experienced that myself.
thought because I've experienced that myself. Jeremy and I have experienced that where we thought like we thought right now, a year ago, we thought that the new muscle for life was going to
be 100% done. Like all of the cool things that we wanted to do with it was going to be 100% done by
now. And we're just starting on it. And it's not because, you know, we just got lazy along the way
and, you know, felt like doing other things.
It's mainly because one project for Legion that we thought was going to take a month ended up taking five months.
So, you know, what?
And so we've run into that many times, and I've run into that myself, where in estimating, even if you're willing to, like, you're not trying to shy away from the effort and the amount of work that something's going to take. You're not trying to think that you're going to write 150,000 word book in a month and it's going to be, you only need, you won't even need an edit or anything like that. We just tend to have, we as humans,
we tend to have that tendency to think in best case scenarios and our best case scenarios are
like, are kind of in many cases, almost fantastical. So that can lead us to,
uh, poor short, short-term planning and then setting ourselves up for disappointment and
setting us up for becoming disillusioned with our goals. Because, you know, when we went into this,
we thought like, Oh, in a year, I'm going to be able to do this. And then a year goes by and you
haven't even done, you know, maybe you've done 10% of it. So I like to just remind, you know, just something to keep in mind myself. I think it's worth sharing
that again, if you, if you stretch that out to go, okay, so, you know, if I just plot along,
if I just, every day I keep showing up and I keep on putting the work in, even if it's 30 minutes a day, in four years, you know, I'm
going to have this project done. That is, there's power and personal power in being able to do that.
And, you know, I can relate a little bit to that because I have a fiction project that I've been
working on. Well, I mean, this project I've been working on maybe close to a year and it has gone
through many, many iterations and, uh, you know, a lot of, a lot of work has gone into getting it
to where it's at right now, but it's probably given that I have maybe five hours a week to give
it. Uh, and I would say six or seven hours at the high end, it's probably going to be another year before it's done.
So, you know, that's just something that,
the fact that I'm just accepting that now sets me up for success,
as opposed to, you know,
maybe trying to tell myself that somehow this thing,
I'm going to get it done in three months.
And then three months from now,
I'm like, you know, not even close.
And then I get disappointed.
So I hope that helps.
Daily schedule, including meals?
Yeah, I have.
Honestly, there's a video on YouTube that I talked about this and not much has changed since then.
I tend to just get into a routine on that stuff mainly because I don't want to spend time thinking about what I'm going to eat. Like I have too many things on my mind these days to want to
also expend any mental energy, uh, on, you know, with meal prepping on the fly or meal planning
on the fly. Same thing with clothing. I don't really want to think about what clothes I'm
going to wear today. Uh, that's why this is all I wear these days. I wear gym clothes because I just grab it and go.
But I mean, it's pretty simple. I would say, I mean, the exact foods I eat, it's not exactly
relevant. And we're talking about stuff like I have 60 grams of protein a day in powder.
These days, I've been trying different vegan proteins because we're
developing our vegan protein. So I kind of wanted to see like, okay, what is Vegas sports stuff?
Like what is sun warrior stuff? Like what are these other ones out there? Like, so I've been
having some of that. I've been having a bit of way before my workouts. I have some chicken at lunch
with vegetables. Um, it's like a, it's a vegetable medley with chicken. Um, I would say probably a
good cup and a half of vegetables there.
I have one or two pieces of fruit here in the office.
It's usually an apple or a banana or both.
And then I have more vegetables, another two cups or so at dinner with some more chicken.
And in terms of carbs, it's normally for a while I was doing a bunch of oatmeal because
it's just a good source of soluble fiber. And then I was doing some rice. Um, and I might go back to the oatmeal. I
don't know. We'll see. I like it cause it's simple and it's healthy and it tastes good and nutritious
and whatever. Um, but you know, I'd say the general guidelines are for, um, in terms of,
you know, how you should set up your, your meals are. Um, it's probably a good idea to
have protein every few hours. I've written about this. If you go to muscle for life and search for
protein timing, you'll see an article I wrote. If we're talking about trying to gain every little
edge we can for building muscle, having protein every few hours, uh, probably is a good idea.
Um, having enough carbs every day, very good idea. Um, and having some protein after you train,
probably a good idea and making sure that, uh, you get some saturated fat in your diet. It's a
good idea that you don't have too much, uh, get some unsaturated fat, especially monounsaturated
monounsaturated fat. A good source of that is nuts. Like for a while I was putting, um,
you know, walnuts,
I was putting walnuts in my, in my oatmeal just to get some monounsaturated fat and make sure that
you're having two to three servings of both fruit and vegetables per day, a serving size being more
or less your fist. So, uh, you know, or, or a cup or so. And, um, yeah, beyond that, I mean, those are your basics. If
you, if you have all that in, and I also, I like to optimize my fruit and vegetable and take a
little bit, I would say by, um, having a variety of fruit and vegetables. Um, so like for instance,
I'll also sometimes all for fruit, I'll do, uh, blueberries and strawberries. So colorful fruits
that have higher amounts of
certain molecules that you wouldn't find in other fruits. I like bananas also because it's a good
source of potassium, a medium bananas, like eight or 900 milligrams of potassium. And then in terms
of vegetables, I like to do something that's green and then also include onions, garlic, and mushrooms because onions and garlic are rich
in certain molecules that, again, you don't really find in many other vegetables. I also like
Brussels sprouts a lot. Cruciferous veggies are great. Brussels sprouts, cauliflower is big. I'm
okay on broccoli, but I try not to just eat nothing but asparagus, for example.
Like that's better than nothing.
If you're only vegetables, asparagus, that's good.
But it's better to have a variety of vegetables.
Mushrooms are also a good source of potassium.
So those are my basic guidelines for diet.
And once you get all that in, then you have calories left over and eat something that you like.
I don't know.
I like chocolate.
I like ice cream.
I like chocolate ice cream.
So I just make sure that I have my foundation in place.
I'm getting all my nutrients.
I'm getting my macro and micronutrients.
And then eat something good.
I'm not really big on sugar.
I don't have to have it.
But it's nice to have a couple hundred calories on sugar. I don't have to have it, but you
know, it's nice to have a couple, a couple hundred calories of chocolate is very satisfying to me.
So, okay, we're wrapping it up. Uh, well again, I want to say thanks a lot for taking the time.
I hope you found this helpful and sorry you had to wait. I know it's been a bit since we did the
previous one. And again, it was kind of, it was, I mean, it mean it's our fault whatever it's just kind of crazy with the move but now that we're uh everything like we're finally actually at this point now everyone
is finally caught up here in the office it's been it's also jeremy's sister got married so then
there was time it was just like every week so we move here and then we fall behind and then it was
like every week there was something else that then you know we would start to catch up and then put
us behind start to catch up and put us behind.
So now we're finally caught up.
So we'll be bringing this back into its regular schedule.
And, of course, we'll be emailing out before and giving everybody a heads up.
And we're going to also come up with some ideas on how we can make it more fun.
Okay, so thanks again for taking the time.
And thanks again for all the support as usual.
And feel free to email me or email contact at Legion if you have any questions.
Matt and Artie help people all day long.
And it's not just like our customer service isn't just for customers even per se.
It's really if anybody needs help with anything, email us,
and we will help you.
We'll point you in the right direction.
So I will help you. We'll point you in the right direction. So, um, I will see you
later. Hey, it's Mike again. Hope you liked the podcast. If you did go ahead and subscribe. I put
out new episodes every week or two, um, where I talk about all kinds of things related to health
and fitness and general wellness. Also head over to my website at www.muscleforlife.com where you'll
find not only past episodes of the podcast, but you'll also find a bunch of different articles
that I've written. I release a new one almost every day. Actually, I release kind of four to
six new articles a week. And you can also find my books and everything else that I'm involved
in over at muscleforlife.com. All right. Thanks again. Bye.