Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Lyle McDonald on How to Recover Faster from Injuries
Episode Date: June 5, 2019If you work out or do just about anything physically challenging often enough, chances are you’re going to have to deal with an injury or two along the way, even if they’re just minor issues like ...muscle strains, tendonitis, joint aggravations, and the like. In most cases, a little extra R&R is all it takes to heal up, but if an injury is more severe, there’s a lot more you can do to accelerate your recovery. And that’s what Lyle McDonald is going to talk about in this interview. In case you’re not familiar with Lyle, he has been one of the foremost evidence-based fitness researchers and writers for a couple decades now and someone whose work I’ve always liked. He’s also uniquely qualified to talk about injury recovery because he has not only scoured the literature on the topic but used what he learned to help recover from a rather gruesome rollerblading accident that literally shattered his leg. After the strategies he discusses in this episode worked so well that his doctor was genuinely impressed by how rapidly his leg healed up, Lyle documented everything in book called Optimal Nutrition for Injury Recovery. Obviously the book focuses on how to use nutrition to recover faster and better from injuries, and that’s also the focus of this episode, but Lyle also shares some other tips that can markedly increase healing. 5:23 - Why did you write this book on injury recovery? 11:17 - What are some of the healing myths of injury recovery? 21:12- Why is inflammation good? 29:57 - How does nutrition play into injury recovery? 31:50 - How pronounced are those effects? 33:31 - How do you figure out if your maintenance level has changed? 43:14 - Why are micronutrients important? 50:14 - Does collagen benefit tendon health for people who aren’t injured? 53:52 - Was your doctor impressed with your recovery? 1:15:13 - What’s next for you? 1:25:34 - Where can people find you and your work? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there, I am Mike Matthews and welcome, welcome to my Muscle for Life podcast.
On this episode, I talked to the one and only Lyle McDonald about something that I was pretty
excited to chat about because it is not discussed very often, and that is how to use nutrition to recover from injuries faster. Now, if you work out
or do just about anything physically challenging often enough, chances are you are going to have
to deal with an injury or two along the way, even if they're just minor issues like muscle strains,
even if they're just minor issues like muscle strains, tendonitis, joint aggravations, and so on.
Now, in most cases, all it takes is a little extra R&R to heal up.
But if an injury is more severe, there is a lot more you can do to accelerate your recovery.
And that's what Lyle is going to talk about in this interview. helped point me in the right direction back when I got serious about educating myself on getting into great shape, when I started to really look into the evidence-based fitness space, so to speak.
So Lyle is also uniquely qualified to talk about injury recovery because he has not only scoured
the literature, but he has also used what he learned to help recover from a rather gruesome rollerblading accident that literally shattered his leg.
And yeah, that sounds like something out of a bad comedy, but it is what happened. so well that his doctor was genuinely impressed by how rapidly his leg healed up, Lyle documented
everything in a book of his called Optimal Nutrition for Injury Recovery. And this discussion
is a summation of the key information that's in the book. Now, obviously, the book and this
interview focuses on how to use nutrition to recover faster
and better from injuries, but Lyle also shares some other tips that can markedly increase healing.
This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff
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Let's get to the show. Welcome back to the podcast. It's been a bit.
Yeah. Well, thank you for having me.
Yeah. I appreciate you taking the time. The last time I think you were here to talk about
fat loss for women and that was, yeah, it was a very popular episode. It was one of the more
popular, probably top 15 that I've done by downloads. Excellent. So I'm sure this one will make the rounds too. And so this time here to talk about injury recovery and specifically
the reason why I wanted to get you on is because you have a book that I thought was interesting
and unique, particularly that goes over nutrition and recovery. So, you know, you'll get into this,
a lot of the discussions that I've read and heard online around recovery are just kind
of the standard rice protocol.
It's good.
It's bad.
Don't do things that re-aggravate it.
It just takes time.
Stretching, mobility, blah, blah, blah.
But not much talk about nutrition.
And so that's what initially kind of piqued my interest.
And so here we are.
And I'm just going to pass the mic over to you.
And I think a good place to start is why did you write this book?
You just told me, but I thought it's interesting.
So let's start there.
So, you know, one of my old sort of long health philosophies is, you know, we're all trying
to fix ourselves one way or another.
Psychiatrists are always, or psychologists are always crazy.
Kind of an old joke, you know, dieticians and personal trainers, we were usually like,
you know, overweight kids.
And you want to find someone who's an expert on low back pain, find someone who's suffered with it for years.
So what happened with this is I got invited to go roller skating, indoor roller rink,
like your parents used to go to for somebody's birthday. And I was an inline skater for years.
I raced. I was nice. Like I hadn't skated in a while, but I did it for two decades.
So went out and, you know, we were out skating and it was one of those group skate things.
And I was out goofing off.
Somebody got out of control and ran into me.
Everything goes into slow motion when you're about to get hurt and everything slowed down
and my skate kind of stuck to the floor and I went over the side of it and I like just
felt part of my left leg explode.
Damn.
They get me off the thing. We go to the emergency room and like, and this is kind of it. And I like just felt part of my left leg explode. Damn. They get me off the thing. We go
to the emergency room and like, and this is kind of gross. My foot sitting on the floor, your foot
kind of points up. It was just hanging off to the side. Like there was no support. It's swollen up
to the size of a cantaloupe. Wow. And they're like, yeah, you broke a bone. I tore two ligaments.
They pumped me up with painkillers and said, I needed to see an orthopedist as quickly as possible. I did. His name is actually Doc Savage. No joke. It was awesome.
So you were sold on the spot. You're like, how could this go wrong?
Oh, yeah.
How can this possibly go wrong?
And I asked him and I was like, dude, did you have the comic book? He's like, oh, yeah,
I had all the comic books as a kid. He was an older guy. And they did the thing. He's like,
okay, so I broke my
fibula, the little bone on the outside of my shin, complete break. I tore what's called the pyramidal
ligament on the inside of the ankle, which normally holds the foot. And I tore the ligament
in between the tibia and the fibula. So he's like, well, we're going to go in, we're going to put a
plate on the fibula. We're going to put two cross pins across the tib fib so they get close enough.
And so that's kind of the long and the short of it.
The only other interesting thing, just because I think it's a cool story, is he takes me in before the surgery.
And he goes, all right, I'm going to give you a prescription for, it was probably morphine.
It was good.
Like, I don't like painkillers.
And he goes, now, I want you to start taking this early because it has to build up in your system.
And he goes, now, you don't have to listen to me, but do not call me at 2 a.m. after the surgery
screaming in pain. And I go, okay. So I don't like painkillers, but I knew this. And the day
of the surgery goes, do you want a nerve block? You can block the femoral nerve. And I'm like,
okay. And they did that for 24 hours. I couldn't feel a thing. It was like that scene in Kill Bill when she's in
the car and I'm like, move your left toe. Nothing. I closed the person who was watching over me. I
closed my eyes and said, touch me. Nothing didn't exist. And exactly 24 hours later, I felt pulse,
pulse, excruciating pain. And that's kind of where I was. This was a major thing like this
required surgery. This is really the extreme end of injury recovery.
Some of what I needed to do, but it just threw me into, all right, I need to go nail this
down in terms of what I need to be doing nutritionally, in terms of supplements, activity.
Now, I was getting a lot of feedback from my orthopedist, of course, and I've got some
really good smart physiotherapist friends online that I got more feedback from. I mean, it sucked. I was on crutches in pain. Sleeping was a nightmare.
You can't do anything. You can't do laundry. You can't put dishes away. It was just hellish.
But I wanted to just make sure I was doing everything correctly to make sure it healed,
not only quickly, but well. Because with a lot of injuries, you know, I'll talk about this in a second,
you can get a lot of scar tissue.
If it doesn't really rebuild itself properly,
you end up with essentially permanent problems.
My left ankle still doesn't have the same range of motion and never will.
I can also predict when the weather changes.
That is absolutely true.
Kind of like a superpower now.
There's research on that. Like people with osteoarthritis, totally when the barometric
pressure changes, you can totally feel it. And the only really good thing that's come out of this is
that I now have a legitimate reason to never full squat again, because my shin just doesn't move
that way anymore. It will not move forward enough. So I'm just kind of limited to box squatting
within the range of motion.
So that's like the long version of what basically I just blew my leg up because someone else ran
into me, which really frustrates me. Like if I'm going to get hurt, it should be my fault.
I don't like it when someone else, the difference is my leg healed. He's got to live with the guilt
for the rest of his life. So I'm kind of okay with that. I mean, if you want to blame yourself,
you can in a karmic sense, you could just say it probably is my fault.
I didn't have to say yes. And I'd been on skates for years. I was out there goofing off and dude
runs into me and stuff. So anyways, that's the long and the short of how this came to be.
And then also like I went and looked and I was really shocked to find that. I mean,
you go to Amazon and there's 47 books on any given topic and fitness and health.
that, I mean, you go to Amazon and there's 47 books on any given topic in fitness and health.
The last book I could find on injury recovery was like 1994. Like nobody had written anything other than what was, you know, on PubMed and in the research. So I'm like, well, here's an
opportunity to offset some of my hospital bills to go figure this out for myself and then just
try to put it together. And what's probably one of one of my most applied books, it's like 44 pages. I was super to the point, super focused and just
keeping it practical instead of 200 pages of theory. I should write more like that when I'm
in a hurry. So anyway. When you're dealing with that, if someone's hurt, they're going to
appreciate that. It's to the point. Yeah. I just want to be better. Tell me what to do, please.
Sure. At the end of the day, nobody needs to know about osteoblasts and osteoclasts
and all this bone resorption stuff and what's going on.
It just doesn't matter.
It's just like, how do I make the bone get stronger and supported nutritionally or whatever?
So, yeah, I tried to keep it super to the point.
What were some of the maybe surprising or counterintuitive things or what were some
of the things that come to the
conclusions you came to that run a bit contrary to what most people think they know about injury
recovery? I don't think they really jumped out at me. Let me make it clear. The book really deals
with muscle, tendon, bone, and ligament, right? There's other stuff. Concussions are a big deal
right now, especially in sport. And that is a whole separate
issue that I did not get into. Nerve injury, not really going to touch it. Menisci, the little
squidgy bits between your bones, not a lot of healing. So I tried to kind of focus on the stuff
that in a training sense, we're going to see most often. I think the big one, and I'd say this is
kind of the big controversy that's erupted, right? So we go back in the day, and when you got hurt, you would just be immobilized for weeks and months and ice and rest and this and that.
We know now that while that's important to a point, too much is bad, right?
There's been kind of this shift from the old thing was, you know, rice, rest, ice, compression, elevation.
shift from the old thing was, you know, rice, rest, ice, compression, elevation. That has actually been now, this was news to me, expanded to prices, which is protection, protect the injured area,
I wear a boot, rest, ice, compression, elevation, and then support. If your shoulder is injured,
you wear a sling. Protection and support doesn't add much to it. And there's some debate over some
of these, right? Protection, there's no debate. If you've injured an area, you want to keep it protected so it doesn't get re-injured. Like,
I have two dogs. I was terrified that one of them was going to be playing and run into my foot,
so I wore the boot for quite some time. It's really where the rest ice compression elevation
is kind of, especially rest and ice. Originally, the idea was just rest and rest and rest.
And the problem is that after an injury
there's this immediate inflammation phase right when it swells and then you enter sort of what's
called a proliferation phase and at this point scar tissue starts to form to just cover the injury
now scar tissue while it's great for covering the injury is never as strong as regular tissue
right it's not as strong as bone and muscle. It's not muscle fibers that line up very much in line. The scar tissue is kind of random. And if you rest for too
long, this proliferation phase just lays down so much scar tissue that you don't get into the next
phase, which is called remodeling, where you're laying down proper cells. And then of course,
that leads into recovery and rehabilitation. So the rest thing went from you should rest forever to resting too long is bad.
But people have gone to the other extreme. You should never rest, right? They talk about early
mobilization. And I don't disagree with that. Like when I broke my leg, I was in a compression sleeve.
The Achilles tendon will tighten, the muscle will tighten, the ligaments will over tighten,
and you'll never get that range of motion back. But the key here is how early is early.
I broke my leg.
This foot was hanging from just the skin, so it was pretty gross.
Now, I know you will hear about athletes who get hurt within one day.
They have their therapist.
They are back to play in a week.
But when you're a million-dollar athlete, you have million-dollar therapists.
They know exactly what they are doing.
If you're reading my book, you are not a million-dollar athlete, you have million-dollar therapists. They know exactly what they're doing. If you're reading my book, you are not a million-dollar athlete.
I'm sure there are drugs that come into play as well.
Oh, God, yes. Because again, if you've got your championships in a week,
they got to get you back on the field one way or another. If you're in football,
they just give you painkillers and cocaine and tape you up. They know how to do that.
But in my case, the more severe the injury, the longer you need to rest.
But we're talking days to like three weeks here.
So if you have a minor muscle strain, right, you pull something in the gym.
You might wait a couple of days, lay off of it, start stretching it by day three.
And by day four or five, you're doing light activity.
You don't want to sit there and wait for this muscle pull or this muscle strain.
It does not need two weeks of you sitting around doing nothing.
In my case, I'd let even some of the inflammation and swelling go down before I could do anything.
I think he started me on that about three or four weeks, right?
I was out of the major inflammation phase.
I was off the painkillers.
And all I was doing was he said, take off all this other stuff.
And I was just doing ankle circles.
Yeah.
Just to get a little movement through the muscle, through the ligaments, especially
because like, you know, I'll talk about this, how this integrates with nutrition.
You know, he's like, draw the alphabet just to start movement.
Nothing severe because, you know, if you want to pull the toe back and point it,
it's a little bit of light stretching, but it was all very gentle.
And, you know, you do this within pain tolerance.
Anything less than a three on a
10-point pain scale, you're good. If it hurts the next day, you overdid it. So it's a matter of
degrees here. And the same thing with ice. So we went from ice every injury every day for weeks on
end to the people who were like, never use ice. Well, again, somewhere in the middle.
We know that some inflammation is important for healing. There's been a zillion studies on ice baths after training and pair adaptation and anti-inflammatories before
lifting decreases muscle growth. And we know that you need some inflammation. However, excessive or
runaway inflammation is just as bad. We need a happy medium. In that initial stage, like I said,
I blew up my entire leg. To say that I
should not be trying to reduce or control inflammation under that circumstance is kind
of ridiculous. Now, do I want to be icing it consistently six weeks later? Only if it hurts.
There's also even some debate if ice works. The old idea of using an ice cup or an ice pack,
it's debatable if that even penetrates the skin. There's actually new
technologies. They gave me the coolest thing. It was an ice pack that I strapped behind my knee.
And it actually, this was so bizarre. A, I could wear it with my boot, but it was cooling the blood
moving underneath my leg. The outside was warm, but it was cold inside. Like kind of a cool
sensation, so to speak, but it was really just weird.
So like, yeah, putting ice on the outside of a leg, it'll make the skin numb.
So again, if you're in that early phase, if you're in that inflammation phase, which is
one to seven days after a major injury, you do need to almost try to eliminate the inflammation
because it's out of control, right?
I was on heavy anti-inflammatories.
Within a week, I was off of them, and I only used ibuprofen or I used naproxen sodium, which I like
better, as needed. If it flared up, then same thing with my painkillers. If I needed it, I would take
one, and if not, I tried to avoid it as much as possible. So the rest and ice thing is just a
matter of degrees. If there's severe inflammation, you need to rest and not move it, but once that
starts to dissipate, you do want to and not move it. But once that starts to
dissipate, you do want to start with light movement kind of as early as possible. Compression, again,
that kind of ties in with all of this. And even elevation, that's really to keep the swelling down.
Yeah. Even some of the studies are like, we don't even, because what they do,
somebody gets hurt or they whatever, they throw ice compression elevation out of it. That doesn't
let you know what's causing what,
but I think it kind of doesn't matter. Since mine was a lower body injury, I did elevate it. If I was laying on the couch, I did elevate it in bed. Why? Gravity pulls fluid down into the foot. It
did make it unpleasant for me. At that point, I was wearing a compression garment. You also,
since I'm not walking, you don't get that lymphatic muscular pumping. Fluid just accumulates
there and it's really, really unpleasant. I did wear support, not some, I guess it's crutches.
He didn't even want me putting my toe on the ground initially. That's how tender this was.
And several weeks later, he was like, okay, you can put 10 pounds of force on it, right? Well,
when you weigh 175, that's barely placing your heel on the floor it allowed me
to drive that was also the biggest fear i drive of course i have a clutch it was my left leg
or not a manual car i couldn't drive couldn't get to the grocery store being injured sucks it was
just awful so i think that's probably where the biggest controversy really is to me it's not
whether it's needed it's a matter of how long. And too little and too much is going to be bad.
But that also depends on the extent of the injury.
Like I said, minor muscle pull, whatever.
Go a little bit too hard in the gym.
Take a day to rest it.
Maybe ice it.
Maybe not.
Start moving.
Two days later, a major injury, you might have to wait until three weeks.
But once the major inflammation period is gone, you should start into some light mobilization
and movement around.
Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast, would you please help spread
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at Muscle for Life Fitness, Twitter at Muscle for Life, and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness.
Twitter at Muscle for Life and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness. can do, short of like EMS or something along those lines. So I said, probably that's probably the big one that kind of leads into another topic, which is the whole inflammation cascade.
There's on the one hand, we've got the never use anti-inflammatories. Long term, they can be bad.
And I think there's no debate about that. But what the studies have shown is for 14 days after a
major injury, they're fine. If you're on them every day for a
year, at least one of them can increase heart disease risk. Forget which one it is. But runaway
inflammation is bad. Too little inflammation is also bad. So you use the strong anti-inflammatories
until you're through that first couple of phases, maybe two weeks tops. Then you want to modulate
inflammation. That was kind of the next section of the book was ways of modulating inflammation. So there's enough, but not too much. And mainly that revolves
around supplements. And just for people wondering, why is inflammation good? Especially these days,
I mean, that word is now just a buzzword for bad. You have anti-inflammatory eating.
Right. And it's like everything else, like the cortisol thing. Is
cortisol bad? No. Physiologic pulses of cortisol that go away are very adaptive. They're important
for tissue remodeling and memory and health and this and that and the other. Chronically elevated
cortisol is very bad. And inflammation has fallen into that same camp. It's become a dirty word
because many people, like you are chronically inflamed and that's actually more
related to obesity body fat is very involved in the inflammatory cascade you don't want 24 7
inflammation and there's actually a really interesting bit about this right so there
were studies early on that found that anti-inflammatories before you lifted weights
decreased growth because that acute inflammatory response that short-lived is part of the overall
adaptational signal. But when they took older individuals and gave them anti-inflammatories,
they grew better because there's frequently a chronic inflammation that occurs when you're
older. And that kind of points out that it's a matter of degrees and directions.
A similar thing that might help, I don't know exactly why the inflammatory cascaded, but it's just part of the overall signaling. This whole thing, you know, antioxidants
and reactive oxygen species and all that stuff. Chronic oxidative stress is very unhealthy,
but especially in an endurance standpoint, the increase in those sort of oxidative stress
is part of the stimulus. So you want some but not
too much. And the inflammation cascade to training is part of that. I don't know the molecular
pathways. But so again, it's a matter of you want to stress the tissue enough to get a little bit
of an inflammatory response without it becoming so runaway. When people have that kind of stuff,
that's why they use cortisone shots, which cause humongous problems in the long term.
But it's to break that runaway where inflammation is driving more inflammation.
If you can break that cascade briefly, frequently it'll shut back down.
Interesting.
And whereas the drugs, the anti-inflammatory drugs, non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs, the NSAIDs, they're totally nonspecific.
They're just a big hammer that just shuts down because
inflammation also has both good and bad pathways. And that's kind of what we're getting into.
The drugs are completely nonspecific. They shut it all down.
It's kind of just like whack-a-mole, right? Wherever it is.
Yeah, exactly. It's just dropping a bomb on the system, which is fine when you've got runaway
inflammation and your foot looks like a cantaloupe as it did in my case, but not so much in the healing process. So at that point, the goal is to modulate inflammation, to maintain the
positive inflammatory pathways while tamping down those negative inflammatory pathways. And that's
where lots and lots and lots of supplements come in. The primary one of which that should be no
surprise to any way are the fish oils. I mean, I've been pushing
fish oils forever. Everybody knows the benefits of these things. But among everything else,
they are critically important for modulating inflammation. And doses of anywhere from one
and a half to five grams of combined EPA and DHA, the two fish oils per day, is what's been used.
Just because I like to be smug about this since probably the early
2000s. I recommended between 1.8 and three grams combined, which is kind of right in the middle of
where it seems to have the most benefit. If I were going to pick one thing to help, I mean,
people should be taking them anyway. And I have for as long as I can remember,
that would probably be the big one. That's for people who are not hurt,
right? That's just if you're physically active, especially if you're into resistance training and the omega-3 fish oils may help with muscle growth per se. Like they truly do everything. I remember
when the data was starting to break and all I thought was, you know what, if I saw this list
of benefits and hadn't read the research, I'd think it was bull. They almost sound too good
to be true, but they truly
do like everything. So yeah, you could bump that up certainly with an injury because probably you
do need proportionally more, again, depending on the degree. If you've just pulled your muscle a
little bit, you don't need to throw the kitchen sink at this. But if you've got a major injury
that you're trying to heal. So that's the fish oils, one and a half to five grams of combined. And how many pills or liquid that takes, this gets confusing because a gram fish oil pill
is not a gram of EPA and DHA. And people, this gets really confusing. This is the actual active
fish oil. The pills I take have 300 milligrams of combined EPA and DHA per day. So for me to get one and a half grams,
I would have to take five of those pills. Five one gram pills would give me one and a half grams
of the active fish oils. And to get five grams, it would be a lot more than that. It'd be like
17 pills a day. So, and I usually- The natural triglyceride oils,
where you swallow the oil, aren't they more concentrated?
Carlson's and stuff like that are probably easier. I'll do 10 a day consistently anyway,
so it wasn't any- Yeah. I do eight a day as just a normal-
They make double concentration fish oils if you're not a big pill swallower or the Carlson's
liquids a lot of people like for salad dressing and stuff. Other things that have been looked at,
white willow bark, which is interesting. That's a natural form of aspirin. Whereas aspirin is a kind of non-specific,
white willow bark is more of a modulator. And I don't know why that's exactly the case chemically,
up to 240 milligrams per day of the white willow bark. I didn't take that because I couldn't find
it. Curcumin and turmeric have been studied extensively for this stuff. And I took that religiously, 400 to 600 milligrams up to three times a day.
Another good one to take just in general, in my opinion.
I mean, yeah, the reality is we are, when we're training heavily and joints get inflamed
and tendonitis, and I see this question a lot online.
People hear, oh, the drugs impair muscle gain.
If I eat a lot of antioxidant or anti-inflammatory fruits and
vegetables with that, well, no, because just the foods aren't as potent and they're more of
modulators. And I get it. I get why they concentrate the drugs to make it. Those are
anti-inflammatories, but that is to control a specific situation. And I would say to somebody,
if you're talking about dramatically reducing your fruit and vegetable intake, because it might impair your muscle gain by like 2% over your lifetime,
I think you're missing the forest for the trees here, my friend.
I agree.
I've seen people going, so if I have a bunch of vegetables at breakfast before trying,
like, no, you're fine.
Seriously, don't miss the forest for the trees here.
Yeah.
Bromelain and papain, those are those two enzymes found in pineapple are actually, it's
funny, you know, it's one of those decades
ago, people were talking about that for healing. And it turns out it's true through whatever
mechanism. 202,000 milligrams per day, that's really hard to get with pineapple. So I again,
took a supplement. Green tea affects 304 milligrams per day.
That's green tea extract?
Yeah, I'd have to look for 100, but I believe so. That's that ECGC or whatever that's called.
Yeah, the catechins, the fat loss molecule.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I didn't use that.
I've used it before, and I just, I don't know, it made me feel weird.
I can't really explain it.
It did something, didn't fit my neurochemistry somehow.
You don't want it on an empty stomach.
That's for anybody listening.
It can make you really nauseous.
It can just more just make you feel weird.
Yep, and that's probably what it was. I'm sure i was taking it as part of like a cardio
fat loss something and it just said well you know others pycnogenol boswellia cat's claw
capsacan which is spicy pepper another one not to take on an empty stomach unless you really want to
have a bad time that stuff's man and you don't want a pill to break in your throat you know so what i was doing
like i said i focused on i took the fish oils the curcumin turmeric and the bromelain papain
and i think i whatever dose i took i mean i work at home i just did like like every three or four
hours i was taking that stuff just absolutely religiously and it is interesting when I went back for my first follow-up,
which is about the three-week mark, my orthopedist, Doc Savage, even mentioned, he goes,
wow, like your inflammation is significantly less than what I would typically see at this point.
And I can't say for sure that that's what did it, but it's not going to hurt. And I certainly
wanted to get this stuff under control as much as possible. So like those are probably mostly important in those early phases of injury, right?
So inflammation, one to seven days, the proliferation, that second phase, when major inflammation
goes away in the calc, like seven to 21 days, I pretty much kept taking it for most, you
know, the first few months, it wasn't going to hurt anything.
I don't know that it helped, but I was of the standpoint,
I had it and might as well. And I was just neurotic enough. So like that deals with the
inflammation thing early on, shut it down after a couple of weeks, modulate it. So you're getting
the good without the bad. Makes sense. How does nutrition fit in to this whole picture?
And it's a little weird. I normally wouldn't cover supplements first. I think in the book,
I only did it because I was talking about inflammation. So nutrition was really the
next thing. And I knew some of this. And sort of the overall thing, in a very real way,
one researcher pointed this out, recovering from an injury, you were building new tissue,
or rebuilding tissue, rather, nutritional requirements for growing babies and growing
children. It's proportionally higher per pound or per kilo.
Like it's not higher in absolute numbers, of course.
Clearly a 100-pound kid doesn't need to eat what a 200-pound adult does.
But they need like proportionally more protein and this and that and the other
because they are building tissue, whereas adults are mainly maintaining it.
But obviously we know that when we exercise, we're trying to build muscle or whatever.
We need more than just maintenance levels.
We were all teenagers once. We remember how cool it was to eat anything and everything and just
never gain any fat. Yeah. It just grow and grow and grow. It's fantastic. So the four big factors,
calorie intake, protein, carbs, and fats. Micronutrients are part of it, and I'll come
back to that. So calorie intake is honestly the hardest bit because of the nature of injuries.
You don't want to diet when you're hurt.
This is athletes get nuts.
Oh my God, I'm not training as much.
I'm going to get fat.
I should diet now.
That's common.
I hear from people like, I can't really lift.
I might as well cut.
I might as well get leaner.
Right.
And if you want to ensure that your injury does not heal effectively, do that.
This is an anabolic requirement, just
like building muscle. Now it may not take zillions of calories, but if you are losing weight or
losing fat, you are not eating enough. So probably the easiest way to set calories, if you're losing
weight, eat a little bit more. If you're gaining too much body fat, cut it back. Like it was funny,
I'd just come out of a diet when all this happened. Did I want to regain the body fat? No, but I wanted to
be injured less. And I'm like, you can always diet later. Just out of curiosity, I mean, how
pronounced are those effects? If I think back, I probably can find an instance where I did the
same thing. And so I understand the psychology of it. So how big of a difference is that in your
estimation where, okay, so you're hurt enough.
Let's say it's enough to prevent you from doing, you can't squat for a bit or you can't do what you normally do.
And if you just maintain a deficit versus doing what you're going to recommend.
I don't honestly know if I can quantify it.
You're looking at so many overlapping.
I know, I know.
Would you say it's fairly significant though?
Yeah.
I mean, it's certainly not going to help.
I know. Would you say it's fairly significant though? Yeah. I mean, it's certainly not going to help. All of your hormones will be affected in terms of testosterone, free testosterone,
insulin, growth hormone, IGF-1. People, you can't gain muscle in a deficit generally without getting
into that topic. So you're certainly not going to rebuild healthy ligaments, bones. And again,
this is so long-term. Damaged ligaments may never come back to normal. A torn muscle or a broken bone will never be as strong no matter what you do.
It will never be back to 100%.
And if you limit that by not laying down proper tissue, you're setting yourself up for long-term problems.
So people just lose sight of, again, forest for the trees.
I'm worried more about what happens in this six-month span than next year or a year down the road.
You can always get back into shape.
And if this injury is dogging you for the rest of your career, you're not going to be happy.
Now, the hardest part with calorie intake is figuring out what it is.
Like I said, you can, if you're gaining fat, you're eating a little too much,
I would rather see weight stay stable or a slow fat gain.
The problem is with excessive fat gain, you start to get insulin resistance. You start to get other issues. It's a very happy medium, but you should at least
be maintaining your weight. The problem is how do we figure out how my maintenance levels have
changed? So let's say you injure your leg. You were training lower body heavy twice a week and
upper body heavy twice a week. Well, you've now taken two leg workouts out, probably burning more calories than the upper body. What do you do? How do you factor this in?
Not to mention, you go from possibly walking a lot to not. Now this gets offset because crutches,
you burn two to three more calories crutching around than you do walking, which I'm waiting.
I need to write a crutch walking fat loss ebook. I want to get people
on a treadmill on crutches without being injured because I think that would be awesome.
That's like an achievement unlocked. Oh yeah, Lyle started that.
Oh my God. But it is. It's exhausting work. Being on crutches is awful. I'm so glad that I did have
a strong enough upper body. It is awful to be on crutches all the time. So on the one hand,
when you're on crutches,
you're burning more calories per minute, but you're probably being a lot less active.
So these may be offsetting one another. Some of it depends on the injury, not just weight training.
If you're a lower body athlete, you're a cyclist, you're a runner and you injure your leg. Well,
runner's not doing anything. Maybe water running if they've got access to it. A cyclist can sit
on a trainer. They've injured their legs.
There's not much a cyclist can probably do, like upper body ergometry, which is the most boring
thing ever. It's really like spinning in circles, right? Oh my God, these are the worst thing I've
ever done. You injure your upper body, you have a shoulder injury and you're a cyclist, you can sit
on a trainer for sure. Back injuries can be some of the most debilitating because you can't do
anything with a back injury. You can't train legs. You can't train upper body. You can't do anything.
I would say people who lift weights have more options. In premise, I've actually got a friend
who just had a surgery. He's off lower body training for like six months. So he's just
training his upper body more frequently. He went from two upper body days to four upper body days.
Every day is arm day now. He's achieved the bodybuilder's dream. He's living the dream. He has a legitimate medical
reason to train arms every day. He's thrilled to death. But I mean, he's a competitive bodybuilder.
He's like, I can bring up my weak upper body, which fair enough. I knew a guy in college,
Chaney Humphrey, who was this amazing gymnast. And he did a tumbling run and landed off the tumbling mat on the concrete.
And it was ugly. He shattered both of his ankles. Six months, he just did upper body work on rings.
That was how he stayed in shape. And his rings routine was amazing. I think his floor routine
never quite got back to where it was. But it's like people who weight train, but even then,
lower body is almost easier than upper, right? Because you can
do upper body machines. If you have an upper body injury, you're not loading a squat bar,
you're not holding a squat bar on your shoulders. You may not be able to leg press because you can't
hold onto the handle tight enough. That may be even more limiting in some ways. For me,
A, there was just this sheer hassle of getting to the gym, driving, also the crushing depression that occurs when this all happens.
This also happened.
I was just in flow.
I was writing a women's book.
Everything was coming along great, and I was editing.
Man, it just shut me down.
All I did was watch television and play PlayStation for three months.
It's so horribly depressing when you can't do anything.
Even when I finally got back to the gym a few weeks later, I'm crutching around. I can't load machines. I'm like limited to the upper body
select, you know, pin machines that I normally would never go anywhere close to. And like,
yeah, it would have been great. I should have been in there four days a week hammering my upper body.
I didn't have the energy or the mindset. I went in for my two disappointingly depressing workouts just so I wouldn't go crazy.
And then I would go to the grocery store just because I was out.
Like I left the house twice a week.
It was just – but anyway, so all of that goes into – for the general public, their activity may not change too much.
It might.
But if you're normally just sitting in front of the computer all day and suddenly you're sitting on the couch all day because you're injured, your activity levels don't change very much.
But if you're an active athlete, depending on the nature of the injured in the sport, your activity multiplier may go down enormously.
And you have to kind of factor that out, the standard multipliers.
If normally you were at 1.5 times resting metabolic rate because you were training four times a week and you come down to twice a week well maybe you drop that 1.3 on rest days and keep it up you know whatever and if
you're training as frequently it may not change much but adding to even that and this was something
i wasn't aware of after an injury there's something called the stress factor and this goes to what we
were talking about about you are rebuilding tissue. The body becomes hypermetabolic after a major injury. And this can increase your resting metabolic rate by even 20%
after a minor injury, up to 50% over baseline for surgery or bone fracture, which is what I had.
If my normal resting metabolic rate basal level was 1800 calories, that alone might go to 2400 just because of the intensive healing.
After major burns, resting metabolic rate can go by 100%. Wow. Which at the risk of being,
this is a little classless, but you want to talk about burning in the cuts. I know too far,
but I think I'm hilarious. Anyway, so like all these competing demands where RMR, resting metabolic rate, goes up for the stress factor anywhere from 20% to 50%.
Thermic effect of food won't change very much.
Activity can just be all over the map.
And it may not change very much if you're generally sedentary.
If you're an endurance runner and you're used to running 60 miles a week and you go to zero training, now you're doing nothing.
It just depends on the sport. And that's a huge variability. You just kind of have to
eyeball it and look at body composition changes. Yeah. I guess you can math it out a little bit.
You can. And that's sort of in the book, the quick estimates. And I'm like,
this is kind of how you would math it out based on some assumptions. And you'll get
a starting point. I mean, daily energy expenditure is,
won't say guess, but it is an estimate. Yeah. I mean, it's always a moving target,
right? Even when you're not injured. There's that too. And we're looking at a long-term thing. If
you're off for one day, it's not any big deal. So that's overall calorie intake. Then we get
to the macros. And just to interject there, I'd say it's important then to err on the side of
the same thing with lean bulking, right? I got people that are afraid of losing their abs at all,
right? They want to try to keep that fat gain as minimal as possible. So they go,
oh, well, I'm just going to go into a 5% surplus. And I'm like, eh,
how do you really know that's a surplus though? I mean, chances are, if you do that,
yeah, you're going to be in a slight deficit half the days in a slight surplus. Let's go a little
bit higher. Let's go 10%. So at least you have a good buffer. Absolutely. And yeah, that means a
little bit more fat gain over like the next six months or something, but who cares?
Right. And if you're neurotic and insane, which most of us are to one degree or another,
that's why we got into fitness, right? Exactly. But you can always take the fat off later and
even easier when you heal faster, faster, you, the faster you get back to normal training.
So main thing, like with everything, protein intake.
And here's really where the researcher first said it's like healing an injury is very much like building muscle.
And you'll find recommendations of no surprise anywhere from one and a half grams per kilo up to about 2.2,
which is 0.7 grams per pound up to one gram per
pound. The standard recommendation kind of been using for years. Now I would add to that,
if you're also training heavily, conceivably you need a little bit more, right? That's just to
cover the injury recovery. If you're now in the weight room four times a week, because every day
is now arm day again, you might even go to 1.2 grams per pound,
you know, about 2.5 grams per kilo or thereabouts. But you do need sufficient protein. These are the
building blocks predominantly of muscle, ligaments and tendons or, you know, the collagen. And I'll
talk about that again, a different set of supplements. But yeah, it's like everything
else. What are the two key factors for muscle growth? Sufficient calories, sufficient protein.
Well, injury recovery is just building new tissue.
So no big shocker that those are a player here.
Carbohydrates, the recommendation, one and a half to three grams per pound, 3.3.
You know, that's pretty much right where someone who's moderately active but not excessively
so should be.
And a lot of that's hormonal.
I seem to recall
there was more involved carbohydrate and something about the connective tissue matrix and i think i
was starting to zone out at that point those are pretty standard numbers for people who are lifting
you definitely don't want to go low carb or keto because your hormonal status will not be optimal
but nor do you need to eat all the carbs because you're not doing so much. Fat recommendations, about 25% total calories. We're looking at half a gram per pound up to
just under a gram a pound, gram per kilo up to about two grams per kilo, like fairly standard
stuff. The only requirement being the fish oils and everything else will just like, so it's really
just your basic athletic diet, quite honestly. I would add to that, and this is really specific
to bone healing, there's this whole thing with protein intake and bone health that's been floating
around for 60 years now with this idea that, oh, excess protein is bad for bone. And the answer is
that is contextually true and contextually untrue. Too much protein in the absence of calcium,
vitamin D, and all those other nutrients is detrimental to bone. Sufficient protein in the absence of calcium, vitamin D, and all those other nutrients is detrimental to bone.
Sufficient protein in the presence of those nutrients is hugely beneficial to bone.
You also need to ensure sufficient fruit and vegetable intake.
I don't want to get into the buffering and the acidosis and pH stuff, but there's an element of truth to that whole thing.
Fruits and vegetables produce endless micronutrients and all that other stuff. But basically, you need sufficient calories, protein, carbs, fat, fruits and vegetables to
buffer any issue with the protein, sufficient micronutrients. You're covering all your bases.
And on the micronutrients in particular, I mean, they're important. And that's just
something that is maybe is obvious to you, but to some people, maybe not so obvious. Why?
It's been so long, you know, I don't think I ever looked at it in detail. It's just we've got all these
biochemical pathways and processes that have endless cofactors for optimal use. I'll talk
about vitamin C and collagen here in a second because that's really a super popular topic
right now. If you haven't, I imagine you'll let Alex Leif on at some point to talk about that because that's very exciting, a big thing for him. And there's good reason for
it. Like vitamin A, B complex, zinc, copper, manganese, for whatever reason, these are just
evolved in the tissue building process. And also I take a daily multivitamin I have for years,
not because I think it does much, so much as like can't hurt, might help.
Plug any potential holes.
Sure. It's just like anything else. Any pathway that has a limiting
factor will be the limiting factor in recovery. For bone health, very specifically, vitamin D,
vitamin K, magnesium, silicon, boron may be involved, I think. Some that there's, you know, there's a lot of like, eh, might be important.
Maybe, maybe not. But again, you'll, if you're eating sort of, you know, that diet and take a
multivitamin, you know, if it's a specific bone injury, I got one of those super overpriced life
extension foundation, like bone builder supplements, like extension foundation. Those guys make body
builders look sane when it comes to supplements and how familiar you are with them.
But they do their homework, right?
They keep up with the literature at a level of insanity.
And their products, the ones that are, you know, a lot of their stuff is just like living
on a prayer.
But when they put together a bone builder supplement, it is every nutrient that has
possibly been shown to maybe have a benefit.
it is every nutrient that has possibly been shown to maybe have a benefit.
And since I was recovering a massive, complete fracture, I wanted every supporting nutrient I can get. So and that sort of brings me to supplements, right? Basic multivitamin can't
hurt, might help, whatever. Whey protein, 20 grams prior to resistance training increases
proteins. Like we've known this from a muscle growth standpoint. But if you're healing a muscular injury, and I'll come back to this, before you load the tissue, you want the nutrients in your bloodstream.
That's probably the simplest way I can put it.
Whether or not it helped, once I got to the point that I was able to load that bone, and literally initially I would sit on the couch with my heel on the floor, and I would push it lightly into the ground.
This was the limit of what that bone could take. But it needed some sort of stimulus
to start telling it, lay down proper bone tissue rather than the scar tissue. But I always made
sure that I had taken my bone building nutrients before I did that, because I wanted those to be
available in the bloodstream when the tissue needed it.
Whey is also calcium rich. That's also a bonus.
Yeah, exactly. That too. And honestly, typically my breakfast, which has been this, I'd have
oatmeal with Greek yogurt, whey protein, some sort of dietary, and that's when I would take
my fish oils, my bone builder, my anti-inflammatory nutrients. I wanted, before I did anything for my
rehab, which became a lot of movement stuff, early mobilizationinflammatory nutrients, like I wanted before I did anything for my rehab,
which became a lot of movement stuff, early mobilization, light stretching, then starting
to load that tissue, I wanted all those nutrients in there so that they would be utilized as much
as possible. Because even with the inflammatory modulators, if you go train too hard, it is very
possible to kick off another inflammatory cascade. So I wanted that to be modulated before I did any
sort of activity. Probiotics, there's some evidence that it may increase middle absorption,
which is important for bone health. I've taken those forever anyway. I'm not convinced anyone
is better than any other. I just get the pearls brand from my grocery store because as I like to
put it, sometimes I like to feel pretty. Basically, it's just whatever. You're not the target market for that product.
I know, and that's why I think I'm funnier.
Glutamine, believe it or not, 10 to 15 grams a day for bone healing.
Arginine, wound healing, 14 grams.
Arginine is gross and disgusting, and I wouldn't bother.
But this is just what the research has kind of randomly found.
For me, like I said, with the inflammatory stuff,
I just stick with the big
ones. Inflammatory modulators, fish oil, curcumin, bromelain for the basic multi-whey protein
probiotics. I might have done glutamine because I had some in the house. I don't remember.
So that's just general stuff to support all the basic nutrition. But there's also tissue-specific
supplements depending on the type of injury. Creatine specifically may limit some of that muscle atrophy. It's not
always the case. Some study, a lot of the studies that do this, it's bed rest level,
it's zero muscle contractions, and that may not overcome that. But creatine does enough other
things, including help with depression, that it was worth taking. I've seen some research on helping with muscle retention in the elderly.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
So like creatine is one of those supplements like fish oils that it just does everything.
Like everyone should take it.
It does so many beneficial things.
Glucosamine and chondroitin, those used to be super popular.
There's more for tendons now.
There's a lot of research that says it doesn't work.
A lot of research because it's absorbed terribly poorly. The stuff I looked at, apparently the current model is it may limit further deterioration. I think I took it because the
worst it was going to do was nothing and I had a model. I take it because of that and it's cheap.
Maybe it does a little bit of something if I take it for the next 10 years of my life. If not,
I don't care because it's cheap.
Exactly.
Because with aging, all this stuff wears out.
So it may not help with recovery, but it may very well help long term.
And then the other one specific for tendon was this collagen vitamin C.
And Keith Barr has done all the research on this.
And it's funny, right?
Because if you go back and talk to your mom or probably your grandma, everyone used to talk about that collagen and jello was great for, as I like to put it,
nails, hair, and hooves. And it's true, like hair, fingernails, toenails, stuff like that
uses a lot of collagen. And so does tendon. And what Keith Barr specifically showed was that he gave them 15 grams of collagen,
well, gelatin, like jello, basically, and 48 milligrams of vitamin C.
Don't know where that came from, why that value.
And then he had them do what amounted to like 20 jump rope, jump type jumps,
like very low, like not super high amplitude, but high peak force jumps versus nothing.
And what he found was that the increase in tendon tissue synthesis in the collagen group
was twice as high. Because going back to what I said earlier, the nutrients were available
when they were needed. And that's pretty critical given the generally slow rate of tendon healing,
that's pretty enormous
to be able to increase it by that much just by having some collagen or gelatin. I literally
would eat a packet of jello before I did my stuff. Do you think there's a benefit
for people who aren't injured just for tendon health?
Actually, yeah. That's something Alex Leaf, this is really kind of his thing,
is that I don't think it's going to hurt.
Now, you do need to realize that collagen is a protein, but it has zero value as a protein.
Right now, and it's such a trendy thing right now. People often DM me and email me asking about it.
I'm like, no, it's trash to your protein. They're only selling it to you because it's cheap.
These are people who are buying it because they want, this is body composition needs, not recovery needs. They don't, or they're not trying to make
their hair prettier or something. They're thinking like, should I buy this whey protein or should I
buy the collagen? And fake doctor on the internet, who's actually a chiropractor says I should buy
the collagen. So. Right. And there's super overpriced GMO or non-GMO organic high collagen proteins that it's like $40 for 15 days of supply.
Yeah. And that shit probably costs them $6 a bottle.
Get a kilo for $22. There's a story. This is back in late 70s, 1980. There was a diet called the Last Chance Diet. It was a low-carb diet that was based around nothing but collagen protein. And a bunch of people dropped dead from it because, A, there was no minerals, so they
got into hard arrhythmias.
But literally, in a dieting situation, your body will start eating itself because you
are getting collagen has zero biological value for as a protein source.
It's simply a collagen source for healthy tendons and again, hair, hands and hooves.
So that's one that if you are healing a tendon.
That's like a self-fulfilling problem.
The last chance diet and then it kills people.
Yeah, for real.
For real, for real.
And I already talked about the bone specific stuff in terms of vitamin D, K, magnesium.
That's the one.
I also realized that from when you're starting to get into, well, so let me go back.
Inflammation for seven days, maximum.
Proliferation, scar tissue.
About the three-week mark, you start with that early mobilization.
And this is just light movement, right?
You're not trying to heal the tissue.
You're just trying to start, put a little movement through it.
Once you get into that remodeling phase where you're trying to lay down tissue and you're training, there's often a lot of overlap, right?
Muscles attached to tendon, which attach to bone. If you're doing any sort of muscular work,
you're loading the tendon as well. And depending on where the nature of the injury is. Ligaments,
there's not really a way to load them specifically. It's just movement tends to put a little stress
and strain on them. That's why I was doing, you know, the ankle rolls and draw the alphabet. And
it was much for a range of motion as it was to just put a little stress on the ligaments.
And ligaments, it's an amino acid.
So again, protein will pretty much support that.
But bone, you're really looking at you need axial loading, basically forces that go along
the bone.
And what's been shown for that is that somewhere between 20 and 40 loading cycles per workout is the maximum.
The bone becomes basically resistant to further stimulation.
So rather than do 100 repetitions, I would do 20 of those little foot pulses into the ground.
But I would do that three or four times a day after having these nutrients in my system.
So when you get into that phase, you want the nutrients in your system, whichever is tissue specific before loading that. So if
you're healing a muscle tendon injury, have some whey protein and some collagen, go do some weight
training that puts some stress through both of those areas, you know, patellar tendon, do leg
extensions or leg press or whatever it is. And that will ensure that you have enough of a load
to stimulate recovery and rebuilding while having the nutrients available to support it. And that will ensure that you have enough of a load to stimulate recovery and
rebuilding while having the nutrients available to support it. And that's kind of the goal of all of
that. It's fantastic. Was Doc Savage impressed with your superhuman mutant recovery?
Yeah. We got to a point with it where it's like he could tell it was healing well.
And there's just this gradual process from the influence. And then he started me on light movement. And then he finally gave me where I could sort of, I could put weight
on the foot and you just kind of hobble along. You use that foot like a crutch where you just
keep the legs straight and you just sort of pivot over the heel. And I mean, my walking mechanics
were completely screwed up and my foot was turned out and all this other stuff. And he got to the
point, he's like, well, I can't really see by the MRI, the x-ray if the bone is healing, but we think so. Eventually,
I was supposed to get the pins taken out, but one of them broke and you can't do anything with that
anymore. So I've got those for life, which hopefully I won't set off any metal detectors
when I go. It was funny. He's a cyclist and he had had like the identical injury a year before.
He got hit by a car and like literally the exact same injury. So we were definitely on the same page.
That's one of those funny synchronicity moments.
Yeah, for real. Really. And it was it was really a lucky thing. Like I just,
they told me to find an orthopedist and I went looking within like my health insurance,
my network. And the first one I found didn't wasn't a network. And I
called this other one and just happened to log out into this guy. It was awesome. One thing I did
talk about in the book, I don't know if you want me to get into this briefly is some drugs that
have been used or considered. I don't know if it's really relevant to your podcast so much.
And if not, people can, I think it's, I think it's worth considering, worth talking about.
Yeah, because that is that is something that people forget. A lot of steroids and such were really
developed for medical purposes. And the two that have really been used for sort of injury healing
are nandrolone, which is Deca and Oxandrolone, which is Anovar. Usually a lot of these,
it tends to be postmenopausal woman with severe osteoporosis. So they use very baby doses, like 25 milligrams every three weeks of Nandrolone or 10 milligrams
per day of Anovar, like super, super, super tiny doses.
For men, you might scale that up 50, 100 milligrams a deca per week, 40 milligrams per day for
men, somewhere in that range, you know, usually multiplied by about three or thereabouts.
They've tested human growth hormone at 2.5 to 10.5 IUs per day, super expensive. I've never
thought HGH was very cost effective. IGF-1, same thing, super expensive. One thing I did do,
because I've heard too much purely anecdotal evidence, You're familiar with that BPC-157 peptide?
It's a magic healing peptide.
It's all animal research.
There's nothing in humans.
Lots of people have written about it.
People either use it and it's magic or use it and it does nothing.
I was willing to give it a shot.
I was willing to throw everything.
You do have to inject twice a day with an insulin needle.
It's kind of a headache.
It's not human approved, not recommending it.
I just tried to include everything in this book.
The only thing I didn't really talk about was electrical muscle stimulation,
which that has been shown to help a lot with muscle atrophy.
I looked at the data.
It's certainly interesting.
I never got around to buying an EMS.
Even when I got to the point where I could do some sort of work,
like I would put a rubber band around my toe and do like calf raises and stretching.
I could do some light leg extension, like whatever I could do. When I finally got back to training,
literally his leg extension is super slow, like five up, five down, because the pad hit,
of course, right where my injury was. And I was so detrained. So I tried to keep those peak forces.
So electrical muscle stimulation for muscle atrophy, but I didn't really look at it. But sort of to put all of
this like together, right? So first seven days is inflammation. Again, this is one to seven days,
light injury, one day, major injury, seven days. That proliferation phase, seven to 21 days,
depending on the extent of the injury. After that, you're really into remodeling. At that point, you should start early mobilization, possibly light activity, again, depending on the
extent of it. What I wrote down, relatively minor injuries might be one to three days of total rest,
and then you should get back into it. Possibly 10 of the ligaments a little bit slower than muscle.
Major surgery, up to two weeks. If it hurts, don't do it. It should stay below three on the pain scale.
For the remodeling and rehabilitation phase, for light muscle injury, maybe a week. Like,
you've done it. We've all had a little strain. I mean, even heavy muscle damage when you get sore,
within a week, you're back to 100%. You might do one light blood pumping workout.
And if you bone break or ligament tear, it might be six weeks before you're back into remodeling
tissue because it takes that long just to get to where it's strong enough to even handle the loading. Muscle and tendon loading,
tension slash movement, like basically lightweight training. Anything that stresses the muscle
stresses the tendon. I think there's been some work on isometrics being specific to tendon health.
I've got a physio buddy online named Tim Rowland. He's written a lot about using isometrics early on for like tendinosis,
more so than discreet. But tendons, if you tear a tendon, if you actually rip a tendon,
which usually means you rip the muscle away from the musculotendinous junction,
that's surgical. If we're talking about healing tendinosis or tendonitis,
we're talking about that's your typical tendon injury. It's just overuse, and that's a very different thing.
Bone break, you're looking at axial loading, 20 to 40 repetitions per session.
There's actually been a lot of really interesting work for bone mineral health for women
where jumping is really, really effective for stimulating bone mineral density.
But what they typically do is like 20 maximal vertical
jumps, just jump straight up and land, rest, jump straight up and land. Another one, they had women
basically jump up to a chin up bar and just drop. But they'll do like 20 reps multiple times per
week or twice a week because doing 100 doesn't give any more of a benefit than 20. You're better
off doing less a little more frequently. And then really, like I
talked about, make sure you've got whatever nutrients support your specific injury in your
system before you load it. The only thing I would add, and this is for the athletes, be patient.
That may be the hardest bit, right? Especially if you're a competition athlete, it's a whole
different thing. But even for the neurotic gym goer. Or even not neurotic. It's even just the everyday, you know, probably most
people listening can relate to, even if it's just, it's during the winter, you get a cold or you get
a flu and the first day you feel better, you're back in the gym and by that night you feel like
shit again. Right. And that's my mentor years ago told me, when you're hurt, he said, wait till you think you're injury free and then wait another week, which is not generally bad advice. Because what people forget, right, so you've been recovering for four months and you're like, I'm ready. Damn it, I want to get back to it. I feel fine. And you go in and you re-injure the area.
you re-injure the area. Now at best, you lose two or three, like, so let's say you wait those four months. If you waited another month, you could get right back to it and be fine. But you go back in,
you re-injure the area. You have just lost, for not waiting three weeks, you have lost four months.
And depending on the injury, right, you've also probably increased the risk that you'll
re-injure it again, depending on what it is? You may have made it worse. If it didn't heal
enough, you may have very well just made it worse. So now instead of the four months
plus three weeks, now you may need six months or eight months and it may never heal. This is
especially true of ligament injuries. Once you stretch a ligament, and it's weird with ligaments,
it's almost better to tear them. If you stretch them beyond a certain point, they're loose for
the rest of your life. And once you've sprained an ankle, you're far more likely to sprain it going forwards.
You lose neuromuscular control. The ligament never goes. Whereas if you tear it and they
surgically repair it, it'll be tight again. Like as weird as that sounds, you're almost better off
tearing it than just stretching it and getting like a grade three or grade two strain. So yeah, so you may, you know, you may very well make it worse by getting back in too soon and possibly ending
up with something permanent. So you're always better off like with the diet stuff,
erring on a little bit less. And when you and then you also have to remember,
if you haven't been training, it's going to take you months to get back to where you were.
If you think you can jump back into where you stopped, you are going to take you months to get back to where you were. If you think you can
jump back into where you stopped, you are going to have a bad time. I spent months, like I said,
I started with super slow leg extensions and leg curls, five up, five down for probably a month.
And over time, I'd go five, five, three, three, two, two. I don't think I brought in leg pressing
for four to six weeks because once he cleared me for a little bit heavier loading i was able i wanted to start
actually loading the bone but light i started with you know a wheel five up five down and
as long as it didn't hurt every couple of weeks i'd go a little bit heavier a little bit faster
and it took me months your work capacity is down down. I mean, again, if you've been training
hyperbody, you'll be fine there. But if you've had a lower body injury and a break and something
that's kept you from training for four to six months, it may take you four to six months to
get back to where you were. And you have to basically be a beginner again. And it sucks.
Yeah. I fractured my wrist playing football when I was younger,
about I was 20 or something. And it wasn't too bad. It was, I think I was maybe five weeks,
give or take a week in a full arm cast. And so I was in the gym doing what I could in the beginning,
but then my cast started smelling like shit. And I was like, this is too gross. I'm just
going to wait it out. And so I had the atrophy to my arm was half, you know, I was on my left arm, half the size of my right.
And so when I could get back into it, I remember trying to train.
It wasn't like curls.
It was something that wouldn't have been.
I wouldn't, maybe it was even a lower body workout.
But regardless, I just remember getting so nauseous.
getting so nauseous. I had to actually just stop the workout because I just didn't realize how much of a difference even that amount of time made just four or five weeks off.
I tried to go back with the same intensity. Yeah, I had to work back into it. I didn't
work with any therapists. I probably should have seen somebody, but I just got back into the gym.
Rotating my palm upward is what I couldn't do with the injury. So when I,
when I first was, was back in the gym, I cast off, I really was, I couldn't get beyond,
I could just maybe begin to see, like, if I'm looking down at my hand, begin to see my
pinky, right. So I could maybe break, yeah, just break straight up and down by, I don't know,
10 or 15 degrees. But within a, I want to say
within six months or so of just, I just went about my thing and trained and trained normally.
I was doing hammer curls. That's all I could do. But I would just event, I would eventually though,
get a little back, get a little more pronation. That's it. That's the correct. Yeah. Right. So
get a little bit more back, a little bit more back, a little more back. And within a year or so, I had full range of motion again. So I almost accidentally did some of what you were talking
about of continuing to, I would just push it a little bit. And if it hurt, I would not do it.
But in time, I guess with the repeated stresses and I was, you know, when you're 20, you're
basically invincible. And I was able to eat a bunch of food and sleep really well.
Yeah. Makes a big difference. Yeah. Because that's one thing I did when I came in. Because
again, I had no range of motion on that ankle. Oh my God, I took a picture of it one time.
And I think I measured, because most of that muscle atrophy is in the first couple of weeks.
And my left calf was a solid inch, inch and a half smaller than the right.
It also, I joked it one thing
i did that i shouldn't have this was really reckless of me i got so frustrated by not like
i did a lot of hopping around my house on one leg which was really unsafe because all it would have
taken was one spill and i probably would have re-injured it was not my but i got so sick and
not being able to carry anything around but oh my oh, my God, my right calf was huge, like the best.
Because, you know, hopping one-legged around the house.
Carrying things, too.
So weighted one-legged hops.
Yeah, so I figured the workout plan, along with the crutches thing,
it's going to be like, break your left leg,
spend six months jumping around on your right leg,
then break the right leg,
spend six months jumping around on your left leg to bring that calf up.
But now your right calf is fucked. I know know there's no way to win on this one but yeah so like i you know i
started doing calf raises and one of the things i did was i would do like higher reps to get some
blood really and then i would let as like of the shoulder like one of those shoulder where the pads
sit on your shoulder type calf raise machines is i would just let it push me into a stretch
and let it grab just try to gradually relax into it it was actually really interesting for the
first month or so I felt nothing in the muscle the Achilles tendon had tightened up so much
and it can it can shorten permanently this is another reason why early enough mobilization
is really a key if you don't get that soon enough you may you know you will never get back full range of motion happens with acl injuries it happens with shoulder injuries that you have to
start putting a little bit of stress across the tendons and ligaments and muscles and so i would
just and then finally about a month in i felt the stretch move into the muscle belly itself
because finally i had stretched out the achilles tendon. It's hard to describe.
On the front of that calf, there is like a mechanical block.
People are like, oh, yeah, you get this calf stretch or whatever, and you feel it in the calf or behind the ankle.
For me, there's just a physical block on the front of the leg that I don't think will ever truly go away no matter what I do.
I still do the stretching and do the thing,
but it's like there's a bony block or maybe it's where the pins are in there or something
that it physically just locks up. So yeah, so that kind of gets into all that stuff. But it is,
it's a year-long process. Bone mineral density takes a while to both be lost and regained.
So yeah, you are looking at possibly a year from a major injury to be even close to 100%.
And you may never quite get there. I bet you all the things that you're doing helped you
psychologically and just emotionally because you got to feel like you were doing something about it
every day and you were taking all these supplements and you're doing your exercises.
You know what I mean? Because there is like, there's an incredible body of literature on the truly clinical depression that athletes go through when they get injured.
Like, this is no joke. When your identity is really training or athletics or competition or
sports, and that is taken away and depression, like the loss of control is just nightmarish.
So yeah, at least I was, you know I was doing something that it is having even the semblance of control
was really critical.
Even I ended up renting a car that was not automatic so that I could at least go do what
I needed to do a couple times a week.
One thing, and I mentioned this in the book, and this was luckily somebody pointed this
out to me.
Someone has made a thing called an iWalk.
And you can picture it as
a really high tech peg leg. And what it does is you bend your knee back and it straps to your
lower leg. And it's just got a little plastic foot on it. It is literally a peg leg. I'm convinced
some guy broke his leg and he was good in the workshop and thought, I'm going to fix this thing.
But it allowed me to be able to walk
and have my hands free. And that... Yeah, yeah. I just Googled it. It's clever.
Yeah. It's really a fascinating tool. And it takes some practice. Do not use it when it's wet.
You'll have a bad time. It doesn't work well moving sideways, particularly. And it is. You
sort of step onto it and you have to kind of pivot up and over the thing. And it took me a little while to practice on. One of my physio buddies says, oh, his guys don't, people he knows don't like it
because it shortens the hip flexor. Well, you know what? You're kind of screwed no matter what
you do. Like I can read, you can stretch the hip flexor during the day. To me, that seems like a
very strange reason to discount what is a life-saving tool. Isn't that a whole concept that you're going
to even semi-permanently shorten a muscle kind of controversially in and of itself?
It could probably happen if you did it over months and months. You can lose sarcomeres,
but even there, it's like- I usually hear in the context of sitting like,
oh, if you sit in a chair for X number of hours a day, you're just going to permanently
mess your hip flexor up. Maybe if you never got up and stood up straight or walked, maybe. I remember for a
while, there was a big thing that, oh, rugby players shouldn't spin on a bike in between
halves to stay warm because it'll shorten their hip flexors. Are you joking? We're talking about
10 minutes. Having them run around the pitch to stay warm. So yeah, if We're talking about 10 minutes. Like having them run around the pitch because to stay warm, like, ugh.
So, yeah, if you're talking about chronic, chronic, chronic, and he just told me, yep,
lay on your stomach, put a pillow underneath your leg to stretch the hip flexor out, and
you'll be fine because the amount of independence it gave me was beyond incredible.
I wasn't willing to take any negatives.
I think I almost fell down.
I would bring groceries home in a backpack, and I learned real quickly that this was a
bad idea because crutches are bad enough, right? If you've ever been on crutches,
you don't quite get enough forward momentum, especially on stairs. You tend to go backwards.
And that's really, really, really terrifying. And I think I did that once on the I walk,
I sort of set it down and didn't, I had a gallon of milk in my backpack. I almost didn't get far enough up.
I had two dogs. I had to walk them. It was a nightmare. It was just absolutely.
The iWalk for lower body injury, if you can use it. Not everybody can,
depending on where the injury is in the leg, but it was a damn lifesaver for me.
Probably burned a few more calories per gate with the iPod. Oh, yeah. I didn't use it all the time. I would put it on in the house and do everything that
needed to be done as far as dishes and laundry and food. Because it's not super comfortable to
sit in. But for the few times when I needed it, since I live alone, it was an absolute lifesaver.
But to go back, to really drive this home, the stuff in the gym takes time. Regaining full range motion takes time because you've got tissues that have to be reconditioned.
And if you go too fast and get hurt again, you've just lost that much more time.
And again, I realize it sucks.
And you just do what you have to do.
And you have to think long term.
Or you do.
You end up making it really a lot worse.
Yeah.
And speaking from
personal experience, having similar injuries, I mean, I haven't probably the worst was that was
the fracture, but then I've run into some tendon issues. You know, once it's over and you're good
again, at least for me, it's over and you don't even, you're just happy to be healthy again.
And it's as if it never happened in a sense. Right. Yes. You also often learn, not so much
with mine. Mine was such
a random accidental thing, but you know, I had another, I had a back injury early in my, when
I was lifting in my twenties and it was just a macho dumb ass like we all are. And I was dead
lifting and I could feel my form breaking, but the card said two sets of five. So by God, I was doing
two sets of five and I felt the pop. I felt the pop in my low back.
I swear I heard it.
I'm pretty sure it's just because it traveled up my spine.
But like I heard, I thought, you know, I was so dumb.
I finished my back workout because by God, I'll be fine.
Like I just, youth and stupidity.
But luckily it wasn't a career ender.
I didn't, I just strained a ligament.
Took me about nine months to get back from that.
Because again, think about it.
The same way that trying to come back from an injury too quickly can lose you months
for not stopping on one repetition, one missed repetition.
I lost nine months of training.
And assuming it doesn't end your career, oh, the lesson you will learn from that.
Once you've done it once, suddenly you become a lot more self-aware in the gym of what you're
doing and realizing that that one bad workout, that one bad set, that one tiny mistake is
not worth.
You can get the rep tomorrow.
You can get the set on Friday.
The six to nine months you're going to lose by doing something stupid and immature in the gym.
Like I started, you want to find someone who's an expert on injuries?
Find someone who hurt themselves.
They will suddenly learn a lot about what to do and what not to do.
And that's kind of what drove this book.
And I guess that kind of brings it full circle.
Yeah, it was a great discussion.
And the name of the book is Optimal Nutrition. I think it's Optimal Nutrition for Injury Recovery
because I'm super great with titles. And it's on Amazon. That's how I found it.
Yes. As a Kindle only. I don't know if,
are you selling it hard copy on your website as well as a Kindle only?
I never did. It was so short and I didn't, you know, With the longer books, a lot of people don't want to read long
books on a Kindle, and I get that. There was never any point in me having it printed just
because it was so short. That shouldn't take super long. Like I said, I tried to keep it
from being too boring. For those who want to delve, as usual, I didn't include all the references,
but there's some selected references at
the end. Kevin Tipton, who's been, I mean, he's been writing about protein and sports nutrition
forever. He's written several of the reviews looking at especially the nutritional dietary
stuff, protein, carbs, fats, and how that some of the supplement stuff. I delved into some of the
other some other papers that looked at glucosamine and bromelain and papain and some
of that inflammatory stuff. But the references are there to get people started. As always with
your work. Yeah, as always. So what's next for you? What's new and exciting? I mean, premise,
I'm working on the women's book volume two in practice. Yeah, I go through phases of writing
and not writing. I'm still pretty exhausted from that first project. One thing I've been kicking around for a while was,
you know,
I'm sure you're familiar with some of the intermittent caloric restriction
stuff that I think is interesting.
I mean,
again,
I'm smug.
It's like,
Oh,
you mean what I wrote about in flexible dieting 14 years ago?
Sure.
But whatever,
but it is like,
it's being researched.
I know there's a paper,
there's a study
about to be done on athletes specifically which we're currently like it's all weight loss stuff
yeah with uh with andy and menno right uh sounds right i remember seeing the you know research it's
funny i'll come across some cool paper i'm like oh this is awesome it's like this is a study that
we're going to be doing i'm like oh so we're now publishing papers about the papers we're going to publish but i mean it's just it's it's laying
out the study design and and yeah so i think that'll be potentially really interesting adding
to the very yeah i'm actually i'm giving uh money and protein powder oh cool to that yeah yeah so
i'm really excited about that and i think it will add to the very limited amount of research we have
on intermittent fasting and athletes.
There's only those two papers that I'm aware of.
You know, and I know that even the research on weight loss says it might be good.
It might be better.
It might be the same.
It might probably person dependent.
Yeah, like if it helps you maintain your deficit.
Like everything else.
Yeah, like every I mean, the one most recent paper I saw that I didn't like the conclusion. Well, so what they did is they did a two-day diet, five-day, like the 2-5 pattern versus a standard deficit. Okay, no shock. They both lost about the same amount of weight and body fat. I don't necessarily think ICR will make you lose more fat for a given deficit. I don't think it's like that, at least not in its own right.
Their conclusion was ICR has no benefit over standard dieting.
My conclusion or my thought is right, but they only did diet two days a week.
To me, that's a benefit.
To not only have to diet hard for two days a week and eat normally for five,
that seems a practical psychological benefit on a different, but like to your point,
some people don't like diets like that. They don't respond well to them. They find that they fly off there. There's
something, there's that psychological diet switch that flips. I am on a diet. I would prefer a 25%
deficit daily than a 75% deficit or whatever it is. Or just cycle calories. I'd like to be at
maintenance for a couple of days and then I'll, and then I'll
drop low and then I'll go kind of medium.
Yeah.
And I mean, bodybuilders have been carb cycling for decades.
So in a sense, this isn't new.
I think ICR is a little bit more formalized, but I've been kicking around, maybe trying
to put something together, you know, looking at how it might be implemented for athletes
because they do have different issues.
General weight loss.
You don't have to worry about supporting training. You don't have to worry about recovery. You don't
have to worry about your training structure. And I think ICR for athletes brings in some
separate issues and mainly because most of it's written. I mean, for what it's worth,
intermittent fasting is still hugely popular. I mean, look at it on Google Trends. It gets a
shitload of searches on Amazon. Oh yeah, no doubt. And I mean, look at it on Google Trends. It gets a shitload of searches on Amazon. Oh, yeah, no doubt.
And I still, whatever, I'm not going to get into it.
Martin's book was super disappointing because he basically came out and said after 10 years that,
eh, I knew intermittent fasting was nothing special.
It's like, dude, really?
You spent a decade charging people a lot of money to tell them to skip breakfast,
and now you're like, eh, I knew it wasn't magic.
Like, okay. But, yeah, and that's another one of those things. When it works, it's fantastic. It's
a great calorie control. It makes perfect sense to cluster most of your calories around training
from a number of like, I get all of that, man, I've written about it, wrote about a women's book
for smaller dieters, especially trying to fit in being able to skip breakfast and have more calories to work with later in the day makes perfect sense.
And for some people, it becomes a binge purge.
It just depends on who the person is.
And I wrote about this in the women's book too.
People forget that these are not mutually exclusive.
Meal frequency, if you're not eating a lot, intermittent fasting makes perfect sense.
If you have to eat a lot because you're carb loading, intermittent fasting makes no sense
whatsoever because I've seen people do it.
Man, I'm trying to eat 3000 calories a day on three meals.
Well, maybe this isn't the right approach.
Yeah.
Do you think there's something to be said for having a few more servings of protein,
like for muscle building purposes, you know, maybe five servings
spaced out by a few hours as opposed to two or three servings? Yeah, there's been a couple
papers on that. We're splitting it up. It's probably better in the big picture. And even
what's even interesting about that, if you go back 15 years ago, one of my old forums,
this is where Martin, Borge, Fagerle, someone who I'm going to deliberately choose not to mention by name
because of some drama last year. This is kind of where they all showed up was on my forum.
I was kind of there before they were really well known. And man, we argued about intermittent
fasting for months because I wasn't buying it. I wasn't buying that not having some protein first
thing in the morning or earlier in the day, I wasn't convinced that it
wouldn't cause problems with muscle loss. I don't think it like the Ramadan data is very convinced.
Like I don't think it's the issue that I'm in it then. However, to your point, people forget this
recovery from training is ongoing. It's not like a switch. It's not like you trained at six and
you're done it. Like if you train at eight o'clock in the evening, protein synthesis continuing for
24 to 36 hours, depending on how well trained you are.
To me, if you're not having, even if it's just a protein drink in the morning, I'm afraid
that you will be limiting adaptation and potentially growth.
Exactly what you said.
If you play that out over like, oh, you're going to be, let's say it's going to take
you, I mean, at least five years, right, to achieve most of your genetic potential in terms of muscle growth.
You could say it may even take eight to 10 years when you factor in the realities of life.
Yeah.
I think you're very much limiting yourself.
And okay, like whatever, the fasting, there's no real magic to it.
I mean, I know autophagy and all this other stuff that people are ranting and raving about.
But, you know, low carb is kind of of it's semi-fasting without fasting and to have 30 grams of protein is 120
calories and isn't going to be a diet breaker it's not going to make you super super super hungry
and i think if muscle growth is your optimal goal i definitely think that's a better way to do it
than just putting 80 of your calories and all your protein into one meal after. And I think people get so insistent on I must not eat anything for 14 hours or
whatever their numbers are, that they do kind of lose the big picture that adaptation is long term
and continuous. And I think that's where some of the dangers in these calorie cycling things can
come from. If you do the super heavy intensive training two days around, they cut your calories way back. Well, you may have very well limited a lot of the
benefits you're going to get. Yeah. Yeah. I was just going to say, that's also why there's,
there've been a few papers now that show that having some protein, particularly some slower
burning protein before you go to bed can help with muscle gain over time for the same idea.
Of course it makes sense. Not that you're going to lose muscle if you don't do it, but your body's muscle building machinery, so to
speak, it's just going to be sitting there kind of waiting for you to give it some raw materials
to work with. And somewhere I couldn't find it right at the moment. I got this really interesting
book that it's by, it's from the Nestle Nutrition Institute because they do a lot of it. It's by
Mon and Louise Burke, who is who I want to be when I grow up.
She's like, Louise Burke is amazing.
She's this clinical researcher, sports nutritionist,
who's just brilliant over at the AIS.
And it's called Sports Nutrition, More Than Just Calories,
Triggers for Adaptation.
And it's pointing out kind of some of the stuff like we know,
whey protein and leucine and mTOR and fatty acids and PPR, AR gamma and alpha and delta.
And all these
nutrient calories are not just fuel and building blocks. They are molecular signals at levels that
we're only just now starting to scratch the surface of. But somewhere in this book, they
talk about this. And there is a paper out there somewhere showing that evening training that there
is a big dip in protein synthesis in the
middle of the night. I don't know what they did to these poor folks if they had to wake them up
at 4am and do an infusion study, but they did directly measure this in humans. And they were
like, yes, there is this critical period that makes perfect sense conceptually and logically
that if you do not have nutrient, yeah, you can eat a pile of protein right at bedtime and maybe
not eat, or that 30, 40 grams of casein or slow-acting protein. Back in the day,
Dan Duchesne recommended like, yeah, you should get up twice during the night.
And I'm like, well, while I don't disagree with that on a nutrient standpoint,
now your sleep structure is screwed. And I don't know that that's necessarily the best way to go
about it. I think having a slow acting protein at bedtime makes far more sense and then getting a
good night's sleep. Yeah. I mean, how much more would you really be gaining, especially if you're
going to sacrifice some of your sleep quality? Yeah. And some of this was body opus and he's
like, yeah, you had to get up every two hours in the middle of the night to carb load. It's like,
nah, it really doesn't matter in the big picture. But this was two
decades ago before this research was developed. But yeah, so I might do something on ICR for
athletes, or I might just do nothing until I get motivated to write again. I always sit there and
go, I should write this out. And then I get bored and go do something else. So I don't know,
really no project wise. I want to get the women's, the training book for women. I don't want it to take forever. You know, the first book took three years and normally I
take about a decade between projects of that sort, but I don't really want to wait that long.
So we'll, we'll see what'll happen is when I get back to it, I'll write relentlessly. It just takes
me a little time to get my focus back. So I think about it constantly. And I've always tended to write chapters in my head, usually when I'm like, what I should do is get back to morning cardio.
That's when I did my best writing.
I would write it all in my head because I was bored.
And then it was super easy to put it to paper.
So maybe that's what I should get back to or take my dogs for longer walks.
So don't know.
Don't know what project is next.
Part of me wants to do something quick just to get it out there. And part of me wants to go play Shadow
of Mordor some more. So we'll see. Well, for everybody who wants to check out what you
currently do have out, where can they find you? My main site is still bodyrecomposition.com.
That's where all my articles are. My store is specifically store. bodyrecomposition.com. That's where all my articles are. My store is
specifically store.bodyrecomposition.com, but there's a link from one to the other,
but that's where all my books are available. One thing I do want to mention just because
like, so the women's book I did was that last year, it is a monster. Like it is a monster of
a book. One thing I started doing about a month ago is I've taken the big book and I'm subdividing it into like three to four chapter booklets in Kindle format only on the Amazon Kindle store.
Mainly to make it more easily digestible and also not nightmarishly expensive.
Right.
I do realize fully that 50 bucks is not a cheap book in this, especially in this, just given this,
the world as it is. And also it is an overwhelmingly long book. So what I'm doing is every two weeks,
I'm releasing like the next section and there's three of them out already. The fourth one will
go up next week. But for people who just want to kind of check it out or just have a specific
set of topics and I've grouped them. Cool. Awesome. Well, thanks a lot for taking the time lyle i really appreciate it
hey there it is mike again i hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful
and if you did and don't mind doing me a favor and want to help me make this the most popular
health and fitness podcast on the internet then please leave a quick review of it on iTunes or wherever you're listening from.
This not only convinces people that they should check the show out, it also increases its search
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and I'm always looking for constructive feedback. So please do reach out.
All right, that's it.
Thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.
And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me.
Seriously though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe
in.
So instead, I'm going to just quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically
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