Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Lyle McDonald on the True Limits of Natural Muscle Building
Episode Date: December 11, 2019Optimists say that with enough hard work, patience, and the right nutrition, you can get as big and strong as you want. That there really is no hard ceiling on your potential for whole-body strength a...nd muscularity. To support this rosy outlook, these people often point to top-level bodybuilders and elite college athletes who claim to have never used steroids. I’ve written and spoken about this extensively already, but I wanted to get Lyle McDonald’s take on the limits of natural versus enhanced muscle gain, and particularly how they relate to the fat-free mass index (FFMI). 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 pulls no punches, brooks no bullshit, and makes no apologies when he feels he has the evidence on his side. In this interview, Lyle and I chat about the difference between natural and enhanced muscle gain, what FFMI is and whether 25 is a true natural cutoff, common “fake natty” red flags, and more. Let’s dig in! 11:18 - What is FFMI? 19:27 - Why is a normalized FFMI of 25 a likely ceiling for most people? 53:06 - What is your opinion on the studies on limits with college athletes? 01:16:07 - Would you agree that a FFMI over 25 is a red flag for steroid use? Mentioned on The Show: Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://legionathletics.com/shop/ Lyle's Website: https://bodyrecomposition.com/ Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Lyle, thanks for taking the time to come and speak with me, my friend.
Hey, Mike. Thanks for having me again. Yeah. So we are here to talk about something that I have written a fair amount semi-recently over the last year or so. I've written a couple articles on this topic directly and indirectly, and I recorded my own podcast actually on this point several months
ago. But a buddy of mine had reached out and was contesting some of the things that I had mentioned,
and particularly about FFMI, which when I pass the mic to you, we can start with just
defining what that is for people, but FFMI and how it relates to steroids. He very much did not agree that a normalized FFMI, which we can
define what that is in a minute, of 25 is for all intents and purposes, a cutoff for natural muscle
gain. That sure, there are some people out there who can get a bit bigger than that naturally,
gain that sure, there are some people out there who can get a bit bigger than that naturally, but they are extreme outliers basically. And kind of more middle of the bell curve people,
it is not in their genes. It doesn't matter how hard they work. It doesn't matter what they do.
The only way they're going to get there is with drugs. And it was on Instagram. It was Instagram
DMs. And so I wasn't able to have a real conversation with him about it, but I understand
where he's coming from. So I wanted to have you on the show because you had recently-
Yeah, last year reasons why I think this is relevant
beyond just kind of nerding out on minutiae is for people who are on social media and they're
checking out other fitness people on social media, you have a lot of steroid users and very few people
are honest about it and they use it to sell shit, including just themselves. But also,
even if they don't mean to, they set
unrealistic expectations for other people. So either by implying that other people can do what
they do just by like with their super advanced training techniques or by really watching their
macros or by making people like people are instinctively, we compare ourselves to, you know,
if you're on social media, you are going to compare yourself to some degree to what you see there. And you could be a natural weightlifter and
actually be doing very well and have a very good natural physique. But then you look at the person
on Instagram and you're like, I look like shit can just be discouraging. So I think it's also,
it's just useful for the everyday person to be a bit more informed and a bit savvier when it comes
to spotting
steroid use, or at least likely steroid use, where at least you could say, eh, if I had to bet money
on it, I'm going to say steroids. So I'm going to give myself a pass. I'm not going to necessarily
do his 30 hard sets per major muscle group per week workout routine. And I'm not going to get
so down on myself because I don't have like 19 inch biceps. And I'm not going to get so down on myself because I don't have like 19 inch
biceps. And I'm just going to try to stick to people who at least are believably natural.
And if I had to make a bet, I would bet on the natural side. So that's my preamble for
why I thought this would be a productive discussion. Yeah, no, and I agree with all of
that. I think especially just to go off on like a quick tangent, well, to a, this industry has
always run like this, right? Like you go back
to, you know, the early bodybuilding days, especially Joe Weider, and that, you know,
the muscle and fitness days, and it's like, okay, we're gonna hold up pro bodybuilders who are
juiced to the 100% aren't, I mean, except for all natural Ronnie Coleman, but other than him,
everybody else, right? You're too young to remember that. In the 90s, he held himself up as all natural.
And he might, whatever.
But they use that to sell supplements.
It's like, oh, here's this guy that's big and jacked who's never used this product before.
And he's been huge because he's on drugs.
But we're going to use him to sell an image to you that is not realistic.
And we're seeing a similar thing now.
And it's actually worse now.
I remember this was years ago.
A guy on my forum, and he was like 195 lean.
With a month of dieting, he could have taken any natural show.
But even then, the pros were at like 260, 270 rep.
How can anyone, you could be 185.
You could be a big dude.
Looks great.
It's obvious you work out.
And you look at a guy that's 280 shredded at the pro level and go, I don't even train.
It creates such a disreality.
You know, that fine bigorexy and all that other stuff like comes out of that.
It gives people, of course, in America, the Puritan work ethic says you can achieve anything you want if you just work hard enough.
There are no limits.
There are no genetic limits.
Yeah, I got bad news for you.
I wish it weren't the case. Like, I'm not just trying to be a negative Nancy. It's just this is the
reality that people need to face, even with the provably naturals. And this gets into a weird
circular argument I'm sure we'll come back to. It's kind of a cop-out to go, oh, nobody can get
above 25 or whatever the cutoff is. And anyone anyone is I'm going to define as being on steroids.
I think that is a cop-out argument.
But to your point, we need to understand where this value comes from, what it represents, what the realities are, and what the statistical likelihood are of certain things.
Like the whole fake natty thing gets a little irritating regardless.
But you've got guys that probably
they're at their genetic i mean they're genetically elite they wouldn't be pro bodybuilders or natural
pros if they weren't like in any sport right before we get a limit right like if i told someone okay
ben johnson ran 979 in the hundred usain bolt ran 95 959. Only 100 guys have gone below 10 seconds.
If I said flatly, and we know they were all on drugs. If I said there is a limit in the 100
meter below which no natural will ever get, most people would go, huh, okay, yeah, you're right.
And yet somehow in bodybuilding, there is no limit because it's the delusional industry filled
with delusional people that want to believe and are sold lies and bullshits by people
that have a vested interest in making them believe.
So I think that's as good as an intro as anything.
But yeah, there is that super reality.
And I can also guarantee that the guys that are big and ripped and lean, they're just bigger versions generally of who they were in high school.
Ronnie Coleman's a great example of that.
Look at what he was massive in high school.
I mean, his age, like you look at, okay, massive, maybe that, but for a 16 or 17 year old, like the dude was huge.
I mean, you look at Ben Johnson at age 15, he was already muscular and lean.
At his peak, he was just a bigger version of himself after training for a decade, and we know he used drugs. You don't generally see guys start at 140 underweight with terrible muscle bellies and somehow step on stage at 210 naturally. I'm sorry. Someone will go, I knew a guy. Great. You're the exception. Fantastic.
someone will go i knew a guy great you're the exception fantastic on average we know it doesn't happen the guys who were big were always big or bigger and we'll talk i'm sure we'll talk about
like potential limits of muscle mass gains because what's interesting is that some of the people who
are like and i don't know like i don't necessarily want to call people out. But one of the ones who's big about, oh, there is no limit, if you look at what he recommends
as realistic weight gains over the first one to four years of your career, the math that
he presents cannot get you above that limit unless you start close to it, right?
So you can't have the argument go both ways.
You can't say that, oh, most people only have a top limit of muscle gain
of so many pounds. And then you math that out on the average body height of a given individual and
go, right, that won't get them there unless they started close to there. I'm sure we'll come back
to that too. And I'm sure you know what I'm talking about. Yeah, absolutely. Let's start
with what FFMI and what normalized F, let's just start there just for anybody who hasn't heard of these things yet. Okay. So I imagine most people know what
the body mass index is, right? It's supposed to be a measure of something and it is your body weight
divided by your height squared, right? And this is kind of a measure of, well,
your height to weight ratio and it correlates or not with a bunch of different things.
You can think of FFMI as the FFM is
fat-free mass, right? Fat-free mass represents everything that isn't fat. That means skeletal
muscle, water, glycogen, minerals, bone, organs, all of that is considered fat-free mass,
anything that's not body fat. So the fat-free mass index is conceptually the same. It is the
relationship of your fat-free mass to your height. And I
believe it's just fat-free mass divided by height squared and probably kilograms and centimeters,
because this stuff's always metric. The normalized FFMI, you can probably explain better than I can.
So when they first did this paper and looked at this, one of the things they noted was that,
oh, FFMI does tend to go up with increasing height, I think, because as
people are taller, they have more bone. Organs are typically a little bit bigger. There's things
that are scaling with body height that are not muscle mass, but are fat-free mass.
And so they made an equation where they normalized it to, was it a six foot tall person?
I think it was 5'10".
Something like that.
I might be remembering wrong. Yeah. Around there. Right. So basically all they're doing is saying,
okay, you say you're 5'5", we're going to normalize your value to if you were 5'10",
and if you're 6'2", we're going to bring it back. And if you get really bored and go look at the
original paper by Corey and Pope, whatever it was called, they show this pretty graph and unnormalized,
the line kind of goes up sloping with height and normalizes a flat line. So what they're trying to
do is so that it's kind of like the Wilkes equation or Sinclair in powerlifting and weightlifting.
It's like, okay, you weigh 114 and you weigh 220. We want to try to normalize your lifting
poundages. Yeah. And determine quote unquote, who's stronger based to be relative.
Correct.
Right.
And so that's kind of what they're doing with that normalized FFMI.
To this, I would add, there is another concept that I've seen, and I think I've only seen
it once, but I don't want to keep up, which was the skeletal mass index, which is the
same exact same concept, but rather than being fat free mass,
including everything non muscle is your actual skeletal muscle relative to your height squared.
And in terms of what we're going to talk about, that is a much better metric,
right? I can carb load you and put 10 pounds of water of fat freefree mass on you, and that will raise your FFMI score. And we all know that
that doesn't mean anything, right? I can dehydrate you and I will lower your FFMI score. That doesn't
mean it because we're not changing your muscle mass, right? When we talk about FFMI and steroid
use, we are talking about your muscular gain potential. And I know we'll touch on this
elsewhere. So skeletal muscle index or skeletal muscle mass index is probably a better measure, but it's much harder to do, right? The study that did it, what did they use? Ultrasound of like eight different muscles and plugging it in. It was a super impossible thing because the other difficulty is of your total fat-free mass.
total fat-free mass. On average, muscle makes up about 40 to 45% of it. It's a little bit lower in women, a little bit higher in men. But in high-level athletes that have presumably gained a significant
amount of muscle who are lean, it can be up to 50%. So you can't automatically assume that if
your FFMI is 20, that your skeletal muscle mass index is 10. So the skeletal muscle mass index is arguably
superior, but it's much harder to measure. And I don't think a lot of studies have used it. So
in practical terms, we'll be using FFMI in this discussion.
Yeah, exactly. I agree. So maybe we start with this idea that a normalized FFMI of 25 is a natural cutoff and where that originally came
from. When people argue against it, it's often they take that original study, the 1995 Curry
et al study, and they just point out the deficiencies and then they say, case closed, I win.
Correct. Yeah. So the paper for anybody who want, the three people who want to look it up,
Correct. Yeah. So the paper for anybody who want the three people who want to look it up, it's by Corey et al. And Pope was the second author. It's called Fat Free Mass Index and Users and Non-Users of Anabolic them report whether or not they used steroids. And presumably, at least some of them were honest, because the group comprised
183 steroid users and 74 non-users. They defined FFMI, which we already talked about, corrected it
to normalize it. And what they basically found was that no natural exceeded a value of 25.
natural, exceeded a value of 25. Now, what was interesting is many of the steroid users didn't get there either, but the only people who were above it were steroid users. I hope that makes
sense. So basically, steroids didn't guarantee you got above 25. Within this group, you didn't
get above 25 if you weren't using. And they did some other stuff. They looked at old 20 Mr. America winners from
1939 to 1959. They tried to estimate normalized FFMI. And this is a crap show, right? This is
trying to guesstimate weights and body fat percentages from presumably either visual records
or strong men used to lie about how much they weighed all the time. This was part of it. They lied about what they lifted.
To try to get an accurate number on this is just because, unfortunately, it's going to be representing your own bias, which I already believe.
So that's a little bit right.
But what they found was that for that group, the normalized FFMI was 25.4.
And it was only like five or six of them of the total group got above 25.
Most of them were
below that. And now the criticisms was the average group of trainees were just kind of like, well,
they were recreational trainees. Were they not like, sure. And maybe they're not representative
of, you know, the hard training, natty bodybuilder. And I don't disagree with that criticism. Don't
get me wrong. And trust me, when this first paper came out, and I read it, I was much more absolutist than I am now,
because presumably in 20 years, I've learned at least one more thing. And I think the big take
home like that got taken like that is an absolute if you're above 25, you're on there's no debate.
Okay, that's not true. Right. And I won't disagree with that. That is an incorrect
interpretation. It was one study with a limited group. It would be far more interesting for them
to either get good records of current natural bodybuilders or, you know, go to the gym,
get guys that compete in natural, hopefully tested contests, bring them in and see what
presumably the hardest training guys who are doing things right, where do they fall rather
than the average gym dude who's probably been training like a dip his entire career?
So I don't disagree with those criticisms. But this is kind of like set the initial thing,
you know, in motion, this idea that there is some sort of cutoff that most people won't get past.
Some sort of cutoff that most people won't get past.
And notice, keyword most, you and I, I'm sure, will harp on this constantly, will not get past without drugs.
Does that mean nobody will?
Of course not.
Most.
Most probably won't even get close, which nobody wants to hear.
I think we should follow that.
I think we should just follow that line and just jump into why that is, because that will
take us into some of these other points that are often used to justify the idea that there
is no real, even for the average person, the cutoff is likely much higher than 25 and stuff
about sumo wrestlers and super fat power lifters and a bit of newer research with high-level
college athletes. And
so why don't we just follow what you're saying with, okay, so if you do currently believe that
a normalized FFMI of 25 is a likely ceiling for most people, why is that?
Well, I think, I mean, what it comes down to, you know, is, is I think it, it, even
if it's not an absolute limit, it's a practical limit.
And the reason being that whether people want to believe this or not, there is sort of an
upper limit of, I'm going to be very specific in my wording here, post pubertal muscle mass
gains.
And I'm being very specific because one example people love to trot out goes,
well, I knew a guy who went from 120 to 160 when he hit puberty without even lifting.
Right. Because puberty is a natural anabolic steroid cycle. And you all know what we're
talking about. And it's not that, so spare me the bullshit, right? It's a stupid argument
because that's not what we're talking about. What we know is that, okay, we've got that guy. You've gone through puberty. You're untrained, right? You are whatever,
five foot eight and you're 165 pounds or whatever it is at some reasonable body fat, hopefully.
That actually might be kind of big. I'm six two. When I started lifting, I was like 160 and
I didn't look disgustingly skinny, but I was like a skinnier dude. I have like zero conception for any of this in the real world.
It's just like, so, but whatever. So you're five, seven and you're 150 right now you start lifting.
Okay. You're going to put on some amount of muscle at some rate. And we know this. And if you look at
several people and I've repeated these numbers and these come from both Alan Aragon and Eric Helms,
I don't know where their numbers, like I at a little bit differently in an article I wrote
called like maximum muscle gain. And I presented like Alan's model and Martin Birkin's model that
came from observing a pile of natural bodybuilders. And so like in the first year, as a male might
gain, what is it? 1%. What is it? Up to like 1.5% of their current body weight. It works
out to about two pounds of muscle tops. So if you do everything right, you're going to gain 25 pounds
in your first year, if you're lucky. Just for people, two pounds per month,
right? Like up to two pounds per month. Like I said, we're assuming a lot of things,
but that's probably an upper limit. And again, people go, well, I knew this underweight kid
who did starting strength with milk. I'm not talking about some kid who's 120 at 5'7". Let's just keep...
Yeah. Who was eating 1,000 calorie meal a day or something.
Let's keep the argument within the realm of what we all know we're talking about,
because this is just ridiculous arguments. So in his second year, he might gain half of that.
So he might get another 12 pounds.
If you, again, lucky, this is like the top.
And if you look at their percentages, it's a range.
It's like one to one and a half percent.
And it drops to like 0.5 to 0.75% of your current weight.
And then by year three, it's half again.
So if you're lucky, you're scraping to get five or six pounds.
And then if you're super lucky in year four, you might get a couple more.
Okay. And if you add that up, optimistically, you might have the potential to gain 40 pounds
of muscle from your starting post-pubertal non-underweight self, if you're lucky. But
that's the upper limit. And most people probably won't gain that. And then if you probably go
punch that into one of the FFI normalization calculators, it's not going to get you there. Or I mean, it might get you know, we've also got the
issue, like I said, FFMI, or fat free mass includes a lot of other components. And this will bring us
into sort of the sumo and football thing, which is water, glycogen, etc. You can very artificially
raise your FFMI by being a fat bastard, because a lot of the weight you gain up to 25% is not
what's called non-essential fat-free mass, connective tissue, water, glycogen, minerals.
When you diet that back down to a reasonable body fat percentage, it comes back off. So even that
guy who's like, okay, I went from 145 to 185 by gaining 40 pounds of muscle over four years.
Yeah, and if we diet you down to even a remotely lean level, you're probably going to be 170.
And if I get you to contest lean, you're going to weigh a whopping 160.
And for anybody who doesn't believe me, right, I've been making this argument with people for years about –
everyone's like, oh, we've got better nutrition and better training
and this and that and the other.
And I'm like, then why aren't the average body weights
of natural bodybuilders going up?
I know we've got more freak show outliers.
Nasima, got to forget.
Oh, wait, I got it right here.
Nasima Inyang is one of them.
And we'll come back to that because there's possibly an ethnic issue.
Go to a natural bodybuilding show.
Biggest class, the class with the most people, 165s.
These are the guys that are presumably doing it right, that are training their ass off,
that are eating, that are watching every macro, that are as psycho as everyone you've ever
met.
And they are competing on stage at 165.
And they might be 175 to 180 in the off season because they're at a healthy body fat.
And they're what? Five, seven, right? Martin Birkin, he's got a different equation. And it's
something like height in meters or height in centimeters minus 100 equals your top end
like contest weight. Yeah. I like 5% body fat, like true stage lean.
Correct. And that is going to artificially lower FFMI just in the
same way because you're dehydrated and you're losing non-essential, right? So if you take
these guys back up to their off-season weight of 175, 180 where they're normally hydrated,
go do the math. Then they probably don't get a whole lot past that.
Even that argument like, oh, well, our nutrition and our training has gotten so much better. But
yeah, but has it really? If you go back and you look at what people were doing and even the information was out there, sure, the evidence base has grown. There's no
question, but these guys have understood energy balance for a long time. They've understood the
basics of macronutrients. It's not like it's that complicated. You eat enough protein and
blast yourself with carbs and okay. The training side of things, a lot of it is like, yeah,
you got to work harder. It's not like the key to making progress once you become an intermediate weightlifter is not
fancy training techniques. It's mostly just working harder. And sure, you can refine your
techniques and you can find exercises that seem to activate muscles a little bit better for you
than others. That's the remaining, you know, we're going to get the majority of your progress out of
just working fucking harder. And it's not like the guys of the older times were not working hard and not
being consistent. One of the things I find, another argument that I've had thrown against
me by a couple of people, and there's actually, there's an article you might've read by Jan Todd,
who she wrote a very critical article called Size Matters, arguing against basically the
original paper, which is very easy to dismiss because there's more to be said about it. And so, A, she went back and reanalyzed the Mr. America and picked different numbers and came, because again, at this point, we're just justifying her own biases, right? I don't think that analysis necessarily, just because we don't know. They weren't as conditioned. We're making a lot of guesses but she also invoked like these 12 strong men and lifters
we're talking about like from 1890 to 1930 right we're talking about these guys that like i said a
those guys all lied about everything it was part of the showmanship they all lied about their muscle
sizes and how much they lifted and how much they weighed but then it raises the question for me. Okay. By that argument, guys in 1925 were better at training than we are now
because somehow they were 210 and lean and the guys now can't get past 165 or they were freak
outliers that are irrelevant, or maybe they were lying. I mean, steroids didn't exist at that point, 1930s. So even by the 1930s, we can start to get questionable about when did people stop being natural?
And it's a lot earlier than anybody thinks.
And I talk about this in my little article series.
We know when steroids were first synthesized.
The athletes knew about them.
These were in the game very, very early on.
them. These were in the game very, very early on. So if you're going to throw a 1960s Mr. America at me, I'm going to go, drugs were already in the game. They got into the game more in the 70s,
but they were already in the game. We know for a fact that the Olympic lifters of the day
under what's his name, strength and health guy, the magic power racks, they were also using the
magic Diana ball. And that was in the 50s and 60s.
So already by that, but again, if you're going to throw some 1925 strongman at me,
you're going to have to tell me why he's bigger than all the naturals today who have the high
end technology. Either we've forgotten how to train, or there's another explanation,
and I tend towards the latter. And again, this this is partly my bias but we don't know
how much they truly weigh we truly don't there are no records of any of this stuff so i don't
think using it one way or the other is a particularly good argument because we also have more current
data now something i want to mention about the natural bodybuilder thing when i first got into
this argument a couple years ago so basically one day i got bored and pissy, as I tend to do, and I decided to sort of examine this whole thing of the natural limit.
And I looked at top natural bodybuilders in one of the federations, one of the dozens, and I looked at their competition results.
These were winners of their class, right?
And these range from 136 pounds.
You knew some of these people too, right?
Sure.
But what I mean, a couple of them are in my group or were, and I do believe that they
are natural, right?
I'm not going to play the game and go, oh, if they happen to, I don't know about all
of them, but I will take it at face value that they are.
It's probably like one of those things where you're like, if they are on steroids, they're
either doing it wrong or they're not taking much.
Well, sure. Exactly. But I am willing to make that assumption. So took their body weight,
estimated body fat percentage at four, which is typically contest lean. So I was able to
calculate their lean body mass, their heights were recorded. So I was able to do a normalized
fat-free mass. And so first I looked at the regular fat-free mass, non-normalized. And of like 15 athletes, five of them cleared 25.
One was 25.6, one was 26.2 or 25.6, one was 26.2.
One was 28.8 and one was an enormous 30.1.
That was the super heavyweight, 237 pounds.
Okay, when I normalized the FFMI, now six people got across. So it was like 40% of the
winning competition bodybuilders, right? This is the population I'm looking at. Okay. Two of them,
25.3, 25.4. They barely get across. Next highest was 26.2, 26.5. They barely get,
like they're a little bit higher. And then two were at both at 29.7,
the two biggest guys. So those guys are huge. And we're like, aha, 25 is not a natural limit.
And I'm not saying it is an absolute limit. But we are now looking at the top 1% of 1%.
And even the guys at 29.7, they're Josh Gilliam, and and Nasima Inyang. And as I think we might come back to,
I think there is an ethnic difference and both of them are, I'm going to say ethnically black
and someone is going to call me out because I don't know actually specifically ethnically what
they are. They're not Caucasian. Let's put it that way. They have black skin.
Thank you. I just, God, I hate having to navigate modern political.
You know what I'm talking about, right?
Anybody who's going to get mad about saying like, oh yeah, he's a black guy.
I guess maybe this is not the podcast for you.
Right.
And like, again, you know, like I don't know specifically what Nassima and Yang's ethnicity
is.
Obviously it's, I'm trying to look it up right now in my browser.
So it doesn't matter.
You know what I'm saying? Let's move on with this. So on with this so okay now yes these guys are all super dieted down and
i didn't bother to go like okay let's feed them back up to 12 i'm sure most of them probably did
get past 25 under those conditions and again great we've now got 13 dudes out of how many tens of thousands are training right now while we're talking
who aren't anywhere close, right? This is an industry. People love the exceptions.
And not just dudes who are training, but look at how many people are trying to be
natural bodybuilders who are dedicating a large portion of their life to it. Not to say anything
of all the people who are into lifting, but they're like not trying to become a natural
bodybuilder. Like I'm into training, but I'm not trying to become a natural bodybuilder.
So these are people again, who are like, they're putting a lot of their time, a lot of their
effort, a lot of their energy into just getting as jacked as possible. It's one of the most
important things in their lives. Sure. And fine. So we've got great. Add 15 guys to the list of the tens of thousands. It's not
an absolute limit, but it might as well be a practical one because this is the top 1% of 1%.
Now, one example I brought up because people don't want to believe there's a limit. They don't want
to believe there's a limit to how much muscle they can gain. And this industry promotes that because
when you hit a plateau, just add a new supplement
or the new magic training program.
Or information, right?
Oh, here's the new training breakthrough that's going to add five pounds of muscle in the
next five weeks.
Well, and what's interesting to me, powerlifting went through the same thing, right?
We had, oh my God, there's all this new technology and there's chains and bands conjugate in
this and that and the other.
And I went, okay, why aren't natural numbers going up very much? If all this training technology is so good
and so effective, why is it only the geared drug users who compete in progressively shittier
federations that pass high squats that are moving more weight? It's just, that's the reality. The
average natural bodybuilder is no bigger now than they were 30 years ago. Even if the top 1% of 1% gets even close to this.
And oh, and here's what's interesting.
Here's some of the lower FFMIs.
The guy who's under 36 pounds, normalized, 23.5.
I got a 22.1, 23.9, 23.3.
To your point, these are guys, and oh man, don't want to say this, the 23.3 is one of the
people who argues most vehemently against 25 being a limit. And when I'm in a bad mood, I'll point
out, then why can't he get past it? My normalized is 23. I think it's right under 23, actually.
It would be closer if he were rehydrated. I'm told that he's a little bigger now. I did this
analysis several years ago. But I'm sorry, if you're going to make that argument, there is
no genetic limit argument, then you got to tell me, a guy did this with me years ago. He was
squatting about 500 because there's no genetic limits. I said, cool, when are you going to squat
1,000? Because at this point, you're gaining 10 pounds a year on your squad. When are you going
to get to 1,000? Never. That's when. There's a limit. Boom. You can't tell me there's no limit
when you've hit a limit. Sorry. Anyway, a lot of these guys, again, the best of the best,
training the hardest of the hard with the most optimized everything, they can't even get close.
Don't tell me that the average guy has even a decent chance, which then people
go, oh, you're telling people not to even try to get any bigger. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. Do not
put words in my mouth. I'm not saying anything of the sort. Everybody can get bigger. Everybody
can gain muscle to some degree. However, you need a reality check. I mean, I've said this a number
of times, which is maybe not quote unquote good business, but it's, I think being a good person However, you need about five years of gains to be had at which point you will only be able to
maintain whatever you've gained in those first five years, really for all intents and purposes.
Maybe if you then start, if you start measuring your progress in terms of like decades and you
really keep working at it, you might see slightly better. I don't know, your biceps might be a
little bit bigger and you know, you might see a little bit better development in your quads and stuff like that.
But as far as size, raw size and strength goes, that's it. That's what you got.
People need to learn the concept of an asymptote and go back to high school math and realize what
that means. And actually, I got into this discussion with someone in a different context.
I did a podcast and the guy was like, oh, yeah, this physique, 20 years of hard training.
I don't know what it was.
It was five years of hard training and 15 years of maintenance.
Do not tell people that it will take them to – actually, I put it in this.
I said, how many quantitative gains have you made in the last 15, once you hit that limit?
Right now, people will go, yes, we're presuminging that is five years of proper continuous training. Stop making semantic
arguments. You know what we're both saying, right? You can have trained like a dipshit for four years
from the time you're 18 to 22, and you still have an effective training age of zero. I mean,
you probably still made gains. Yes, you may, it may take you three more years. Aha, it took seven.
No, it didn't.
It took you four of real training. And I said, this guy, I'm like, no, this isn't 20 years of
training. This is five years of proper training. And someone was like, well, why do no younger guys
win World Cups? I go, wait, are we talking about sports now? I thought we were talking about
bodybuilding. Yeah, how do you make that leap?
I have no idea what he was getting out.
And even so-
If it only were that easy.
To gain more muscle, you just have to get more skilled at the biceps curl.
That's what you got to do.
Right.
And I mean, I would say if there's anything that happens with experience, you learn how
to diet, right?
These guys, especially with conditioning requirements now, you learn how to get stage lean without losing muscle, right? These guys, especially with conditioning requirements now, you learn how
to get stage lean without losing muscle, right? Every guy's like, oh, I came into contests bigger
than last year. Right. Because you didn't diet so badly that you gave up five pounds of muscle.
Yeah.
But that even that's irrelevant. And I said, but here's the thing. We're not talking about
competition bodybuilders. I'm talking about the general training public to tell someone it's going to take you 20 years.
It's so disingenuous.
And I get it.
It's to be like, oh, I've been a hardcore trainee for 20 years.
Yeah, whatever.
You've been fighting.
Trust me.
As soon as you hit 35 and aging starts, now you're just fighting decrepitude, right?
You're fighting the slow you are maintaining at best.
You're as big as you're going to get.
Because even you look at these top guys who are making this, they're like, yeah,
I trained for a year, I gained a pound. You don't even know if that's really a pound of muscle.
I don't know. I weigh a pound more, but who knows why? Yeah, maybe I ate more food or
that's why I went before I weighed. And he was the one that actually just came up in my group
today. He goes, I've been training for a bunch of years. I'm as big, am I wasting my time? It's like, well,
that's a judgment call, right? I can't tell you what your priorities in life should be. But
if you're training six days a week or five days a week in the hopes that you're going to gain
significantly more muscle, yeah, you are wasting your time because it's not going to happen
without going on steroids. And so, yeah, I told him, I'm like, yeah, don't tell people it took
you 20 years or 30 years to get there. It took you five because if you gave me somebody 18, who'd never trained and
you let me control everything for the next three to five years, that's as big as they're going to
get, period. Now, will they be able to make stage? That depends on where they started. Like we may
have talked about early on, I know we talked about in the pre recording, the guys that are big and
muscular and have good symmetry. Now, they look like that in high school,
by and large. They are just bigger versions of themselves. And even if you look at the guys that
hit that FFMI of 25 or above, they probably started at like 19, right? They were just coming
out of puberty because they were tall and had a certain amount of muscle mass. And it's interesting, there's actually a strong relationship. There's been
studies that have correlated the amount of lean body mass per height, per inch of height or per
centimeter of height. And if you actually go look at those numbers and they're super depressing,
right? Because if you actually go, all right, at six foot tall, this is pretty much my upper limit.
Now go crank that
into an FFMI chart and see where it puts you. It's probably not going to be where you want it to.
And for anybody listening who wants to play around with some of these numbers,
I have some calculators in this article I wrote. So it's at legionathletics.com. If you search for
naturally, it's a long article, but a lot of good information. It's called, here's how much muscle
you can really gain naturally with a calculator. So anybody listening, if you want to start playing around
with, we have a calculator in there that uses some of Casey Butts' information. It's pretty
useful for getting a pretty good idea of how big you are going to be able to get.
Well, and even that, I would say that is going to be your upper limit if you're lucky.
Yeah, I agree. I don't think I ever could hit, just according to Casey's information,
if I take off 5% or so, maybe, maybe, but this is about it. I weigh 200 pounds.
I'm around 10% body fat. I'm 6'2". This is the end of the road.
And for people, if you think about that, that means you've got 20% body or 20 pounds of fat.
If we dieted you down to 5%
contest lean, you'd come in at 190, which is big. That's a big natural. And again, most guys come in
at 165. But even the Casey Butt numbers in those calculators. I suspect my weight would be a bit
lower though, just because it always comes out like that, right? I'd probably be 185.
Sure. Which is still big, relatively speaking, for a natural. But again, that's, you know, and I'm sure the 165s are the biggest.
You don't see a lot of guys in the littler classes.
And I'm sure 185s is next.
And then go look at the number of guys in the super heavyweights, right, that are above
200 pounds that are conditioned.
And they are in the minority.
There are a lot of big boys on stage.
But at least when I was looking at natural results,
some of them seemed to forget to diet.
It was kind of interesting because they stepped on stage with an app.
But anyway, you know, you diet them down, they'd be 195 if they were lucky.
But realize those Casey Button, all those calculators for the majority of people are
going to represent a maximal limit, not necessarily where you're going to end up.
a maximum limit, not necessarily where you're going to end up, because this is like the upper limit at the far right hand of a fairly normal curve. That's if everything falls the right way.
If you have good testosterone levels, there's been all this research about individual difference,
if you've got whatever, you generate ribosomes better than others, you've got good mitochondria,
this other molecular biology that isn't the topic here. And that's if you're lucky. Realistically, most won't even get there.
All these numbers we've thrown out are perfectly optimized physiologically.
Those are the maximums. That doesn't mean that that's what you're going to get.
And the good news, the pretty significant silver lining is at least based on the majority of people I've worked with over the years,
who would be the gen fit crowd of people who just want to look good and they want to feel good. And
they have maybe three to five hours a week to give to their training. And yeah, they're willing
to follow meal plans and things, but they're not going to be neurotic about all of it.
The type of physique that most of those people aspire to is not even close to a normalized
F25. It's probably right around where I'm at, 22 to 23. Your average guy would be very happy with
that. And for your average woman, I don't know, somewhere around 20 or 21, probably. It's harder
with women. And there's a lot less data to try to identify where those numbers are. I had numbers in my women's book, plug, plug, plug, about the relationship between height and muscle mass. And I even talked about it with that, right? I looked at the results of, it was at the time, the top pro female bodybuilder, who I guarantee was on steroids. She was 145 pounds in contest shape. That's at the big end.
I realize that there's women that are bigger than that. And female bodybuilding tends to be judged
a little bit differently. So it's a weirder sport than the men's event. But I'm like, women will be
like, God, I weigh 120 and want to get huge. I got bad news for you. That's it, right? That 40 to 45 pounds of potential muscle gain for
men, it's about 20 for women if they're lucky. And what I did is I presented the ranges. I'm like,
okay, here's the low end of like muscle mass to height and then here's the high end. And it's
like if you're a beginner and you're low end, you might make the high end. If you've been training
for five years productively and you're low end, you're never going to get to the high end ever.
You might make it close to the middle, but you're never going to make it to the high end and you need to come to terms with that and men need to do the same thing and there's
numbers for men too but i don't have them anywhere handy but yeah so that's it right so we've got
this thing the top one percent of one percent may get there i assure you they started big actually
there's another weird paper i looked at and it's really interesting because what they were looking at was how do different body types
in terms of basically being sort of small or big boned, it's that whole thing, respond to training.
Because that's been one of those things floating around for years. If you are the classic
ectomorph, the skinny, because I think even Caseyy butts uses wrist circumference that's been an old
one and it's actually a decent indicator of other things right where all that stuff kind of tells
you with what your prenatal androgen exposure was and all this other stuff that programs the
physiology that nobody wants to hear about right now and but what they did is they took these people
that they either like based on their current body weight and stuff, they put them through the same training program. And the guys with like a light or lean body build gained for
nothing, right? They gained like a pound. And the guys with a thicker body build, you know,
the quote unquote mesomorph gained quite a bit. Now on the one hand, we might go well,
ectomorphs, whatever the skinny guy needs a different style of training. I won't disagree
with that. What was interesting if you look at it it, the lean guys started with an FFMI of
21, and the bigger guys were 24. When you added it up, the lean guys got to 22, and the guys that
started at 24 got to 26. But all that tells you is if you start big, you'll end big. Well, duh.
Because again, we're assuming a relatively
fixed amount of gain from where you are. If you started 130 after puberty, you're not going to be
much bigger than 170 no matter what you do, period. You're not going to get to 200 lean.
And just to comment on that, when I started lifting, I was like 155, maybe 160 pounds, probably with
similar body fat to now. Maybe I was somewhere in the teens and I'm a little bit leaner now.
And here I am fluctuating, I'd say 198, give or take a couple pounds. That's it.
And that's just where the numbers fall, right? So you look at the guys that are
220 now and they started at 180. They were big boys in high school. I would love to know what Nassima
and was it Josh Williams, I think was the other one that, yeah, sorry, Josh Gilliam, who hit 29.7
in that analysis I did. I'm willing to bet you because they competed respectively. Josh competed
at 180 at a height of five foot five, right? So just try to picture that. Picture, say,
65 inches in height. Picture a guy who's five foot five, who weighs 180 pounds in contest shape.
Actually massive.
Right? One of the other guys who's 65 and a half inches, five foot five and a half,
weighed in at 145, right? So Josh Gilliam is 35 pounds of muscle heavier than him
because he started big. Nesima weighed in at 237,
but he's also six foot one. But I guarantee you that when he was at his full height in high school,
having hit puberty and stuff, I bet you he was already 190 in that range. He was already big.
So he just got bigger. But if you don't start there, you're not going to get there, period.
I mean, if people still disagree with us arnold at his peak depending on which numbers
you believe competed between 220 and 240 it's very difficult to get realistic numbers now if
he was 220 that means that he was like no bigger than some of the top naturals now which is but
even at 240 they weren't as conditioned as they are now they didn't have to come in his leaning
he would have been easily 10 pounds lighter with current conditioning levels.
So this is a guy with optimal genetics.
We know you steroids and he topped out at 230.
So if you think as a natural, you're going to be bigger than that.
I was just, I pulled up Josh Gilliam's Instagram and there's a throwback picture.
This is timely of when he was 19 tanked. He makes me look small at 19.
Yeah. So he just got big. And again, I don't want anybody to hear me. This isn't meant as
a criticism of either of those athletes. I'm not dismissing the fact that they went from being
jacked to more jacked and that they're amazing bodybuilders. I'm not.
It's to make the point that if you didn't start big, you're not going to get that big.
Wherever you were after decent, or if you weren't super underfed at puberty,
if you're lucky at 40 pounds, that's it. Go figure out relative to how tall you are.
That's your personal FFI limit if you get all 40 pounds. But realize that's four to five years of intense, productive,
correct, consistent training to get there. And let's face it.
You know, I just put into chat, check out this link that I just sent you. This is him at 12
years old. At 12, I'm not joking. He was bigger than me at 19 after like a year of weightlifting.
Oh, good God. Yeah, That's phenomenal. Look at those
arms. What does that even mean? Those have got to be 16 inch guns and belts. Right.
And this kid is 12. For anyone listening, you want to see this. His Instagram handle is Joshua
and then G-L-L-M. And you look at him now and he's huge. And then go look at him at 12. That's
actually stunning. He literally at 12
was bigger than I was at 19 after I'd been lifting. Sure. I was doing stupid bodybuilding
magazine workouts, but it doesn't matter. I was going to the gym five or six days a week
and he was bigger at 12. You could put him up against a lot of guys training at my gym right
now. And he was bigger at 12 than they are now and probably will ever be sure so
kind of just like i said to the point so yes is it possible of course are most gonna do it sorry no
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please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what I love, like producing podcasts like this. And I guess that speaks to
some of the other research that's often held up as an example of why we don't know what the limits
are. There was a study by Hardy et al. And there was a study by Trexel et al. with college athletes.
And I just want to get your comments on those studies. And I have my opinions,
but I was curious as to your thoughts.
Yeah.
So, and I had had one of those.
I don't remember which one it is at the moment.
And it was sort of thrown at me and it was like, oh, here's a bunch of, they looked at
like a hundred top athletes.
And like, these were like world, maybe it was, I don't forget how many it was.
These were like world championships, a lot of Olympic sports, American football
athletes.
And of the 100, like 10 had FFMIs that were pretty significantly above 25.
Like I said, these were kind of world-class athletes.
And the argument I had was like, oh, and you look at the description and the athletes said
they didn't use drugs.
Well, there you go. Athletes have never been
known to lie about steroids in a world where they will basically completely lose their sponsorship.
Why would they lie? What's in it for them? I know. How dare I?
And then why would they take steroids? Why would a football player take steroids? What could
possibly be in it for them? Yeah. Oh, here we go. Here's the paper that I'm thinking of. It is
called Skeletal Muscle Mass in Human Athletes. What is the Upper Limit by Abe et al. with Jeremy
Lenneke was on the end of the American Journal of Human Biology, 2018. So 95, quote unquote,
large sized males and 48 controls were measured body, blah, blah, blah. 10 of the athletes had
more than 100 kilos of fat free mass. So that's 220 pounds. The largest was 120.2, right? That's 250. Seven of the controls had
more than 50 kilograms. Woohoo! 110 pounds of muscle mass, including the largest, you had a
whopping 60. Fat-free mass and skeletal, blah, blah, blah. Skeletal muscle index was higher in
the athletes. And this is important important right the it was like 40 to
45 percent in the recreational athletes and it was like 50 percent in the high level athletes right
they have a greater proportion of muscle mass and this was the one where the athletes were like yeah
here's just some stuff from my article they looked at 43 american college football players 18 power
lifters another sport that doesn't have drug use in it, 28 college sumo wrestlers, which I have no idea what the culture is there,
and six shot putters. Football players were Division I NCAA, the other athletes,
national, international level. And they all said, we don't use drugs. Sure. I believe you.
I believe you because only the handful of cheaters that get caught are on steroids.
We know that steroid use in high school football is enormous. Steroid use in college football is enormous. Nobody gets to
the world level in any sport without drugs. They've been part of sports since the 70s.
You always have to giggle when announcers, when sportscasters are like, oh yeah,
once he started on the college team and he put on 30 pounds in that first,
they have a really good weightlifting program there. Sure. Yeah, exactly. And I'm not saying they were all using. I'm not.
However, to even assume that a majority of them were clean, knowing what we know about the
realities of high-level sport in American football is nonsensical. Now, again, as part of my overall obsess, like I looked at, so here were
the top 10 athletes. Well, unfortunately, they didn't do fat free mass in God, do I have these
numbers? Probably not. So I looked at them and their fat free mass index ranged from a 25 was
the lowest 34.49 was the highest. Interestingly, that guy had a skeletal muscle mass.
He had like 47% was the ratio of skeletal muscle.
One dude had a 53% of his total fat-free mass was muscle.
And he had one of the higher fat-free mass indexes.
But these were 10 of the 100.
So again, we've got 10% of these high-level athletes.
They're the only ones that are making it past right even the average ffmi
so like yeah 10 of 95 the total athletes which are huge outliers pulling the numbers up i can't find
what the average of fat free mass index was regardless there was also and i did some early
calculations and i've kind of gone back on them because of some criticism right because of the way like i said fat-free mass isn't
all muscle right one of the guys with the highest fat-free mass index is 28.48 he only had 42 percent
of his total fat-free mass as muscle that means he was carrying a lot of water and glycogen his
body fat percentage was probably higher i don't know the numbers in front of me and what that
basically means oh yeah no i do right the body fat percentage on most of these guys ranged, they were in the mid-20s. One guy was
36% body fat. One guy was 10%, and he was the one I believe that had the most regardless.
If you diet these guys down, their FMI's will drop because they're losing the glycogen water
and essential fat-free mass. When you start looking at these athletes and American football players and sumo wrestlers,
right? These are two sports that have turned morbid obesity into performance. Fascinating.
Yeah. These guys have some of the like sumo wrestlers have been measured as having some
of the highest fat-free mass values measured, like 120, which is considered the top end. And
Abe has done that research too.
But a large percentage of that is inessential. And I guarantee you, and these guys are 600 pounds,
right? They are 50% body fat. Now tell me you diet this guy down to 10%. I guarantee you he's
not going to have 120 kilos of lean body mass. Guarantee you. I don't know where he'll fall,
but it's going to be a lot less than that. So even if that's considered an upper limit of fat-free mass, that's including glycogen,
water, minerals, connective tissue, stuff that will go away.
And that applies to powerlifters too, like Ray Williams, for example, that's come.
Oh, sure.
Yes.
Which again, a sport where there we know is completely clean at the highest levels.
People don't lie.
Why would they lie?
They just follow the rules.
Yeah, exactly. Well, they just compete in untested federations. And it's funny,
that's where the biggest, strongest numbers are. It's funny how that works. And again,
I'm not criticizing steroid use. I don't give a shit, honestly. What everybody wants to do is
their own business as long as they're not using and competing in a tested or natural federation.
using and competing in a tested or natural federation. My issue is that holding up, just with you, holding up these athletes as examples of people that cross the threshold
because they say they're not using, to me is a little bit of desperation.
We've kind of run out of examples. So we're going to throw, oh no, lots of people go past it
in sports with rampant steroid use that we know of. In the paper you're going to throw, oh no, lots of people go past it in sports with rampant steroid
use and that we know of. In the paper you're referring to, it's called the Fat-Free Mass Index
and NCAA Division I and II Collegiate American Football Players. And let's see, they looked at
235 football players, 62 of them, so about 25% had height-adjusted FMI above 25, right? So even in these elite athletes,
only 25% are making it across. The mean FFMI was 23.7. So these big, strong, muscular football
players, they're still not getting past it on average. And that's pretty telling too. You find
that 23 number coming around again, just like when you were talking about natural bodybuilding.
Right. Now, so, okay. So they looked at the numbers. Upper limit estimations for fat-free
mass index appear to vary by position. Duh. This value was exceeded by six linemen,
three offensive linemen and three defensive linemen. Now, I don't know if you have non-American
listeners, but you need to understand something about American football. The front lines,
the offensive and defensive lines, those guys truly have turned more about obesity into an elite sport, right?
Somehow they still can move.
And the high school level, those guys are typically about 300 pounds.
At the college and professional levels, they weigh – they're in the 350 to 400-pound range.
And most of them dropped out at 45 because of it, right? And in those six linemen who are three to 400 pounds,
the maximum observed value of FFMI was 31.7.
Okay, so fantastic.
Six morbidly obese athletes on steroids got to 31.
I'm not impressed.
I don't find this a particular,
and actually just to kind of put this in perspective,
Nasima had a normalized FFMI of 29.7 at 4% body fat, right?
So at 237 pounds, he had nearly the same FFM because he's a genetic freak, just like Josh Gilliam is a genetic freak.
But as soon as you diet these guys down from 400, because they probably have 40% body fat,
as soon as you diet them back down and all
that nice connective tissue non-essential f guarantee you yeah they might still be above 25
but that's the drugs because collegiate football players use steroids back in the day when diana
ball was first came or was first got super popular this was at the pro level you probably heard it
called the breakfast of champions yep you know why the coaches would come into the, the food hall and they would shake
pill Diana ball pills out onto the athletes breakfast cereal.
Where did this happen? Oh, this is in professional football in the seventies.
Okay. They were legal. It was cheap. They would just come in and just sprinkle the stuff on their
food. Taking your vitamins. Sure. Taking your vitamins. So was cheap. They would just come in and just sprinkle the stuff on their food.
Taking your vitamins.
Sure. Taking your vitamins. So yeah. So again, we've got this point that yes. So again,
if only 25% of top level collegiate football players can get there, you're not getting there.
You're not as the average natural bodybuilder or recreational weight trainee,
you're not getting past it. If the top 1% of 1%
of natural bodybuilders only sometimes get there because they started big, you're not getting there
realistically unless you started close, right? And that's it. That'll be the exception. If you
go back and look at yourself in high school and you were like 180 at five foot five, like Josh Gilliam probably was. I mean, he competes
180 at five, five, right? And he was already whatever, 170 at five, five coming out of
puberty. Yeah, you might get there. It looked like he was 150 at 12.
Shit, when he was 12, right? So God, by the time puberty hit, God only knows. I mean,
I would love to see a similar picture of
Nassima, but I'm sure it's exactly the same, where at 18, he's bigger than most of us will get,
probably even with steroids, just because that's a whole separate issue why some people do and do
not respond to steroids. So yeah, the people, and again, I get what the folks who are kind of using
this argument are trying to say, but to somehow go, well, they said they were clean and take that at face value, knowing what we know, is extremely either naive or desperate.
And again, I'm not saying all these athletes use, except that all these athletes use, because this is the reality of high level sport.
It just is.
Because the guys that aren't that big at a high school don't play collegiate football.
They just don't. They don't get there. There's so much competition. I said,
they're using it at the high school level. We know this factually. Not all of them,
but sort of as a tangent, people often ask me, do you think that there are Olympic athletes
who don't use steroids? To which I say, yes, someone has to come in last.
I make the same joke. I'm like,
but it's not a joke. Like, you know, there are there, somebody has got to lose.
And that's just the reality of it. Similar with natural bodybuilding. I ask like,
oh, do you think so-and-so is natural? I'll say, well, look at them stage ready. If they look good,
but not that good, they look kind of small. They don't have the separation and the fullness.
They just look good. Then that's a thumbs up. That means that there's a fair chance. Compare
them next to people who are competing in untested and they look like shit. Yeah. Now you're getting
into the realm of natural. Yes, exactly. And this will sound like that cop out, right? Oh,
if, you know, what's the old joke? How do you know if someone's on steroids? Well, they're bigger than me, right? That's kind of the old joke. And yes, this stuff kind of got taken to an extreme where, oh, anybody above that must. you are now. Deal with it. I believe that the other people on this list,
so many of whom that I know, I believe that they are natural. They get above 25 because they started
big and they're genetic elite specimens who have trained, do not get me wrong, they trained their
asses off for five years. I believe Nassima Inyang is natural because, and I found a paper, it's in my article,
but I can't find, that did show that there was, on average, a one point that blacks had an average
FFMI that was one point higher than Caucasians. And if you start looking at these numbers,
that's kind of where they fall, right? It's if you kind of like look at them, it's like, okay,
yeah, the biggest Caucasian athletes, it's about one point lower. Like I said, Gilliam and Yang are just freaks.
They are freak outliers. I know within this list, there were a couple other bodybuilders
that were African-American. Anybody who's spent enough time in the gym knows that too,
that the generally speaking, the jacked black dudes are just more jacked than the jacked white
dudes. It is what it is. Oh, let's see. Yeah. I think I even looked at least this is all,
I'm not going to bother with this. Oh no, here's what it was. So when I looked at these numbers,
the first two bodybuilders who cleared 25 were both Caucasian. First two were 25.3, 25.4. Next
two were 26.2, 26.5. They were both black and they were about one point higher. And then Josh
Gilliam and
Nassimia and Yang throw the curve because they're both at 29.7 because they're freak shows,
and they train their nuts off. But they are the exceptions to the exceptions.
Another example that's been held up, and I referenced it for the same reason, and this is,
I don't know if I brought this up yet in the actual recorded bit. We talked about this in
the pregame.
If I were to tell you factually, did I already give the sprinter example, the 100-meter thing?
Am I losing my mind?
I'm old.
Don't know.
I'll just briefly-
Let's just do it again.
Yeah.
Right.
Only like 100 sprinters have ever gone below 10 seconds in the 100-meter.
Oh, yeah.
You did mention this.
Yep.
If I said there is a limit beyond which you will never get, nobody would blink.
Yeah, you did mention this. Yep.
And so if I said there is a limit beyond which you will never get, nobody would blink. And yet somehow, right, and the exceptions of some interest, there's one exception,
that French guy whose name I forget, different issue. 99.9% of the ones who've gone sub-100,
they were all black with the one exception. And that's just to try. He's gone 9.99 or something.
He is four-tenths of a second behind Usain Bolt, which is another area code in the hunt.
Every single Olympian, every gold medalist, every world record holder, they are all black of Jamaican descent from the same town.
This is not a joke, right?
lot of joke, right? Something about this one town, just like all this, like the guy who just broke the two hour running, like all Kenyans, Africans of East African descendants, Kenyans, and there's
one other group that's doing okay, right? They are all Africans of Jamaican descent from the same
town. It's genetic. Again, they work their asses off. They need to keep those genes alive. They
need to go back and reproduce there. Don't muddy their superior running genes with us shitty white genes.
I'm not touching that.
No, you guys preserve what you've got.
Us slow white people are going to fuck it up.
Which isn't to say that every person from that town is a sprinter.
That's where the dumb argument gets reversed.
Oh, if all sprinters are blacks from this town, aren't all blacks fast? No, of course not. We are looking at the 1% that
has the genetics, the training, the exposure, the coaching, the et cetera, et cetera. It's just
without that, you're never... And again, I've gotten into this argument, people who don't want
to believe that there's a genetic or an ethnic basis. Go to the high school level. You will see
white track sprinters doing all right,
depending on who their competition is. Go to the collegiate level. Every top white high school
sprinter in the 100 or the 200, they're done. I don't give a damn how hard they work. I don't
give a damn how hard they train. They are getting blown off the track. Go to the Olympics, go to the Olympic final. The number of white
athletes you can count on the line will be zero. And the funniest argument I ever heard against
this was by someone who's, I won't even get into it in detail. He goes, well, not at the European
championships. No shit, dude. I'm sorry, because there aren't black athletes in Bulgaria. Spare me
this utterly moronic argument, right? It's the same reason Americans, because they aren't black athletes in Bulgaria. Spare me this utterly moronic argument, right?
It's the same reason Americans, because they couldn't win in the marathon, started holding
American-only marathon, because that's the only way they could win. The only way they could win
was by not letting the Kenyans run. And that's the argument he was making. Yeah, spare me. Just,
oh, for God's sake. Anyway, so we've kind of gotten off topic. So yeah, do some people make it past? Sure. The top elite naturals, athletes that I will generally say are probably not natural because of what we know about elite sport. And even then, only a percentage of them makes it. Only 10 of 100 in the one study. Only 25% of 100 in the other study. This is not compelling evidence.
100 in the other study. This is not compelling evidence. Yes, it goes the argument, some people can make it. I'm not going to debate that. I'm going to debate that the majority never will,
period. You're not going to disagree. They'll continue to disagree, in which case, fine.
Why aren't they? Just why aren't they? Is it because Paul Carter says because they don't
train hard enough and they do I-F-Y-M, that's his argument, which is hilarious. And I asked him, yeah, the reason naturals aren't as big as pros is because
they practice if it fits your macros. Okay. To which I asked him, then why are you on hormone
replacement? Why don't you just train hard and eat clean? Whatever. It's something. I don't know
what it is, but this industry, yeah, it's a whole lot of something. So yeah. So like, again.
And sort of bring that around then to somebody again, who is scrolling around Instagram,
keep that in mind when you see a lot of guys on Instagram who are jacked, who's normalized
FMI's would be north of like 25 or north of 25. And really what you have to realize is you're
either looking at a super freak genetic outlier
or you're looking at steroid use.
And by the nature of super freak genetic outliers, when you can just go from one to another on
Instagram, that should tell you something.
And you can't just say that, oh yeah, well, all of the top genetics just somehow found
their way into weightlifting and then found their way onto Instagram and are popular. Is it that or is it steroids? Well, and I would even say, I mean,
we're also dealing with a weird selection pressure, right? This industry is basically
predicated on you have a career if you're buff and jacked as a dude and know how to pose that booty
if you're a female. And I'm still, since I do Instagram, I'm still, my long-term plan is I
want to be a big booty Instagram model. That's currently my, I'm working on it.
You have to transition first. First, you have to...
My low back doesn't arch like that and I'm going to need a whole lot of electrolysis,
but moving on. So this industry has always been predicated on that as a primary goal.
So I do think there's a selection pressure. I think there's an inherent aspect that the people who are going to either be drawn to the business end of this or be successful in their career,
almost by definition, have to be those genetic outliers. Now, again, are there? Sure. There's
going to be some guy who's going to send you and me both a pissy email, go, this is what I looked
like in high school, and I busted mine. That's great. I'm
so happy for you. That's just skippy as all hell. I don't care because this industry loves to focus
on the exceptions. Well, how come all the biggest guys do one body part per workout and do 30 sets?
I don't know. Why do all the smallest guys do the same thing? Don't tell me. I don't care about the one it works for.
I care about the 999 that it doesn't.
It's like contest dieting.
Everyone holds up contest lean athletes.
This is proof of concept that the diet, that's how you should diet.
Great.
Let's talk about everybody who didn't make it stage.
Let's talk about the 98% who cracked, who ended up with an eating disorder, who binged, who fell off.
It's like Bulgarian powerlifting. People love, oh, that's the way you should train because the
Bulgarians win the Olympic gold medals, right? They break 65 out of 66 athletes doing it.
I don't care about the exception. I care about what's going to apply to the grand majority of
trainees. And the grand majority probably won't even get close to the
limit. If they get above it, it's only going to be by a little and only because they started big,
naturally. But the people who by definition are in that category are the ones you're going to see on
Instagram because they're successful because they're successful. And it's a very circular
thing. They're big and lean because they have the genetics. And again, they train hard and the whatever to get big and lean.
And then they're held up as, oh, see, there's lots of people doing this who exceed that limit,
right? Because the people who don't, don't have Instagram accounts, right? They're not going to
do it. They're not going to go on Instagram and do shirtless poses. I still do it now and again
with my measly 23.
Yeah. Which again is still big. And that's the other thing, right? People have gotten this,
oh my God, like if you go cap math it out for your height at what a 23 fat-free mass index
would put you at lean, it's going to be decently big, right? It's not. But again,
we get into this issue there of, well, God, compared to pros, I'm positively tiny.
Yes, because they've got 100 pounds.
I mean, the guys now are 320 ripped.
They make Arnold look small, right?
Lou Ferrigno competed at like 270.
He was a giant.
He was huge.
And it was funny.
He retired.
And then when he came back, when there were way more and newer and better drugs around, suddenly he was competing about 30 pounds heavier than he had when he competed against Arnold.
I guess he did one of those collegiate football weight training programs.
Advanced training and nutrition techniques.
He probably did drop sets or something.
I'm sure he did.
Or maybe he used bands and chains.
Maybe that was the secret.
Overload eccentrics or flywheel training. And he also, he cycled his carbs too.
He probably did intermittent fasting with an eating window because that's early. Anyway,
yeah. So we can stop being snarky. So I guess that hopefully I think we've beaten that into
the ground. Is it a hard limit? No. Is it a practical limit? I personally think so. Do the people who get past it,
they're either the 1% outliers or they're using and saying they're not, which I think brings us
into maybe the fake natty part of this. And so that's, of course, why this has really even
kind of become mainstream-ish, I guess, in certain circles of the internet is so-and-so, natty or not.
Okay. So we've talked a lot about FFMI and how it relates to muscularity. And so I think it's
fair to say that if their normalized FFMI is 25 or above, it's a red flag. It doesn't necessarily
mean automatically on steroids, but it means that the likelihood of steroid use has just gone way up.
Would you agree? Yes. And that's it. I do think what happened,
we got very absolutist about it. So if you're above 25 FMI, you're on because of the Pope study,
which had severe limitations. So it's not an absolute. There are guys, again, I firmly believe
are provably natural that exceed it who are the top 1%. And the majority,
I would say, like you said, it will statistically indicate a greater or a great likelihood that this
is the case. Is it going to absolutely, and that's what it became. It became a, I'm going to throw
someone under the bus, someone who says they're natural because they're above 25. And by death,
no, I disagree with that. We are talking about statistics and statistics never represent the individual, but they are more likely than not,
in most cases, to probably, you know, be using something. And it's interesting, right? I think
we get into some gray areas of our SARMs considered natty. I think some people will, well, hell,
in the drug subculture,
I've heard people go, the body makes testosterone. It's natural. I know guys that think they're clean
if they're only taking a gram a week, which is hilarious. That's where it's gotten in the
powerlifting subculture. If you only take a gram a week, you're clean because that's a baby dose.
There's a guy who passed away last year. I'm not trying to speak ill of the dead,
but they calculated out his testosterone and what his weekly, he was taking 12 to 13
grams of testosterone a day. Oh my.
Grams. God. I've never even heard of that as a dose. I mean, I'm not-
Well, people- I haven't looked deeply into drug use in,
I was always under the impression it was in the range of sub-10 grams
when you include other drugs as well. Well, and that's pot like, I don't know if they said that,
but his testosterone level was 25,000 nanograms per deciliter.
For people listening, just to understand that your average dude walking around is probably
like 500 or 600, and if he's older, it's probably like three or 400. Yeah. The high normal is 1100.
But it's hard to find though. You'd be hard pressed to find, I mean, it's out there for sure,
but your average dude would wishes he had that high of a testosterone level.
And I dare say the naturals who are getting past 25, guaranteed are in that upper range.
There's something, you know,
I'm sure you're familiar with Jacob Wilson's amazing studies. And by amazing, I mean,
they get results that are completely impossible. Like HMB is better than steroids. Did you know that? HMB fatty acid puts on more muscle than D-ball. But if you actually look, the subjects
in his group seem to have been fairly carefully selected because the average testosterone levels there like a thousand. He's picking high responders. And I guarantee you,
the guys are at the top, have high testosterone after they hit puberty, right? That's the big
part of this. When you hit puberty and your testosterone is a thousand, naturally, the amount
of muscle mass you're going to put on even without training is going to be high. And you're going to
be primed when you add training in to just grow like crazy. You also, you have an advantage just
starting with more muscle, as you've said, because you only have so much muscle you can gain and
you're just going to, that's one of the reasons why guys can gain a lot more muscle than women,
right? Because we're just bigger and we start with more muscle. Oh, careful. It's all a social
construct. Don't go down that road. There's actually an utterly stupid, I've read a couple of places and I'm not getting into it. Someone wrote,
a supposed smart guy researcher, testosterone is so important for building muscle. How do women
build muscle without it? Which is just some of the dumbest shit I've ever heard. He's thinking
in absolute terms. Well, since women are only 70 and men are 600, like, yeah, is it not possible
that women's bodies respond differently to lower levels? Because if you double a woman's testosterone with PCOS, she has more muscle. If you give women even
low doses of testosterone, a study just came out, they gain muscle mass. People want to dismiss the
testosterone on women for a bunch of political sports reasons that I definitely don't want to
touch. Yes, but that is the primary difference. Why, you know, when you hit puberty, and this is
why it's so funny that people dismiss it.
At puberty, what's the big difference in hormones?
Men's testosterone goes up.
Women's estrogen and progesterone goes up.
Men gain muscle.
Women gain body fat.
Done.
That's it.
That's all there is to it.
When men's testosterone hits at puberty, they lose body fat and they gain a ton of muscle.
Guys that are higher will not only end up higher after puberty, but will have more
potential to gain when they train. And something else just to mention about estrogen is estrogen
also enhances muscle gain as well. So women have, I don't want to get us completely off track,
but that's an area that you definitely know. I had written an article some time ago on female
muscle gain and was going into this, why women can actually gain muscle fairly well. It's just, they start out with a lot less and they are never going to be able to gain as much
as guys. And I was talking about this hormonal aspect that yes, having lower testosterone
is theoretically a disadvantage, but the female physiology, it's not that simple.
It also has some advantages as well. And when you look at it again, without getting,
then we'll get right back to the topic is if you weight train men and when beginner men and women they will gain roughly the same they'll make the same
percentage gains in both muscle mass and strength percentage the difference being that a woman is
starting with about half as much muscle or less so they will both gain five percent it's just or
strength is a little bit easier right if a woman is benching 40 and a man
is benching 180 they both gain five percent the woman gains two and the man gained nine because
they're starting at a higher so like the relative gains tend to be fairly similar but then you start
looking at like the average muscular levels and especially like natural female bodybuilders
if they come in in contest lean they they're like 116, right?
Pro-female, I guarantee you was using, she's 145.
So already with drugs, a woman might get to 20 pounds less than like the average male
natural at 165 in contest shape.
The average female natural, it's going to be 40 pounds less because her testosterone
levels are one-tenth to one-thirtieth
of the time. Probably a bit shorter though too as well, right?
Oh, yeah. Yeah. And that's why it's more useful to look at it relative to height and stuff. And
that's a whole separate topic. So back to the natty or not thing.
So just to throw out a couple other things just for people wondering again, like, okay,
so these people I follow, how many of some of these super jacked guys likely on drugs or not?
So we've talked about the FFMI and we can, in the spirit of, I think we're too long for brevity, but we don't have to go another hour on these points.
But I just wanted to throw them out there and just get your thoughts on like, okay, so for me, by my lights, you have the muscularity for sure.
And then you have strength as well. So if you have some dude with a normalized FFMI of, let's say it's 26 or 27, and he's
benching over 400, he's squatting over 500, he's pulling over 600, that's another thing
where I'm like, okay, that to me says likelihood of steroid use has just gone up.
And then there's leanness would be other big
things. So if they're very lean and also if they generally stay lean. So if you go look through
their feed and their version of like, oh, I've been bulking is like 10% body fat. And otherwise
they kind of just hang out year round at seven or 8% or even nine where they just, they have
vascularity
everywhere. And they look like they're a few months, a couple months out from just stepping
on stage. At that point is where I go, all right, if I had to put money, it's steroids, $10,000.
Okay. God tell me. Yeah. If you were a betting man, like, and that's the thing, you will find
the exceptions and sort of in this vein, right? I had a training partner in my 20s. He is a beast, right? He had trained since he was in high school. And actually, here,
as a super just random different note, there seems to be people that train in high school
during puberty, right during that for pubertal development, they, I think a lot of them,
whether genetic or not, they seem to not only gain a lot of muscle,
but just keep it. You want to see a big, strong dude, find a kid who worked on a farm bailing
hay when they were in high school. These guys are monsters. I'm having deja vu right now. I was just
talking recently. Who was I talking to about exactly this point? Corvallis, Oregon, a truly
nowhere little town. There were a bunch of guys at her gym that had grown up on the farm, baling hay. And they could just deadlift the world, you know,
because once you've dealt with baling hay or like a cow that doesn't want to be picked up,
picking a bar up off the floor is easy. But not only that, not only do they seem to gain a lot
of muscle during puberty, they never lose it, right? It's not like training induced gains,
where you train and train. And if you take a bunch of time off, you lose a lot of it. The hypothesize, right, is speculate, is there's
something going on that we know that the teenage body is very plastic and malleable. And there's a
lot of epigenetic programming and all this other boring scientific stuff that I think something
happens when you train during that time period, that you're going to get results that won't occur as an adult to the same degree, because you are
basically just you're leveraging a steroid cycle. I know there's athlete or there's coaches that
feel the top level athletes, if they didn't train through their high school years, they can never
reach the top. And I don't think that's necessarily true. But there is something there is an extra
set of gains you get
when you train through high school. So my training partner, he did that. His dad trained he and his
brother from the time he was 15. When I met him, he was in his late 20s. He is a beast, right?
He was in off-season. He was 5'5", about 220. He was built like a fireplug, right?
He would compete at 195 in NBC.
He was natural.
But because he had good levers, it's funny you mention those numbers, right?
His best, I saw him squat 315 for 20, and he did 400 for at least five.
He pulled 500.
His bench was only 315 because he had wonky shoulders.
He could incline 275 for fives.
He did dumbbell bench press with 120 in each hand,
which, man, that was a pain in the ass
handing those things off to him.
I've almost got there.
I did 115 for sets of four.
Damn.
The hard part is just getting him started, right?
I mean, you have to get him onto your –
I got him onto my –
so I like deadlift him up onto my knees
and then kick him one, you know.
What we had to do, he would put one on his thigh
and I would pick up the other one, you know. What we had to do, he would put one on his thigh and I would pick up
the other one by the ends. And as he kicked up, I would hand the other weight into his hand so he
could get a bounce and go to the top. It was terrifying, right? To do this with one 20s up.
I just started at the bottom and ate that first rep basically.
Yeah, basically. And just ate, exactly. And that's it it he wasn't getting any bigger he would
diet down to 195 but again at five five he trained all through high school he had good genetics
and he was never getting any bigger he was just the only way that he could be any better on stage
was just dieting more effectively but yeah so like you see those guys like that's that ends up being
sort of at top limit and you see that in in strength, right? Because again, guys will go, man, only bench 405. And they're like, there's guys benching 1000, right? In goofy
federations that passed ridiculous lifts, they're 350 pounds and somehow still relatively lean.
I think they've got an advantage that you don't, right? Or, you know, an example I use in a recent
paper, recent article I wrote, you know, an example I use in a recent paper, recent article I wrote,
you know, which had to do with like gaining strength over time in terms of how that developed muscle mass. And it's like Benedict, Benny Magnusson, is that his name? It's the freak
deadlifter. It's not, it's no, no, no. I'm thinking of a different guy. Go ahead. I was
thinking of a Sig Marson. Yeah, no, this was Benny. I don't think he competes anymore as
Norwegian dude. His first day in the gym, he pulled 405. I know a guy like that. I mean, actually, no, I know he's a friend of a friend,
but my friend was there to see it. That was literally his first deadlift ever was 405 with
kind of like janky form, but it doesn't matter. He picked the weight up.
Yes. And years later, Benny did 900. He doubled his strength. And even Cone,
the first time he lifted, he pulled some ridiculous amount of weight. his first competition, he's like, I just maxed every day.
He's in high school.
Maxed every day for two years.
My first meet at 16 140 pounds, I squatted 400 or something just depressingly ridiculous.
And it's like, yeah.
And a decade later, he weighed 220 and he squatted over 1,000.
We know they all used.
And that's not a criticism.
The greatest of all time. But this is like the reality we need to face right there's an old set of numbers old
hard gainer crew that if you did a legitimate 300 pound bench 400 pound squat 500 pound deadlift
all right i'm american 315 405 495 because those are three wheels 405 is four wheels. And 495 is five wheels.
Tacking that two and a half on, I get it.
Those were held up as good natural goals.
For someone who was like six foot tall and like 180.
And people will just, ugh.
It's such a limitation.
Like, no, he's not holding that up as an upper limit.
He's holding that up as a goal.
Because if you get there as a natural, you will you've got as big as you're going to be and you'll go but but these top power i don't give a shit about these you know these 300
pound go into your gym today ask yourself how many legitimate 315 benches have you seen by that i
mean a controlled descent at least a brief pause on the chest not a a bounce. Hips down, no bridging, no spotting. Tell me how many legitimate
405 squats, by that I mean, controlled descent to below parallel. I've seen a lot of 405 quarter
squats. How many legitimate 405 pound deadlifts have you seen by someone weighing 180? Probably
zero. Let's turn to powerlifting, Joe. Squat, right?
Yeah, 405 squat. And then 500 pound deadlift we call it 495 how many 495 legitimately good deadlifts like in the deadlift i realize you can get away
more slop but how many legitimate 500 pound deadlifts have you seen in the average commercial
gym by someone way yeah there's a 280 pound dude who can do it how many and the answer is generally
zero so if you as a natural were to get to those numbers
you'll be right on the edge like i wouldn't call that say yes automatically you're using that as
impressive and you probably trained your ass off or you have really good levers right because the
average quote-unquote hard gainer typically doesn't have good levers you You know, somebody will go, oh, I know a guy who weighs 150 and he benches
all this. I'm like, right, his arms are six inches long and he's got a barrel chest and, you know,
there's videos of Chinese women who were benching 500 in a shirt and their range of motion is an
inch and a half. I'm like, you know what I'm talking about. So stop making stupid arguments.
Not you, but the people who try to make those kinds of things. I'm like, we're talking about
outlier freaks with great levers. For anybody wondering, just so I, my best
numbers. Now, to be fair, I didn't explicitly train to try to max those key lifts out. I was
still doing a good amount of volume on bench squat and deadlift every week. And the best numbers that
I got to were about 295 for, I think it was two on bench and 365
for about three on squat.
And my deadlift wasn't as it was maybe 435 for two.
Now I know that I could have gone further.
The reason why at that point I was like, I think I was lean bulking for a bit at that
point.
I was like, I think I'm just going to cut and I'll do some photo shoot stuff or whatever,
because I started to get joint pain.
And I was like, I think I'm just going to cut and I'll do some photo shoot stuff or whatever,
because I started to get joint pains. So like my knee was starting to bother me and my neck was getting pretty tight during pressing. There were just things that my SI joint got kind of pissed
off deadlifting. And at that point, I just, it became a matter of like risk and reward where
I was like, I think physically I could go a bit further. I wanted to get to the three, four,
five. That's what I wanted to do. But I called it off for those reasons. And I felt like it was the right decision at the time.
Yeah. And there it is. You would be sort of presumably there's a practice effect to get
that big one RM, but you were in range, right? With probably with six to eight weeks of pure
powerlifting training. Yeah. You would have made those numbers and yeah, that's pretty damn good.
Right. Go look at some of those elite strength numbers and it's like, yeah, you would have made those numbers. And yeah, that's pretty damn good, right?
Go look at some of those elite strength numbers.
And it's like, yeah, you know, one and a half body weight bench, double body weight bench
is huge for most people.
But you know, double body weight squat, two and a half body weight deadlift, and you're
right up there.
But if you see that guy and he's like, ah, I'm 180 and I have a 500 pound squat, and
he doesn't have superior levers,
that might raise red flags for me. Am I saying in absolute terms? Absolutely not. You can go
to powerlifting contests and see that. But again, if you look at the average numbers,
the outliers are only that. The guys who win are the guys who win because they have the exact
combination of genetics, levers, technique, training, drive,
et cetera. And if you look at everything below the top 10, suddenly you get a check of like, okay,
this is what average people are lifting. And one other thing just to look for that,
I think another red flag is when people who have a lot of training experience suddenly get a lot stronger or suddenly gain
quite a bit more muscle, but that one you see less.
What you see more often is suddenly adding 30 pounds to a big lift in, I don't know,
three to six months or something like that with a legitimate training age of maybe like
seven years.
And you're like, hmm, please explain. Did you work
on your form a little bit there or? No, they got on one of those collegiate
weight training programs. Come on. That D1 lifting.
By which I mean, yes, by which I mean they went on the collegiate drug program. I mean, let's just,
there's someone in the industry and I'm not going, this was years and years and years ago,
who I will not name in this case because it's not worth it. And they were prepping for a contest and they kind of hit a wall and
they were, I don't know, 10% body fat. And they said, I decided to go see, you know, one of the
top contest prep gurus. For those that are not involved in bodybuilding, contest prep guru is
like cycling guru. It means drug coach, right? Now, and he told me, it's like,
this guy was amazing. Two weeks later, I dropped 4% body fat. Oh, you must have cycled your carbs.
I mean, clearly, he switched out your fish for chicken. Did you change your carbohydrate sources?
Because clearly, that's what did it and not adding clen and thyroid. Just don't,
right? Just don't even try to pretend that this is not what happened because nobody does that.
There's another individual who I'm also not going to name who makes some astounding claims.
Shit, Poliquin was one of them, right? His numbers were ridiculous. He was like,
oh, I once read that he took the aluminum fillings out of someone's teeth and they gained 23 pounds of lean
body mass in a month. Not a type I'm 10. I love that. That's so Paula Quinn. Oh my.
And I maintain that Paula Quinn's decimal key was broken because if you take all of his numbers,
the 30 grams of fish oils, the 25 pounds that people gained in a month and divide by 10,
they're actually right. That's my belief because I can
come up with no other explanation other than he was just a consummate pathological liar in comment.
Anyway, this other individual claims these amazing transformational results,
perfect recomposition, losing 20 pounds without a change in body weight. And I'm like, okay,
either this is the greatest coach who's ever lived in the history of ever,
Either this is the greatest coach who's ever lived in the history of ever, or I don't necessarily think they're a drug coach, or they're just completely full of shit.
It was like Jacob Wilson's numbers.
And I think what you end up seeing is some weird, because what Wilson would do, right, is he would carb deplete and dehydrate, he'd do these weird cyclical ketogenic diets, and he would make sure and measure lean body mass at dissimilar situations to go, oh yeah, they gain eight pounds of lean body mass in three days. Why? The two-week overreaching cycle? Please, just don't even pretend. Anyway, to your point,
yes, when someone who's been training for a decade suddenly adds 50 pounds to their squat in six
weeks and gains 10 pounds of lean body mass, well, I guess I'm going to have to buy the book they're going to write on what they did.
Because I'd be really curious to know what the magic training program is.
Because it just doesn't work that way.
And if you talk to the guys in the industry who are provably natural, who do do contest prep,
they're like, yeah, I diet for for six it's even the same thing right back
in the day you dieted for 12 weeks for a show this was at the pro level because they starting at 10
to 12 and with enough drugs you can do it and naturals try that and never make it or they lose
too much muscle naturals now diet for at least six months and do a show because they are trying to lose maybe 0.5% to 0.75% weight per week.
It's like men, maybe a pound and a half early on if they're bigger. Pound, women,
quarter to a half pound a week. So when some guy's like, yeah, I lost 4% body fat in two weeks,
yeah, I don't think that was by skipping breakfast.
Maybe it was a breakfast of champions.
Yeah. So I agree. That's kind of another big sign when somebody just starts making those
incrementally. You see the people who are grinding along, right? Because yeah, these big naturals
who are still grinding at it and they're like, yeah, I trained for six months to gain
this potentially measurable pound. I'll believe that. I don't know if...
Basically, it's like, I think I made progress. I can't really prove it to you, but I think I did.
Sure. Because at that point, you can't even... It's noise. At that point, you can't even,
oh, well, my tape measure on my biceps went up by 1 16th of an inch. Like, okay. Or whatever it is.
I'm not trying to dismiss that even if they are making that progress over six months,
BFD. I mean, I got better things
to do with my life, presumably. Same thing with powerlifters, right? If you see someone who is
grinding for four months to put the next two and a half kilos on their bench, I will believe that
that's being done naturally because that's realistic. That's a realistic rate of gain.
I mean, okay okay if they've
been training that long or at a high level and suddenly they had 10 kilos from meet to meet
either they got a really good new shirt which is always a possibility which there wasn't an old
somebody said if you want to get your bench numbers up just buy a tighter shirt i think
that's pretty much what it came down to for a while which which there's truth to. Or there's something, you know,
it wasn't because they incorporated bands and chains
or compensatory acceleration at that level.
There was something, and same thing in muscle gain.
It just doesn't work that way.
It'd be lovely if it did, but like we talked about,
started, and we'll kind of wrap it up, I guess.
You put in your five years of consistent training.
It's about as big as you're going to get.
If you started big, you're going to end big. If you didn't, you're not. And I wish it
weren't the case. Dan Duchesne once famously said, with the new supplements and nutritional strategies,
naturals will eventually surpass drug-using bodybuilders. Now, I love Dan. I miss Dan. He's
the most creative people, most interesting people I've ever known. But that was so laughably wrong as to her.
He was thinking that creatine and HMB
was going to be the great equalizer.
I didn't realize this was back in the 90s.
Was he a friend of Bill Phillips?
Do you have a stake in EAS or what's going on?
He did not.
He wrote for Muscle Media,
which was Bill Phillips magazine.
But no, I think he truly believed it.
I think he truly legitimately believed drugs cover up a lot of mistakes and they did a lot of dumb things
nutritionally. And he had better nutritional strategies and supplements seemed to be really
interesting, but it was still a pipe dream. Nothing beats 600 milligrams per week. And
certainly nothing beats 12 grams of testosterone per week. Right? People thought I was kidding when I wrote in an article.
I was just going to say. What would that even be like? My best guess as to what it would feel like
to be on a TRT level is if I can think back to when I was a teenager, okay. That's what it's
like to be on a lower level of anabolics, I guess. What would it even be like to take that much?
of anabolics, I guess. What would it even be like to take that much? You'd have to have lost your mind and transcended into another realm or something. Yeah, I can't. I truly can't imagine.
I'm trying to find somebody posted a case study in my group. Case studies are what they are.
And they worked it out. And the guy, seriously, he was taking, taking oh here we go during the peak of his cycle he
injected 60 milliliters of anabolic steroids per week which is about 15 000 milligrams of
testosterone equivalents like is it steroids or not i know enough about steroids to be dangerous
60 milliliters of oil a one milliliter needle that's a lot of 60 per week 15 grams of testosterone
equivalents.
Anabolic, he's currently using growth hormone, clenbuterol, T3, tamoxifen,
well, two estrogen blockers, as well as protein, vitamin, mineral supplementations.
And I'm sure they, spontaneous hemorrhage of his lip,
I'm sure they blamed the protein somehow.
But yeah, 60 milliliters of, I can't, what is steroids?
100 milligrams per milliliter.
So to take 13 grams that's 13
milliliters of injection this guy's taking 60 okay i just can't even i can't even fathom it
and i don't think anybody else who even knows about steroids can fathom it either but but yeah
that's like that's kind of the numbers we're looking at somebody thought i was joking i wrote
an article once about the 600 milligram thing.
And I'm like, that's a baby dose.
Like, you've got pros who are taking a gram a day.
And they thought I was kidding.
And then this case study came out like, okay, maybe not.
Maybe there are guys taking 12 grams a week.
I'm like, I wasn't digging a dry well.
But even at the lowest levels, right, that 600 milligram study, the BASIN study, in 20
weeks, those guys put on 10 kilos of lean
body mass. Now some of it was probably water, but they measured a lot of it was muscle.
They gained 20 pounds in 20 weeks with 600 milligrams in the simplest,
stupidest training program you've ever seen. That's a year's worth of work for a beginner.
Was that the paper where the testosterone only group gained more muscle than the natural
training group?
That was a different study.
They did a different one where they compared steroids-only to training-only to steroids-plus training.
And the steroid group gained more than the training group.
And the steroid-plus training group gained about, basically, if you added them together, it was like four pounds for steroids, three pounds for training, seven pounds if you did both.
So, basically, drugs beat training.
And that's what you have to kind of keep when you sort of start looking at this and go, okay,
you've got these handful of top naturals that barely get across it. You've got these guys that
are way past it. And unless they're just a genetic freak show, statistically, they're going to be on
drugs. And none of this changes the fact that 99% of people
training will never get past it or even get close to it. And that's fine, but they need to come to
terms with it. Awesome. Well, this was great. I really appreciate it. Let's wrap up with what's
new in your world. Let everybody know where they can find you, but do you have a new project that
you're working on? Anything that you want to tell people about? The website, bodyrecomposition.com,
my store, store.bodyrecomposition.com, my Facebook group, which is where I am most of the time.
My forums are currently dead and will probably stay dead because the two posts a day weren't worth keeping them up.
About a month ago, I released a little booklet on birth control and athletic performance, just trying to get something.
I should be working on volume two of the women's book, but it's just an overwhelming concept to even consider.
So I've got that little booklet.
It's a very common question.
I'm sort of half editing. So back before the women's book came about, I decided to update
one of my older books because someone had ripped it off and plagiarized it, which has pissed me
off. And I ended up writing about 400 pages on just like this tome on fat loss. And then that
led into the women's book and I got sort of sidetracked for three and a half years. So I'm
kind of working on that a little bit because it's way easier to edit stuff that's
already written. We'll see if anything comes of it. People have been telling me I need to write
something about training, but there's already so much out there. And I don't know. I'm just kind
of like, if folks haven't seen, I've started doing some like little shorter video pieces on my
website and YouTube. Because like I said, it's all leading up to being an Instagram big booty model.
That's really been my dream from the start. So I'm kind of working towards that.
Peak life goals.
Yeah, we'll see. You got to have them, right? And you got to go where the money is. And that's,
you know, Instagram apparently is where everybody, all the cool kids hang out now.
Facebook, I guess, isn't really it anymore. So I will never Twitter.
You got to get ahead of the curve and get on TikTok. That's the next one.
I don't even, I'm old.
I barely know what TikTok is.
I actually don't exactly know either.
I'm not on it, but it's apparently it's where all the kiddos are hanging out these days.
I thought it was something.
What was the one?
Was it Snapchat that it was seven seconds long?
No.
Was that Vine?
Was that Vine?
Yes.
Like Vine was a thing for a while and I get the impression TikTok is kind of like Vine, but I don't know.
I'm old.
The kids today, they dress funny and they don't want to work.
Millennials are killing the Facebook industry.
I don't know.
Like I'm just an old man yelling at clouds now.
Like we were saying before we got on, just watching the world burn.
I mean, it happened early for me. I was 25. I drove past my old high school and I was like,
you know what these kids today need? Discipline. And then I took a step back and went,
crap, I've become my father. So I went and bought some khaki shorts,
got a pair of sandals and black socks, and it's just been downhill ever since.
Embrace it.
Yeah. Trust me, you'll get there. I'm sure you've seen the simpsons with a word i'm on the
way i'm 35 i have two kids whatever your child just wait there's an old simpsons thing and i'll
let you go where abe simpson grandpa goes i used to be with it and then what it was changed don't
worry it'll happen to you and it will i'm okay okay with it. Yeah. If you haven't reached the point yet where you just try to listen to pop music and go,
this is all crap.
Oh, I'm already there.
I've been there for years.
It actually is demonstrable trash now though.
It is actually scientifically, mathematically trash.
They've shown this, that it is actually objectively worse than previous genres of music.
So it's not just an age thing this time.
But have you gotten to the point where you've tried to recollect all the music of your high school years?
To some degree on Spotify. I haven't made a playlist for that, but a lot of the stuff that I go back to and listen to regularly is from that period.
That's the next step. You get to the point where all you want is nostalgia, where all you want is the music of your youth and the media of your youth. And you actually, you kids today do have it easier.
So all the stuff I listened to was on cassette
and most of it is not available online
in MP3 or iTunes.
So there's a lot of it that I have been fighting.
But yeah, you get to the point
where all you want to do is just,
I'm enjoying, I'm a kid of the 80s,
all these TV shows
that are just nothing but 80s references
because the people my age are writing the scripts now. And I'm seeing it shift already. I'm seeing the shows that is all 90s references,
at which point I'm done and I'll just have to keep watching the original Star Wars trilogy
and remembering how it used to be. All right, man. Well, I appreciate the time.
It's always entertaining. It's always informative. And I look forward to the next discussion.
Sounds good.
always entertaining. It's always informative. And I look forward to the next discussion.
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