Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Menno Henselmans on the Science of Sticking to Your Diet
Episode Date: December 29, 2021In this podcast, I chat with Menno Henselmans again in what’s meant as a part two to our last podcast on the science of self-control and willpower. This time, we’re specifically talking about will...power as it relates to diet. The episode is chock-full of practical tips for improving your diet adherence, which can help you lose fat faster and more easily. This is something Menno is an expert on because he recently released a book called The Science of Self-Control, which is an evidence-based look at willpower that references over 500 scientific papers and distills it all down to actionable tips you can implement now. Menno’s book is designed to help anyone boost their self-control so that they can better stick to a diet, work smarter (not harder), and simply put, be the best version of themselves. And this time, we’re focusing solely on the dietary part of the book. In this interview, Menno explains why dieting is inherently difficult, ways to make it easier, how macronutrient composition, meal timing, and consistency can help (or hurt) adherence, cravings, the difference between satisfaction and satiety, tips for eating out and going off-plan, and a whole lot more. Menno has been a repeat guest on my podcast, but in case you’re not familiar with him, he’s a former business consultant turned international public speaker, educator, writer, published scientist, and physique coach who’s passionate about helping serious athletes attain their ideal physiques. So if you want to learn evidence-based tips to better stick to your diet, definitely check out this interview! Timestamps: 0:00 - Pre-order my new fitness book now for a chance to win over $12,000 in splendid swag: https://www.muscleforlifebook.com/ 8:05 - Why is dieting difficult? 16:47 - Why do you only eat "healthy" foods with no junk? 19:15 - When do you feel a difference from your diet? 21:50 - What can we do to make dieting easier? 24:29 - Consistency is more important than "optimal" 26:05 - What are the key aspects of consistency that matter most? 27:19 - Are you always getting healthier when you get leaner? Is 15% body fat healthier than 10%? 29:59 - Does macronutrient composition matter in dieting? 32:45 - Why "if it fits your macros" with junk food isn't sustainable 35:27 - Can you satiate a craving? 38:40 - The order you eat foods has a significant effect on adherence 39:41 - Meal satisfaction 43:43 - Meal timing 44:37 - Tips for eating out 45:50 - Why you shouldn't save up calories by starving yourself before you go out to eat 48:53 - The satiety sweetspot 49:17 - The difference between craving pleasure (satisfaction) and satiety 52:15 - What should you do if you overeat one day? 56:14 - Where can people find your book on self-control and your other work? Mentioned on the Show: Pre-order my new fitness book now for a chance to win over $12,000 in splendid swag: https://www.muscleforlifebook.com/ Menno’s new book: The Science of Self-Control - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0991FG9SC/?tag=mflweb-20 Menno’s website: https://mennohenselmans.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
For decades now, most doctors have recommended cardio over strength training because they believed it produced more health benefits,
stressed the body less, and it was more popular among the public.
We now know, though, that strength training has multiple major advantages over cardio,
and if you had to pick just one kind of exercise, it should be strength training. That said, there are good
reasons to include cardio in your exercise routine as well. First, as the term implies,
cardio boosts the health and the function of your cardiovascular system. For instance,
while cardio and strength training are about equally effective for reducing blood pressure, research shows that doing both reduces
blood pressure the most. Additionally, cardio but not strength training helps keep your arteries
flexible and responsive to changes in blood flow. And that's why studies show that people who do the
most cardio have these supplist arteries. And that is crucial for maintaining healthy blood pressure levels and minimizing
stress on your heart and blood vessels. Another circulatory downside to aging is the reduction
of the capillary health and density of your muscles and other tissues. And studies show
that cardio can significantly increase capillary density, which is the number of capillaries in an area of
the body, in muscle tissue in just a few weeks. Cardio also burns substantially more calories per
unit of time than strength training does. And that of course can help you lose fat faster and help
you keep it off more effectively. Cardio is great for body composition maintenance for that reason.
And when you combine strength training and cardio together, and when you combine them,
especially in the way that I teach in my new book, Muscle for Life, which you can learn about
at muscleforlifebook.com, muscleforlifebook.com, you can maximize fat loss without hindering muscle or strength gain.
So the takeaway here is with moderate, sustainable, and effective doses of strength training
and cardiovascular exercise, you can build a body that looks, feels, and functions like a well-oiled
machine. And cardio is easier to incorporate into your fitness regimen than you may think
to. In fact, in muscle for life, I share three simple principles that allow you to enjoy most
of the benefits cardio has to offer with none of the potential downsides. And again, you can learn
all about that book as well as the, now it's over $13,000 of cool goodies,
fitness goodies that I'm giving away to people who pre-order the book at muscleforlifebook.com.
Hello, hello. I'm Mike Matthews and this is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today. And if
you haven't already, please do take a moment to subscribe to the show in whatever app you're listening to me in so you don't miss any new episodes. They will be queued up for you. And
it helps me by boosting the ranking of the show in the various charts. So this episode was a fun
one. This was one of the more stimulating conversations I've had recently. In it, I talk with my buddy Menno Henselmans again about a similar topic to our previous discussion, which is the science of self-control and willpower.
But this time we talk about dieting in particular. The first discussion that we had, the part one, if you will, was more broadly
about self-control and willpower because Menno recently released a book on the topic. And I
wanted to have him back on to dive into self-control and willpower with dieting. And this episode is
chock full of practical tips for improving your diet adherence. This is not just academic theory. You are going to be a better dieter by the end of this episode, I promise you. And that means losing fat faster and more easily, maintaining your ideal body composition more easily, or even gaining muscle and strength faster and more easily because lean gaining can be
similarly difficult to cutting. It's difficult in different ways, but many people struggle to
successfully lean gain, mostly because they get sick of eating a lot of food and they have the
opposite problem of when they are cutting.
And all of that is something that Menno is an expert on, not only because he is a veteran evidence-based researcher and writer, and he is also a coach with a lot of experience working
with normal everyday people, but Menno also recently released a book called The Science
of Self-Control, which is an evidence-based handbook. I think that's the right term because
it's very practical. It has over 500 scientific citations, but it is not a dry, complicated
textbook. Not that all textbooks are like that, but many textbooks are that give you a lot of
theory and then leave it up to you to figure out what to do with all of it. Menno's book is not
like that. Menno's book was written with an eye to application, which resonates with me because
I try to do that in all of my work. I don't just want to teach people interesting facts. I want
to teach people useful things that they can put into application and get good results with.
And so in this interview, Menno is going to share a lot of the material that is in his book. He's
going to talk about why dieting is inherently difficult, several simple science-based ways to make it
easier to stick to a diet, how macronutrient composition, meal timing, and consistency can
help or hurt dietary adherence. He talks about cravings, the difference between satisfaction and
satiety, tips for eating out and eating off plan, and a whole lot more.
And in case you are not familiar with Menno, he has been on my podcast a number of times.
He is a former business consultant turned international public speaker, educator,
writer, published scientist, and physique coach who is passionate
about helping serious athletes attain their ideal
performance and physiques. Hey, Mano, it's good to see you again. Thanks for coming back and
taking your time. My pleasure. Always good to talk. Yeah. Yeah. So this, the idea here was to
kind of make this a part two of our previous talk, which was about your newest book about
self-control and discipline
and willpower. And the first discussion for people listening, if you didn't listen to it,
you don't have to listen to it, I suppose, for this discussion, but it will provide good context
because in that talk, Menno gave some overarching principles that would apply to anything, not just
fitness related things. And in this talk though, I thought it would make sense to get into diet, the context of diet in particular, and how we can
use, I guess you could say, evidence-based strategies and tactics to help with dieting.
And a lot of that obviously comes down to compliance, but that can start with
design because some diets are easier to stick to than others and are better in that regard.
And so, yeah, that's the general topic for today's discussion. And Menno, I'll just give
it to you because I know you have a lot to say on this.
Sure. Yeah. I mean, in my book, I go into a lot of tips on how to improve diet adherence,
focusing on willpower. And the first important thing probably to realize is that dieting in itself relies on willpower inherently because essentially it's an investment you are foregoing something now
certain foods that you you may want or your more primitive brain your system one for those that
followed previous talk once but you choose not to eat so if you didn't have hunger and you didn't
have these sensations that drives you to eat certain foods, then dieting would be as simple as simply making a choice. Unfortunately, that's not the case. We
can't just say, okay, you know, I'm just going to eat broccoli and chicken. And that's it, because
you're going to have cravings, you're going to be hungry, you're going to feel restrained and
restricted. And interestingly, it's exactly that feeling of being restricted that is the primary problem with dieting.
Because this is a serious red pill moment for those that haven't seen this research.
But in research where people are unaware that they are in energy deficits,
there are zero cognitive, behavioral, psychological, or sleep-related effects of the diet in fact a recent pretty recent math
analysis found that the diet related symptoms or side effects so troubles with concentrating
fatigue those kind of things they were unrelated to the degree of weight loss completely unrelated
meaning people that were not actually losing weight at all.
So they were trying but failing. So they were actually at energy maintenance,
not an energy deficit. And they still had the same number of side effects, the same problems.
Whereas in, for example, military personnel, where they just have rations and they don't know
how much they're eating, or in experiments where people eat modified gels so they have no idea of what what they're eating they just know it's a certain amount of
gel that has a certain flavor and one group has basically maintenance energy intake and the other
group consumes essentially zero calories and you can do that for several days and there are no
differences when you unleash a battery of psychological and
cognitive testing on these people like they perform equally well on iq tests reaction times
their mood states they also they can't tell in these kind of experiments whether they were in
the diet group or not but if you contrast that with most people's experience with dieting it's
a completely different world right because almost everyone that I've talked to thinks dieting has some negative effects on how they feel. So it's that
feeling of restriction, knowing that you're dieting. That is a key part of the problem.
And that is also the feeling of being restricted and having to give up certain things and making
choices. That is the biggest
problem with dieting now may you know maybe in contest prep when you actually get near starvation
levels lean then maybe we can talk physical effects but for most people people that just
want like you know decent six-pack and not like crazy counter shape most of the effects of dieting
are not physical effects of the dieting they're
mental effects they're in the brain so that that is the foundation of of everything i think realizing
that first that's interesting and you know that makes me think of the last little cut that i did
which was during so it was maybe six months four four to six months of last year when the first round of
lockdowns first began. And so I couldn't go to the gym and I was at home doing home workouts
and I wasn't driving to the office or to the gym. And so it's like, yeah, I'll just take that time
and I'll just do some cardio and I'm not going to change anything about how I'm eating though.
take that time and I'll just do some cardio and I'm not going to change anything about how I'm eating though. And it was, it was very easy. And I mean, I guess there's a caveat in that
I can't say that I've ever had a particularly rough time of cutting, but I have had cuts where
I do start to notice it. And, um, the, the end point of this previous cut, which did not feel
like a diet at all. And of course I was
eating the foods I like to eat, but, but, but that point of making no change to my diet probably
helped make it even easier when all I did is just increase my activity level, eat exactly the same
in a calorie deficit, but had no, I wouldn't have known it. All I noticed is I just got a little
bit leaner, a little bit leaner until eventually I was like, okay, I guess I'm pretty lean now and I'll just stop here. And that end point was
comparable to previous cuts. I've gotten, I got pretty lean. Um, it's hard to say exactly, but
maybe somewhere between eight and 10% where, uh, I think that's where most guys like to be for
looking good. And, um, but in previous previous cuts where the the diet was a little bit more
aggressive and i guess um the the perception of it was a little bit different it did it it did
feel a bit harder yeah definitely and i think what what you have is most people should aspire to
i think that is sort of the the idea of being successful at dieting,
is when you can diet ad libitum, you know, without necessarily tracking everything that you eat.
You just know what kind of foods are good for you and you eat them until you're satiated. And then
you automatically essentially lose fat and you just stop when you're happy with how you
look in the mirror. That is, I think, the ideal endpoint for most people.
When you get so good at dieting, and in particular, managing your appetite,
that you can just get to that point.
And then for many people, and myself too, cutting is actually easier than bulking.
Because from bulking, you have to be more meticulous.
You can't just dream or bulk and eat whatever you want.
You get fat.
And if you eat your regular food choices, or at least probably for us regularly, you don't end up in energy surplus anymore.
So you probably need more tracking.
Or maybe the flip side is you just eat more of the stuff you normally eat.
If I were to do that, I probably would.
I like to eat oatmeal at night.
So it's usually about a cup dry, cut it, put some nuts and fruit in it.
All right, fine.
That turns into maybe two cups or that's probably the way I would.
I haven't done a lean bulk in a while because I don't really see the purpose in it because I'm not going to really gain much of anything anyway.
I'll just get fatter.
But that's probably how I would approach it.
Yeah.
And that only works to a certain point, though, especially if you have an adaptive metabolism.
Yeah. And that only works to a certain point though, especially if you have an adaptive metabolism. For me, when I end the cut at like 2000 calories and then for the bulk,
I have to go up to 4000 and above it very quickly. Well, I'm already eating a lot of food
at that point at 2000 calories. So I definitely kind of doubled that.
True. True. That is the last time I was lean gaining. I had to end, I was around maybe 4,300.
And for me, probably similar to you,
that feels, I was force feeding myself, basically.
I mean, it was the final meal of the day in particular.
I mean, it's fine, I did it, but I didn't enjoy it at all. Like I could have stopped eating probably at noon
and would have been totally fine with that.
I wouldn't have gotten hungry again for the rest of the day.
Yeah, me too. When I go over about 95 kilos, I'm force feeding. And would have been totally fine with that. I wouldn't have gotten hungry again for the rest of the day.
Yeah, me too.
When I go over about 95 kilos, I'm forfeiting.
Now, I could easily do it if I started eating junk food.
But I have a sort of mantra for myself to only eat healthy food or nutritious food that has no adverse health effects.
Let me put it that way.
And yeah, it's basically a luxury problem you know because of course it is it is a problem but on the other hand you can just stay leaner and then your
appetite's higher because the leaner you are the higher your appetite always naturally is because
you have lower leptin levels so it's definitely the focus for almost everyone i think should be on
how to get lean in a very sustainable, low-effort fashion.
And then if you're one of the individuals that actually has the luxury problem of having difficulty with bulking,
then you can use some of these tips in reverse.
But mostly, for a lot of people, it's like, okay, you have 600 calories that you need to fill in.
Eat a chocolate bar. Done. Peanut butter sandwiches, okay. Oh, you're still eating lean
dairy? Well, let's make it full fat. Lean meat, let's make it full fat meat. I see egg whites in
there. We can use whole eggs. And also fruits and vegetables. Yeah, eat a lot less of that stuff.
And also fruits and vegetables.
Yeah, eat a lot less of that stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
You don't need that much of those.
Yeah.
And I want to get back to the planned topic.
But you said something that I'm just curious and I want to hear your thoughts on regarding, you said it's a mantra of yours to stick to nutritious foods or foods that don't have any adverse health effects.
I'm curious what you mean exactly by that.
Yeah, basically a diet that's- And why?
I'm just, because it sounds like you are, just based on the comments you made,
that I'm sure you're probably not against having some chocolate every day, for example,
but it sounds like you will only allow so much of that, as opposed to some people are somewhere, maybe they're not full IIFYMs, so to speak.
Uh, but, but, you know, and, and I've run across a lot of these people in the gym too, that they don't, they don't eat very much fruits and vegetables ever period, for example.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I talk about, I have, I have in the book as well, by the way, ifIT Fisher Macros. It's another interesting topic we can touch on. But for me, I basically optimize the health of my diet because I want optimal health.
for me, is a way to make the best version of myself I can be.
And health is a big part of that.
And I'm also actually very sensitive to changes in diet.
Because I, for example, for a period, I actually tried,
what if I still eat mostly whole foods,
but, for example, I don't pay attention to the fatty acid ratio of my diet. And that ended up me basically eating just fat and then my blood lipids actually skyrocketed they were really bad very quickly so ldl super
high yeah ldl super high that in particular yeah hdl was low so i actually have to pay attention
to this and i also have um i think it's just hereditary factors. Like I have sort of WASP genes, if you will,
which most people have a hereditary predisposition
for high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
That's definitely the case for me.
So it's also relevant.
And some clients I know can use more like the 80-20 rule,
where it's like 20% relative junk in their diet,
at least when they're bulking and it's
everything is completely fine but for me i actually see a difference in blood work so
i definitely are on the side of uh just making everything as healthy as possible
when you feel a difference because a lot of people don't get they don't get blood work done
so they wouldn't they wouldn't know unless there's something that they notice like it could be worse uh digestion it could be worse sleep it
could be brain fog yeah i think digestion is probably the thing that people notice first
but there are a lot of adverse health effects that people don't readily notice yeah in fact
if you if you take a bunch of people out of the population at random then almost all of them will
have at least one micronutrient deficiency and it's hard to pinpoint for them like what causes it because it's it's
something that creeps up over time and occurs gradually and you just get used to feeling a
certain way you don't know that that way is suboptimal that that's what is is so insidious
about any non-optimum state whether it's a mental state or a physical state or
being in a shitty relationship i mean is is just how easily we can adapt to shitty circumstances
yeah yeah exactly and just go well this is the new normal now
and then and then if if you are able to to break through and fix it then of course we've all had
that experience where we look back and and then we realize how bad it was before and we then wonder
how we ever put up with it it's just one of those it seems to be perennially human things that we
all have to struggle with definitely and with dieting sleep that's very very much the case like if you look back on you
know your first diets like oh that was bad yeah it's true it's true so let's segue back to dieting
so okay so we have this uh this framework here uh this mental framework which is is probably news to
a lot of people listening because i know a lot of people they think that even even a mild calorie
deficit within a week,
you have all of these physiological things that start happening, metabolic adaptation,
and it's a very slippery slope. And if you don't take a diet break every four weeks,
you are just going to feel miserable, et cetera, et cetera. And so, let's just accept your,
I mean, obviously it's not your, but let's accept this proposition that you put forward, which is for a lot of people who are looking to go from out of shape to in shape, or probably even some people who are pretty in shape, who want to get really in shape, maybe something comparable to what I was talking about, my little COVID cut.
And if most of the major obstacles are going to be, I guess maybe a word could be psychogenic or just it's more psychosomatic than it is actually physical.
What are some things we can do to make that process easier to stop our mind from messing with us so much a lot of it comes down to well basically when you realize that the problems are the
restriction and the the feelings associated with that and having to make choices you don't like
your diet a big part of it other than realizing in the first place you're not actually becoming
healthier you're actually becoming a lot healthier. Objectively, almost every health biomarker improves in energy deficit,
even up to really, really lean levels.
So other than that and realizing that,
there is a big part of successful dieting revolves around
not feeling restricted and restrained.
And you can do that, for example, with successful appetite management
so that you can eat as much as you want.
You're not hungry because you always feel restricted when you're hungry and you can't eat more.
And reducing choices, not thinking about food.
I think one of the biggest problems a lot of people have when they're dieting, and in particular people that are very serious about fitness, is that they obsess the crap out of their diet.
And that only makes things worse.
Because dieting is like sleep.
If you obsess too much over your sleep, you're only making it worse.
And with dieting as well, you're not going to make your diet any better
if every day anew you're trying to tinker things and trying to optimize things.
Because there's a range of basically optimal.
For most people, you can mix a lot of different diets that all result in similar
effects both for your physique and health. So it's not like there's the one optimal magical number.
Plus, there's actually a lot of research that shows that variation itself is detrimental,
not just for diet adherence, but also for our mood and our cognitive functioning.
For example, researchers have looked at the effect of changing the size of a meal that people are
used to at a certain time of day. For example, at lunch, you're used to a 500 calorie meal,
and then some days they give them a thousand calorie meal, and the other group just eats 500.
And they can also do it at breakfast, blah, blah, blah. And then they see if you eat a
meal that's different, very different, not like 100 calories, but very different in size it's 500 and they can also do it at breakfast blah blah and then they see if you eat a meal
that's different very different not like 100 calories but very different in size than you
used to and also if that is different macronutrient composition like very different you go from keto
to high carb you actually have a worse mood typically and cognitively you perform worse
so things like reaction time might deteriorate if you do a testing like iq testing you'll probably perform a bit worse on iq test after an unusual meal and
in general one of the biggest predictors of successful dieting is consistency in everything
people that are very consistent even if it's not necessarily optimal but they're doing things
very consistently right those people are much much more successful
than other people and if you realize that fully then you can also see why i'm not a big proponent
of things like if it fits your macros in the sense of having a new meal plan every single day
i like the principle worse on the fly every day thinking all right what do i want to eat for lunch
and then searching calories and macros oh that doesn't work okay maybe i can you know what about that all right what if i cut that in half and like
that stuff yes definitely yeah and diet breaks also not a fan any any kind of very dramatic
cycling or changes in the diet that do not have a very clear purpose you have to be very wary of
because if you can just make things very simple and basically
make the road to success the path of least resistance and make the path that you're on
the default the best possible option. So for example, if you do meal planning and you have
a fridge full of food and you already know, okay, lunchtime, I put this Tupperware box in the
microwave. This is my meal. Like that's
the default. And then if you don't think at all, you don't make any choices, you just follow the
plan, then you're going to be successful. Whereas if you don't have a meal plan, and you have to
think, okay, what am I going to eat? And especially when you're hungry, the worst possible time
to actually have to make those choices is much, much more difficult for yourself.
to actually have to make those choices is much, much more difficult for yourself.
Absolutely. And so what are some of these key points you mentioned? Consistency? What are some of the key aspects of consistency that matter the most? I can hear people wondering, well,
is it consistency of meal time? Is that the key? Or is it it the calories or is it the macros is it the food
choices or is it a bit of everything basically everything yeah it's uh it's remarkably uh or
it's remarkable how much consistency matters in like every single field like macronutrient
composition of the diet the size of your habitual meals it's been found to play a role nutrient
timing as in consistency of mealtimes,
there was actually just a recent study that confirmed what I wrote also in the book,
that if you have your meals at irregular times,
the firmic effect of food is actually significantly lower.
Like it's not hundreds of calories,
but based on the estimates from the two best studies that we have,
you're looking at a 5% to 10% difference possibly in total daily energy intake in people that have their meals at the same time
versus people that have different times every day. And that could be the difference between
maintaining and being in a successful cut. And you mentioned that when we are getting
leaner, we are getting healthier. I could see that as something that
many people, they had to, wait, did he say, was that, did he mean the other way around? Because
again, many people, especially if somebody is already looking fit, it's obvious if somebody's
very overweight and they're going to a healthy body comp, let's say a guy at 15% body fat,
to a healthy body comp let's say let's say a guy at 15 body fat that's totally fine he's going to look fine fit healthy but to go from 15 to 10 is it's in in women let's call it 25 to 20 that's
probably often considered uh not a healthy process and then and then i know some people will say even
well being at 10 or 20 as a woman a woman is generally less healthy than 15 or 25.
Yeah, that's definitely false.
That's objectively false.
So there is definitely an argument to be made when you're talking about 5% and 15% for men and women, respectively.
I've never been to 5%.
Maybe you have, but most people listening probably don't have to worry about that.
I've had nutrients for my last contest. Then you definitely don't feel good.
But for most people, if you objectively look at their health biomarkers, and you can literally do this yourself.
If you're 15% body fat as a guy 25 as a woman
do your blood work don't change anything your diet in terms of general food choice and everything
lose like five percent body fat go to the doctor again you'll find your resting heart rate's
probably lower your cholesterol profile is probably better your level of insulin resistance
is almost certainly lower the only thing that might deteriorate is your anabolic hormone levels.
Do you think that'll be meaningful though?
Yeah, that's what I was going to say.
As long as they don't go below the physiological range,
which they might at some point in contest prep,
but they shouldn't at like 10% body fat for a guy or 20% as a woman.
It's actually debatable if that's really going to affect longevity because hormone replacement therapy, for example, in elderly individuals and post-menopausal
women does not seem to affect all-cause mortality. It has some pros, it has some cons. So there might
be slightly elevated risk of cancer and certain types of cardiovascular conditions, other types
of cardiovascular conditions are less likely to occur so you know
sex hormone levels seem to be they definitely increase well-being but they don't really seem
to affect longevity and all cause mortality in this and which means like your total risk of dying
from anything basically and what are your thoughts about macronutrient composition in the context of dieting. Many people that reach out to me,
they understand high protein. There's a little argument about that. But then I see a lot of
people put a lot of attention on carb versus fat and what's the ideal. Should it be 40-40-20?
Should it be 40-30-30? And so on? Yeah, that's an interesting thing with the whole flexible dieting range,
where there has been a major de-emphasis on food choices,
but a huge emphasis on macronutrients.
And I think a lot of people are actually quite obsessed with their macronutrients.
And they think of their foods, you ask them, like, what are you going to eat?
Like carbs.
You don't eat carbs okay you eat a
certain food you're eating like potatoes or rice it's like protein or fat you know because they're
in there are huge differences in any kind of tasty tasty carbs what do you mean yeah 50 grams what
do you want i mean if you say fat does that mean you're you're drinking oil or you're eating an
avocado or you know there's a huge difference in effects.
Yeah.
And exactly.
Is fatty beef, is that protein or fat?
Like, what about nuts?
They're high in both carbs and fat and protein.
Yeah, exactly.
So in any case, that focus on macronutrients is definitely misplaced in the context of
diet adherence.
And in fact, in most contexts, actually.
Especially when you're talking minor differences,
there really aren't any effects.
And also in the book, I review the research
on what kind of the optimal diet is.
And you basically find, as long as you're consistent,
it doesn't really matter.
There are a few principles, like high protein works.
But high protein means at least
1.6 gram per kilogram per day. Above that, you again, don't really see more effects.
Super low fat and super low carb, but especially low fat does not work. Like zero fat diets. You
see this a lot in competitors. Works fine for a couple of weeks, maybe even months. And then
you completely burn out typically. Unless you're on gear, then it's not as bad because if you get your hormones from a needle, you don't need fat to make your body produce them itself.
And super low carb like keto, carnivore, show some trends to be worse in the long run.
But I think that's mostly because people have a very difficult time implementing
them properly, especially in research. A lot of people think keto is drinking olive oil.
Then no, it's more like eating avocado. You're still eating vegetables. Keto is also not about
minimizing carb intake. So I think that's more wrong implementation, getting micro-ritual
deficiencies and the like, rather than really necessarily suffering from the lack
of carbs. So the most important thing, again, is by far just getting the basics right of your diet
and then being consistent. And other than that, food choices are actually far more predictive
of long-term diet success than macronutrient composition of the diet. Like if someone's
still eating ice cream and pizza, then you can fit those things into your diet if you're tracking
your energy intake. But even that up to a point is simply not sustainable. Like if I want to eat
a thousand calories of pizza or ice cream, and at some point in my diet, I have to go to 2000
calories a day, I'm going to be super, super hungry. And nobody gets successful long run
being hungry every day. So it's
theoretically viable, like, you know, in physical terms, as long as we're eating 2000 calories,
you can fit some pizza in there. But behaviorally speaking, it's not. And you also get into the
problem that if you eat a little bit of pizza, but you can't satiate yourself with pizza anymore,
it can only result in further cravings. And that's why, for example, take ice
cream for me. I eat ice cream if I'm maintaining, which that's what I've been doing for some time
now. I like to have it once a week unless I'm going to be eating at a restaurant or something.
But I don't really like eating ice cream unless I eat a lot of it. For me, having 100, 200 calories
of ice cream, it's just not enjoyable at all. I'd rather just not do it. I'd rather actually just eat some oatmeal with some nuts
and fruit. So if I'm gonna eat ice cream, I want to eat the whole pint. And the brand I currently
like is this brand called Jenny's and that's a thousand calories a pint. And so I'll do that
once a week. But that's just, that's just once a week. I don't nibble on the ice cream every day.
Cause I know that
even if I have a good relationship with food and good discipline, I'm still going to want to eat
more and it's just going to be annoying. So my little daily treat if I want to have something
is just some dark chocolate because I don't have to eat much of that at all. And I like it. I can
have just a square or two and be like, oh, that's nice. Not the case with ice cream. So going to your point of food choices, I think if I'm hearing you right, people, they need to understand what works for them.
That's not the case.
I mean, I know people who they can eat five spoons of ice cream and feel, hey, that was great.
They can put it away.
That's not me, though.
Yeah.
And for a lot of people, it's not, even though they think it is.
A lot of people think, I just need a little bit of this and portion control in general
seems to be short-term successful for some people, but long-term really does not do well.
So all that stuff goes right out the window when people get really lean and muscular,
which massively increases your appetite. And if you just eat a little bit, it just increases the craving. So I think that's one
of the biggest myths also in terms of diet adherence, the idea that you satiate a craving
and then it's gone. It does not work. And then there are numerous studies on this,
like literally, I think at least a dozen, where they show that not eating a food reduces the
craving for that food. And as long as you keep indulging in the food, you keep fueling the
craving. And it doesn't even matter how much you eat. So if you eat a little bit of ice cream,
you fuel the craving just as much as if you eat a lot. In fact, in large portions,
it can be better to eat a lot, especially if you get nauseous, because then you get a negative
food association. So these are all things that work well
when appetite really isn't a problem yet.
But you see typically that when they get leaner,
more muscular,
those things don't work anymore.
And there's a lot of research showing that.
There are some tricks that you can implement it,
like ice cream, for example.
There's research on chocolate cravings,
which shows if you indulge in the craving a little bit
after you're already satiated, it induces far fewer cravings than if you eat the chocolate first or on an empty stomach.
Which makes sense, right? Because then if you eat it afterwards, you're basically already full and you just have a little bit purely for the taste.
But if you eat it really to eat, to to satiate yourself then um you're
going to feel restricted because you can't eat the whole thing that's a great point and uh that's
something that i've always done i didn't uh i didn't realize that that it's an evidence-based
way to manage cravings but i've always tacked whatever little thing I want to have. It's always been, I mean,
for me, it's, it's almost always after dinner, but it's not, it's not a meal unto itself. I'm
not going to have a 3pm snack of just like half of a chocolate bar or something.
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the giveaway sauce, go over to muscleforlifebook.com, muscleforlifebook.com. Yeah, the order in which you
eat foods actually has very significant effects on diet adherence and research.
And in my book, I use the analogy of eating sushi with traditional Japanese order.
And there the order is that you start with the least flavorful or most sort of mundane kind of foods,
like the miso soup, edamame, the white fish, and then you move up to more flavorful and more fatty kinds of fish and that the order is very successful uh for two reasons one is that if you start with the fatty
stuff then you actually just induce the craving and then you switch the other stuff you don't
want it anymore like you don't want soup anymore when you've just already started eating ice cream
right but if you eat soup first when you hungry, you actually might like the soup.
And then later on, you're going to be content with far less ice cream.
And because you're basically filling up your appetite units with lean foods, you reduce the total energy intake of the meal a lot.
And there's also one thing that's, I think, very important to realize.
Research very consistently finds that meal satisfaction is completely
unrelated to energy intake like a lot of people think especially if they go to a buffet that they
get the most satisfaction when they try the most things and they eat a lot but that's not true
like satisfaction is a psychological phenomenon it's the brain registering satiety mostly like you have a certain emotion or in this case a
feeling that which is mostly hunger and if you can satiate that emotion like let's say satiate
yourself in this case of hunger then the brain creates positive emotions basically because it's
it's mission accomplished but the brain does not have a system where it's like, oh, we need this amount of calories.
It's actually with dieting.
There are a lot of things where the brain is not that smart, evolutionary speaking.
Or it's even smarter if you look at the even bigger picture than we think.
So there are a lot of ways you can manipulate and trick the brain into being satiated or satisfied in general much earlier with a certain type of meal.
satiated or satisfied in general much earlier with a certain type of meal and and something that is probably worth mentioning just to just to carry that uh on is research showing that
the amount of food volume that you eat has more to do with satiety than than the calories yes and
that's i think a useful tip when i mean to that point i can eat a big vegetable dinner i just
call it
vegetable slop that I've been eating forever. Talk about consistency. I think two years now,
I basically have the same dinner every, call it Monday through Thursday, maybe Monday through
Friday, or even on the weekends if my family's out of town or whatever. And it's just a bunch
of vegetables, some meat, some, it's like a bastardized Frankenstein stir fry. And at one point, I probably worked out the calories just to have an understanding of my overall calorie intake.
But it's certainly not a high calorie meal, but it's very filling and it's very satisfying even when I'm hungry, even though it is just really a bunch of vegetables.
It's probably like five to six servings of vegetables just in one go with meat
yeah it's perfect i mean i have a lot of things like that too a lot of soups that i really like
soups are great i think a lot of people that are very successful with dieting if you look at what
they actually eat it's very consistent they i often joke that in large part the key to successful
dieting is simply finding four keeper recipes.
And if you found those, then you're basically set.
For example, I had one client, which he did not realize, but he actually loved zucchini.
And I gave him a zucchini soup recipe, and he made that.
And he was like, this is amazing.
And then he started implementing zucchini in everything.
They made zoodles.
this is amazing. And then he started implementing zucchini and everything made zoodles. And that basically, that one thing was for him the difference between struggling massively with
dieting. And since then, he literally said like a week later, I think I have permanently solved
the dieting issue. Because he could just eat loads of zucchini. Whenever he wants to lose fat,
just eat loads of zucchini. Done. That was it.
The zucchini diet.
Yeah, he loved it.
Zucchini is super nutritious, super satiating.
So he never had problems anymore with consuming fewer calories.
That was just it.
That was like the one golden thing he needed.
And I understand that.
I mean, I'm trying to think.
I guess I really like Brussels sprouts.
I eat them every day. I eat zucchini as well. That goes into my slop. And everybody listening, I'm sure, can immediately think of some nutritious, relatively low-calorie food that you just really like, and especially if you find the right recipe, right? And there are so many different ways to prepare things. It's hard to not be able to find something like that. Like maybe the guy seems like he's a little bit lucky in that he just loves zucchini,
he can just pound zucchini all day
in five different ways and he loves it.
All right, fine.
Maybe that doesn't work for a lot of people.
But what about three things?
And what about just three go-tos?
And I think that's a great tip.
Definitely, yeah.
What about meal timing?
Yeah, for diet deterrence, again, consistency is the most important thing.
Research on appetite generally finds, including a recent meta-analysis,
that the sweet spot is typically around three or four meals.
Most people do worse.
Funny enough, the old bodybuilding idea was that you need six, it's better.
But I think almost everyone has found for themselves,
it's actually really hard when you get to low energy intakes
to have six meals because you just have tiny, tiny meals
and there isn't a single meal of the day that really satiates you.
So most people, I think, are best off with three or four.
Two might actually be good for some people in terms of diet adherence,
but it's most likely suboptimal for muscle growth slash retention.
So I wouldn't experiment with that unless it's a lot easier for you
diet adherence-wise and you don't care about maximizing muscle mass.
And what about eating out?
I know that's something I get asked about fairly often.
Yeah, there are a lot of good things you can do
to minimize the damage there.
The food order tip that we discussed,
like starting with the least flavorful options,
having your protein and fiber first in particular,
that's really important
because then you're also in a position
to make much more rational choices.
Another tip from recent studies
is that starting with something with an umami flavor and free glutamate, like mushrooms or tomatoes, actually increases self-control and lowers energy intake.
Because the free glutamate seems to affect glutamate receptors in the mouth that subsequently enhance self-control and lower energy intake.
One of those things that MSG in soups is what research
actually originally started with. And I found
that it works. It's actually
a
significant diet adherence booster to have
an artificial flavor enhancer
in your food. That's ironic.
Yeah, pretty
crazy.
But that's one of those
tips that's like
almost too good to be true,
but it actually works.
And another thing, I think the thing that most people do wrong
is they save up calories by basically starving themselves
before they go out.
And you should think of it as you're going to eat foods
that have a higher energy density than the foods you normally eat. So you have a certain amount of appetite units. And if you're going
to fill them with those foods, you're going to end up with a far higher energy intake than otherwise,
which means that if you starve yourself, and then you're going to pig out on pizza and ice cream,
you're going to do heinous damage. Whereas if you show up already satiated, which is actually what I recommend for a lot of people,
actually at home, first eating a soup, for example, first eating a big bowl of tomato or zucchini soup,
and then you show up to the barbecue or wherever else you're going,
then for one, you're not starving, so you can make much more rational decisions.
And you can just eat the food for flavor rather than having to satiate yourself with those high
energy density foods so it's much more effective to switch to very lean foods like just eating
like your filler recipe with a lot of vegetables lean protein sources saving up calories but not
starving yourself rather than just saying what a lot of people do in my experience is for example
oh i'm going out to eat i'm going to i'm going to skip the meal beforehand and that is not only not effective it's actually
directly counterproductive because you're going to have more appetite at the uh cheap meal
makes sense and and that's something a mistake i'm sure i've made many times in the past and
what i found my way to and this is this is what I would say I have most recently recommended
is I don't mind saving up calories, but to your point, I'm going to eat probably most
of my protein for the day.
I'm probably going to have some fruits and vegetables.
I'm going to eat some, I'm not going to come into the meal having only eaten a couple hundred
calories so I can like oh i have three thousand
calories to eat in this meal i'm gonna i'm gonna come into it um not not any hungrier than i would
normally feel for let's call it a dinner right and i'm gonna eat enough food enough of the right
foods to make sure that i feel more or less normal and And then I don't restrict myself at the meal, but also I've learned
to not, and this is probably something that you might even have in the back of your mind to
mention as well, that I've learned that you don't have to, I think of Thanksgiving, which is coming
up where in the past, just for fun, basically, I would eat like seven plates of food to the point where it was actually painful. I'm on the couch, can't move, sweating. And it
was kind of fun, you know, at like plate three. And then I kept going because yeah, it tasted good.
But I have learned that you get most of the satisfaction just eating to the point of of satiety and no more hunger and i've tasted
everything enough and then just stopping there you know yeah there's good research on this where
people have sort of a satiety sweet spot and i quote i often like to mention is from lewis ck
where he says the meal is not over when i'm full the meal is over when i hit myself yes exactly that that that was my old thanksgiving uh routine yeah so
i think for a lot of people it's really good to have this framework that
society is happens on a continuum like there's certain points where you're starving and also
good to realize for for dietence, by the way,
if you're really hungry and someone's like,
there's a saying in the Netherlands, actually,
if you're really hungry, then raw beans will taste sweet to you.
So if you think like, I would love some beans right now,
then you're actually hungry.
But if you're like, no, I don't think I'll have beans.
Ice cream though, I think I can go for some ice cream.
They are not really hungry.
Then you're just craving pleasure, basically.
And that is a really important distinction also for yourself to note, because that's what I call the two S's of diet adherence. You have to be satiated and satisfied. And those things have
different kind of things you can do for them. And with this simple test, you basically know
if your problem at the moment is actual satiety or satisfaction, which is more psychological.
Where was I originally going?
Well, we were talking about this idea of coming into a restaurant meal, for example, being satiated.
Right, the satiety spectrum.
So, yeah.
So, I'm guessing what you're like, okay, you've kind of checked off the satiety so yeah so i guess i'm guessing what he's like okay you've kind of checked off the the satiety now you can you can go to that meal and just chase the satisfaction and not have to
also try to get satiety from it right and with fullness on the other side of the spectrum there's
also um a sweet spot that you should be aware of where like you say you can be a certain point
you're full and you don't need food anymore, but you can keep eating.
And at certain points, if you keep eating, it actually makes you worse off.
Like it's every single bite just hurts.
It doesn't provide any more pleasure.
You're already full.
All it does is it causes pain.
So it's really good to realize that the goal is not to eat as much as possible. And I myself, for sure, have made this mistake before,
where if you just go into the meal with the idea of eating as much as you can
because you felt so deprived beforehand.
And it really is not.
The goal of the meal is to satiate yourself
and to be happy and have a pleasurable experience.
And there is a certain sweet spot there that you just need to cross
and you don't need more than that.
On the other hand, it's also very good to realize that you do need to be satiated because long-term hunger is not sustainable
for anyone and research generally finds that men prefer to be a bit higher on the the continuum
than women women are generally a bit more okay with being you know just full but maybe still
having some idea of i could eat, but I don't want to.
Whereas men typically want to be more on the end of,
I'm really full, I'm very completely satiated.
I could eat more, but it would definitely not be pleasurable anymore.
So it is good to realize that you do want to be full, right?
Because a lot of people also think,
oh, I just eat a little bit and I'll be hungry.
No, you definitely can't be hungry, but you also don't have to pig out and actually make it
unpleasant so yeah i think it's a really important mindset to have and one other thing that you
mention uh in the book is and i think this is this is a good tip is okay so you're going to
have your your cheat meal or treat meal or, and you're going to go out for it. And okay, so you overdo it. And you would prefer that somebody overcompensates the following
day as opposed to, or let's say they just know that what they're going to go eat, it's going to
be a lot of calories. It just is what it is, right? You're going to go eat the 2000 calorie pizza,
and you're gonna have some ice cream after, and that's what you want to do. Okay, fine. Um, you have two options. You could
starve yourself leading up to it, right? Which we already talked about and why that's a bad idea.
Um, or, or you could even, let's say eat to satiety, go into it, but you still are going to
eat what you're going to eat. It's going to happen then the following day is it okay uh to eat quite a bit
less to get rid of maybe some of that previous day's surplus it can be like theoretically it is
and if you're extra motivated at that point that's the reason i think it's better to compensate
afterwards than beforehand because if you compensate beforehand to run into the problems
that we just discussed yeah we just make you know the overeating worse if you compensate beforehand, you run into the problems that we just discussed. We just make the overeating worse.
If you compensate afterwards, you're probably more motivated to do it.
So that's good.
On the other hand, most research finds it's much more important to focus on the long run
and to simply reflect on why did you overeat and was it worth it?
That's a really, really important question to ask yourself.
And also especially to do body composition measurements at the end of the week or even day if you overeat a lot and see was there a noticeable fat gain did i
not lose fat compared to you know i was supposed to lose fat and then reflect on was this worth it
and you can often quantify things as okay this was a week of dieting gone in a single meal
and then you may think okay, maybe that was worth it,
but maybe it was not. And it is good to actually make that reflection objectively based on data.
Now, other than that, it's much more important to focus on long-term habits and routines and
just following your meal plan. Because if the next day you already had trouble with the diet
and you have to change your meal plan to compensate for that one day of overeating, and you may end up hungry and
you're going to obsess about food again, it's better to just stick with the plan and learn from
the mistakes, if there were any, and continue as planned. Because really in the long term,
those single events, those aren't going to make or break things. But habits, routines, and long-term sustainability, those definitely will.
Makes sense. And something I will add to that just in my experiences, this is me,
and it doesn't necessarily apply to everybody. I've found, again, I'm generally in maintenance
mode. Sometimes I do a little bit of cutting, but I'm generally in maintenance mode. And if I eat a
lot and it was my plan to go eat a lot. And so I would say, is it worth it? Yeah, that's what I
wanted to do. That was the plan. And I didn't go to the point of hating myself, but I was in a nice
surplus for the day. What I've found is it's quite easy to eat a bit less the following day because I'm usually not very hungry. Like in
the morning, if I eat a sizable dinner, quite a bit more than calories than I normally would in
food I would normally eat, I am not very hungry in the morning at all. So I could just skip
breakfast basically. And then that also then carries on really through the rest of the
day where, and I totally agree with you, I could just not and not care at all and move on with my
life. That's totally fine. But because psychologically, physiologically, it's very
easy for me to just eat less the next day. I just do that. All right, cool. And then move on with my
life and get right back to my normal plan. Exactly. And that's basically the decision I
think you should make. Like, is it very easy to do this? And am I motivated to do it?
If so, okay, you can do it. Otherwise, just stick to the plan. Focus on that.
Makes sense. Well, hey, that was all the questions I had for you and a great discussion,
a lot of great, great practical advice. I know it's going to be very well received.
And we've mentioned the book, the book, the book, but we have not mentioned the title yet.
And I will mention it in the intro,
but a lot of people skip intros.
So why don't you share the title
and anything you want to say about that?
And then let's tell people
where they can find you and your work.
And if there's anything else you want them to know about,
let's wrap up with that.
Sure.
It's called The Science of Self-Control.
And you'll find it on our websites,
you know, ensimals.com, along with Science of Self-Control. And you'll find it on my website, vanowensimals.com,
along with all the other information on Amazon.
You can read a preview of the book for free.
And on my website,
you'll find a lot more information
to see if you may want to purchase it.
Or just probably also good
that there's a free email course
where you can just get all the free content and then decide if you want to purchase anything.
Other than that, I just hope people enjoyed the call and look forward to talk to you again
at some point in the future.
Same.
Thanks again.
Well, I hope you liked this episode.
I hope you found it helpful.
And if you did, subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it increases the
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other people who may like it just as much as you. And if you didn't like something about this
episode or about the show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just feedback to share, shoot me an email.
Mike at muscle for life dot com muscle for life dot com.
And let me know what I could do better or just what your thoughts are about maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future.
I read everything myself.
I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive
feedback. So thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.