Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: “Boring” Training, Cutting and Newbie Gains, Adrenal Fatigue, and More
Episode Date: September 9, 2022Will cutting “waste” your newbie gains? Is adrenal fatigue real? Are knee sleeves necessary? Do I ever get bored of my workout routine? Should you take every set to failure? Can foam rolling help ...muscle growth? Should you increase energy flux? All that and more in this Q&A podcast. This podcast is a Q&A, but it’s a bit different from the kind you’ll typically find here on Muscle For Life. In my usual Q&A episodes, I take a question from email or Instagram and then fully answer it in an episode of the podcast every week. However, over on Instagram, I’ve started doing weekly Q&As in the stories, and it occurred to me that many podcast listeners might enjoy hearing these questions and my short answers. So, instead of talking about one thing in an episode, I’m going to cover a variety of questions. And keep in mind some of these questions are just for fun. :) So if you want to ask me questions in my Instagram stories, follow me on Instagram (@muscleforlifefitness), and if I answer your question there, it might just make it onto an episode of the podcast! If you like this type of episode, let me know. Send me an email (mike@muscleforlife.com) or direct message me on Instagram. And if you don’t like it, let me know that too or how you think it could be better. --- Timestamps: 0:00 - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan 3:11 - Does cutting make our body less responsive to training? 5:21 - What is best, 4x10 reps or 3x4-6 reps? 12:19 - Do you get bored of your workout routine? 12:58 - Do you have any advice for sleep apnea? 13:43 - What were your calories on your last cut? 15:15 - Do you consider knee sleeves necessary for squatting? 15:46 - Is it possible to plateau in a weight loss journey if you don't eat enough protein? 16:12 - Should I be bracing my muscles when I’m lifting or should I be loose and tensionless? 17:41 - Is it good or bad to take every set to failure? 19:31 - Why can’t we all stop hating each other and just get along? 20:18 - Is adrenal fatigue a real thing? 21:25 - What are your thoughts on occasionally training for a pump because I enjoy it? 22:09 - Can cold showers after a workout blunt inflammation response? 23:06 - What are your thoughts on energy flux? 27:36 - Does foam rolling after a workout help with muscle growth? --- Mentioned on the Show: Want a free meal planning tool that figures out your calories, macros, and micros, and allows you to create custom meal plans for cutting, lean gaining, and maintaining in under 5 minutes? Go to https://buylegion.com/mealplan and download the tool for free!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey there, this is Muscle for Life and I'm Mike Matthews and I want to thank you for joining me
today for another Q&A episode where I answer a number of questions that people have asked me,
followers have asked me over on Instagram. So what I do is every week or so I post up a story
asking people to ask me questions and then I pick questions to answer there on Instagram in
my stories. And then I bring the questions over here where I can answer them in more detail
because I can only write so much in a little Instagram story. And so if you want to ask me
questions, follow me on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness. And then every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or so, you will see the story go up and you can ask questions. So what are we getting into today?
Well, I'm going to be talking about newbie gains in the context of cutting, just cutting,
get in the way of does it lessen your newbie gains. I'm going to be talking about my training,
why I periodize my training, why I train in
different rep ranges, and I don't do what is in my Bigger Leaner Stronger book.
I do what is in my Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger book.
I'm going to explain that.
I'm going to talk about boredom.
Somebody asked me if I get bored with my workout routine, and yes, I do get bored with it sometimes,
but that's not a bad thing.
I also have a question here regarding knee sleeves. Should you be using them? How to properly
brace your body when you are lifting weights? If energy flux matters when you are cutting or
trying to maintain your body composition and more. Before we sink our teeth into it, how would you like a free
meal planning tool that figures out your calories, your macros, even your micros, and then allows you
to create 100% custom meal plans for cutting, lean gaining, or maintaining in under five minutes?
Well, all you got to do is go to buylegion.com slash meal plan,
B-U-Y legion.com slash meal plan and download the tool. And if I may say this tool really is
fantastic. My team and I spent over six months on this thing, working with an Excel wizard
and inferior versions of this are often sold for 50, 60, even a hundred dollars.
Inferior versions of this are often sold for $50, $60, even $100.
Or you have to download an app and pay every month or sign up for a weight loss service and pay every month $10, $20, $40, $50, even $60 a month for what is essentially in this free tool. So if you are struggling to improve your body composition, if you are struggling to
lose fat or gain muscle, the right meal plan can change everything. Dieting can go from feeling
like running in the sand in a sandstorm to riding a bike on a breezy day down a hill. So again,
if you want my free meal planning tool, go to buylegion.com slash meal plan,
buylegion.com slash meal plan, enter your email address and you will get instant access.
Okay, so AFLDN asks, if a newbie cuts first, do muscle gains wait for when you decide to bulk?
Or to put this question differently, this is something that I often get asked. I've always
often been asked if you are new to strength training and you have a lot of fat to lose.
So you start with a cut. Does that impair or does that mitigate? Does that reduce your
quote unquote newbie gains? So thanks to newbie gains, your average guy can gain
probably about 15 pounds of muscle in his first year, whereas his second year is going to be about
half of that. It can be upward of 20 pounds. That would be a high responder. And in women,
it's about half of those numbers. So your average woman can gain, let's just say eight to 10,
maybe 12 pounds of muscle in her first year of lifting.
And then her second year, a potential muscle gain is about half of what she could gain in the first
year. And the primary reason we can do so well in our first year is newbie gains, is our body is
hyper responsive to training. And so the question again is, does cutting make our body less responsive to training? And although you might think that would be the case because a calorie deficit does generally impair muscle building, but research shows that newbie gains are so strong that our body is so hyper responsive to strength training,
that a calorie deficit doesn't seem to much affect our results, at least for the first
six to eight, maybe 10 months after that, maybe to some degree. So the bottom line is,
if you are new to this stuff and you have a lot of fat to lose and you want to gain a fair
amount of muscle, you can start with cutting, start with restricting your calories to lose fat,
and you will gain muscle, significant amounts of muscle, and you will lose fat, significant
amounts of fat at the same time. Andron Beat asks, according you're doing four by 10 these days, is there any
issues with three by four to six reps? Cause it works really well. Okay. So they are referring
to training clips that I post in my Instagram stories. I show my workouts and with some
exercises at some points in my macro cycle, I am doing four sets of 10 reps, even on big compound
lifts. And the reason I'm doing that is not because the training that I espouse in Bigger,
Stronger, which is my book for men who are relatively new to strength training, who let's say have yet to gain their
first 25 to maybe 30 pounds of muscle, Bigger, Leaner, Stronger is for them. Unless they're
40 to 50 plus and have a lot of weight to lose and are not in great shape, then I actually would
recommend my book Muscle for Life, but I digress. So the reason I am not following my Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger program is, well, I explain it in the sequel to bigger leaner stronger, which is beyond bigger leaner stronger and that is the program
I am following but basically what it boils down to is the amount of volume in bigger leaner stronger is not sufficient to
Help me gain more muscle and strength. I have to do more volume, which in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger,
it's about nine to 12 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And that works great for a while
until it doesn't work so great. And again, for most guys, that style of training, it will get
them to probably 20-ish pounds of muscle. Some guys
will be able to go maybe as far as 30 pounds if they're a very high responder to weightlifting.
But for most guys, it'll get them to 20 to probably 25 pounds of muscle before
they reach a plateau. And then the primary change that they have to make is more volume. They just have to work a bit harder. And in
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, you are working in the four to six rep range for a lot of exercises. For
some exercises, you are doing six to eight reps per set because four to six is just awkward. Think
about a dumbbell side raise, for example. You can do four to six, but once you get a bit stronger and
the weights get a little bit heavy, it's hard to maintain proper form. You start swinging all over
the place. And so I recommend lightening the load a little bit on those exercises, but mostly
sticking to four to six reps per set, because that is highly effective for gaining both muscle and strength. And it is also a great way to set yourself up for success
in your intermediate and advanced phases of your training, where gaining strength is really the
only reliable way to continue gaining muscle. So by doing a couple of years of a lot of four to
six rep work, which is right in the middle of the spectrum of strength and
hypertrophy, so to speak. Pure strength work would have you do a lot of ones, twos, threes,
fours, and fives. Pure hypertrophy work might be something like eight, nine, ten reps per set or
beyond. And four to six is in the middle. So it gives you a nice blend of strength and
hypertrophy works very well. But a problem with the four to six rep range, as you move into your
intermediate phase and you need more volume than bigger, leaner, stronger provides is you can only
do so much four to six rep work before your joints start hurting, before your
body starts hurting. You can't do, for example, 15 to 20 hard sets per week for, let's say,
your lower body in the four to six rep range without a lot of things just starting to hurt.
You might be able to get away with it for a couple of months, but after that, your knees are
probably going to start hurting, your hips, your lower back, and so forth. And so a solution there
is to start working in different rep ranges. You don't abandon four to six, but you start doing
some higher rep sets, which allow you to get in more volume with less stress on your joints.
which allow you to get in more volume with less stress on your joints.
Now, ironically, though, those higher rep sets are not easier than the lower rep sets.
Many people think that lower rep strength training is more systemically fatiguing.
For example, it's not.
Anybody who has done a lot of sets of 10 in the squat rack, for example, taken close to failure can tell you that
10 reps of a squat taken closer to failure is far more difficult and fatiguing than say three reps
taken close to failure. The three rep set is hard. Don't get me wrong, but your quads are not on fire
at the end of a three rep set in the way that they are at the end of a
10 rep set. And so anyway, this practice of working in different rep ranges is known as periodization.
And again, once you become an intermediate weightlifter, after, let's say, a couple of years
of good training, you've gained a lot of muscle and strength. Research shows that periodized
training is better for gaining strength and therefore likely better for gaining muscle
than non-periodized training. So training in different rep ranges becomes particularly
productive when you are more experienced. If you are new, you don't need a complicated periodized
program. You need something simple based on good fundamentals like bigger leaner, stronger for men or thinner leaner, stronger for women or muscle for life for men or women who are 40 or 50 plus and very new to all of this. But again, eventually you will stall out with the programming in those books. It'll take you far, but if you want to gain or try to gain basically all of the
muscle and strength that is genetically available to you, you are going to have to make some changes.
And that's what I've done in my training. And I talk about all of this and you can check out
basically exactly what I'm doing in my book, Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. And for any
women listening who are wondering if I have Beyond Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, I don't have it yet, but it is on my list. I do intend on writing
that book. But for now, you could read Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. You will learn a lot
and chances are you will want to make some changes to the programming. It will probably have more
upper body volume than you want to do and not enough
lower body volume, but you will know enough based on what you have learned in Thinner Leaner
Stronger and Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger to make those changes. So you could read it or you
could wait until I have Beyond Thinner Leaner Stronger. Okay. Ben Cook PT asks, do you get
bored of your workout routine? Yeah, definitely.
Sometimes my workouts are boring and I do feel like I am kind of just going through the motions.
But remember that the more boring, and I put that in scare quotes, a training program is,
so the more familiar the exercises are, the more simple the progression model is, the
more repetitive the workouts are and so forth, the more likely it is
to produce long-term results. Also remember that sometimes you don't want to work out and then you
force yourself to do it anyway and then you feel happy. Daniel Mufti asks, any advice for sleep apnea. Well, a CPAP machine can be very helpful, but check out
mouth taping. I know it sounds silly, but there is evidence that it can help with sleep apnea
and it can help anyone who tends to mouth breathe when they sleep. And if that piques your curiosity,
and if you want to learn more about the science and art of proper breathing, check out the interview I did with James Nestor.
By the time this goes live, it will probably be, I don't know, sometime in the last four to eight weeks that the interview with James was posted.
But go back in the feed and find it.
Nestor, N-E-S-T-O-R, and give it a listen.
Dr. Polk asks, what were your calories on your last cut?
So I averaged about 2,400 per day during the week.
When I was more active, I lift weights Monday through Friday for about 60 to maybe 80 minutes.
I also do 30 minutes of cardio, six or seven days per week.
I hop on a bike and just do moderate intensity, steady state cardio for 30 minutes.
And then I was probably closer to 2,900 calories per day on the weekends because my kids like
pancakes in the morning and we do that for them, my wife and I on Saturday and sometimes
Sunday and I'm going to eat them as well.
And then I also at the time was making a pasta. I was trying different pastas on Sundays. Again,
my family liked that and I wanted to eat enough of that to enjoy myself. And so when you consider
that I was burning probably around 3,000 to 3,300 calories per day during the week,
and probably something closer to 2,700 to 2,800 calories per day on the weekend.
You see that doing it that way meant slower results because my weekends chipped away a
little bit at my weekly calorie deficit, but I was okay with that. I didn't have that much fat to lose and it didn't
matter to me that the cut was just going to take maybe an extra three or four weeks because I
didn't have any deadline. Lyndon Sepp asks, would you consider knee sleeves necessary for weight
lifting? No, they are not necessary, but I do like them a lot for squatting
because they keep my knees warm and they do seem to help a little bit with joint stability. And if
you want to learn more about that, head over to legionathletics.com and search for sleeves,
and you will find an article called, should you wear elbow and knee sleeves or wraps while Should You Wear Elbow and Knee Sleeves or Wraps While Weightlifting? And check it out.
Lyndon Sepp also asks, is it possible to plateau in a weight loss journey if you don't eat enough
protein? No, that is only going to make it harder to gain or maintain muscle ultimately. And
unfortunately, true weight loss plateaus only occur because calories in are too close to or are beyond
calories out. And yes, all calories matter. All right. Mateo draws asks, should I be bracing my
muscles when I'm lifting or should I be loose and tensionless? Well, generally speaking,
you want whole body tightness during sets of just about every
exercise i mean there are some obvious exceptions like a seated rear delt raise or a calf raise or
whatever but for most exercises whole body tightness and especially with the heavy compound
exercises and particularly with your core muscles. So you want to tense them
before you squat, for example, or before you pull or overhead press or bench press or whatever.
You want to tense those core muscles like you're about to get punched in the stomach
and you want your glutes, for example, to squeeze hard at the top of every squat and every deadlift and every
overhead press. So generally speaking, the more whole body muscle tightness, the better.
All right. Nicola Caldwell asks, thoughts on Wendler's 5-3-1 program or the best progression
scheme for squat, bench, and deadlift? Well, Wendler's 5-3-1 is a great program, particularly
for people who are newer to powerlifting and want to give it a try. I've actually written about it.
If you head over to legionathletics.com and search for Wendler, you will find an article
where I talk about it and explain how it works. All right. Robert Malmstrom asks,
it works. All right. Robert Malmstrom asks, if always training with no reps left good or too much. So is taking every set to zero good reps left. Meaning if you go for another rep, you are
going to fail. Is that good or is that too much? That is definitely too much, especially with heavy
compound exercises. It's okay to go to that point where you have zero, maybe one good rep left every once in
a while on your compound lifts.
If you know what you're doing, if you know how to maintain good form when an exercise
gets that hard, and if you have a reason to do it, maybe you are testing your strength,
for example, but generally you want to end all sets of the big lifts with at least one good rep left.
And on isolation exercises, you can go to that zero to one good rep left or even absolute muscular failure more often, depending on the exercise, usually without issue. So if it's a biceps curl, for
example, and that final rep is a real grinder, and you think that you probably couldn't get another
one, that of course is not the same as doing that on the deadlift. It's okay to do that on the
biceps curl fairly often. You don't need to do it every set always. I
wouldn't recommend that. But if you want to do it here and there, even, you know, you do it a couple
of times per week because you are curling a couple of times per week and you want to take that final
set of your, let's say you're doing four sets of curls in each of these workouts and you want to
take the final set really close to failure. I don't see any problem with that, but I would not
be doing that every week again on a squat or a deadlift or an overhead press or even a bench
press. Sloporte98 asks, why can't everyone stop hating each other and just get along?
I could make a joke about clown world here, but my honest answer is cultural rot.
We have declining mental health.
We have declining attention spans.
We have declining literacy, declining IQ levels.
We have highest ever levels of media and government gaslighting, moral idiocy and so forth.
and government gaslighting, moral idiocy, and so forth.
And, you know, we all have a hand in this,
even if it is through inaction,
by not trying to do anything to improve circumstances.
Ultimately, we will get the world that we deserve.
Stacio71 asks, is adrenal fatigue a real thing?
Well, according to the Endocrine Society, which represents 14,000 endocrinologists, no, that is not a real medical condition. Adrenal insufficiency
is, but that's different. And burnout and exhaustion, those are real things and those are real symptoms of adrenal insufficiency,
as well as depression and obstructive sleep apnea. But adrenal fatigue, again, is not adrenal
insufficiency. This is the difference between thinking maybe you are gluten sensitive or gluten intolerant and knowing that you have celiac disease. So if you suspect
that there might be something up with your adrenal health, I recommend staying away from
anyone who talks about adrenal fatigue and instead going and seeing a good endocrinologist who can
help you properly assess your situation. Thomas Colvin 96 asks
thoughts on occasionally training for a pump mainly because I enjoy it. There's nothing wrong
with that. There's nothing wrong with just including some pump work in your training,
but I would recommend that you keep it to no more than 20% of your total volume. And there are different ways to look at volume,
of course, but in this context, an easy way to understand it is number of hard sets. So sets
taken close to muscular failure for a given major muscle group per week. So if you're doing, let's
say 15 hard sets per week for whatever muscle group, and you want to include some pump work in those sets,
I would limit it to no more than three sets per week. Vibe Colmetha, sorry if I am mispronouncing
your name, but that's the best I've got, asks, cold showers straight after a workout can blunt
inflammation response? No, a cold shower is not going to give you nearly enough cold exposure to matter now if you
were to go take a five or six minute ice bath immersed to your neck that probably would if you
were to do that after every workout that would likely result in less muscle growth than if you
were to not do that if you were just to maybe go
take some cold showers because that post-workout inflammation is part of the muscle building
process. And so if you do something to interfere with that, like take an ice bath or maybe take
some NSAIDs after you train, it is going to result in less muscle gain. Yisro Levine asks, thoughts
on energy flux? And in case you are not familiar with that term, it just refers to the amount of
calories that are going through you, the amount of calories you are eating and burning. So a high
flux individual eats a lot of calories, but burns a lot of calories. And a low flux individual would
be somebody who doesn't eat very many calories and doesn't burn very many calories. Now,
both of those people can gain weight, lose weight, maintain weight, of course, depending on the
relationship between the calories in and calories out. But the energy flux discussions that people have are usually centered
around the question of which is best, which condition is best for losing weight and maintaining
weight. And the short answer is most people seem to do best.
They get the best results with a high flux approach, meaning they move a lot, they burn
a lot of energy, and that allows them to eat more food.
So in the case of a guy who's cutting, let's say he's burning about 3000 calories per day
and he's eating 2500 calories per day to cut, he is
probably going to do better with that approach than let's say burning 2500 calories per day and
eating about 2000 calories per day, the fat loss will be the same, but he probably will feel better,
he probably will have better workouts, he probably will retain more muscle. And all of that matters, of course. It's not just about losing fat. And in the case of women, it works the same. It's just the numbers are usually smaller. So when cutting, most women are going to do better if they can eat 2000 calories per day versus 1500 calories per day or 1500 calories per day versus 1000 calories per day.
1000 calories per day is almost always inappropriate.
But if you have a small woman who is fairly lean and just wanting to get a little bit leaner, she might need to eat somewhere close to a thousand to 1200 calories per day based on her activity level, but burn more calories so she
could eat more calories. And that's really it. That's all there is to energy flux. Practically
speaking, it is not a metabolic hack that allows you to speed up your metabolism, to lose fat faster,
to recomp, to gain muscle and lose fat at the same time.
I wish it were that easy because I would do it myself and I would recommend that all of
you do it.
But there is no good scientific evidence for any of those kinds of claims.
And a final comment here that might be useful for anyone who is now thinking about how they can get their calories out up so they can get their calories in up as well.
training per week, which is probably the most I'd recommend unless you are like 20 years old and invincible and maybe pushing up to a few hours of cardio per week, which is also about the most
I'd recommend because beyond that, it is going to start to interfere with your strength training.
And most of us should be prioritizing our strength training, not just for body composition reasons,
but for health reasons as well. And so
that's one way of doing it. But you can also just walk. You can just go for walks. You can do about
as much walking as you want without interfering with anything in your strength training and
without placing any extra demands on your recovery. Walking, I think, is one of the most underrated forms of exercise there is.
So just look at what you do every day and see if you can walk more. Can you go out for walks?
Can you take the stairs instead of the elevator? Can you go walk up and down the stairs several
times per day for no other reason than just walking up and down the stairs,
whatever you need to do. Walking is great for your health. It can improve your fitness and it burns
a couple of hundred calories per hour. It burns more energy than most people realize. Okay. Final
question. Yavraj Asopa asks, does foam rolling after a workout help with muscle growth? No, it does not. It might
help slightly with muscle soreness and it might slightly improve your range of motion in
subsequent exercise, but it is not going to help with your recovery or your muscle building.
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 rankings of the show a little bit, which of course then makes it a little bit more easily found by 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 muscleforlife.com, muscleforlife.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.