Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Diet Soda, Specialization Routines, Thoughts on 5:2 Diet, Carb Tolerance, and More
Episode Date: February 24, 2023What’s the best cardio if you only have 10 minutes? Is drinking diet soda ok in moderation? What do I think about the 5:2 diet? Can you train heavy while also preparing for long-distance runs? What ...are my thoughts on biohacking? Are there different health effects between high-fat and high-carb diets while in a deficit? All of that and more in this Q&A podcast. 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) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (1:44) - What are your thoughts on Only Fans? (2:06) - Is diet soda okay in moderation? (6:03) - Are some people more carb tolerant? (8:04) - Do you foam roll? (9:39) - How is your calf training going? (12:22) - What investments do you think will have the greatest return during this recession? (15:05) - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan (16:33) - What is the best alternative to squats? (17:01) - What are your thoughts on biohacking? (17:43) - Do you always track macros or do you eat more intuitively? (20:40) - If you only have ten minutes for cardio, after lifting, do you recommend HIIT or LISS? (22:28) - What are your thoughts on the 5:2 diet? (24:30) - Are there any differences in health between high carb/fat diet when on a calorie deficit? (25:31) - Is it okay to train heavy weights while preparing for long distance runs? (27:52) - Who is the best world leader to have lived in history? 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)
Hello and welcome into Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today for
another Q&A episode where I answer some questions that people asked me over on Instagram. If you
want to ask me questions, then follow me over on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness and every
week or every other week. I have quite a few of these already saved up for future episodes,
so I don't always post a new one every week, but usually every week or two on Wednesday or Thursday,
I put up a story asking for people to give me questions. And then I go through all of the
questions that get submitted and I pick ones that are being asked often or that are very topical or that are just interesting to me.
And usually I'm looking for questions that I haven't answered a million times before.
And I answer them briefly there on Instagram and then come over here on the podcast and give more detailed answers because I can only put so much into an Instagram story. All right, so in this episode,
I am answering questions like,
what's the best type of cardio if you only have 10 minutes?
Is drinking diet soda okay in moderation?
What do I think of the 5-2 intermittent fasting diet?
Can you train with heavy weights
while you are also preparing for
a long distance run? And several more. And again, if you want me to at least review your questions,
I can't promise that I will answer all or any of them depending on what they are. Follow me
on Instagram at muscle for life fitness and pay attention to my stories. Okay, the first question
comes from CAA1997. Thoughts on OnlyFans, good or bad? Oh, it's great. I mean, is there a bigger
hallmark of an enlightened culture than depraved women degrading themselves for money from porn addicted simps. If there is one, I don't know it. Charlie
O. Mac Isaac, Charlie O. Mac Isaac. Okay. He asks diet soda. Okay. In moderation, or is it cancer
water? It's definitely not cancer water. Totally fine. Basically all of the alarming claims about
the supposed dangers of diet soda and artificial sweeteners are false or very, very overblown.
That said, I would not recommend drinking a bunch of diet soda or just having a lot of artificial sweeteners every day forever.
Because one claim that is panning out in research is that these chemicals may not be great for our gut health.
research is that these chemicals may not be great for our gut health. And our gut health impacts many aspects of our overall health, performance and well being. And so if we want to maintain an
optimally healthy gut, and we do, we probably don't want to be having call it 6, 8, 10 plus
servings of artificial sweeteners every day forever. And many people
in the fitness world do that because they take supplements. So they're taking, let's say,
three or four scoops of protein powder every day that's artificially sweetened. And then they have
some pre-workout, they have some post-workout, both of those artificially sweetened. Maybe you
toss in a green supplement, maybe BCAAs as well. That's even more. Let's now add an energy drink
on top of that and a diet soda or two. You're now up there. That's even more. Let's now add an energy drink on top of that and
a diet soda or two. You're now up there. That is many servings of artificial sweeteners every day.
And that probably also will include artificial food dyes, which again, are not as problematic
as some people would have you believe. But I personally try to stay away from them. I guess
my diet just doesn't really contain things with them. But I personally, let's put it this way, I would not be okay with and I would not personally have the 68 to 10 plus servings of artificial food dyes every day in addition to the sweeteners.
a couple of the reasons why I went with 100% natural ingredients for my sports nutrition company Legion. And I started Legion eight years ago now. And at that time, there was some evidence
that artificial sweeteners may not be good for gut health. If I remember correctly, though,
at the time, it was only in rodents. And I made the call just because I was betting on that
research panning out in humans. And I was thinking
with my own health too. I mean, I wanted to use my own products and I didn't personally feel
comfortable having all of those chemicals every day. And I, that I also wouldn't personally feel
comfortable selling those products to other people and telling them to do it. And so I decided to go
all natural, even though it costs a lot more. To give you an example,
it costs a lot more even today with Legion, basically much larger now than it was in its first year, second year, third year. It still costs me anywhere from three to five dollars a
bottle for my powders to use 100% natural sweeteners and natural flavoring and natural
coloring, which is just derived from like fruits or other foods. And if I were to use artificial ingredients, I could bring that down to probably 50 to 75 cents, certainly no more than a
dollar. So think about protein powder, think about pre-workout. So this year Legion will sell,
I don't know the number right off the top of my head. I'm going to say six or 700,000 bottles,
say five to 700,000 bottles of protein and pre-workout. And maybe you need
to include post-workout to get there, but let's just go with protein and pre-workout.
And if I were to save two or $3 per bottle, that's cost of goods savings. That means that
money goes straight from the top line to the bottom line. And I don't have any partners in Legion. And so
that's just profit that I have to pay taxes on and I could just take. So there's a real cost to me
personally in using natural ingredients, but I stand by it. I think it was the good move,
the smart move. And I think now it's a even better move, But let's move on. Duke Duke 07 asks, are some people more carb tolerant than others?
Yes, absolutely.
Some people do respond better to carbs than others.
And that doesn't mean body comp, though.
There's very little evidence that one person who, quote unquote, responds better to carbs
is going to gain less fat from eating carbs, for example.
But certainly can enjoy how much you enjoy your diet, which is going to like gain less fat from eating carbs, for example, but certainly can enjoy how much you
enjoy your diet, which is going to affect your compliance and that can affect your body comp.
And so, for example, some people find that if they eat more than a certain amount of carbohydrate in
one meal, they get bloated and tired. They just don't feel good. They don't ever get a pump when
they eat a bunch of carbs. Whereas other people, and I'm one of those people, I have a high sensitivity to carbohydrate in a good way. And I know that from
some DNA testing that I did some time ago. And it's just in line with my experience. I can eat
a large amount of carbs in one sitting and feel good. I get a little bit sweaty, even like I get
a pump and I get no gassiness. I get no bloating, no lethargy.
And I might be eating 100, 150, even 200 grams of carbs in one meal.
Again, other people, they would try to eat that much carbohydrate and it might put them
to sleep.
And the same is true for total carbohydrate intake for a day.
Some people find, I can think of some people over the years I've heard from, what they find is if they exceed 200, 300, 400 grams of carbs per day, they get the same type of problem, the same
type of reactions to a very high carbohydrate meal. Their digestion gets messed up. They're
bloated all the time. They don't have as much energy as they should have for all the carbs
that they're eating. They're not getting the
carbohydrate pumps and they're not seeing that effect in their workouts that you should see if
you're going from, let's say, 200 grams of carbs per day to 400 grams per day. And so that's just
something to be aware of. There is a point where we just can't stomach eating more carbs.
there is a point where we just can't stomach eating more carbs.
Elliekemptnbpt asks, do you foam roll?
No, mostly because research shows that the way most people do it doesn't probably do much.
It maybe can reduce Dom's muscle soreness, post-workout muscle soreness a little bit,
but it seems to be mostly a waste of time.
I guess a caveat to that is if you have trigger points and you have like a knobby foam roller, or if you have a flat foam roller and you can get to a
trigger point and you can work on those trigger points that can help tremendously. And trigger
points are little points of pain that refer, usually it's like hypersensitivity in an area.
And usually that pain refers to another area. So if you were to press on it, maybe the trigger point is in one of the muscles on your back and you press on it and
then you're now feeling it down into your biceps tendon, for example. And if you can work those
and desensitize them, it can sometimes produce strangely almost, it seems like miraculous
results. Like, you know, you're not able to bench press without some pain in your shoulder. You've tried so many things to address the
shoulder and it just doesn't go away. And then there's a trigger point in your back and you have
a massage therapist and they work that out or you know of it and you work it out with like a
lacrosse ball or something. And then you can bench press with no pain. And so long as you keep that
trigger point desensitized, so long as
you don't allow it to develop again, you simply don't have the problem anymore. So a foam roller
can help if you can get to some of those points, but it doesn't work usually as well as like a
lacrosse ball or a spiky ball. Okay, next question. It's just beige asks, how is the calf training going? Noticing any improvement? Yeah, absolutely. So what I'm doing for my calves, if you don't know, is I'm training them every day. I'm in the gym four days a week right now. And I'm doing four sets every day. I'm in the gym. So 16 hard sets per week. I am working in a variety of rep ranges. I'm doing some of those sets in the four to six rep range, some of them in the six to eight, and then some of them in the 10 to 12. And I have gained quite
a bit of strength in my calves. I've been doing that for a couple of months now. So I've gained
quite a bit of strength in my calves. Like I'm, I think I started, if I remember on the standing
calf press machine, I believe I started probably 220, let's say for 10. I think that's more or less
correct. And now I think my last was 290 for six or seven. So getting up there, getting up there
in strength. And I've also noticed an increase in size, of course. And there is a good little
rule of thumb here. If a muscle group of yours is not growing despite good programming and good eating, do what I'm doing. Do three to four sets, four to five days per week. So do a total of 15 to 20 hard sets per week for that major muscle group.
recognize soreness, train the muscle group every day. If that doesn't really work for you,
try to break those sets up into at least three sessions. Try not to be doing 10 plus hard sets for any individual major muscle group in one workout and use double progression. So make sure
you're getting stronger. Don't just fall into the routine of doing the same exercises, same weights,
same reps. As you are getting stronger, make sure you are adding weight.
A double progression works really well.
For example, once you hit a top of a rep range
for one, two, or three sets,
usually is how it works,
you increase weight.
And if you do that, and if you stay patient,
that muscle group will grow.
And that's really how specialization routines work,
which I'm gonna be producing some more content on.
I should be able to get into it in this next year, is specialization routines work, which I'm going to be producing some more content on. I should be
able to get into it in this next year is specialization routines. So you need a routine
to get bigger arms. Okay, here is a three month routine or a four month routine specifically
focusing on arms. Now we're not going to neglect anything, but we are going to train everything
else a little bit less so we can get 15 to 20 hard sets,
direct sets for biceps and triceps, for example. Actually, I probably wouldn't do 20 direct. I
probably would go for like 15 direct training for the biceps and triceps. And then the remaining
five probably would come from pushing and pulling. But anyways, next question, Jason Remmer asks,
what investments do you think
will have the greatest return in this continued recession? Well, this is an area that I'm pretty
ignorant in because it's just not relevant to my circumstances right now. My primary investment is
Legion. Most of my net worth is in that business. And I am working toward bringing in a strategic
partner, which will allow me to take some money out of the business. And then am working toward bringing in a strategic partner, which will allow me to take
some money out of the business. And then I will have to look more into investing. How do I diversify
this money now that I've taken it out of the business? But over the last several years,
I have invested in stocks, just simple ETFs, I forget the name of them, VTI and VXUS. I've put
a fair amount of money on those, just total US and total global markets, just trying to go for simple, steady growth, which obviously has been upended, but that's okay.
deals. I don't know much about it, but I know a rich guy who knows a lot about it, who is friends with another rich guy who does it. And so I'm just kind of riding their coattails just because
the first rich guy is also a longtime friend of my dad's and I trust him. The guy just makes money.
That's what he does. He knows how to make money. So it was just an easy way for me to make money on something
that I could only give a cursory explanation of. I couldn't really get into the mechanics of how
that business, like, what do you look for when you are wanting to buy a mobile home park? Yeah,
I could give you some high level bullet points, but I couldn't break down the whole process. I
don't really know it that well, but I've bought some gold and silver over the years. Not that
that's so much of an investment as just kind of wealth preservation and disaster planning. If things got so bad, at least I have something there. If I needed to like trade my little junk silver coins for money, I've bought some crypto, mostly Bitcoin bought back in 27 or 2018, put some money into it. And even with all the volatility of the last couple of years,
I'm still up on that, but that's just a long term. I'm just holding it forever to see what happens.
I don't really care about even the return so much. I look at that as gambling personally.
And in the short term, you know, I, I am looking to just invest more in my businesses right now.
That's where most of my money has gone over the last 10 years, back into my businesses, my publishing business and my sports nutrition business, because that's
where I got the best returns. No other investments were going to produce the returns that I could get
in my businesses. And I have control over my businesses. At least I have a lot more control
over my businesses than many other types of investments.
Also, 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 $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 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. Next question, Caleb Few asks, what's the best alternative to
squats? I know they're the best leg exercise, but I hate doing them. Plenty of alternatives. You
don't have to squat to have a great lower body, strong, muscular.
You can do lunges.
You can do the leg press.
You can do the split squat.
You can do the hack squat machine.
You can do the pendulum squat machine if your gym has one.
That is a deceptively difficult exercise.
I like the pendulum squat a lot.
Next question is from Mariana22S.
She asks, I'm assuming it is a lot. Next question is from Mariana22S. She asks, I'm assuming it is a girl. She asks,
what is your opinion on biohacking? It's basically all bullshit. That's the unfortunate reality
because the absolute best biohacks that they aren't telling you about, well, they're things
like getting good sleep and eating a lot of nutritious food and doing strength training and deloading in your strength training and not just running yourself into the ground and not drinking alcohol and not using recreational drugs and not looking at porn and reading books and managing stress levels. And I think you get the point. Megan Nomadic Fitness asks, do you always track
macros or do you sometimes eat more intuitively? I generally eat more intuitively. I only track
or measure if I'm cutting. And I just want to make sure that I'm not suffering from portion
distortion where my idea of a certain amount of like rice or vegetables or whatever has just
expanded because that's unfortunately what always happens is we we almost always are eating more than we think we are eating
and so i will track or count or plan at least in the beginning when i'm cutting just to get
everything dialed in to kind of calibrate my expectations portion sizes and so forth i think
it's also smart to do that every so often even even if you're not cutting. So if you've been eating intuitively for some time,
and let's say you've been noticing a slow and steady fat gain that you're not liking,
and you want to see what's going on, audit your food intake by tracking or planning or counting
your calories or macros for a couple of weeks. And you will probably find that, again, you are eating
more than you think you are eating. It could be that the tablespoon of peanut butter is not really
a tablespoon because the tablespoon that is 100 calories weighs, let's say, 18 grams. I'm not sure
that's accurate. It's probably close, though. And your tablespoon, though, is like 30 grams. Okay,
so that explains something. And then
the oatmeal that you're eating, you're thinking it's about a cup of oatmeal,
but that cup of oatmeal is supposed to weigh, now I'm not sure what a cup of oatmeal is supposed to
weigh. Let's just say it's 40 or 50 grams, but your cup is weighing like 70 grams. Okay. Because
it's a heaping cup. So those quote unquote hidden calories all add up. And it's hard to catch
that stuff unless you occasionally audit your intake. So for what I do, though, generally is I
kind of the same stuff every day, I eat stuff I like until I no longer I'm looking forward to it.
That for me is the point when I start to make changes. When it's time to make my salad, I'm
going to do that actually after I'm done here. And I really am not looking forward to it.
I'm not getting any salivary response.
And it's feeling just like a chore, like I just have to eat this.
Then I will make a change.
And in the case of a salad, I've been eating a salad every day for a long time.
And I just make changes to the ingredients.
Sometimes, you know, I recently started adding some goat cheese.
That was a nice addition.
Maybe some like little crunched up chips. That was a nice addition. Different kind of vegetables you can throw in there, especially if they're cooked, that can make it
different enough to prickle the pleasure processors. You can make various changes in
the dressing that often is enough where the salad itself doesn't really change, but you start using
different dressings, making different dressings.
And so I just do that basically with all meals.
And then my portions don't really change because my meal templates are not changing.
It's just some of the ingredients that go into each meal change.
Miss Cape asks, if you only have 10 minutes after lifting for cardio two or three times a week, would you do HIIT or LISS? So HIIT, high intensity interval or on an upright bike or a incumbent bike if it didn't have an air bike.
If that wasn't an option, I'd look for a rowing machine, basically something that is no impact.
And if the only option were a treadmill, then I would probably run sprints on the treadmill.
But I'd have to pay attention to my recovery because sprints is certainly on concrete. They,
and I'm speaking, I can remember in my twenties, there was a time when I would go out and I'd run
sprints for probably 15 to 20 minutes outside on concrete. And I was in my twenties. So I was as
physically invincible as I ever was going to be. And I had to stop actually, because my hips,
particularly my hip flexors,
they would get so sore that it was actually getting in the way of my squatting and deadlifting.
And it also sprinting on concrete puts a lot of stress on your joints. And although I didn't notice anything in that way when I was younger, I probably would notice that now. I'd notice a
little bit in my knees, they would not feel as good. Like they'd probably be a bit sore in my squatting.
And so I would avoid that.
And if you don't even have a treadmill, which is going to be less impact, then you can run
on grass.
That is better than running on the concrete.
You can also run up a hill, like a grassy hill.
Obviously, it can't be too steep, but that's even better in that you can get the intensity with less speed, which means less force, less impact. Okay, Practical Self Dev asks,
thoughts about a 5-2 diet optimized for fat loss, more protein? 5-2 is totally fine, which,
so you know, this is basically where you eat the way that you normally eat five days a week,
and then you eat a lot less two days a week.
Sometimes it's pure fasting.
I don't think those protocols generally recommend 48 hours of fasting.
So those two days are not back to back.
It'd be a 24 hour fast twice a week.
Other five, two iterations allow you to eat 600 to 800 calories two days per week.
And that's the one I would choose, by the way, out of the two.
I would only eat protein, basically. And that is a viable way to lose weight. You eat as you
normally do five days a week and then two days a week. Don't have to be back to back up to you
whenever just two days a week, you are only eating, let's call it 150 ish grams of protein.
Obviously there's going to be like trace amounts of fat, maybe trace amounts of carbs. If you want to throw in some vegetables, you don't want to exceed 800 to 1,000 calories. So
a lot of protein, maybe a piece of fruit, maybe a little bit of vegetables, maybe,
but that's it, two days a week. That can work quite well. So long as you don't
accidentally eat more on the five days to compensate for the two days. You should know though that that's an
effective way to slowly lose weight. You're not going to lose fat rapidly with that approach
just because the weekly calorie deficit that's required to lose even a pound of fat per week
is about 3,500, maybe even about 4,000 calories. And chances are, unless you're a big dude or a very
active woman, you are not going to be in a call it 1,500 to 2,000 calorie deficit on those two
days. It's going to be, it's going to be a smaller deficit. It's going to be a thousand, maybe 1,500,
maybe at most, you know, 17, 1800 calorie deficit. But that means that you can lose anywhere from probably one third to
two thirds, maybe a pound of fat per week using that five to approach. So Sakeeb one asks,
are there any differences in health between high carb slash fat diets when in a deficit?
Well, I would argue that high fat, low carb loses on one and possibly two important points. The first is cortisol levels
are generally higher when carbs are low and high cortisol makes cutting harder. It makes life
harder. And then two high fat, low carb cutting can result in poor nutrition depending on food
choices because of how little fruit and vegetables can fit into your diet. If you only have 50 grams of carbs per day, you are simply not going to be able to eat a few servings of fruit
and four or five, six servings of vegetables every day. You're just not going to be able to do it.
When calories are restricted, it's even easier to develop nutritional insufficiencies. It would
take a lot of calorie restriction to develop full-blown deficiencies,
but it's easier to develop nutritional deficiencies when calories are restricted
because you're eating less food. Sychandra246 asks, is it okay to train heavy weights while
preparing for long distance runs? Yes, yes it is, but you are going to have to manage your volume properly. And by volume, let's just
say hard sets, sets taken close to muscular failure, strength training here. And the reason
that is important is the volume of your hard sets is really what drains us. That's really what
causes systemic fatigue. That's what makes training most difficult to recover from, not the load per se.
Many people get that mixed up.
They think that it's the heavy weights that are the hardest to recover from, not the lighter
weights, but more sets.
So like, for example, many people would think that three sets of five with, let's say, you
know, one or two good reps left,
so pretty close to muscular failure on the back squat, they would say the three sets of five
is harder to recover from than, let's say, four, five, six sets of eight or 10 or maybe even 12
reps. Now, an experienced weightlifter wouldn't say that because anybody who has done that,
anybody who has done six sets of 10 on the
barbell squat close to failure knows that that is so much harder, so much harder in every way,
physically and psychologically and emotionally than the three sets of five. Now, the three sets
of five is harder on the joints. That's true. So people with joint issues or who just want to
reduce joint stress for a period will reduce the
load and they will just increase the reps per set and they'll find that their joints feel better,
but they are putting a lot more stress on their body as a whole, joints excluded. The amount of
systemic stress is much higher with the additional sets, even if it's lighter weight. Okay, last question comes from
Sam J. Smith, 25, and he asks, who is the best world leader to have lived in history? Well,
that I've read enough about to have an opinion on, I would say number one is probably Caesar
Augustus. Number two would be William the Conqueror.
Number three, Cyrus the Great.
Number four, George Washington.
Number five, Julius Caesar.
And number six, Alexander the Great.
Even though he was a terrible administrator,
but his military exploits are legendary, obviously.
And he's just one of my favorite characters in history.
So I got to put him on the list. 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.