Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Fixing a “Crashed” Metabolism, SI Joint Pain Fix, How to Bench 315, & More
Episode Date: October 4, 2023How do you fix a crashed metabolism? Should you eat more than your TDEE while bulking on non-exercise days? Are resistance bands as effective as free weights over a short duration? In this episode, ...I dive into these questions and a lot more, all sourced from my audience who regularly participate in my Q&A posts. As always, these questions come directly from my Instagram followers, who take advantage of my weekly Q&As in my stories. If you have a question you're dying to have answered, make sure you follow me on Instagram (@muscleforlifefitness) and look out for the Q&A posts. Your question might just make it into a podcast episode! 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! (1:13) - Do big meals stretch your stomach? (1:47) - Is the deadlift considered leg or back volume? (3:01) - Should I eat over my TDEE on non-exercise days during a lean bulk? (4:39) - Is training for abs still worth it? (5:35) - Can nuts aid in weight loss? (6:25) - What are strategies to fix a crashed metabolism? (9:44) - How can I progress from a 285lb to a 315lb bench press? (11:19) - Does your program involve too many sets and insufficient recovery? (13:50) - Find the Perfect Strength Training Program for You: www.muscleforlife.show/trainingquiz (14:36) - Can resistance bands replace weights effectively for a short duration? (16:51) - What are tips for lifting heavy with back issues? (18:26) - What's the best training/eating regimen for lowering blood pressure? (18:41) - Would Legion Athletics consider Dylan Mulvaney as a spokesperson? (19:06) - Can you suggest a back day routine? (22:11) - How can I return to my previous lifting weight after a 3-week break? (24:55) - Why should I transition from BBLS 1.0 to 2.0? (26:01) - Are there concerns about electromagnetic frequencies from AirPods? (26:56) - What additional remedies exist for SI Joint issues beyond abductor exercises? (29:53) - What are your opinions on weight gainer and mass gainer supplements? Mentioned on the Show: Find the Perfect Strength Training Program for You in Just 60 Seconds: http://www.muscleforlife.show/trainingquiz
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there, I am Mike Matthews, and this is Muscle for Life.
Thank you for joining me today for another episode, a Q&A episode,
where I answer questions that people ask me over on Instagram.
And if you want me to answer your questions, you gotta follow me on Instagram,
at Muscle for Life Fitness, and you gotta watch my stories,
where I occasionally put up a story asking for questions,
and then I answer a bunch of them there on Instagram.
I choose ones that are topical, or that many other people are asking or that I just
haven't already addressed a million times before. And then I bring everything over here to the
podcast where I can answer the questions in more detail. And so in today's episode, I am answering
questions about stomach stretching and hunger. If you eat too many large meals, can that stretch your
stomach out and make it harder to feel full? I answer a question about deadlift volume. How
should you be counting that in terms of your major muscle groups? There's a question here on
rest days when lean bulking, how many calories should you be eating on your rest days?
Abs training, is it worth it? Should you be doing
direct training for your abs? How to fix a crashed metabolism and more. Vivian, there are a couple of
E's and N's there in the username, asks, big size meals stretch your stomach and you need more and
more to feel satiated. True, Not quite, because regularly eating large meals increases stomach elasticity,
so how much your stomach can stretch, but not its size per se.
However, research shows that that can indeed influence how full you feel after a meal,
but the effect is small.
It is not likely to make much of a difference, practically speaking.
Candy Coombe, 37, asks, does the deadlift count as leg or back volume or both? Well,
if we want to be precise, I would count one set of a deadlift as one set for my hamstrings,
for my glutes, for my spinal erectors, and for my traps, and maybe one half of a set for
quads and lats. Some people also would add one half of a set to biceps, and that is probably not
entirely wrong, but I'm not sure that there is enough stimulus on the biceps to make much of a
difference. And so practically speaking, what that means is to get big b biceps to make much of a difference. And so practically
speaking, what that means is to get big biceps, you are going to have to do a fair amount of
direct biceps training, direct volume for your biceps, indirect volume provided by deadlifting
to whatever degree that is the case. Certainly by any sort of pulling that provides more effective
indirect volume to the biceps than deadlifting.
Those two things are not going to be enough.
If you want big biceps and you don't already have big biceps, you are going to have to
also do probably anywhere from six to 12 sets per week directly for your biceps.
Casey Dia asks, I'm on a lean bulk right now.
Do I eat over my TDEE, total daily
energy expenditure? Even on days I don't exercise. You can, if that's just one or two days per week.
So let's say you're lifting four or five days per week and you're off the other days, you can
maintain your calorie surplus on those days. But I would probably bring my calories down to maintenance
level just to try to gain a little bit less fat, which can matter if you are lean bulking over the
course of many months. And I definitely would do that if I were only training three or four days
per week, but I also probably wouldn't be lean bulking on three days per week and certainly not two days per week because I simply wouldn't be able to get in enough volume in three workouts per week to make
meaningful progress unless I was focusing on one major muscle group that I probably could do. So
that would entail doing five or six sets for whatever muscle group that is in each of those workouts. So let's
say it's a Monday, Wednesday, Friday routine, and I am trying to focus on my lower body. Each of
those workouts would entail five or six sets for my lower body, and then would probably entail
anywhere from, let's say, eight to 10 sets of volume for the rest of my body.
And that could be broken up in different ways,
but the goal primarily would be to progress
in my lower body training, that's the focus,
and to just maintain strength and muscle everywhere else.
Coach Gregory Groves asks,
abs training still worth it?
Yeah, sure.
If you want bigger, more pronounced ab
muscles in particular, the rectus abdominis muscles, if your heavy compound lifting is not
getting you the look that you want or is not getting you there fast enough, you can add
direct abs training to speed up that process or to give you bigger, more prominent abs. But if you are happy with the level of
development in your abs and you don't necessarily want bigger, blockier abs, you don't like that
look, for example, then no, there's no reason to do any direct abs exercises. Your compound
weightlifting that you're doing, assuming you are doing some sort of squat, some sort of hip hinge, some sort of overhead press on a regular basis, those exercises will
be enough to maintain the level of core development that you currently have. David E. Barraza asks,
are nuts helpful for weight loss? I've been told that not all their calories are absorbed by the
body. No, they're not helpful simply because
they have a lot of calories that are packed into a small package and those calories are well
absorbed. So whatever you heard is incorrect. That is not to say, though, that you can't eat
nuts when you're cutting. Of course you can. You just won't be able to eat a lot of them without
borking your meal plan. And that's why most effective
cutting meal plans out there, most meal plans that have helped people lose a significant amount of
fat are not going to include nuts. There are better ways to use those calories when your
calories are restricted and your primary goal or one of your primary goals with your meal plan is to stave off hunger and cravings.
Okay, Holly Bay Beaks 3 asks how to fix a crashed metabolism. Well, fortunately,
if you think that you have a crashed metabolism or a broken metabolism, you almost certainly don't.
Your metabolism is likely less damaged than you may think, but it may be, let's say,
underperforming for various reasons. And there
are a few key things that you can do to increase your body's metabolism, the performance of it.
The first one is to do regular strength training workouts and to focus on gaining muscle in those
workouts and flooding the body with anabolic hormones. And that's very simple to do. You just
follow fundamental strength training principles,
maybe with a little bit of bodybuilding hypertrophy work included in the regimen.
That's how all of my programs in my books are designed. So if you are a guy and you haven't
gained your first, let's say 25 pounds or so of muscle, check out Bigger Leaner Stronger. Or if
you are, let's say over 40, 45 years old and
you're brand new to strength training, I would recommend Muscle for Life instead. If you're a
woman and let's say you're looking to gain maybe it's 10 to 15 pounds of muscle in the right places
on your body, bring your body fat percentage down to an athletic level, Thinner Leaner Stronger
would be for you with the caveat of 40 to 45 plus brand new to all of this female
muscle for life is going to be a better start. And if you are an advanced weightlifter, if you're an
experienced weightlifter, you've gained a lot of muscle and strength, but you still can gain a bit
more. Your genetics will allow you to gain a bit more and you really want to push for it beyond
bigger, leaner, stronger would be the program for you. So that's the first point. And the second point is high protein intake, because that will support
your strength training. It will help you gain muscle, but it will also increase the total
thermic effect of food that you experience, which is the energy required to digest food.
So your metabolism has to run faster when you are eating more protein. My third tip is to eat a good variety of fruits and vegetables and possibly even take a high
quality multivitamin as well to plug any possible nutritional holes that might impair metabolism.
Adequate zinc intake, for example, is very important for metabolic function.
And you can get there through food, but it depends on what types of food that you like to eat. Okay, the next tip here is, and the final tip, number
four, is a high level of general activity, or let's say as high as you can get, given the constraints
of your lifestyle, outside of your strength training workouts. Ideally, you would not just do strength training and then sit in a chair or on a
couch or in a car for the vast majority of the rest of your days. And I understand for some people
that is just the way it is. But if you can incorporate just a bit of low intensity movement
throughout the day, if you can go on a couple of walks, if you can take the
stairs instead of the elevator, if you can park further away from the entrance to wherever you
have to go, maybe you have to visit people in person for your work. If you can just keep yourself
moving as much as you can, that also helps improve your metabolism. Okay, J77 Mueller asks,
I want to be able to bench 315 for one rep max
stuck at 280 or 285.
Biggest tip to hit 315?
The simplest tip, and this is where I would start,
just see if this works.
If you can just grab this bit of low-hanging fruit
and it'll just get you there,
is to bench press more often. Specifically, get on the bench three to five days per week. And now, of course, you have
to adjust your volume accordingly. I would not recommend doing more than probably 12 to 15 sets
of the bench press per week. And if you are going to do that, you probably don't need to do anything
else for your pecs or your shoulders, at least your front delts.
And so it's possible that simply increasing the frequency of the bench pressing can help you break
through this plateau, especially if you are only bench pressing once per week, because you are then
probably going to do more bench press volume as well. If you were to go from, let's say, one to
three sessions per week, I mean, how much bench pressing are you doing in your one bench press workout per week? Six, maybe nine sets? Well,
if you just go from that to three sessions and you do, let's say, four sets per session, you're now
up to 12 sets of bench pressing per week. So you have that increase in volume and you have the
increase in frequency, which alone can improve performance on an exercise.
And that applies to other exercises as well. Sometimes the easiest way to break through an
exercise specific plateau, especially if you are just doing the exercise once per week,
is to just do it more often. Jay Harris Takes asks, I wonder if your program constitutes too many sets and not enough recovery.
I'm not sure which program he's referring to, but my answer would be the same because I have put a
lot of work into developing all of the programs that I offer. And I would say, no, I would say
definitely not. Too many sets for a beginner, for example, would be in the range of probably 15
hard sets, which is a set taken close to failure for a major muscle for example, would be in the range of probably 15 hard sets, which is a set
taken close to failure for a major muscle group per week. It's not that 15 or even 20 hard sets
per week is going to be detrimental to a newbie. It can. It depends on individual factors, how their
body responds to training, how much stress they're dealing with, how well they're sleeping and
recovering and so forth. But research shows that for people who are new to weightlifting,
15 to 20 hard sets for a major muscle group per week does not appear to be as significantly
more effective for gaining muscle and gaining strength than call it 9 to 12 sets per week.
So unless you just like working out and you like to spend a lot of time in
the gym, why do more than you have to, especially when doing more volume after a certain point,
I would say after about probably 15 hard sets per week increases the risk of injury, if nothing
else, just repetitive stress injury. And that's not to say that weightlifting is dangerous,
but it does place stress on your body. And if you do too much of it, you can overstress your body and that can
cause problems. So anyway, coming back to the question, I would say that for newbies, anything
over probably 15 hard sets per major muscle group per week is inappropriately high or unnecessarily
high. And for advanced weightlifters, I'd say anything over 20 hard
sets per week, especially if there's a fair amount of heavy compound weightlifting is going to be too
many. Eventually those people are going to get hurt. And none of my programs violate those two
principles or those two thresholds. They don't take newbies beyond 12, probably hard sets per
major muscle group per week. And my programming for advanced weightlifters doesn't take newbies beyond 12, probably hard sets per major muscle group per week.
And my programming for advanced weightlifters doesn't take you beyond probably 16, 17 hard sets for any individual major muscle group per week.
And by the way, if you want to learn more about sets per week and hypertrophy, just
head over to legionathletics.com and search for hypertrophy spelled hyper trophy and look
for an article I wrote called how many
sets should you do for muscle hypertrophy and check it out. Have you ever wondered what strength
training split you should follow? What rep ranges you should work in? How many sets you should do
per workout or per week? Well, I created a free 60-second training quiz that will answer those questions for you and others, including how frequently you should train each major muscle group, which exercises you should do, what supplements you should consider, which ones muscleforlife.show, muscleforlife.show
slash training quiz, answer the questions and learn exactly what to do in the gym to gain more
muscle and strength. All right. Kelsey J asks, can bands short-term like 48 weeks be as effective as
weights? Well, it depends on how fit you are and
how strong your bands are. And if you're a fit person and you've never used bands before, you
might be a little bit surprised at how effective it can be. With a good variety of bands and some
basic bodyweight exercises, you can train every major muscle group fairly effectively, especially
if you have access to a couple of other things like a pull-up bar and a dip bar. reps per set and that's ending sets close to failure, if not right at failure, which is
easy and safe to do with bands because there's no risk of dropping weights on yourself or getting
stuck at the bottom of a squat or getting stuck on a deadlift and trying to grind through a rep
with a lot of weight to then have your form go out, which can lead to injury and so on.
Now, that said, if you are a fit person and you are used to doing proper weightlifting,
and now you're going to do some band workouts because maybe you're on the road or whatever
reason you're training at home for a bit, you probably are not going to make any progress to
speak of with bands, no matter what
you do, but you can likely maintain all of your muscle and probably a fair amount of your strength
as well. You are going to lose some exercise specific strength if you stop doing certain
exercises for a period of time, but that strength comes back quickly when you start doing the
exercises again. What's most important
is preserving the muscle because that is the primary source of our strength, not our skill
at the exercises. And if you want to learn more about band training, if you want to know how to
set up some band workouts, some effective workouts, head over to legionathletics.com, search for band and look for an article that I wrote called the Definitive Guide to Resistance
Band Workouts. Okay, let's move on to Lainey Bola, who asks how to lift heavy with back problems,
SI joint, disc herniation, arthritis, scared of more injury. Well, you're going to want to stick
with exercises that don't aggravate the issues. And that can include variations of deadlifting,
like the trap bar or the rack pull,
or maybe the Romanian deadlift or the stiff leg deadlift,
or no deadlifting whatsoever.
If that is simply out,
there are plenty of options that you can use
for horizontal and vertical pulling.
You can also look into reverse hypers, which can be great
for people with back issues. And I would also recommend trying to rehab your back, trying to
improve your back. Ideally, you'd be able to work with a competent physical therapist, ideally
someone who has worked a lot with athletes, because in my experience, those physical therapists have seen all kinds of injuries.
And if they have had a successful career working with athletes, they know how to get
results. They know how to quickly diagnose problems and fix problems because that is what
they are paid for by the athletes or by the teams. If they can't get the athletes back on the court, on the field,
they get fired. Now, if that is not an option for you, for whatever reason, if you have to work
through this yourself, pick up a copy of the book, The Back Mechanic by Stuart McGill, and go through
the diagnostic protocol in that book, and then do the remedial exercises called for because there's a good chance that it will help you a lot.
All right. M.B. Haywood asks, what is the best training or eating plan for lowering blood
pressure? Check out the DASH diet. That is an evidence-based diet for reducing blood pressure.
A lot of good evidence of efficacy. That's what I would do personally. Justin from Mind Pump asks,
would Legion ever
consider Dylan Mulvaney as a spokesperson? You know, that would be a great idea if I could figure
out a way to short a private company with maximum leverage. So if anybody out there wants to take me
up on that, then yeah, I would love to make a Dylan Mulvaney edition of Pulse. Pondra20 asks
a nice open-ended question, back day routine? Well, my favorite one-size-fits-most approach
for back training is to do one to four sets of a hip hinge, some sort of deadlift, three to four
sets of a horizontal pull, generally alternating every so often,
maybe every four to eight weeks between a unilateral and bilateral exercise. Unilateral
meaning one limb at a time, pulling one arm at a time, bilateral pulling both arms at a time,
as well as alternating between different angles of movement. Research shows that that can produce
better results over time. And then we would do three to four sets of a vertical pull exercise with the same notes
as the horizontal pull alternating between unilateral,
bilateral, different angles of movement.
And that's it.
Now, if you are not going to do the deadlifting
in this workout for whatever reason,
then I would say replace that exercise
with three to four sets of either more pulling.
And if you want to do that, what I would do just to keep it simple is one week, I would make it a
horizontal pulling exercise different than the other one that I'm doing in the workout. I would
choose one that trains my muscles in a slightly different way, slightly different range of motion,
slightly different angle. And then the following week, I would swap that for a vertical pulling exercise that's different than the other one that I'm
doing. So that's one option. Or you could consider doing some direct lat training,
like for example, the dumbbell pullover or a machine pullover. If your gym has a machine
pullover, a lot of gyms don't. My gym does. And I've used some pullover machines that I have not
liked in the past, similar to, I would say, seated hamstring curl machines can be hit and miss.
Some can feel very awkward. Some can feel great. That's been my experience with machine pullovers.
My gym has one from, I believe it's Hammer Strength that I really like. It feels really good. And it's great direct volume for the lats.
You can also do a standing lat pushdown.
That's another option.
And this would just depend on your physique.
So let's say you have plenty of middle back development.
You're happy with that, but your lats are lagging.
You want more lats.
Of course, you can continue doing your wider gripped
pull downs and wider gripped, well, pulls of any kind. But similar to my comments on training the
biceps earlier, you may benefit from doing some exercises that really just focus on the lats that
don't also require biceps and other back muscles that can fatigue before the lats fully fatigue.
And for what it's worth, that's what I had to do to get my lats to where I wanted them to be.
Simply deadlifting and doing various pulling exercises was not doing it. And so I started
doing some direct lat training, dumbbell pullovers. I mean, the exercises I just mentioned,
dumbbell pullovers, machine pullovers, and pushdowns and just worked at those and got stronger. And of course, slowly added muscle
to my lats until I was happy with what I saw. Riley D Harper seven asks, just had to take three
weeks off of lifting any advice on how to get back to my weight before training weight is what
they're talking about. Okay, so after a few weeks off, you should be able to go back in the gym and so that means that you're now working in the rep
range, let's say of four to six. And once you get one or two sets of six reps, you add maybe five
or 10 pounds of weight to the bar or to the dumbbells or to the machine. And that will knock
you down to probably four. Again, you'll lose, generally speaking, you'll lose about two reps
for every 10 pounds total that you add to an exercise. And for
dumbbell exercises, that means five pounds per dumbbell. So 10 pounds total, that will usually
knock your performance down about two reps. So you have your weight. Once you can get one or two sets
of six reps in this case, because you once could do eight, maybe 10 reps with this weight. Now it's
four to six. All right, you got six, six, you're adding 10 pounds to the exercise. In some people that is a little bit too aggressive. They will lose more
than two reps. I see that more often with women, in which case I would recommend adding five pounds
to the exercise whenever possible, not always possible with dumbbells, for example. And if
that's the case, maybe you need to work up to three sets of your
rep targets, maybe three sets of six, and then you go up 10 pounds on that dumbbell exercise,
and it should stick. That progress should stick. You should only lose about two reps.
All right, you're at four now, slightly heavier weight, and you just work your way back up to
six, rinse and repeat. And if you don't like working in the four to six rep range,
you can apply this general approach to any rep range. So instead of using the weight that you
were previously lifting for, let's say, eight to 10 reps, let's choose something that previously
you could lift for 12 to 15 reps. And now you can get, call it eight, nine, 10, probably closer to eight and repeat
that double progression system that I just explained. And if you want to learn more about
double progression, and if you don't know really what it is, I mean, I just explained it in essence,
but if you don't know how to implement it, you need to learn it because it is the single most effective model for progression for most
people. And to learn more about it, head over to legionathletics.com, search for double progression,
and you'll find an article I wrote on it. And next, we have a question from Ryan B08. They ask,
why should someone switch to BBLS 2.0, so my second edition of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger,
to BBLS 2.0, so my second edition of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, versus sticking with BBLS 1.0, the program in the first edition, what's better? So in BBLS 1.0, the first edition that I
released many years ago, it came with a reverse pyramid program, which can work well. However,
I think BBLS 2.0, the program in the newest edition, the current edition that's out,
the second edition, I do think that that program over time will take you further toward your genetic potential than
BBLS 1.0. But if I had to sequence them, I would say do Bigger, Leaner, Stronger until you can no
longer make progress on that. And then I would say do BBLS, Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger 1.0.
If you have it, if you don't, you don't need it. You don't
have to go trying to find it somewhere on the internet. I would say just get the current second
edition of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, and you will do just fine. But if you have it,
if you like it, do BBLS 1.0 after BLS until you are no longer making progress or no longer enjoying
it at all, followed by BBLS 2.0. The JBS family asks, thoughts on electromagnetic frequencies from AirPods?
Well, the weight of the evidence is that it's unlikely to be an issue because it's non-ionizing
radiation, but there is evidence that suggests that heavy use of mobile phones that also emit
non-ionizing radiation may increase the risk of certain tumors. Now, in the case of AirPods,
radiation may increase the risk of certain tumors. Now, in the case of AirPods, they emit much less radiation than phones, of course. So it's hard to say whether the research on phones also applies
to AirPods. And so my personal takeaway is I think it's probably smart to not have a cell phone
on your ear for many hours every day. And if you're on the phone many hours every day, let's say for your work and you are concerned about radiation, even lower amounts of radiation coming from AirPods,
then just get something that's wired, get a wired alternative. Xdmw08 asks, I also have SI joint
issues. Anything else to help in addition to adductor exercises that can help if you're
having SI joint issues, if your adductor muscles are not as strong as they should be. And quickly
for context, the reason this person is asking me this question is I have mentioned a couple of
times on Instagram that my SI joint on my left side was bothering me. And this goes back to a
deadlifting injury that occurred many years ago,
nothing too extreme, but probably some disc herniation that had to heal. And it bothers me
now and then. And so I have looked into what I can do about it and strengthening the adductor
muscles can help. And that did help me. Another thing that helped me, and this would be to answering the question, is to check out your internal rotation on the problem
side. Because if your internal rotation of your hip is restricted, then that can lead to SI joint
issues, especially if you are using your hips vigorously like you do in weightlifting. And you
can improve that with daily stretching. That can help a lot. Something else that I should mention is you should audit your form on your
squats and your deadlifts. And specifically, you need to make sure that you are really getting deep
into your hips in those exercises, that you're really pushing your hips back, not just sitting
straight up and down or getting a little bit back with your hips and
then going straight up and down. And you know you're doing this correctly, generally speaking,
when you really feel your hamstrings working, especially on a deadlift. When you are getting
in position to pull the bar, you should feel a lot of tension in your hamstrings, even going up into your glutes. You should notice that
your shins are more or less straight up and down, more or less perpendicular to the floor. They
should not be angled significantly forward because if they are angled significantly forward, if your
knees, for example, are right over your toes when you start to pull, you are not deep enough into your hips and you are going
to place a lot of strain on your SI joints, on your hips. Now, that tip applies more to the deadlift
than the squat. Depending on how your body is designed, your knees probably are going to have
to travel more forward in the squat to do it correctly than in the deadlift. But if your knees are traveling significantly
forward and you are not feeling a significant amount of engagement in your hamstrings,
particularly in your glutes at any point in the squat, then you are probably not getting deep
enough into your hips. You are not keeping those hips back or pushing them back as far as they need to be.
And again, that is going to place an undue amount of strain on your hips, on your SI joints.
Okay. Yashwant Singh asks, any thoughts about weight gainer and mass gainer supplements?
Most of those supplements are garbage. They are full of cheap and relatively non-nutritious carbs,
as well as fat. Sometimes even the protein is not the highest quality. Instead of doing that,
I would highly recommend figuring out how you can eat enough food to gain muscle,
gain strength effectively. If you need to add a protein supplement, that's fine. You can get plenty of
high quality protein supplements, but I would not recommend trying to replace whole meals with mass
gainer or weight gainer supplements. 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
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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.