Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Intermittent Fasting, Isometric Exercise, "Selling Out," and More . . .
Episode Date: January 31, 2020I’ve churned through over 150,000 emails, social media comments and messages, and blog comments in the last 6 years. And that means I’ve fielded a ton of questions. As you can imagine, some questi...ons pop up more often than others, and I thought it might be helpful to take a little time every month to choose a few and record and share my answers. So, in this round, I answer the following questions: 1. Why haven’t you sold out yet? 2. What is your current take on intermittent fasting? 3. Does isometric exercise work? 4. How much does time under tension contribute to muscle growth? If you have a question you’d like me to answer, leave a comment below or if you want a faster response, send an email to mike@muscleforlife.com. 2:32 - Why haven’t you sold out yet? 14:26 - What is your current take on intermittent fasting? 19:51 - Does isometric exercise work? 23:27 - How much does time under tension contribute to muscle growth? --- Mentioned on The Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://legionathletics.com/coaching/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Mike here. And if you like what I'm doing on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service where we can help you get in the best shape of your life. My team and I have helped people of all ages, circumstances, and needs. So no matter how
complicated or maybe even hopeless you might think your situation is, we will figure it out and we
will get you results. Every diet and every training program is 100% custom. We provide daily workout logs and do weekly accountability calls. Our clients get
priority email service and discounts on supplements and other products, and the list of benefits goes
on and on. So to learn more, head over to www.legionathletics.com slash coaching. That's legionathletics.com slash coaching and schedule
your free consultation call. I should also mention that there is usually a wait list and new slots do
fill up very quickly. So do not wait. If this sounds even remotely interesting to you, go ahead and schedule your call now. Again, that URL is
legionathletics.com slash coaching. Hello, my friend. It is time to answer people's questions,
to answer questions that I've been asked via Instagram, DMs, and email mostly. So how this
works is people ask me questions, which I answer, and then I note down some of the more interesting ones or the ones that I get asked more frequently and answer them publicly as well in these Q&As.
in the next Q&A. Then either follow me on Instagram and send me a DM. Muscle for Life Fitness is my handle, username, whatever the term is, at Muscle for Life Fitness,
or send me an email, mikeatmuscleforlife.com. All right. So here are the questions I'm going
to be answering today. Why haven't you sold out yet? That's the first one. What is your current
take on intermittent fasting? Next one. does isometric exercise work? And lastly,
how much time, how much does time under tension contribute to muscle growth?
So the first one, why haven't I sold out yet? This is actually something that I've been asked,
I would say every month or two for a couple of years now, as people have seen my things grow,
seen Legion grow and seen my book sales grow and so forth. And it's either why haven't I sold out
yet? Or when am I going to sell out? And the answer of course is I haven't been offered enough money yet. Duh. I mean,
everyone has their price, right? So George Soros, if you happen to be listening and you could use a
fitness czar for the new world order, let's talk. I'm your guy. Hail Satan. Okay. Okay. The real
answer why I have not sold out yet and don't plan on selling out,
which I could do, for example, a very easy way to sell out would be to cut the costs of
Legion's formulations down. So Legion's cost of goods hovers around 60%. That's very high.
By normal business standards for businesses that sell stuff, you want your
cost of goods around 40%. That'd be considered good. And if you can get it down to like 30%,
that's very good. So by normal business standards, Legion's cost of goods is way too high. A business
consultant would say, what are you doing? You're bad at this. Get that number down.
A business consultant would say, what are you doing? You're bad at this. Get that number down.
The problem is supplements are not like t-shirts. You can make a t-shirt and have a really good margin and have people buy the t-shirt and like the t-shirt and be totally fine with the entire
transaction. The t-shirt works exactly as described. It sat there on a rack and you liked
how it looked and you liked how it fit and so you liked how it fit, and so you bought it. Now, supplements are different. People are buying them for different reasons, and you have to
promise real benefits and real results. People are not spending hundreds of dollars a month
on products thinking that they'll probably do more or less nothing. Maybe there's a small chance
they'll do a little bit
of something some of the time. And to produce supplements that can deliver enough benefit to
warrant the expense, you just have to spend a lot of money on them. Good ingredients are expensive.
Good doses are expensive. So much so that if a supplement has a markup of greater than three to four times, it's almost certainly
a subpar product. And in some cases to produce really good products, you need a markup of two
times. So just doubling your money. If something costs about $20 to produce, such as my whey protein isolate, whey plus, costs me, when you
factor all the expenses in, to get one of those from the manufacturer to you costs me about $20
and we sell them for, I think, $40. Maybe it's $45 now. We have to raise some of our prices.
I'm not sure if we've raised that yet, but I think it's about $40 right now. So you hear that and
you go, okay, well, you're doubling your money. You're producing it for 20
and you're selling it for 40. That's pretty good, right? No, that's terrible. By business standards,
by normal business standards, that is horribly unprofitable. Again, someone from the outside
looking in, not understanding why I can do that and make it work, which really comes down to my marketing
expenses and my advertising expenses are way, way lower than my competitors because I'm able to
drive a lot of interest through stuff like this, through recording videos and recording podcasts
and writing books and writing articles. But normally you don't have that. Most supplement companies don't
have someone like me willing to do that for less annual income than I could get just shilling for
somebody else. Now, there are other reasons why I'm doing it, not just the immediate cashflow.
There's obviously long-term value I'm building in the business. And I like that I have real products that I can stand
behind. But again, when you look at the short-term view, the short-term financial view, it really
doesn't make sense. Because again, by normal business standards, you want to have at least
a five times markup and that's considered not very good. You should think twice about selling something that only has a five times
markup. You really want to get into the eight times plus range. That's the solidly profitable
range. So if something costs you $1 to produce and bring to market, excluding marketing costs,
but to make it available for purchase, then you want to be able to sell it for at least $8.
it available for purchase, then you want to be able to sell it for at least $8. That's considered good. And again, there are a number of reasons for that. And there's a lot of logic and a lot
of thought and experience behind that recommendation. And it takes into account things like
middlemen, the costs of wholesalers and distributors, for example, which you normally
need to work with to get your product to market, which I don't work with, for example, I'm just direct to consumer. So I can cut all that
cost out and just put it into the quality of the product itself. And that's what I have to do just
to sell good products. I don't think I'll ever see a six times markup and a good product, unless
maybe it's like a vitamin D pill and people are willing to buy my vitamin D pills, maybe then,
maybe it's like a vitamin D pill and people are willing to buy my vitamin D pills. Maybe then,
but a true proprietary formulation, not proprietary blend, but a formulation,
a unique formulation that's created by my scientific advisory board, not some off the shelf formulation. I'll never get to six times because the ingredients are just too expensive
and the doses are too expensive and to meet that high
standard of very good. Not okay. I want my products to be very good. It just costs a lot of money.
For example, take my multivitamin Triumph. When it's all said and done to produce that and get
it to you, it costs me about $18 to $19. So then by normal business standards, I would have to sell that for anywhere from $120
to like $150, $160 for it to be solidly profitable. And there aren't many people out there who are
going to be spending that kind of money on a multivitamin. Anyway, that's just to give you
an example of how I could sell out. I could systematically work down my cost of goods by just removing ingredients slowly. No major
changes, lowering doses, removing ingredients. So maybe over the course of the next year or so,
I've reduced my COGS by anywhere from 20 to maybe even 40% without too many people really noticing
what's going on. Now, if I were to do that, it could mean literally millions of dollars
straight to me. That's money I could just take out of the business if I wanted to.
And so back to the question, why am I not doing that? And the answer is mostly something that I
covered in a podcast that I recorded a couple of weeks ago called Eight Ancient Laws for Happier
and Simpler Living or something like that.
And that is, I really do believe in doing the right thing even when it costs you something.
I believe the right thing is simply treating consumers the way I would want to be treated.
And that means producing really good, high quality products that can be honestly sold
and that are backed by good scientific
research. That's how I would want to be treated as a consumer. And so that's what I'm doing because
I feel like that's the right thing to do, even though it's costing me millions of dollars
personally. Now, why? Why do that? When I could just as easily rationalize cutting corners to
make more money. I mean, I could start listing off
probably 10 different ways that I could try to tell myself that doing that is okay or is even
the greater good. But none of that would change the fact that I still would instinctively and
inherently know what is right and what is not right and know that I wasn't doing the right thing.
And so then I would have to continually apply pressure to keep that submerged because anytime
I started to look at it, of course, cognitive dissonance would kick in and I would start to
feel uncomfortable. And so then I'd have to try even harder to suppress that instinctive knowledge that I would have. And you do that enough and you
really start to lose your sense of right and wrong. That signal gets lost among all the noise.
And I've seen this happen firsthand in a number of people over the years. I've seen them compromise their integrity for money. And I've seen how it played
out over the course of years, in some cases, 10 plus years. And the results were never pretty.
Their lives were in shambles in the end, one for one. And I don't think that is a coincidence. Again, this is something I've spoken
about and I've written about elsewhere and I'm already rambling quite a bit, so I won't rehash
it here. But I really do think that if you do your best to do what is right and what you know is right, then you can expect to be repaid in kind by the universe,
by your God, by whatever form of spirituality you might believe in. Now, on the flip side,
I can make plenty of money, more money than I need, being honest and doing the right thing
and treating people the way I would like to be treated, creating good products, creating good services, taking care of customers, making things right when we make mistakes.
And so why not just do that? And one other thing of note is I want to be a good example.
My business is to be a good example of the growing conscious capitalism movement where
the primary goal isn't just to make profits
at the expense of everything. The primary corporate goal is not to just, as Ken Galbraith
said, engulf everything, but instead to foster healthier and more functional people, markets, and societies, and to do that profitably.
But where there are more metrics and there are qualitative metrics, not just quantitative
profits. And so for example, that is why this year Legion is going to be switching to 100%
recycled plastic. And we are going to partner with a charity. We haven't picked the exact one yet. We have a
couple that we've narrowed it down to, but we're going to be partnering with a charity that works
to clean up plastic waste around the world. I particularly like a couple of charities that are
doing this in the ocean. And we're going to look at offering refill bags. So you can have a recycled plastic way plus bottle, for example, that you
keep and you can recycle it yourself when you're done and get a new one, or you could keep it and
buy a bag, which obviously has less of an environmental impact and then refill your tub
with the bag. I really liked that option personally, and I will be surveying it around
soon. I just have to finish the rebrand redesign that we are in the middle of, toward the tail end
of, and this recycled plastic initiative and this charity setup. So once all that is done,
I'm then going to look at refill bags. I think it's a cool option. I don't know how many people
will take me up on it, but I think it's worth offering option. I don't know how many people will take me up on it,
but I think it's worth offering. Okay. That was a long answer to that first question. Let's move on
to the next question. What is your current take on intermittent fasting? Well, the research is
ongoing. There is a new IF study coming out every several months now. And there are several interesting ones underway,
including one that I have helped fund. And I also provided protein powder too, that's being led
by Dr. Andy Galpin and Menno Henselmans. But as of right now, the weight of the evidence is
the results of intermittent fasting as far as body composition goes are just unimpressive.
If you are expecting to lose fat faster or gain muscle faster with IF, there's nothing inherent
in it that would suggest, and this is again with our current literature, there's nothing that
suggests that it's going to make any sort of significant difference. You have to keep in mind that a lot of the research up until now that has
been done on IF has been done with obese, non-lifting people. And even those studies have
showed that when calorie deficits are matched, if the eating window is eight hours or 15 hours,
it doesn't produce different results in the way of fat loss or muscle gain.
And if you look at the bit of research that has been done on IF with resistance trained individuals, it's more or less the same.
You see no more fat loss than traditional dieting when calories and protein are matched, no more muscle gain.
than traditional dieting when calories and protein are matched, no more muscle gain. You do see muscle retention not being a problem. So that was once a thing where people were concerned that if
they used intermittent fasting when they're cutting, they were going to lose muscle. I think
we can say definitively that's not the case, but there is no good evidence currently that there is any inherent benefit.
The benefit would be if you like intermittent fasting and some people do. Some people like
really just skipping breakfast is what it comes down to. They stop eating after dinner or maybe
they have one last protein snack at maybe 9 p.m. and then they don't eat until somewhere 12, 1, 2 the following day. They skip
breakfast. Some people just like that, and it helps with compliance, mostly because they like,
or I'd say usually in my experience, because they like eating fewer, smaller meals when they're
cutting because they find that more satisfying than taking their restricted calories and spreading them out over four or five or six meals starting
at 7 a.m. Now, as I mentioned, there is a study underway that I'm looking forward to reading once
it is published. That's why I'm helping fund it. And that is the study that Dr. Annie Galpin and
Menno Henselmans are doing on a lean gains style of intermittent fasting with resistance trained individuals
and looking at muscle growth in particular in a number of different ways. So who knows,
maybe we've been missing something and those are two really smart guys that might be able to tease
that out. We'll have to see. Now, as far as intermittent fasting and health goes, it's a
lot of the same. You have a lot of claims of increasing longevity through autophagy, for example, and that is something that I recorded a rather long podcast on some time ago. You can find it in my podcast feed if you just search for autophagy. is there do seem to be some interesting effects, but there are a lot of confounding variables.
And it is disingenuous to say that there is conclusive evidence that fasting regularly
is going to greatly enhance your health and your longevity. And especially if you are also
exercising regularly, eating well, maintaining a healthy body composition, sleeping enough, you know, doing the fundamentals, the things that we do know for a fact, enhance your health and
enhance your longevity.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service. Now, my team and I have helped
thousands of people of all ages, circumstances, and needs. So no matter how complicated or maybe
even hopeless you might think your situation is, we will figure out how to get you the results you want.
Every diet and training program we create is 100% custom.
We provide daily workout logs
and we do weekly accountability calls.
Our clients get priority email service
as well as discounts on supplements
and the list goes on and on.
To learn more, just head over to legionathletics.com slash coaching.
And if you like what you see, schedule your free consultation call.
Now, there's normally a wait list to work with our coaches,
and new slots do fill up very quickly.
So if this sounds even remotely interesting to you,
head over to legionathletics.com slash coaching now
and schedule your free consultation call. And let's see if our program is a good fit for you.
Okay. The next question, does isometric exercise work? Now, in case you are not familiar with
isometric exercise, it is simply exercise that involves contracting your muscles,
but not lengthening or shortening them. So there's
not a range of motion, just contraction. So for example, with traditional exercise,
let's say with your biceps, you are going to start in a lengthened position and you're going to
contract, and then you're going to lengthen and contract. And the contraction and the lengthening
are two different types of stresses that you place on the muscle. With isometric exercise though, you might contract to the top and just hold there
until you can hold no longer. For example, that would be an isometric exercise, one rep basically
that you just hold up there. Or in the opposite case, you might, let's say, load a barbell and hold it in a fully
lengthened position and start to contract a little bit, just enough to where your biceps are
noticeably contracting, but they're still in a lengthened position. You're not at the top of the
rep and you just hold there for some period of time. That could be another version of an isometric
biceps exercise. So how effective is this? Well, the specificity principle applies here, meaning
that isometric exercise can help you get stronger in that position that you're training,
but that isn't necessarily going to carry over to the traditional exercise. So for example,
if you want to get better at the squat,
you're going to have to squat. You can't just isometrically contract your leg muscles and then expect that to immediately transfer over to the squat and immediately make you stronger on the
squat. That said, you can profitably include some isolation exercise in your training in the form
of paused reps, which is something that I'm
going to be recording a podcast on this week. So if you're interested in that, keep an eye out,
or I guess an ear out. And what this comes down to is in a paused rep, you deliberately pause
for a couple seconds at a certain point in an exercise, and then you finish the rep.
Now, the points at which you pause are normally the sticking points in an exercise and then you finish the rep. Now the points at which you pause are normally the
sticking points in an exercise. The points when it is particularly hard to keep going. So in the
squat, for example, that's when you're in the hole and you are transitioning from lowering to raising.
That's you have several inches there that are very difficult. And so when most people do paused reps
on the squat, that's where they're pausing because they're trying to increase their strength, particularly at that point in the lift. And it also helps them work on their technique because even a slight wavering from side to side or front to back can make it harder to effectively transfer that force into the ground and get up when the
weights are heavy and you are deep into a set. Anyway, that's something I'll be talking more
about in the podcast on pause drip. So I'll just leave it at that. Back to isometric exercise.
Another good use of isometric exercise is for strengthening your grip. So barbell holds, plate pinches, those are
isometric exercises that work if you need to, or if you want to improve your grip. Isometric
exercise can also be useful if you are working through or working around an injury that prevents
you from being able to use a full range of motion. And isometric exercise can be useful for core training. So for
example, planks, good core exercise, isometric. All right, next question. How much does time
under tension contribute to muscle growth? So this is one that I've been asked many times over
the years. I even wrote an article on it some time ago, which I'm going to be updating soon.
And I may just record a podcast on this specific point. But to summarize here,
all right, so you've undoubtedly heard the bodybuilder adage that muscles don't know weight,
they only know tension. And so if you just increase your time under tension, you can
increase muscle growth. You don't necessarily have to increase intensity, load, weights that you're lifting. And that sounds pretty cool because then
theoretically you could use lighter weights, which would be easier on your joints and safer,
you know, lower risk of injury and just slow your reps down. For example, increasing the time
under tension and gain muscle just as effectively as traditional training, which would entail,
of course, faster reps and heavier weights. Unfortunately, it doesn't pan out. A number
of studies have shown that traditional weightlifting results in more muscle growth
than super slow training, slow rep training. Why is that? Well, while the time under tension crowd isn't entirely wrong
that your body does need to be exposed, your muscles do need to be exposed to greater tension
over time to continue getting bigger and stronger, what they miss is that it's not the duration of
the tension that matters nearly as much as the amount of tension being produced in the muscles.
In other words, to achieve progressive tension overload, which is the primary mechanical driver
of muscle growth, you have to force your muscles to contract harder over time, to produce more
tension, more force, not simply produce the same amount of tension for longer periods of time.
And we know that the most effective way to achieve progressive tension overload, to
increase those levels of tension being generated in the muscles, is to add weight to the bar,
lift heavier weights. And so focusing too much on time under tension is a case of missing the
forest for the trees. Instead, what you should do is use a traditional training tempo of 2-1-2,
you know, two seconds down, slight pause at the bottom, or even no pause at the bottom,
and two seconds up, and just focus on adding weight to the bar, on getting stronger, on increasing your whole body strength over time.
And eventually when that becomes very hard to do, when it becomes very hard to add even 10, 20 pounds to a lift, when that might take upward of a year, you can better increase the amount of training stimulus, the amount of tension being produced
in the muscles by just doing more sets, adding volume, not taking your current volume and slowing
down the reps. And by the way, if you are curious how exactly to go about that, how to program that
little shameless plug for a book that I am wrapping up, which is the new second edition of
Beyond Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger, which is meant for intermediate and advanced weightlifters. It's the sequel to
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which is meant for people who are new to weightlifting or new to
proper weightlifting. And in that book, Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, you are not only going
to learn the theory of what it takes to break out of the rut that you inevitably fall into as an
intermediate weightlifter. And if you have been in the gym lifting consistently for more than,
let's say three years, you know exactly what I'm talking about. Everything moves along
until eventually it slows down and it slows down more. And then you find yourself really just treading water and not knowing what to do.
You know, it's a similar phenomenon of when you were new, not knowing what to do.
And you hear about all these different training techniques and all these different methods and all these different ways of programming and exercises.
And you then hopefully find your way to the fundamentals, the 20% that deliver 80% of the
results. But what do you do when those fundamentals no longer seem to be producing results? Well,
oftentimes then you go back to trying a bunch of weird stuff. Now, fortunately, the fundamentals
still work. You don't need to abandon them. You don't need to make major changes to your programming,
but you do have to change the right things and you have to change them correctly.
There are many wrong ways to respond when you get stuck in a rut as an intermediate weightlifter,
and there are only a few right ones. And one of the key ones, and I'm going to be talking about
this at length in Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, and the program itself is going to reflect this. One of the key ones is volume. The amount of
volume, the amount of hard sets per major muscle group per week, you can look at it that way.
There are different ways to look at volume and in certain contexts, certain ways are more
suitable than others. But in the context of this discussion, hard sets per major muscle group,
hard working sets per major muscle group per week works just fine. And so nine or 10 hard sets per
major muscle group per week, so long as you are taking those sets close to technical failure,
so they're actually hard, that's enough. When you're new or new to proper weightlifting,
you will do great doing just that. But eventually that's not
enough volume to continue making progress. That becomes maintenance volume, regardless of what
you do with your intensity. For example, regardless of how much weight is on the bar and regardless of
the different rep ranges that you might be working in and how you're periodizing your training.
If you're not doing enough volume, if you're not doing enough volume, if you're not
doing enough hard sets per major muscle group per week, you are going to get stuck. And again,
to put a number to that, I would say most intermediate weightlifters need to do upward
of 15 or 16 hard sets per major muscle group per week, regardless of the rep range. And there are
reasons to work in different rep ranges, but regardless of that, that's, I'd say a fair estimate of how much volume it takes as an
intermediate weightlifter to continue making progress. Anyway, those are things that I'm
going to be talking about in this new second edition of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger,
which should be out this summer. I am more or less done with the manuscript and it's in the hands
of the editor and we're working through that. And there are some odds and ends that need to
get done, some bonus material stuff. It's going to come with spreadsheets that are going to allow
you to very easily program your workouts. And it's going to come with meal plans and all the
key takeaways neatly summarized and other nice things.
And so there's still a bit of work to be done before I can release it.
But I do think this summer is doable.
I'm going to say probably later in the summer, but this year for sure.
And I do think late summer.
That's what I'm doing on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service where we can help you get in the best shape of your life. My team and I have helped people of all ages, circumstances, and needs. So no matter how
complicated or maybe even hopeless you might think your situation is, we will figure it out
and we will get you results. Every diet and every training program is 100% custom. We provide daily
workout logs and do weekly accountability calls. Our clients get
priority email service and discounts on supplements and other products, and the list of benefits goes
on and on. So to learn more, head over to www.legionathletics.com slash coaching. That's legionathletics.com slash coaching and schedule
your free consultation call. I should also mention that there is usually a wait list and new slots do
fill up very quickly. So do not wait. If this sounds even remotely interesting to you, go ahead and schedule your call now. Again, that URL is
legionathletics.com slash coaching. All right. Well, that's it for today's episode. I hope
you found it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor,
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