Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Minimizing Water Retention, Mind-Muscle Connection, White Vs. Whole Wheat, & More
Episode Date: April 28, 2023How can you reduce water retention? Are seed oils as bad as “they” say? What am I doing to heal my biceps tendinitis? How important is the mind-muscle connection? Should you eat white or whole whe...at carbs while bulking? 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! (1:30) - What are ways you combat water retention? (5:12) - Where do you get the memes you post? (6:00) - Are seed oils really that bad for you? Or is it just another fad? (6:45) - What have you been doing to help the biceps tendon healing process? (18:05) - How important is the mind-muscle connection? (18:14) - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan (21:50) - White versus whole wheat carbs on a bulk? (24:55) - Should I take a week off if I have a sore throat or lung infection? (26:10) - What is the latest conspiracy theory you believe in? (26:30) - How many reps and sets for increasing bone density? (28:10) - What are your thoughts on alcohol consumption? 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, hello. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today for a
new episode, a new Q&A episode, my 41st Q&A episode where I answer questions that people
ask me over on Instagram. Every week or two on Wednesday or Thursday, usually I put up a story
asking my followers to ask me questions and then I pick questions that are interesting or topical
or questions that I haven't answered a million times before already, especially here on the
podcast. And I answer them briefly there on Instagram. And then I bring everything over
here to the podcast where I can share more in-depth answers. And so if you want me to
answer your questions, follow me on Instagram at muscle4lifefitness, F-O-R spelled out, not the numeral four, and look for that story every Wednesday or Thursday
and submit whatever questions you want.
And if I find any of your questions interesting, topical, or if they are things that other
people tend to ask that I haven't already answered many times before, then I may answer your question or questions.
So in today's episode, I'm going to be answering questions about water retention. How do you
minimize water retention? Seed oils, are they as bad as many people claim? How I've been dealing
with some biceps tendonitis that has been nagging me for a couple of months
now. It went away about a month or so ago, and then I re-aggravated it, and I'll explain
how I did that so you don't make the same mistake, how important the mind-muscle connection is,
and more. Okay, the first question comes from Julian Elias, and he asks,
what are ways you combat water retention? I wake up lean some days and
puffy on others. Well, the most common reasons for large fluctuations in water retention are
large fluctuations in daily water, salt and carbohydrate intake, as well as daily stress
levels. So specifically, if your water intake goes down, if you drink quite a bit
less water than you usually drink, then you can notice that when you do start drinking more water,
you tend to hold a bit more of it. You look a bit more bloated. If you eat a lot more salt
than usual, which is very easy to do because the recommendation, the general recommendation for
sodium intake is about a
teaspoon of salt per day. Now you can have more salt than that, especially if you are physically
active and you sweat a lot. So let's say you get up to two teaspoons of salt per day, about four
grams of sodium per day, but still that's only two teaspoons of salt per day. Your body almost
certainly does not need more than that unless maybe you do a lot of endurance exercise
outside in the heat and you are sweating a lot every day. So let's say you have a treat meal or
two. Maybe it's a treat day. Maybe it's a couple of off-plan meals and you go out to restaurants.
And generally speaking, restaurant food is going to be very salty because salt brings out flavor. And so most things that you like to eat probably contain a lot more sodium than recommend it if you have high blood pressure, but if you are
otherwise healthy, it's okay if you do that now and then. Again, not a daily regular occurrence.
However, you are probably going to notice more water retention the next day. Your weight is
going to be probably a couple of pounds higher if you also were just staying hydrated throughout
the day and especially if you also ate more carbohydrate.
So that was on my list.
Eating more carbohydrate causes your body to retain more muscle,
causes your muscles to retain more muscle too, which is cool.
You can wake up with a bit of a pump if you eat a lot of carbs
and you eat a lot of sodium at night, but you might also look a bit fatter.
And I also mentioned stress levels. So if you
have a very stressful day, that can cause increased water retention because of increased cortisol
levels. So that's the stress hormone, one of the hormones that your body produces in response to
stress that triggers that fight or flight response. And that is fine and normal. Acute spikes in cortisol
are not necessarily bad. It becomes bad if it happens too often and cortisol levels are
chronically elevated. But acute elevation of cortisol levels is a good thing, actually.
That's an appropriate physiological response, but it can result in additional water retention.
And how much really varies from person to person.
Some people really notice it. Some people do not. Now, if you keep those things relatively steady,
if you keep your daily water intake, your salt or sodium intake, your carbohydrate intake,
and your stress levels on a day-to-day basis, there aren't major changes in any of those things,
then you probably will not feel bloated very often unless there is another issue. Your water
retention levels and your bloating will remain normal and you should have minimal bloating.
Okay. Adriatic Official asks, where do you get the memes that you post? So on my Instagram, several times per week, I share five to 10 memes in my stories. And given the eccentric character of these memes, some people are wondering, where do I find these things? Well, I actually don't find them per se. I do, but I find them in a group chat with one guy in particular who spends really an
unhealthy amount of time just wading through the underbelly of the internet in search of memes.
And I pick the ones that are appropriate, I think, for sharing publicly. And I put them up on my
Instagram. And if I have piqued your curiosity and you want to see these
memes for yourself, follow me on Instagram at MuscleForLifeFitness. Okay, CAA1997 asks,
seed oils as bad as people say or just another fad? Well, most of the hype around the purported harm of seed oils is nonsense.
Seed oils per se are not unhealthy.
However, a diet that is rich in seed oils
is probably an unhealthy diet.
And that is the problem, not the seed oils.
And if you wanna learn more about that,
and if you wanna look into the scientific research
that supports what I just said, head over
to legionathletics.com, search for refined oil and check out the article I wrote on this subject.
Jay Madden asks, what have you been doing to help bicep tendon healing process? So over on Instagram,
I have been updating people in my stories about some biceps tendonitis that I've been dealing with.
It started a couple of months ago after I slept, I guess, kind of funny on my side. I remember
waking up and feeling a little bit of pinching in my bicipital groove in that area where that
biceps tendon runs. And I ignored it and just did my normal training, felt a little bit off. It wasn't
painful per se, but it was a little bit uncomfortable. I could feel that there was
something not normal. And then a day or two later, also ended up sleeping on that left side. So I
had the biceps tendonitis on my left side. And this time when I woke up, it felt a little bit
worse. And then with my training, a little bit worse.
And eventually I realized that I need to get ahead of this because if I keep ignoring it,
it just gets worse and worse.
That's how these repetitive stress injuries go.
I've experienced this before.
I've had some biceps tendonitis on my right side.
And so what I've been doing to address this current bout of biceps tendonitis is getting
rid of the pec tightness and the biceps tightness that are causing it.
And so my left pec, I didn't realize it, but I see a massage therapist every week.
I started doing that again.
And I realized with her just working on my body that my left pec was very tight.
There were some pretty major trigger points in there, which are painful. The pain refers to
other areas. You have hyper-contracted portions of the pec. And I didn't realize it because
otherwise in my day-to-day life, it wasn't painful. But when she started getting in there
and working on my left pec, I quickly realized, oh, wow, that feels awful. But when she started getting in there and working on my left pec, I quickly
realized, oh, wow, that feels awful. And when she works on my right pec, it feels totally fine.
And so that has been part of the issue because of that hypercontracted pec. And the hypercontraction
and the trigger points are more pronounced as you move closer to my armpit. Then so you have that area, that kind of outside
area of the pec that has been very tight and kind of pulling on the shoulder joint. And then I also
mentioned my left biceps. So I didn't really realize that there are a couple of trigger
points in there and just hyper contracted portions of the muscle. So that's now also
pulling on the upper part of the biceps. And so I've been
working on getting rid of those problems, those trigger points and those hyper-contracted portions
of muscle. And I've been doing that by using a massage gun every day. That has been helping a lot.
And also, again, I'm seeing a massage therapist every week, which I realize not everybody can do who runs into these problems.
But the massage gun every day is more effective than seeing a massage therapist once a week.
And so foam rolling can also be good for particularly the pecs.
If you look up online how to foam roll your pecs, that can help a lot. In my case, it doesn't quite help because of the awkward nature of the part of
my left pec that needs to be worked. You kind of have to get under, almost like trying to get to
the pec minor. And it might even be a little pec minor. It's hard to know exactly. But foam roller
doesn't work. However, a massage gun works because I can angle it from the outside. Think of outside
of my body kind of angling in toward the midpoint of my body. And so I've been doing that. I've also
been avoiding exercises that cause pain. I'm okay with a little bit of discomfort. So if 10 is
excruciating pain and zero is no pain, I'm okay with like a two. Like, okay, a little bit of discomfort. It's not
pain. It's not ouch. It's just, eh, that doesn't feel perfect. I'm okay with that, but it can't be
pain because if you keep working through pain, then the repetitive stress injury just gets worse
or minimally doesn't go away. Avoiding the exercises that cause pain is one
of the most important elements of healing any sort of repetitive stress injury. You have to
stop doing the things that are continually aggravating the problem. So for example,
I stopped barbell bench pressing, at least flat bench pressing. Incline feels okay, so I'll do some of that still.
But no flat bench pressing or decline bench pressing even because they just don't feel right.
Same thing with dumbbells.
Dumbbells actually of any kind don't quite feel right.
So flat pressing or incline pressing dumbbells doesn't feel good.
It gets to pain.
It gets to ow.
That does not feel good, so I don't feel good. It gets to pain. It gets to ow, that does not feel good. So
I don't do it. There's also an incline pressing machine that feels nice, that causes very little
discomfort, maybe one out of 10. So I do that. And I was doing some pec decks and pec flies as well,
just for pecs. But even that was causing a bit too much strain. So it was just preventing the
healing and was dragging out this process of getting back to normal. So I even cut those out.
So for my pecs, all I'm doing right now is incline bench pressing and incline machine pressing. It's
an Atlantis plate loaded incline pressing machine. It's actually great. And I also stopped doing side raises because those were aggravating the biceps tendon. And the one triceps exercise that puts no
strain whatsoever on that tendon are kneeling overhead rope extensions, which is a great
exercise. Most people do that exercise standing and standing is fine, but I feel a little bit more stable kneeling. So I actually
prefer the kneeling variation, but that overhead extension, great triceps exercise, isolation
exercise, obviously, and no strain whatsoever in my biceps tendon. So that is the only triceps
exercise that I'm doing right now. And I can pull, but even there are a couple of row, like a couple of horizontal rowing exercises that I like that don't work right now.
Like a close grip cable row doesn't feel right, but a barbell row feels fine.
So I barbell rowed last week instead of the close grip cable row.
And so the point is I have modified my training quite a bit to
allow this biceps tendon to heal. And I am training in a way that I wouldn't normally
train. And I don't even particularly like only doing one exercise really for my pecs and not
being able to do a couple of the triceps isolation exercises that I like to do. I can't really do a proper
shoulder workout. Even overhead pressing is hit and miss. Some weeks it feels fine and I do it.
Some weeks it does not feel fine, so I don't do it. However, I am prioritizing handling the biceps
tendon. So this already worked previously. I mentioned that about a month ago it was feeling
totally fine. And so I went
back to my normal training and then I re-aggravated it. And the mistake that I made there, I should
have known better, but the mistake that I made is I loaded the tissues too intensively. So I went
back to the barbell bench press and went back to a normal working weight, maybe 225, 245, something
that I can do reps with. I have the strength to do.
But within two or three weeks of doing that, my biceps tendon was bothering me again because
I hadn't fully resolved the underlying issues, the pec tightness, the biceps tightness. And I
went back to relatively heavy weights fairly quickly on these exercises that were causing problems previously. And so
the proper way to fully resolve issues like these is to one, make sure that you have found the
underlying cause and addressed that. And two, make sure that you ease back into the exercises that
were causing problems previously. Don't aggressively load those tissues. What I
should have done, even though I hadn't properly addressed the underlying issues, but what I should
have done is gone back to, let's say, the flat barbell bench press and just start with 135 and
do what might normally just be some warm-up sets and that's it. And then go off and do some other
exercises with heavier weights, more intense training that don't aggravate or did not aggravate the biceps tendon.
And then in my next flat barbell bench press session, maybe move up to 185 and do sets with
several good reps still left in the tank. So maybe sets of six or eight or 10, but where I could do
at least another three, four, five reps. So not
pushing close to failure just yet, and then go off to other exercises. And then the following week,
then maybe if everything's still feeling fine, jump up to 225, getting back to my normal training
weight and maybe do a set of four there still with a few good reps left in the tank and so on until I am training normally again on
that barbell bench press. And the same approach would apply again to any other exercise that was
previously causing problems. So anyway, that's what I'll do this time. I'm also icing the biceps
tendon area a couple of times per day simply because it helps. I know icing isn't nearly as effective as many people
have long thought it to be, but for this problem, it does help me. And I have experienced that also
on the other side of my body a couple of years ago when I had biceps tendonitis on the right side,
and that actually stemmed from the subscapularis. So that was very tight. And then there were, it's hard to know exactly what was tight on the backside of my body
because it could have been teres.
It could have been infraspinatus.
It's hard to know exactly, but it was in that area and very tight, painful trigger points
really had to work through that.
I saw a physical therapist and then I was able to use a massage gun.
And actually it was when I was able to use a massage gun.
And actually it was when I was in Virginia in an office. So one of the guys who worked with me would come and massage gun these couple of points on my back and we would just gun it every day
until the pain would subside and a couple of stretches. We would gun the subscap again,
just until we had caused it to relax, at least temporarily.
And that plus the regular icing, plus avoiding the exercises that were causing problems then,
which because the underlying cause was different then, the exercises were different.
Like I remember then I could do dips and pec flies with no issues whatsoever.
Whereas right now I cannot do dips and pec flies.
And last is staying patient. Unfortunately, tendonitis, tendon inflammation, it just takes time to resolve.
Even under the best circumstances, it can take anywhere from one to three months, depending on
various factors. And I'm okay with that. So I'm just staying patient. I can still enjoy my workouts. And I know if I just stick to my little protocol, then I will get past this and get back to what I like
to do. At least I like more than what I'm currently doing. 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
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And if I may say, this tool really is fantastic. My team and I spent over six months
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buylegion.com slash meal plan, buylegion.com slash meal plan, enter your email address,
and you will get instant access. All right. The next question comes from Nick Matthews fit and he asks how
important is mind muscle connection or pumps actually. So let's talk about mind muscle
connection because that's the one I get asked more about. So the mind muscle connection is not,
I wouldn't say it's like an essential component of training. However, it is a good
training tip. And that tip is when performing isolation exercises in particular, if you focus
on the target muscle group, so it might be one muscle in the case of a unilateral exercise,
or it might be two muscles, like think of a biceps curl. So if you are doing an alternating
dumbbell biceps curl, then it's one at a time. If you are doing a barbell biceps curl, then you are training both
your biceps at the same time, but you have that target muscle group. And if you focus on that
throughout each rep, if you really feel it contract, you focus on that contraction,
you really feel it lengthen, you really focus on that lengthening, that may improve muscle activation, which in turn may
improve your results over time. There is some research to support that. However, that is not
nearly as important as, say, training with the right intensity, training with the right load,
training close to muscular failure, doing the right amount of volume,
progressively overloading your muscles by adding weight over time. That's the best way. That's the
most effective way to progressively overload. There are other ways, but the other ways are
really just kind of a means to the end of being able to add weight to the exercise, getting
stronger. Now, one of the other reasons
why the mind-muscle connection is not nearly as important as those other things is it doesn't
apply to compound exercises, especially the most difficult compound exercises, the heavy ones.
With those, you want to focus on external cues. You want to think, push the floor away when you're squatting
or push the bar away when you are bench pressing.
And if you want to learn more about weightlifting cues,
and the right cues can make a big difference.
They can help you maintain good form.
They can help improve your performance,
and particularly on the big exercises
that give you the most bang for the buck
in terms of whole body muscle and strength development,
head over to legionathletics.com,
search for cues, C-U-E-S, and you will find a couple of articles giving good and in some cases,
evidence-based cues. There is some research even on specific cues and which ones work the best.
So when you are performing compound exercises, particularly your hip hinge exercises,
your deadlifts, your squats, your bench presses, your overhead presses, you are going to do a lot better with the cues that you can read about over at legionathletics.com, external cues, than internal cues like focusing on something that is in or on your body, like your biceps contracting.
So if you think about
when you are squatting, what is going to help you more? A cue like throw the bar off of your back.
Some people like that, like when they get down in the hole and then you have to explode up,
they think of throwing that bar off of their back, like throwing it up in the air,
squatting so violently that it flies off of their back. Is that going to help you the most or is thinking
about or focusing on your quads contracting going to help you the most? Well, research
is very clear on that. The former approach, assuming it's a good cue and it works for you,
is going to work better than trying to focus on any individual muscle group that's involved in a major compound exercise. Okay, next we have a question
from Polly Graves, and he asks, white versus whole wheat carbs on a bull slash cut is one better for
physique or is it more about total calories? I would say go white when you're bulking because
whole wheat is more filling and that makes bulking more difficult, especially when you are at least a couple of
months in and when you feel like you are force feeding yourself every meal, at least every meal
after lunch. And just in general, you are always full. You lose your motivation to eat food,
really. Even just lean bulking, even slight calorie surplus, just a 10% calorie surplus,
do that consistently for a couple of months and you are going to be very sick of eating. So,
foods that are very filling for not very many calories or just that are more filling than
an alternative option of that food, like white rice versus brown rice, for example, or white wheat versus whole
wheat are going to make it just a little bit harder because you are just going to be a little
bit fuller from those calories. And so when you are lean bulking, you make different choices than
when you are cutting. And this refined versus whole grain is one example of that.
Drinking calories is another example.
When you are cutting, you want to drink as few calories as possible, generally speaking.
But when you are lean bulking, drinking calories, which don't have to be just junk calories,
I'm not talking necessarily about soda, it could be milk, for example, that can help
a lot because you can drink a couple hundred calories of milk
and not feel very full from it. However, if you were to eat a couple hundred calories of fruit,
when you are lean bulking, when you have been lean bulking for some time and you are generally full,
you are generally not interested in eating, the extra fullness that comes from the fruit can just make it that much
harder. So coming back to the question then, if we now talk about cutting, you just do the opposite
of what I was describing for lean bulking. Go with the relatively unprocessed grains because,
one reason, because they are going to be more filling. And when we are cutting, one of the top
priorities is to minimize hunger. If we can
minimize hunger and we can eat foods we generally like, and if we can have good energy levels,
if we can sleep well, have good workouts, cutting is pretty dang easy. The only thing that,
practically speaking, that can really get in the way at that point is socializing. In my experience
hearing from and working
with many people over the years, the more you eat out when you are cutting, the harder it's going to
be to control your calories and control your macros. It can be done, but it takes extra effort.
And if someone isn't willing to put in that extra effort, then it can derail the entire process.
But so long as that doesn't happen, and so long as we have the other boxes that I mentioned, check, then cutting can be mostly a breeze.
Okay, Peter G. Do it asks, exercising with a sore throat slash lung infection, if not take the week
off? Extra rest is always the smartest move when you feel even a little bit sick. And so when you are
definitely sick, definitely extra rest. In both cases, you feel like something is coming on,
you're fighting something off, skip your training, extra rest. Sick, skip your training, extra rest.
And by doing that, you are not going to infect others, which matters. And you are also going to reduce your
chances of getting even more sick because intense exercise stresses the body and it acutely impairs
immune function, whereas light activity has been shown to possibly stimulate immune function. So
if you are coming down with something or you are lightly ill, now, if you are in bed with a fever,
stay in bed with a fever, going in bed with a fever. Going for
a walk is probably not going to help you unless it just appeals to you emotionally and psychologically
because you are sick of sitting in bed. I understand that. However, if you are getting
sick or if you are lightly sick and you want to do something a little bit physically active,
just go for a walk. Again, light physical activity may actually
speed up your recovery. Okay, Sakib1 asks, what is the latest conspiracy theory that you believe in?
Well, I have a problem with the term conspiracy theory because I prefer recognizable pattern.
And it's hard to find a good conspiracy theory these days because
they all keep coming true. Next up, we have a question from Sandy Amara 3. I want to increase
bone density reps and sets. So here's a quote from a study that I linked here on Instagram.
Quote, the greatest skeletal benefits from resistance training have been achieved when
the resistance was progressively
increased over time, the magnitude of mechanical load was high, around 80 to 85% of one rep max.
Exercise was performed at least twice a week and large muscles crossing the hip and the spine
were targeted. So what we're looking at here is progressive overload, four to six reps per set, at least two workouts per week,
and some hip hinging and some squatting. That sounds very familiar. That sounds a lot like what
I've been preaching since the beginning, since the first edition of Bigger Leaner Stronger back in
2012, I believe that was. And you're going to find that in my book for women, Thinner Leaner Stronger,
that approach, the weights don't start out that heavy because practically speaking, I have found
that women who are new to strength training seem to do best with a bit lighter weights, not light,
but instead of 80 to 85%, one rep max, more like 70 to 75%, something around eight to 10 reps per
set. And then as they gain strength,
work into some heavier weightlifting and at least two workouts per week. In my books and programs,
there is an option for three workouts per week. You could do two, but I give three, four, five
day options in the books. And that also applies to my most recent book, Muscle for Life, which was written specifically for the 40 plus crowd,
men and women. Okay. So Tiffany Marie asks, what's your take on alcohol? Well, unfortunately,
alcohol is a poison. I would say the weight of the evidence is clear here. It's unhealthy
in the sense of not conducive to good health. However, some people's bodies can process alcohol better than
others, making it more or less unhealthy in individual cases. And so this is why some people
respond very poorly to alcohol. If they drink even relatively small amounts infrequently,
they feel very bad the following days. And then you have other people who drink moderate amounts of alcohol regularly and who don't experience the same types of after effects. However, those people
are harming their health to some degree, even if they don't realize it and they've gotten used to
it and they say they feel fine. What those people will often say, and I know this because I've
heard from many of them over the years, that when they stop drinking alcohol, they feel a lot better.
And they realize that what they considered feeling fine with regular alcohol consumption is not fine if compared to the standard of how they feel with no alcohol or very little alcohol.
alcohol or very little alcohol. All that said, though, if you want a simple practical recommendation,
evidence-based recommendation, if you have, let's say, a few drinks per week or less, and otherwise you live a healthy lifestyle, you exercise regularly, you eat a lot of nutritious
food, you maintain a healthy body composition, you get enough sleep, you maintain healthy amounts of
stress, you are not completely stressed out all the time. You don't have anything to worry about. However, if you were to not drink alcohol whatsoever, you might notice
that you feel even better. You might notice better energy levels. You might notice less brain fog.
You might notice that you are mentally sharper. You might notice better sleep. And all of those
things can add up to a significant improvement in just overall quality of life.
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.