Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Protein, Carb, and Creatine Timing, Fasted Training, Workout Routines (4- Vs. 5-Day), & More
Episode Date: May 26, 2023Does protein before bed impact your sleep? How do you prevent muscle breakdown if you can only train fasted in the morning before breakfast? Will training 5 days per week give better results than 4 da...ys per week? Are gluten allergies and intolerance real, or just another health fad? How long can someone use the program in Bigger Leaner Stronger and still make progress? 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! (1:43) - Does eating a large portion of protein affect sleep quality? (2:13) - How long until people forget about Liver King? (4:49) - How to minimize muscle breakdown for someone who does intermittent fasting but can only work out in the morning? (6:54) - Thoughts about the future of crypto? (9:26) - Should I strength train 4 or 5 days a week for best results? (13:16) - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan (14:39) - Is creatine consumption needed every day? (15:12) - Have your personal views affected your business? (16:13) - Any ideas on a one-day workout routine when life gets rough? (18:12) - Is gluten allergy a fad or is it actually real? (19:52) - Do you believe that a high amount of carbs is a requirement for muscle preservation? (21:24) - When doing a unilateral exercise do you rest between each side or after you do both? (23:26) - Best chest exercises to fix chest asymmetry? (24:02) - How long can I use Bigger Leaner Stronger? (28:25) - Do you see yourself taking HRT on a therapeutic level after hitting 40+? Mentioned on the Show: Want a free meal planning tool that figures out your calories, macros, and micros, and allows you to create custom meal plans for cutting, lean gaining, and maintaining in under 5 minutes? Go to https://buylegion.com/mealplan and download the tool for free!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews, a congested Mike Matthews, hence the
nasally tone because I have a bit of a head cold. But that's not going to stop me from recording
today's episode, which is a Q&A episode where I answer questions that people ask me over on
Instagram. Usually on Wednesdays, I publish a story on my Instagram and I include a little
sticker for people to ask me
questions. I get a bunch of questions. I choose ones to answer there on Instagram. And then I
bring everything over here to the podcast where I can answer the questions in more detail. And so
if you want me to answer your questions again, follow me on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness
and look for that story that I post every week. Although I didn't post last week because I've
been sick now for like five days. It's kind of a low-grade radiation poisoning of some kind that just won't go away.
But normally it's every week and submit your questions. And if you ask me something new or
interesting or topical, then there's a chance that I will answer it. I can't answer most,
of course, because I get a lot of questions submitted, but I do my best. In this episode, I'm going to be answering questions about eating
before bed. Does eating protein before bed improve sleep specifically? How long until people forget
about the liver king? How to minimize muscle breakdown for people who train first thing in
the morning? Whether you have to do four or five
strength training workouts per week to maximize progress,
or if you can achieve most of the same results
on say two or three workouts per week.
I answer a question about creatine consumption.
Do you have to take it every day
to get its benefits and more?
Noah Weiss asks,
does eating a large portion of protein before bed, say 30 plus grams,
impact sleep quality? No, but research does show that about the same amount of carbs can improve
sleep quality. Now, you don't want to eat too much, though, because studies also show that
a large meal within an hour or so before bed can disrupt sleep, but a smaller meal,
carbohydrate rich meal can improve sleep. Adventure Fine asks, how long until people
forget about Liver King? I think the only way the Liver King goes away is if he decides to go away.
In fact, the scandal has probably helped his business simply because it has gotten him even more
attention than he was already getting. And people have a short attention span and are easily
distracted. And many people are very quick to justify or to accept other people's transgressions
and dysfunctions and perversions because, of course, they are thinking of themselves. They don't judge others,
quote unquote, judge being judgy because they don't want to be judged. Because, of course,
a part of them always knows what is right and what is wrong, what they should be doing,
that they are not doing, what they should not be doing, that they are doing. And it requires
energy. It requires effort to smother that consciousness, that element of our consciousness.
And so when other people spotlight that element of our consciousness by saying the same things,
by saying, hey, people who are not doing these things should do these things, or people who
are doing these things should not do these things,
it makes us uncomfortable because a part of us knows that they are right. It seems to cut through
all of our rationalizations and justifications, no matter how many layers we have built on top of
this fundamental awareness of what is right and what is not, we experience cognitive dissonance. And one way to try to escape
that is to go on the attack, is to criticize the other person for criticizing us, for being judgy.
Why don't you just let people enjoy things? Anyway, philosophizing aside and coming back
to Liver King, my point is I think over time, many people simply won't care anymore that he lied about using steroids because the thrill of being outraged or at least pretending to be outraged is exhausted and they've moved on to being outraged about something else.
I will say, though, that by my lights, his fake apology was even more scandalous than the revelation that he was using steroids.
Like that was a surprise to anybody who understands body composition and PEDs.
That script that he was reading in his apology video was very poorly executed.
Whoever wrote that script is very bad at lying. Maybe it was him.
All right. Alien Theory Official asks, how to minimize muscle breakdown for someone who does
intermittent fasting but can only work out in the AM? Well, generally, this is not going to be a
problem if you eat some protein within an hour or so of finishing your workout. However, if you are
fairly muscular and you are cutting and you really
want to minimize muscle loss, I would recommend adding a supplement to your regimen and that is
HMB. And the reasons I recommend HMB over leucine and BCAAs are one, HMB has no insulin response,
whereas leucine and BCAAs do. It is not a particularly large insulin response in the
case of leucine and BCAAs, but it does quote unquote break your fast, at least for a period
of time, maybe 15 to 30 minutes. Not a big deal. But if you are, let's say, taking BCAAs and
something like yohimbine to try to speed up fat loss and stubborn fat loss in particular,
right before your
workout. And that is going to now elevate your insulin levels significantly, not as significantly
as a meal, obviously, but significantly for, let's say, up to 30 minutes. That might be
half or even two thirds of your workout. And in the case of yohimbine, when insulin levels are
elevated, its fat loss properties, so to speak, are negated. Yohimbine
will still work as a stimulant, but it is no longer going to enhance fat loss and the loss of
quote unquote stubborn fat in particular when insulin levels are elevated. And so HMB again
is a better choice because you get the anti-catabolic effects. You actually get stronger anti-catabolic effects with HMB compared
to leucine and you get no insulin response. So you maintain that fasted state. And that's why HMB
is in a supplement of mine called Forge, which also has yohimbine. So this is a pre-workout
fat loss supplement specifically for use with fasted training. And again, it's called Forge.
If you want to check it out, you can find it at buylegion.com, B-U-I-L-E-G-I-O-N.com slash Forge.
Okay, CAA1997 asks, thoughts on the future of crypto? Well, this isn't an area that I'm all
that interested in, so I haven't educated myself all that much in it. However, I would say that it's very hard
for me to wrap my mind around betting against the will of the superclass, especially in matters of
high finance. So I would think that there is a good chance, maybe a very good chance that these people get exactly what they want, that they usurp and
control digital currency. There's a lot of talk about central bank controlled digital currencies
that will be programmable, trackable, revocable. And of course, it's going to be sold to us plebs
as convenient and secure and efficient. But it's going to suck for us because ultimately what
that means is the government is going to be able to dictate what we can and can't do with our money.
For example, it could allow the government to deny your ability to buy a steak at the grocery store
because your personal carbon footprint is
too high for that month. You have run out of carbon credits, so to speak. And if that sounds
like conspiracy theory to you, oh no, that is being openly discussed in mainstream news sources.
If you've never heard of it, it's probably because you either don't pay attention to the news at all, which is not necessarily a
bad decision, or it's because you only pay attention to your preferred source or two or
three of legacy media outlets, so to speak. You only watch Fox News or CNN, or you only read the
New York Times and Washington Post or whatever the right wing equivalents of
those publications are. Anyway, bringing that back to crypto, if cryptocurrency as it currently
exists, as it currently functions, is going to stand in the way of what I just mentioned,
the central bank controlled digital currencies, I'd like to believe that the Davos crowd couldn't
figure out how to take control of the cryptocurrency sphere and just roll it into their plan or maybe
do away with it, at least as we know it today. But given their track record and the length to
which they are willing to go to accomplish their objectives, I think that they have a very good
chance of succeeding. Chad Smith 86 asks,
should I strength train four or five days a week
for best results?
At least 80% of the potential gains
that are available to you,
and this applies really to anybody
in terms of muscle and strength,
can be obtained with four workouts per week.
So you don't have to go five times per week. Don't feel that you need to.
And an exception to that would be an advanced weightlifter. So this is somebody with many
years of proper training behind them. They've gained a lot of muscle. They've gained a lot
of strength and they are really pushing for that final 20% of muscle and strength. And that requires a lot of time in the gym. It just does
because it requires a lot of volume. It requires a lot of sets per major muscle group per week to
continue making progress on multiple fronts. And by that, I mean multiple major muscle groups. If
you are just trying to progress on one major muscle group, you can probably get in enough volume training three or four days per week, which is going to be 15 to 20 hard
sets for that muscle group per week.
If you are an experienced weightlifter, that's probably what it's going to take.
But if you do that, if you prioritize that one major muscle group and you're training
three to four times per week, you simply won't have time or you won't have the inclination to do
enough volume for any other major muscle group to progress there as well. So how you would set that
up is that's a specialization routine, as it's called, is you would build your routine around
first hitting your volume target for your target major muscle group, and then you would add
strategically enough volume for each other major muscle group to And then you would add strategically enough volume for each other
major muscle group to maintain your current level of muscle and strength. And so for most
advanced weightlifters, that's only going to be, it could be six. That's probably a good kind of
middle of the curve number, six hard sets for each other major muscle group per week. And that can be
direct volume. Think of a biceps curl to train the biceps or indirect volume kind of depends on the exercises, but think of a barbell row.
It also, of course, trains your biceps. You wouldn't necessarily count one set of a barbell
row as one set for your biceps. I would probably discount that to a half of a set for my biceps,
whereas one set of a biceps curl is one full set
for the biceps. But anyway, six hard sets per week for the major muscle groups that you are
just trying to maintain will be plenty to maintain all of your muscle, probably all of your strength
or at least 80% of your strength, especially if you keep those weights heavy. And you can
then make that work with three to four workouts per week. However,
if you want to try to progress in multiple major muscle groups, so it's not just your lower body
now, it's your lower body and your back, and you then look at what it's going to take to do 15 to
20 hard sets per week for your lower body and for your back, and then get in your maintenance volume
for everything else, and then try to do that in just three or four workouts, those workouts get impractical. They
just get long and grueling. And that's where five sessions or even six sessions per week can make
more sense. Six is the most I would ever recommend. I would not recommend that for all people,
not even necessarily all advanced weightlifters. That is a lot of training that you are going to have to be able to recover
from. And a lot of recovery comes down to lifestyle. It's how you are eating. It's how
you are sleeping. It's your general stress levels. If you have a stressful lifestyle and you add a
bunch of training stress on top of it, it can create symptoms that are
related to overtraining or that can appear to be overtraining. Even if it is not technically
overtraining, it simply just won't work. How would you like a free meal planning tool that
figures out your calories, your macros, even your micros, and then allows you to create 100% custom meal plans for cutting,
lean gaining, or maintaining in under five minutes.
Well, all you got to do is go to buylegion.com slash meal plan,
buylegion.com slash meal plan, and download the tool.
And if I may say, this tool really is fantastic.
My team and I spent over
six months on this thing, working with an Excel wizard and inferior versions of this are often
sold for 50, 60, even a hundred dollars. Or you have to download an app and pay every month or
sign up for a weight loss service and pay every month, 10, 20, 40, 50, even $60 a month for what is essentially in this free tool.
So if you are struggling to improve your body composition, if you are struggling to lose fat
or gain muscle, the right meal plan can change everything. Dieting can go from feeling like
running in the sand in a sandstorm to riding a bike on a breezy day
down a hill.
So again, if you want my free meal planning tool, go to buylegion.com slash meal plan,
buylegion.com slash meal plan, enter your email address and you will get instant access.
All right, next question comes from Dan, Dan, Dan the man.
And he asks, is creatine consumption needed every day,
even rest days for max benefit? No, you can take creatine every day, but you don't have to.
Research shows that three to five days per week on average is enough to keep creatine stores
elevated. And every day might be a little bit better. But to wheel out the tired analogy again of the 80-20 rule,
three to five days per week is going to give you at least 80% of the potential benefits of creatine.
Dazmedevin asks, have your personal views had any negative impact on your business in this soft-ass
world? Now, this person is referring to some of my comments on social media about politics and
society and culture. And yes, I'm sure that some of that has had a negative impact on my business,
on Legion, has convinced some people to not buy my things or to stop buying my things,
but not enough to matter. And something to remember is the most
obnoxious people are always the loudest, but they do not represent the majority of people who simply
don't care and don't comment because they feel neutral about it. And neutrality as an emotion
doesn't inspire us to action. Strong feeling does. And then, of course, there are people who do agree,
who secretly agree with things that I say, but they just don't want to publicly agree. They don't
want to publicly share their opinion. OK, Horror Show Base or Bass asks one day a week program for
when life kicks you in the balls. Yes, this is a good idea because just one workout per week,
this would be a full body workout, is enough to maintain everything that you have until you can do more training or until you want to do more training. And I just talked about this a couple of minutes ago. If you can just get in, say, three to six hard sets per major muscle group per week, direct and indirect volume, and you can do that with a full body workout that prioritizes compound exercises, you know, that train multiple major muscle groups at once, one workout a week, 60 to 90 minutes. That's all you
need. And this speaks to really the only training periodization plan that most people need. And that
is train hard when you're feeling good, maybe train really hard if you're feeling really good,
but then ease up or even rest when you are exhausted or when you
are sick. I have not been to the gym in a week. I want to go. I could make excuses to go. I feel
okay. But I know that if I do go, it's just going to prolong this kind of low grade head cold that
I've had for the last five to seven days, I really probably should just be lying in
bed. I shouldn't even be recording this podcast because it seems that even mental exertion,
if I mentally exert myself when I'm sick by just working all day and doing my normal routine,
leaving out the vigorous physical activity, it prolongs illness. This has happened several times
and yet here I am recording a podcast. So I guess
I have not learned the lesson yet, but anyway, so when you are exhausted, when you're sick,
ease up, rest, and then try to do at least enough to not get smaller, weaker, and fatter when you
are very busy or when you're just unmotivated. Always do at least enough to maintain momentum,
to maintain your muscle and strength.
And again, that's an hour to an hour and a half per week.
All right, Josh Gonzalez MWS asks,
is gluten allergy real or is it a fad?
Well, research suggests that about 1% of people
here in the United States have celiac disease
and can be markedly harmed by gluten. That of course is real. United States have celiac disease and can be markedly harmed by gluten. That
of course is real. If you have celiac disease, you need to stay away from gluten. And studies also
show that probably about 6%, that's based on the data that we currently have, 6% of people here in
the US are gluten intolerant and they can experience gastrointestinal issues when they eat gluten. It
is not as harmful to their health.
It doesn't screw up their small intestine the same way that celiac disease does. But when people who
have a gluten intolerance eat gluten, they don't feel good. Which, by the way, is an easy way to
know if you possibly have a gluten intolerance is when you eat gluten-containing foods. If you don't
feel good, if your stomach hurts, if you get gassy, if you get indigestion, if you get have a gluten intolerance, is when you eat gluten-containing foods, if you don't feel good, if your stomach hurts,
if you get gassy, if you get indigestion,
if you get lethargic,
then you should stop eating those foods.
Now, it may not be the gluten
because there is a lesser-known condition
that many people mistake gluten intolerance for,
and that is called a FODMAP, F-O-D-M-A-P sensitivity.
And if you wanna learn more about that,
head over to legionathletics.com and search for FODMAP, F-O-D-M-A-P sensitivity. And if you want to learn more about that, head over to legionathletics.com
and search for FODMAP, F-O-D-M-A-P.
Especially if you are constantly dealing with GI issues
despite eating a nutritious diet
that is replete with fruits and vegetables and whole grains,
you might have a FODMAP insensitivity.
And by cutting out very
specific, in some cases, vegetables, fruits, and grains, you can eliminate the symptoms altogether.
Carleen Rag asks, do you believe a high amount of carbs is required for muscle preservation
during a deficit? No, it's not required. High protein is required, something around one gram
per pound of body weight per day. Or if you, something around one gram per pound of body
weight per day. Or if you are overweight, one gram per centimeter in height per day is going
to be enough. But carbohydrates do help improve workout performance. And that's mostly by keeping
muscle glycogen levels higher. And that is going to help you preserve muscle. When you are cutting,
you want to try to preserve strength. That's really, you want to keep pushing in your workouts,
especially in the beginning of a cut.
For the first four to six weeks, you should feel totally fine.
You might not even really notice any negative side effects yet.
And try to make progress in your workouts.
Don't think that you're cutting now so you don't have to train as hard
because you can't really gain anything anyway.
No, train hard.
Maintain that intensity. Maintain that strength, try to keep that weight on the bar,
try to get your reps, hit your rep targets. That is how you're going to preserve muscle.
And carbs can help with that by improving your workout performance. And carbs can also help by
keeping insulin levels generally higher. And insulin is not anabolic, but it is anti-catabolic. And so some
research suggests that a high carb diet can be better for preserving muscle because you just
have generally higher levels of insulin when you are eating more carbs, especially when you're
eating carbs every few hours than when you are eating a low carb diet or eating carbs maybe
only in the morning and then not later in the day. Katie Parks 7 asks,
when doing a unilateral exercise, do you rest between each side or after you do both? So I like
to rest between sides if it's something that's quite hard, like a Bulgarian split squat. So if
I'm doing a Bulgarian split squat, I'll do one side and then I will rest 30 to no more than 60
seconds and then do the other leg just because I find that if I don't do that, especially if
I'm pushing myself pretty hard, I will get, let's say, six to eight reps on my right leg with that
weight with maybe, let's say, one to two good reps left. And then if I immediately go to my left
leg, I might be able to get the same number of reps. But instead of having one to two good reps
left, I might have to push like right up to the point of failure. Maybe that's zero good reps
left. But if I wait 30 to 60 seconds, just let my heart rate come down a little bit,
catch my breath. I can then hit my reps with my other leg and still have that one to two good
reps left in reserve. So I'm training then both sides of my body with the same number of reps.
So the same volume, as well as the same intensity, the same proximity to muscular failure. However,
if it's an exercise that trains a smaller muscle group that isn't very systemically fatiguing. Think of a cable curl,
like one arm at a time, right? On a biceps curl, or think of a single arm side raise or any other
single limb exercise that is either your arms or your legs, like in the case of a single leg
hamstring curl. Many gyms don't have even an option for that,
but my gym does.
And so if I were doing a single leg hamstring curl,
that is not nearly as difficult
as the Bulgarian split squat.
And so I could rest 30 to 60 seconds in between sets,
but I don't because in actual practice,
it doesn't make any difference in my performance.
I can still get the same number of reps.
I can keep the volume the same
and I can keep that intensity the same. Okay. King Gwangili asks, best exercises to correct
chest asymmetry, single arm presses are going to be it. And that's of course a dumbbell press is
the only way to do that. You're not going to be doing single arm barbell pressing. You can do
single arm chest pressing as well, but a single arm dumbbell press
is a great exercise for this. And it's actually not a bad inclusion generally because it helps
prevent imbalances. And it's also good core training. I wouldn't make that my primary chest
pressing exercise, but a single arm dumbbell press is a useful secondary pressing exercise.
Kashan Patlu asks,
how long can I use Bigger, Leaner, Stronger?
Simple answer is,
and this applies to any program actually,
use Bigger, Leaner, Stronger
and any other program,
whether it's mine or somebody else's,
as long as you are still enjoying it
and you are making progress with it.
And progress you can judge
by your whole body strength,
particularly with Bigger, Leaner, Stronger
because it is a power building program, so to speak.
It is kind of a hybrid
between traditional strength training and bodybuilding
on Bigger Leaner Stronger,
as well as Thinner Leaner Stronger,
Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger, Muscle for Life,
all of my programs.
If your one rep maxes are going up,
and particularly on your big exercises,
if you're getting stronger in your squat exercises
and your hip hinge exercises
and your vertical and horizontal press exercises and pull exercises, you are making progress.
It's working. Keep going as long as you are still enjoying your workouts. And if you are making
progress, you probably are still enjoying your workouts because that is the most motivating factor for most people until they get well into
their fitness journey and it becomes very hard to continue making progress and then motivations have
to change. But for most people in their first three to five years of proper training, so long
as they keep making progress, they are probably going to be enjoying their program. And so in the case of Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger, it's been now, let's see, 11 years since I published the first edition of that
book. I have spoken with virtually, mostly via email, but also social media. I've spoken with
many, many people, thousands of people now who have run that program. And it seems like most
people can continue making great progress with Bigger, Leaner, Stronger and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger as well for two to four years.
And in that time, men, we're talking about Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, should be able to gain anywhere from 20 to 30 pounds of muscle.
Women, about half of that number, 10 to 15, maybe 20 pounds in two to four years of Thinner, Leaner, Stronger.
And then after doing that, so it's been two to four years.
And if you're a guy, you've gone from normal to pretty jacked by normal people's standards. 20
to 30 pounds of muscle is a lot of muscle. I mean, envision like a 16 ounce steak, that's a pound of
muscle, and then put 20 to 30 of those all over your body. And in the case of women, think of
putting 10 to 15, 16 ounce steaks all over your body
with an emphasis on the lower body.
And I guess in the case of the men, it would be an emphasis on the upper body.
But that's a lot of muscle.
If, though, that's not enough and the trainee wants to keep going, wants to see if they
can gain, in the case of men, maybe another 10 pounds of muscle, maybe 15, depending on
their genetics.
In the case of women, another five or maybe 10 pounds of muscle, then they are probably going to have to work a bit harder. The biggest change they're
going to have to make to what you learn and do with Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, Thinner,
Leaner, Stronger, even Muscle for Life is more volume. They're just going to have to do more
hard sets per major muscle group per week. And if they want to see how I have gone about that,
they should check out my book Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. If that's you, if you are an
experienced weightlifter, you're a dude who's gained 20 to 30 pounds of muscle, or you're a
gal who's gained about half that 10 to 15 pounds of muscle, maybe even upward of 20 pounds of muscle,
and you really want to push for whatever you have left in your genes, check out Beyond Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger. And I do plan on creating a female version Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. And I do plan
on creating a female version Beyond Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, but currently I only have
Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. All of the principles apply equally to women as they do
to men. But of course, the examples in the book are male and there is some kind of male specific
stuff that I will take out when I do the female book. And then the programming will change a little bit. Currently, the programming, because it's a
men's book, it does emphasize the upper body over the lower body because most guys have to train
their upper body a lot more to get it to where they ultimately want it to be versus their lower
body. And with women, it's usually the other way around.
Most women I've worked with, I've spoken with over the years,
are very happy with their upper body development within the first year or two often,
but they still want to work on their lower body for at least another couple of years
to have the exact look that they want.
And so, of course, in Beyond Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, the programming will reflect that. Okay, Middle American R asks, do you see yourself taking HRT on a therapeutic level
after you hit 40 plus? Sure, I'm totally open to it. I think it's a smart decision if testosterone
levels are clinically low. And that does not mean lower than they were at 18. That means low, almost always below 300 nanograms
of total testosterone per deciliter of blood. And that means symptoms associated with low
testosterone. So poor sleep, low energy, low sex drive, poor workout performance, poor muscle
growth, and so on. And so if that is the case, and I have done
everything that I can naturally to try to improve that, so that's lifestyle primarily, of course,
diet, training, sleep, stress levels. I would also try natural supplements that have any sort of
evidence of efficacy, stuff that I wouldn't sell because the evidence is not strong enough for me
to get behind it and take people's
money for it. Something like Tongkat Ali, for example. But if there's any chance that it might
help, sure, I would just try it and see if I can get lucky. And so if I've done those things, I've
tried to modify my lifestyle to make it as pro testosterone as I can, and I'm taking as many supplements as I can, and my
testosterone levels are simply low, then yes, absolutely, I would get on TRT. Because at that
point, it's a matter of health, low testosterone levels, clinically low. That is unhealthy. It
increases the risk of various types of disease and dysfunction. And it's a matter of quality of life,
because having all of those symptoms every day would suck.
And one final comment is I would make sure that it is an appropriate dose of testosterone.
I'd make sure it is actually testosterone replacement therapy and not testosterone
explosion therapy like I see many guys in the gym talk about.
They are really just on steroids, bodybuilder doses of testosterone, many hundreds
of milligrams of testosterone per week, 1,500 to 2,000 plus nanograms of total testosterone per
deciliter of blood. No, that is just steroids. And the risks of proper TRT are quite low,
but they become significantly magnified when you start taking a lot of testosterone,
when you turn it into steroid use. And practically speaking, that means keeping your testosterone
within the range of what is normal, what is naturally possible. It could be the higher end
of the range, and some smart people argue that it really should be so long as your blood work
looks good, so long as certain biomarkers look good, which is mostly
a matter of how your body responds to drugs, testosterone. If it responds well, then your
blood is going to look good even at the absolute maximum of what is naturally possible, which is
around 1,000 ngdL. You could go maybe a little bit higher, 1200, but beyond that is when you enter the supra
physiological range of testosterone, the beyond what is naturally possible range. And when you
get well beyond that, you are now in the bodybuilder steroid territory. 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.
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muscleforlife.com
and let me know what I could do better
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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.