Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Rest-Pause Training, “Plant Deniers,” Casein Benefits, and More
Episode Date: October 21, 2022Is coolsculpting legit? Is rest-pause training beneficial? Does casein before bed help with fat loss? Are there any side lateral raise alternatives? Should you build your metabolism before cutting? Wh...at’s the best way to deal with “off,” nonproductive days and a lack of motivation? Is there any truth to the idea of vegetables or whole grains being harmful to health? All 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) - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan (2:49) - Is coolsculpting real? (3:56) - Is there any merit to the carnivore diet claims? (5:42) - What are your favorite shoes for lifting? (7:31) - Is casein before bed good for weight loss? (12:00) - Is rest-pause training good for your shoulders? (13:27) - Can you make more fun flavors of your plant protein? (14:18) - Can you take Recharge with Pulse? (14:49) - What are some movement patterns for side delts? (16:20) - What are your thoughts on the no vegetables and whole grain thinking? (17:51) - Should I start cutting or build my metabolism first? (21:39) - How do you address off days when you’re not motivated or productive at work? 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, lovely listener. I'm Mike Matthews, and this is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining
me today for another Q&A, where I answer questions that people ask me. So what I do is every week,
every Monday, Tuesday, usually on Instagram, at Muscle for Life Fitness, come follow me.
I put up a story asking for questions. I get a bunch of questions and then I choose ones that are interesting or topical or
that I just haven't answered a billion times already and answer them briefly there on Instagram
and then bring everything over here to the podcast and answer the questions in more depth because I
can only put so much information in a little Instagram story.
So if you want to ask me questions, follow me on Instagram at Muscle Life Fitness and look for that story that I put up every Monday or Tuesday
and submit your questions and we will go from there.
All right.
So in today's episode, I am answering questions about cool sculpting for fat loss.
Does it work?
My favorite shoes for weightlifting.
If eating casein protein before bed can help with weight loss.
If rest pause training is worth incorporating in your routine.
How much protein your body can absorb in one sitting and more.
Before we get to it, how would you like a free meal planning tool that figures out your
calories, your macros, even your micros, and then allows you to create 100% custom meal plans for
cutting, lean gaining, or maintaining in under five minutes? Well, all you got to do is go to
buylegion.com slash meal plan, B-U-Y legion.com slash meal plan
and download the tool.
And if I may say, this tool really is fantastic.
My team and I spent over six months on this thing, working with an Excel wizard and inferior
versions of this are often sold for 50, 60, even 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. Okay. This time around, I don't have any information
here on who asked these questions. I think there was something wrong with Instagram at the time.
Anyway, they are all going to be anonymous questions today. And the first one is cool
sculpting for fat loss. Please tell me this is a joke. Now, if you haven't heard of cool sculpting, it is a technique that involves
cold temperatures and suction to destroy fat cells. And it obviously sounds like a scam,
but ironically, a few studies have shown that it can smooth out and remove small amounts of body fat that is directly beneath the skin. It can't
help you lose large amounts of fat though, which is often how it is marketed and it's very expensive.
And so it is not only hype. And if you want to learn more about it, just head over to
legionathletics.com, search for cool sculpting, one word, and you'll find an article
that I wrote on it. I don't think I actually wrote that article. Somebody on my team wrote it,
but you will find a good evidence-based article on it. All right, next question. Do you think
there is any merit to Paul Saladino's carnivore slash animal-based diet claims? Unfortunately,
Dino's carnivore slash animal based diet claims. Unfortunately, mostly nonsense and getting quackier and quackier because that is how you win in the game of getting attention online.
You just say more and more outlandish things and more and more people pay attention and talk about
all of the outlandish things that you are saying. And then you team up
with other quacks saying outlandish things like liver King. For example, I saw that liver King
and Paul Saladino are doing, I guess, little collaborations on Instagram saying outlandish
things together. And if you are good at that game and get at least a little bit lucky, you get a bunch
of followers and admirers and customers. You make a lot of money. Now, if you want an evidence-based
refutation of the carnivore diet and some of the major claims made to support it, head over to
legionathletics.com, search for carnivore, and you'll find a long article I wrote with a lot
of research linked, cited for all of my major claims against the major claims of the carnivore
diet. And my recommendation regarding carnivore dieting, which is if you need to do an elimination
diet, that is a great place to start. But if you don't,
then I wouldn't recommend the carnivore diet. And if you're not sure what an elimination diet is,
make sure that you clarify that before you try the carnivore diet, because it is
factually an elimination diet. All right. Next question. Favorite shoes for lifting.
diet. All right, next question. Favorite shoes for lifting? I like something light and simple with a flat sole. Over the years, I've tried shoes from Innovate. I've tried New Balance. I remember
liking their Minimus model for a while, and I currently just wear a pair of Zeros XERO.
And I currently just wear a pair of Zeros X E R O. I'm not endorsed by that company, but they sent me shoes. I had the owner of the company on my podcast. He offered to send me some shoes. I don't remember the model that I chose. It's one of their simple, just kind of bare bones, minimalistic little training shoes and I've been wearing them for, I think it's like a couple of years now,
and they still are fine. They haven't fallen apart. There's no obvious wear or tear,
which is cool because I've done a lot of training in those shoes, a lot of deadlifting in those shoes. Now, as for squatting, I like a proper pair of weightlifting shoes. I use Adidas weightlifting
shoes, but there are other good options out there.
And I actually have an episode coming on training shoes. It is an interview I did
with a guy named Jake Bolle, who has a YouTube channel where he does reviews of training shoes,
cross training shoes, running shoes, weightlifting shoes, all different types of
shoes that you exercise in. And so if you want to learn more about finding the training
shoes that are going to work best for you, if you care enough to learn a little bit about what goes
into choosing good shoes to train in, to run in, to squat slash deadlift in, look for that episode.
By the time this is up, Jake should be up within the next four to six weeks.
I run fairly ahead on interviews, but it will be going up soon-ish. Okay, next question. Is
casein before bed good for weight loss? No, not in and of itself. Eating protein of any kind before
bed is not going to directly help you lose weight. But of course, it's not
going to hurt so long as your calories and your macros are calibrated properly. Some people do
find that having a serving of protein and particularly a serving of slow digesting
protein like casein later at night after dinner helps them avoid late night snacking on other stuff
that can get in the way of your cutting simply because it's very tasty and has a lot of calories.
And what they find is that final serving of protein at, let's say if dinner is at six or
seven, the final serving of protein is at nine or 10. It just makes sure that they are not hungry
come bedtime and then rummaging around in the fridge to find something to eat. And one other
benefit of having some protein before you go to bed, some slow digesting protein in particular,
like casein or pea protein works as well, is more muscle growth over time. A couple of studies have shown this. It's not going
to make a major difference, but it does appear to help because what it does is it gives your body
some amino acids to work through while you are sleeping. And of course, your body's muscle
building machinery requires amino acids to repair muscle, to grow muscle. And so if you eat dinner at say 6 p.m. and you have a
serving of protein with that dinner, you are done processing that food by probably somewhere between
10 and 12, depending on what you ate. The larger the meal, the longer it takes. Also mixed meals,
you ate, the larger the meal, the longer it takes. Also mixed meals, meals with protein, carbs,
and fat, for example, take longer to process than meals that just have protein or just protein and carbs or just carbs or just carbs and fat. What that means though is, let's say you are in bed
until six or 7 a.m. And so from, let's say 12, from midnight to 6 to 7 a.m., your body cannot continue to repair or build muscle because it has finished processing the food that you ate at dinner.
It has finished using the amino acids provided for muscle repair and muscle growth, and it's just waiting for the next serving of protein.
Now, what is not true is not eating protein before bed can lead to muscle loss. That is not true.
Your body's muscle building machinery is just going to idle, so to speak. Your body is not
going to break down muscle to get amino acids because it doesn't have any. It just can't continue to
repair and build muscle until it has amino acids. And so what happens when you have a serving 30 to
40 grams of a slow digesting protein right before you go to bed. So let's say you're going to bed at
10 p.m. That will give your body a few hours of amino acids to work with. It will take your body
a few hours, probably somewhere between three and four hours to fully digest and process that 30 to
40 grams of casein or pea protein. So what you have done then is taken the downtime, so to speak,
as far as muscle building goes, of six to seven hours and cut it in
half. So for the first few hours of sleeping, then your body is able to continue working with
those amino acids to keep creating new muscle proteins and repairing muscle proteins and so
forth. And by the way, in case you didn't know, my sports nutrition company Legion has casein
protein, has micellar casein, which is the highest quality casein you can buy, and a
plant protein as well, which is a combination of pea and rice protein.
And we use that combination because they have complementary amino acid profiles.
And when you combine those amino acid profiles, it actually looks pretty similar to
whey protein. And that's why that combination of pea and rice protein is often referred to as the
vegan's whey. And if you want to check those products out, you can find them over at
legionathletics.com. All right. Next question is, is rest pause training good for your shoulders?
All right. Next question is, is rest pause training good for your shoulders?
Yeah. Yeah. Rest pause training is a good technique. Generally, it's good for jacking up volume without putting a lot more stress on your joints. And it does work well for smaller
muscle groups in particular. It works well for the shoulders. It works well for the biceps,
the triceps. But I would not
bother with that until you need to do a lot of volume to continue growing, until you need to do,
let's say, more than 15 hard sets per major muscle group per week. And even then, I would personally
first work up to probably about 15 to maybe 20. That's pretty high, but at least 15 hard sets,
normal sets, just working sets for whatever muscle group.
If we're talking about the shoulders, fine,
but could also be the biceps or the triceps.
Some people will do rest pause with the calves as well.
And so again, I would personally work up
to a high amount of straight set volume, so to speak, before adding rest pause volume, because rest pause training is not necessarily more effective than just plain old, quote unquote, boring straight sets.
It's just a way to get in extra volume without all of the structural stress that comes with straight
sets. Okay, next question is, can you make more fun flavors of your plant protein, the same ones
you do for whey? Yes. Yes, I can. And I am. Cinnamon Cereal Plant Plus is coming soon in the next
month or two. I don't have the schedule right in front of me, but certainly this year.
And we will continue adding flavors to Plant Plus because it is becoming more and more popular.
It's getting really good word of mouth and probably because we reformulated it a few months
ago and now it tastes better. I thought it tasted pretty good before, but now it tastes really good. And especially compared to any other
plant-based all natural protein powder out there. I challenge, challenge anyone to find a plant-based
all natural protein powder that tastes better than my plant plus. Okay. Next question is another
supplement question. Can you take recharge, which is my post-workout supplement with creatine and a
couple of other ingredients, with your Pulse, that's my pre-workout supplement, or do you have
to do Recharge after workout? So the best way to use those supplements and just pre- and post-workout
supplements in general is to just take the pre-workout before you train and take the post-workout
after you train. And in the case
of recharge, ideally after you train with some food. Next question, besides side raises, any
other move for side delts? Well, if we're talking movement patterns, not really. We can kind of just
raise our arms to the side if we want to train our side delts, but we don't have to only use dumbbells
or train both of our arms at the same time. So with dumbbells, you can do your traditional
side raise. You're holding two dumbbells, you raise them out to the side, or you can do single
arm dumbbell side raises. And usually when you're doing that, you are holding on to something like one of the metal poles, for the lack of a better word, of a cable setup.
Right. So you are kind of hanging off of this pole at a slight incline and then you are holding the weight in the hand that's not hanging on to the pole.
And then you are doing side raises so you can do it that way. You can do cable side raises, double or single arm. Cable is a nice variation because of the constant
tension. Whereas with dumbbell side raises, it gets a lot harder as you are raising the weight.
So you get a lot of tension at the top of each rep and then you get like no tension at the bottom. Another variation I like is a machine raise. And again, you can do double arm or single arm. Most
gyms have a side raise machine. And one of the things I like about the machine is also that
constant tension. All right, moving along here. Thought thoughts on the no vegetables and whole grains thinking any truth.
I really don't like the plant avoidance movement, the plant deniers, if you will,
because claiming that eating certain vegetables, certain plant foods, certain grains, or just
eating those things in general is unhealthy. I mean, that is Orwellian-level science denialism.
It's like saying that exercise is bad for you.
It really is.
It's as ridiculous as saying that research shows
that exercise is bad and you need to stop
or that water is toxic
unless it has been specially treated to be a certain pH
or that energy balance is fake,
actually, like triangles and math. It's all just a social construct. So my point, of course, is
eat your vegetables, eat four to six servings per day. The weight of the scientific evidence is tremendous and tremendously clear.
The people who eat the most plant foods tend to live the longest.
Now, it doesn't mean that you can't eat animal foods, of course.
That doesn't mean that you shouldn't eat meat or other animal sources of protein or just other animal foods that you like.
foods that you like, but most of your calories should be coming from relatively unprocessed,
highly nutritious foods that incidentally come from plants. Next up we have, should I start cutting or build my metabolism first? Well, the best ways to build your metabolism are to build
muscle and eat a lot of nutritious food, which is what you want to be doing when you
are cutting. So I would say do both. Now, that said, some people do claim that you should reverse
diet before you cut. And by that, they mean just progressively eat more and more food,
increasing your total daily calories by maybe 100 for a week or two weeks and then increasing by another 100, sometimes even smaller
amounts, sometimes it's just 50 calories. And the story is that if you do that, you can speed up
your metabolism without getting fatter or gaining any significant amount of fat. And then when you
start cutting, it's going to be a lot easier because if you are a woman
currently eating 2000 calories per day, let's say that's your maintenance level. And if you were to
just start cutting right now, maybe you have to go down to 1500. If you want to be aggressive,
maybe 1700, if you want something in the middle calories per day, but if you were to go through the
reverse dieting process, you could get that up to 3000 calories per day.
And then you could cut on 2500 calories per day, 500 calories more than you are currently
eating.
Imagine that.
Or if you really wanted to be aggressive, you could cut on 2000 calories per day.
Your current diet could
produce rapid fat loss. That's the pitch. And it sounds great. And I wish it worked like that,
but it doesn't. Instead, all that's going to happen is you're just going to get fatter and
then you are going to have to cut for longer to reach your goal. Now, some people do gain less fat than others
when they try this because they are the type of person who responds to overfeeding with more
physical activity, often spontaneous physical activity that they are not even entirely aware of.
There is a genetic component in this, whereas other people don't seem to naturally increase their physical activity
levels when they're consistently in a calorie surplus. And so, of course, they gain fat faster
than the people who tend to move around more when they eat more. But I will say that in my many
years now of doing this, I have not come across a single person who responds so strongly to a caloric surplus that they spontaneously move around so much more that they are able to just slowly work their calories up without gaining fat. The only people I know who have successfully increased their daily calories significantly while preserving their body composition explicitly worked more movement into their lifestyle.
So they extended their workouts or they did more workouts, often cardio.
They often added cardio to their routine or started to do more
cardio than they were doing previously. And so then if you want to do that before you start
cutting, because maybe right now you are not very active, maybe you are doing one, two or three
strength training workouts per week, and you're looking at your calories and you look at the number you're going to have to eat to lose,
let's say a pound of fat per week, and it is depressing because it's a small number,
then sure, add some physical activity so you can eat more. And that generally makes cutting easier.
Okay. Last question is how do you address off days when you're not motivated or productive at
work? I just accept them as inevitable. I mean, remember, even elite athletes have bad games where
they're totally off form. And so I don't see any reason to be self-critical. I mean, even the
greats are not always great. Often they're not even consistently great. They're often just great
at being consistent. They always show up and they always put in the work. Sometimes it's great.
Sometimes it's not so great, but even the not so great still moves the needle somewhat. And so
usually I just focus on what I'm going to do the next day. I try to make sure that I don't have
two bad days in a row. One bad day is try to make sure that I don't have two bad days
in a row. One bad day is totally fine. There's no reason to have two bad days in a row, right?
Oh, and also I remind myself that even if every day could be perfectly productive, or let's just
say highly productive, can't ever really achieve perfection, but close to perfect in terms of absolute results, it wouldn't look
that different from, let's say, 80% of my days being really productive, 24 out of 30 days,
really productive. It's kind of like dieting in that regard, right? Because if you can follow
your meal plan well, not perfectly, just well for, let's say, 24 out of 30 days. So 80% consistency. And so long as
on the other six days, you don't eat many thousands of calories more than you burn,
you're going to do great. There's nothing you can't do with your body composition. If you can
do that and get your strength training workouts in. And so then should you roast yourself on one
of those six off days?
No, of course not.
You might even want to plan them in.
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.