Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Slow Cutting, Improving Stamina, Preventing Muscle Loss on Trips, and More
Episode Date: July 19, 2022What’s wrong with slow cutting? If you’re low on protein, but already hit your calorie target, should you stop eating? How can you prevent muscle loss while on vacation? Should you lift your head ...off the bench while pressing? What’s the most effective type of cardio for sports? All that and more in this Q&A podcast. This podcast is a Q&A, but it’s a bit different from the kind you’ll typically find here on Muscle For Life. In my usual Q&A episodes, I take a question from email or Instagram and then fully answer it in an episode of the podcast every week. However, 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 - Try Pulse today! Go to https://buylegion.com/pulse and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points 3:16 - Is there a downside to slow fat loss? 4:17 - Do you have any tips to minimize or prevent muscle loss while on vacation? 8:11 - Should you lower your macros as you decrease bodyweight in a cutting cycle? 10:19 - Would you squat barefoot if your gym allowed it? 10:42 - Do you have doubts about the war on Ukraine? 11:50 - Should I lift my head while benching? 12:52 - Which type of cardio is most effective for increasing stamina for sports? 13:48 - Should I continue using creatine while cutting? 14:01 - What do you think is the best form of government? 15:14 - Which pulse flavor do you recommend for someone who thinks most are too sweet? 15:48 - What book had the most significant impact on you life? 16:27 -What is the best way to see if I have gained muscle? 17:21 - Is WWIII about to start? 18:04 - If I’m under my protein but hit my calories for the day while cutting, should I stop eating? --- Mentioned on the Show: Try Pulse today! Go to https://buylegion.com/pulse and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I am your host, Mike Matthews. Thank
you for joining me today for a Q&A where I'm answering, oh, I don't know, maybe 10 or 15
questions that people have asked me over on Instagram at Muscle for Life Fitness every week
or two. I put up on Monday or Tuesday, I put up and ask me a question story and then gather up
a bunch of questions, answer them on Instagram, and then come over here and answer them again on
the podcast. And I'm always looking for questions that I have not answered many times before,
you know, that I haven't written about or spoken about repeatedly, or questions that I'm just getting asked a lot about and that I
haven't also beaten to death already. And sometimes I take some questions that just amuse me and give
me a chance to at least laugh at my own jokes. And so if you want me to answer your questions,
just follow me over on Instagram at muscle for life fitness Fitness and look for the ask me a question story that
goes up every week or two and ask me some questions and maybe I'll pick one of yours.
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A nice egg asks, is there a downside to losing fat too slowly for someone around 28% body fat?
downside to losing fat too slowly for someone around 28% body fat? Yeah, definitely. It is the duration because the longer you have to cut for, the more things can go wrong and get in the way.
Random, accidental overeating, vacations, diet fatigue, demotivation, etc. So when cutting,
I generally recommend people to lose fat as quickly as they healthfully can. You don't want
to be so aggressive that you suffer. You don't want to be hungry all of the time and have cravings
all of the time and lose muscle and so forth. But you do want to lose fat. At least most people
should be looking to lose fat as quickly as they can without running into any of those problems. That way you can greatly increase your chances of reaching your goal, your target body
composition, and then you can get back to the fun stuff like maintenance and lean bulking.
Alessio Bell 897 asks, going to be traveling for a month or so. Any tips to prevent slash minimize
muscle loss? Yeah, definitely. So the first thing you should know is it takes about three weeks of no training to lose
actual lean muscle tissue, as opposed to just losing water and glycogen in your muscles.
And that makes your muscles smaller when you lose water and glycogen, the intramuscular
water and glycogen, which does shrink and your muscles shrink when you haven't
trained. I mean, I start to notice it probably after about a week, seven or 10 days of no
training. My muscles look a little bit smaller, probably only an amount that I personally would
notice, but that is not because I'm losing muscle tissue. It's because the water and the glycogen,
which is a form of carbohydrate stored in the muscles and in the liver, those substances,
glycogen, which is a form of carbohydrate stored in the muscles and in the liver.
Those substances, I have less of them, less water and less glycogen in my muscles after,
call it seven or 10 days of no training. That is also what people refer to when they're talking about the residual pump that comes with training, the post-training residual pump. That is mostly
just water and glycogen that is in your muscles that makes them look bigger and
fuller. And the water and glycogen comes back very quickly once you start training again. So
you could be off for two or three weeks. Your muscles might look quite a bit smaller, but that's
not because you've lost actual muscle tissue. And then once you get back in the gym within a week
or so, you just look back to your normal size. That's mostly because water and glycogen coming
back. And so
then when you are going out of town, make sure to enjoy yourself. Don't worry about losing muscle
because you are going to take a couple of weeks off of the gym. You are not going to lose any
muscle unless you severely restrict your calories and your protein intake while you are not training.
And if you do basically nothing, if you just lie around in bed all day and eat very little food and very little protein, all right, fine. You actually can lose a fair
amount of muscle in a couple of weeks, but so long as you eat enough calories.
And if you're like most of us, you are not in a calorie deficit when you are on vacation.
And if you're just physically active, even just moving around, you don't have to do
any formal workouts, but just walking around a lot, for
example, actually does stimulate a lot of the muscles in your body to some degree. And if you
are so inclined, again, I would not go out of my way personally to do it, but if you are so inclined
and you can do, even if it's just one full body resistance training workout per week. And even if it's
something just like body weight training, high reps to basically to failure, you don't have access to
a gym or you don't want to bother going to a gym. You just want to do a simple body weight workout.
It could be in your hotel room, or maybe you go into the hotel gym, which is very limited. They
have some machines, they have some light dumbbells. That's totally fine as well.
It can be a much less difficult workout than you are used to and still be highly effective at
maintaining muscle and even strength. For example, research shows that you can maintain your muscle
on one third to even one ninth of the amount of volume that it takes to gain muscle. Now, of course, the more
intense the training is, the less volume is needed to maintain the muscle. So if you train, let's say
fairly intensely five days per week, and you were to cut that volume down to one ninth, that would
need to be fairly intense training. You couldn't go from intense strength training to light body weight
work at one ninth of the volume. But regardless, my point is one or two max two, and I would just
do whole body training. Just keep it simple. Just hit all of your big muscle groups. Do
the most compound ish exercises you can based on what you have available. That is plenty for maintaining
everything that you started your vacation with. Okay, Carlos Real 54 asks, should you lower your
macros as you decrease body weight in a cutting cycle? Yes, you will need to bring your calories
down. You can also read macros depending on how you are tracking things, or you need to
bring your activity up as you lose weight because this reduces your total daily energy expenditure.
It costs more energy to move a heavier body than a lighter one, but it's not that much. Generally,
total daily energy expenditure drops about 100 calories for every, call it 10 to 15 pounds lost. So you just have to adjust for
that as you go. And eventually what you'll find is that you can't feasibly move or exercise more,
which is what I'd recommend doing in the beginning of a cut. If you need to increase, if you need to
grow that calorie deficit by let's say 100, 150 150 calories because you've lost now 10 or 15 pounds.
If you can move a bit more, I would recommend that before cutting food.
But once you're up to three to five hours of weightlifting or resistance training per week and call it two or three hours of cardio per week, that is about as much activity as I would recommend.
Because if you start doing a lot more than that, you can not be able to recover from
it. It just becomes too much on your body, especially when you are also restricting calories.
So at that point, you just have to start eating less food. And as far as which macro or macros
to reduce, of course, most people, they just reduce carbs or fats or a combination of both.
people, they just reduce carbs or fats or a combination of both. And I would say do whatever you enjoy the most. I personally like to keep my carbs as high as possible when I'm cutting.
I find that my workouts are best and I am generally fuller if I can keep my carbs up.
And so as I'm cutting, my fats get lower and lower. And at the end of a cut, I might be only getting 20%, maybe even 15% of my daily calories from fat.
And of course, that is not ideal as a general way to eat.
I would not recommend that as a lifestyle choice, but it's totally fine to do temporarily when you are cutting.
Okay, Comfy Sweats asks, if your gym would allow it, would you squat barefooted? No, I much prefer
squat shoes because they increase stability and they help you screw your feet into the ground.
Like literally like you imagine you're screwing your feet by trying to turn your toes outward
into the ground. And that can help with form and even performance. Danius 187V asks, so you have doubts about the war on Ukraine?
So this was asked to me a couple of months ago when it started. No, then I didn't have any doubts.
And even now, I don't have doubts. I'm just not surprised. Putin made it very clear that he was
not going to allow any more of his neighbors to join NATO.
And now we are all finding out.
And so look at it this way.
Would the U.S. ever allow Canada or Mexico to ally with Russia or maybe China and then arm itself with nukes? No soap. That would
be a guaranteed invasion and war. Okay. Disorganized asks, lifting head for bench,
why not stay planted? So this is a habit that I've had actually just lifting my chin off of
the bench a little bit when I am pressing, barbell pressing, dumbbell pressing. And I thought
it was a benign habit actually. And I knew that you definitely don't want to smash your head
backward, like down into the bench because that can strain your neck. But ironically,
I recently strained my neck, nothing too bad, but just kind of annoying on the incline dumbbell press by kind
of doing the opposite, just bringing my chin to my chest a little bit too forcefully when I was
pressing relatively heavy weight. And so now I am retraining myself to leave my head on the bench
and again, to not push backward into the bench because many people do that and
that can also strain your neck. So here I am still learning how to lift weights better. All right.
Keith plus two asks, which type of cardio is more effective to increase stamina for sports hit or
list? So high intensity interval training or low intensity steady state cardio. Well, ideally, you would do both.
Ideally, if you really wanted to maximize your endurance, you would want to do a lot of moderate intensity work.
And then you would want to steadily increase your performance in that.
So you could measure that by wattage per session, for example, if you were on a bike.
And then you also want to do some high intensity work. But I would recommend limiting that to no more than an hour or so per week. So an hour or so
of high intensity interval training per week with each session lasting maybe 20 or 30 minutes.
And you also need to make sure that you are progressing in those workouts. So your sprints
should be getting progressively longer in those workouts and your rest times should be getting progressively shorter. Okay. Mamkin Kachok asks, should I
continue using creatine when I am cutting? Yes, absolutely. It's going to help you retain your
performance and your muscle mass. Do it. Anonymous asks, best form of government?
do it. Anonymous asks, best form of government? Well, impractically speaking, if I am just going to daydream a benign dictatorship of some kind, like for example, what we had in the Pax Romana
period. Practically speaking, though, I think the best we have seen so far is something akin to what
we started with here in the USA, a representative
government with limited democracy. I wholeheartedly believe that one of the many things wrong with our
current polity and our society is too much democracy, not too little, too much. For example,
what if we had to earn the right to vote by, say, paying taxes in three of the last
five years? Yes, with reasonable exceptions like retirees, blah, blah, blah. But what if that was
the rule? What if, for example, now the parasites who take so much more from society than they give
or maybe only take from society and give nothing, what if those people had no say in how the country
is run? How might that change the dynamics of this culture? Hmm. Rah Rah Rachel 79 asks,
which pulse flavor for someone who thinks most are too sweet? Don't mind tangy. Oh,
that's definitely sour candy then. That is my favorite actually, because I like
tang like you and I don't like too sweet. Although I will say that I don't find any of the Pulse
flavors too sweet for my tastes. If I try some of the artificially sweetened stuff out there,
that can get way too sweet for me, particularly with protein. Anyway, I think Sour Candy Pulse is delicious.
And if you like sour, you might like it too. Okay. Sean Joe 125 asks, what book had the most
significant impact on your life? I get asked this fairly often, and I wish I could give
a great honest answer to it. But what I find is it's so hard for me to pick one, but collectively,
I would say it has been the many books I've read about writing and marketing because I can
attribute at least 80% of my success in my career to my abilities in those areas. And my success in my career has greatly impacted every aspect of my life.
Shamunk7 asks, best way to tell if I've gained muscle pictures, body scan measurements,
et cetera, question mark. Well, the easiest ways to know are just more strength. If you're getting
stronger, especially if you are not brand new, if you are brand new to weightlifting, you are going
to gain a fair amount of strength in the first few months without gaining much muscle. But if you are
at least, let's say six to nine months into your resistance training journey, then more strength
generally means more muscle and more body weight as well, because of course, muscle weighs something.
So if you are getting stronger and you are getting heavier, even if slowly you are gaining muscle, even if you are not gaining noticeable amounts
of body fat, particularly if you are within your first year or so of resistance training, because
you can lose fat and build muscle at the same time. Next question comes from smooth boss. He asks, I'm guessing it's a, he
is World War III about to start serious question. Uh, well, I will be at least a little bit
surprised if the God or Dameron is sparked off over an invasion of a country that most people
couldn't even find on a map and, or didn't even know existed a few months ago. I guess though,
that actually would be a kind of fitting end
to the clown world that we live in.
But no, I don't think the probability of Armageddon over Ukraine is very high.
If I had to put a number to it, probably no higher than 10%.
But geopolitics is a bit off my beat.
So I might be wrong.
OK, last question comes from Theo
Meester and they say cutting if I'm under on protein, but hit my calories for the day,
should I try to hit my protein or stop eating? You can just stop eating, but I would not recommend
that you make this a habit unless you're talking about missing by like 10 grams or
something. Generally, you want to work to hit your protein target at least five days per week,
because if you miss it by a lot, several times per week, that can get in the way of your results.
Actually, it can slow down fat loss. It can accelerate muscle loss. So make sure that you are really paying
attention to your protein intake. If you don't want to pay attention to all of your macros,
pay attention to your protein, and you can let your carb and fat intakes fluctuate so long as
your calories are where they need to be. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it
helpful. And if you did subscribe to the
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show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just feedback to share, shoot me an email,
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I read everything myself. I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks again
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