Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Social Dinners While Cutting, Seated vs. Standing Presses, Time Management, and More
Episode Date: June 17, 2022Is TRT getting too trendy? How do I manage my work and time as a parent of young kids? How can you stay in a calorie deficit while going to social dinners? Can keto optimize your hormones? All that an...d 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 - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan 2:41 - What are your thoughts on tattoos? 3:37 - Do you think that TRT is getting too trendy? 5:27 - What is missing in the fitness industry? 6:37 - Do seated dumbbell/barbell presses work the core as much as standing overhead dumbbell/barbell presses? 7:23 - How can I maintain a calorie deficit when social dinners are constantly on my schedule? 9:36 - How much do you love listening to me talk about horses? 10:02 - How can I maintain my goal and strong mindset while cutting? 11:23 - How do you manage all that you do while having kids? 14:17 - What is the recommendation on warm up weights vs set weights? 16:31 - What are your thoughts on keto in terms of hormonal optimization and preservation? 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
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Well, hello there. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today
for a Q&A episode where I am going to briefly answer a number of questions that people have
asked me over on Instagram. And how I've been doing these episodes is on Instagram every
Monday or Tuesday, I post a story asking people to ask me questions. And then I answer
a number of those questions on Instagram, the ones that are interesting to me or that I haven't
already beaten to death in my writings and speakings or that are just topical things I'm
getting asked a lot recently. And then I bring everything over here to the podcast as well. And so what am
I going to be talking about in today's episode? Well, I'm going to be talking about TRT. I'm going
to be sharing my thoughts on a few things that I think are missing in the fitness industry,
how to maintain a calorie deficit when social dinners are constantly in your schedule,
how you should approach your training
when you are cutting, what your goal should be, what your mindset should be, and more.
Before we begin, 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. Alrighty, the first question we have here comes from CAA1997, and they ask,
any thoughts on tattoos? Well, I think that some of the artwork is impressive. Some of it is even
stunning, but it does seem that many people get tattoos for external reasons, for admiration, for approval, for acceptance. And I think that
that is generally a bad reason to do just about anything. Generally speaking, we tend to make
better decisions when our own applause is all we need. And so for me, I don't appreciate the art of tattoos and the idea of getting tattoos isn't
appealing enough to me just for my own sake to want to do it. All right, moving on to the next
question from Comfy Sweats. They ask, do you think that TRT is getting too trendy? Yes, absolutely. Many men are getting on TRT right now with perfectly normal T levels or even maybe slightly
low or let's just say with T levels on the lower end of normal, but with no symptoms
of low T. And many of those guys are also taking way too much testosterone without understanding the risks.
I recently met a 20-something-year-old dude in the gym who said he was on TRT, but when I
started to ask him about it, well, actually, he's currently cruising at about 1,200 nanograms per deciliter of blood NGDL after recently being as high as 2000 to 3000
NGDL. That, my friends, that is not TRT, that is steroids. I mean, 1200 NGDL is going to be at the
absolute top end of the range of what is attainable naturally. It might even be a bit higher. I'd
have to look at some research that I haven't looked at in a while. Somewhere around 1,000
is about the highest you can ever expect naturally. So 1,200, certainly 2,000 plus. 2,000 plus is
supraphysiological testosterone levels. That is steroid use. And because we are on the topic, I also want to
recommend that you give the side eye to any jacked fitness gurus or influencers who claim
to be only on TRT. That often means a lot of T and other anabolics, and they are just trying to feel less guilty by at least admitting that they're on T.
Next, Faustabin asks, what is missing in the fitness industry? Well, a few things. One is
a general understanding and acknowledgement of what it really takes to get and stay jacked and shredded. Often it involves eating and body disorders and
exercise addiction, and it negatively impairs health and performance in many ways. For most
people, it is simply not worth it. Another thing that I think is missing in the fitness industry is honest marketing. So
many parasites, so many profiteers who are willing to do and say anything to make coin
in this industry. And they're pushing their pills and they're pushing their powders and their
programs. It does get a bit tiresome. And the third thing that I think is missing is humility.
There is just far too much grandstanding and one-upmanship in this space for me. I like people
with poise, not pose. Govind Deepak, he asks, do seated dumbbell slash barbell presses work the core as much as standing overhead barbell presses or dumbbell, I suppose? No, but the core is still very involved in a proper seated press. But the standing overhead press and barbell press in particular is one of the most difficult pressing exercises you can do. It's almost a whole body
exercise, not as much as a squat, of course, but it does involve a lot more muscle mass than a
seated dumbbell press, for example. And that also includes the core muscles. They are more highly
activated in a standing barbell press than a seated dumbbell. Okay. Kate Foreman Yoga asks
how to maintain calorie deficit when social dinners are constantly on your schedule. That's
a good question. And honestly, it's difficult. It might make more sense actually to just take
a diet break until you are eating out less. But if that's not really an option because it's part
of your work or just part of your lifestyle, a few tips that can help are one, save up calories for that meal by just eating less than you normally would before.
So if it is a dinner, for example, you are just going to eat less throughout the day,
eat light throughout the day and save quote unquote, a lot of your daily calories for those
dinners. If you can get in, for example, most of your protein by dinner and a couple of
servings of vegetables and a little bit of whatever else that you like to eat, just so you're not
hungry. That's kind of the goal is getting your protein, getting some vegetables throughout the
day and just stave off hunger. So then you can eat fairly liberally at dinner without blowing up
your calories and blowing up your macros. That's a workable approach. You can eat fairly liberally at dinner without blowing up your calories and blowing up your macros.
That's a workable approach.
You can also check menus online beforehand to work out some options that fit your needs so you can look at the calories and decide what you want to order.
And that can be a lot better than trying to approximate calories when you are looking at the menu in the restaurant, because
of course, most restaurants, they don't share that. Another tip is to have a high protein snack
before you go to dinner. That is going to just help you be less hungry and it's going to make
you less likely to overeat. And lastly, I would recommend skipping dessert, at least as the rule,
you can make exceptions, but generally you want to skip dessert when you are eating out, if you
are eating out regularly, because restaurant desserts often have a lot more calories than
you might think, or then you might be used to if you make similar things at home, because of course,
restaurants are in the business of
making food as delicious as possible. And in the case of desserts, that almost always means a lot
of butter and a lot of sugar and therefore a lot of calories. Okay, so the next question comes from
my lovely German wife. And she asks, how much do you love listening to me talk about horses?
And she asks, how much do you love listening to me talk about horses? Well, I would rather just buy her more horses than have to hear about them all the time. And that's why we have four horses currently. And she hasn't lobbied me for another, at least recently, but that's where we're at right now. Kong Leeway asks workout goal slash mindset during a cut. I
feel I've been lifting the same weights every workout. It's a good question. When cutting,
the goal is to maintain muscle and strength, not gain it. Unless you are brand new to strength
training, then you can gain muscle and lose fat at the same time. But if you are an experienced lifter, you cannot recomp as it is
known. And so your goal then is to maintain muscle and strength. So really, you should consider a
workout where you do exactly the same thing as the last one, maybe that workout in the previous week,
if you've done exactly the same thing, same weights, same reps, no progress, that's actually
a win when you're cutting. And if you lose a rep or two here and there, which will happen if you are cutting for
long enough, and if you are getting lean enough, that is not necessarily a cause for concern
because again, it's going to happen, especially if you have been cutting for probably about six
weeks. That's when most people start to see declines in performance
and the declines can be more marked if you are going from lean to really lean. If you are going
from maybe a little bit overweight to fairly lean, you are going to notice less of a decline
in performance than if you are going from lean to really lean. The next question comes from anonymous and they ask, how do you manage having to do all that you do while raising two
kids? Well, a few things. One, I married a woman who was willing to do everything she can to support
my work and she continues to do that. And so that's a huge part of it. Two, I have no hobbies, really. I have no social life outside of seeing a few people in the gym five days a week, going
to the golf course every now and then, although I haven't been inclined to do that at all
in the last couple of months because I've mostly just been working.
I also read and work about 10 hours or so, call it nine to 11 hours
per day, Monday through Friday, and then several hours per day on most Saturdays and Sundays.
And lastly, I don't spend as much time with my kids and with my wife as I would like to.
And the reason why I continue to do what I'm doing when I say that I would like to
do something else is mostly that I have an opportunity right now with how things are going
on all fronts, my business fronts, you know, Legion, my sports nutrition company, and
my book publishing as well. Those are the two major things.
I have an opportunity over the course of the next one to three years to achieve what I would say is true financial independence, I guess. And by that, I mean having enough money to not have to
work for money ever again. Not that I'm looking to retire or do anything majorly different than
I'm doing right now, but there is a lot of peace of mind that comes with having enough money that
earns you enough money to more than cover your lifestyle. And I'm putting a particularly large
premium on that right now, given how much uncertainty there is in the world and given the state of
the economy here in America and really everywhere. And I'm not sure that this opportunity will always
be there. I think it would be naive to think that it will always be there. And so I'm trying to take advantage of it while I have it. And so that's why my number
one priority is my work. And my family comes as a close second. But if I look at it in terms of
time, I give a lot more time to my work than I give to my family. However, in the next one to
three years, if my plan pans out and so far it is going well, then I definitely plan on taking some time away from work, just working a bit less.
I mean, I still want to work hard, but working a bit less so I can spend more time with my family.
OK, the next question also comes from anonymous and they ask, what is the recommendation on warmup weight versus first set weight? Well, what I like to do is I like to use about 50% of my working weight for one or two sets of eight to 10 reps. Those are easy sets, of course. And then I like to go up to about 80% of my working weight and do one set of four or five reps. Again, that's pretty easy. And what I'm feeling as I do these warm-up
sets is I'm feeling a little bit of a pump. I'm feeling the muscles warming up. I'm feeling some
blood flow. And that, by the way, is what I would do for a bigger exercise like a squat or a deadlift
and for an easier exercise like the bench press, I'm usually fine with just one or
two warmup sets with 50%. So I'll skip the 80% or four to five reps usually. But sometimes I will
do that third warmup set on the bench press, for example, or the overhead press. It just depends
how that 50% set or how those sets feel. If I don't feel ready to load the bar yet, then I will
do the heavier warmup set. But if I feel fine, I'll skip it and just get right into my working
sets. And with most isolation exercises, I don't need to do any warmup sets because the muscle
groups I'm training are already pumped and trained a little bit and warmed up from
the exercises I start my workouts with because my workouts always start with my heavy compound
weightlifting and then move into my isolation work. So for example, my current pull workout
starts with deadlifts and then moves into chest supported rows. And I of course do my warmups on the deadlift and almost always do
those three warmup sets. Actually, yeah, always. I can't think of a time where I skipped that
heavier warmup set. I like to be fully warmed up on the deadlift as well as the squat. But after
I'm done with the deadlifting and I go over to the chest supported row, I don't need to do warm up sets there because my biceps are already warmed up.
My back is already warmed up from the deadlifting.
OK, the final question comes again from anonymous and they ask thoughts on keto in terms of hormonal optimization and muscle preservation.
Keto is not ideal in this regard because research shows that low-carb dieting plus intense exercise leads to generally higher cortisol levels, which in turn can lower your testosterone levels and impair muscle repair and growth. Workout performance is also impaired on a low-carb diet, and that, of course, further hurts body composition because the less you progress in your training, the less jacked you look, generally speaking. 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. 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.