Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: TRT, Fasted Training, Vegetable Oils, and More
Episode Date: November 8, 2021This 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 fu...lly 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 6:21 - When should you consider TRT? 12:23 - When should you start using straps for conventional deadlifts? 15:23 - Are bands and bodyweight exercises a waste of time? 16:08 - Should you change macros or calories during a deload week? 17:27 - When should you move on from BLS to Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger? 20:54 - What do you think about vegetable and seed oils? Are they unhealthy? 21:43 - How should your diet look when you're sick? 22:54 - Should you use a weightlifting belt? 23:32 - Do you trust any politician? 23:49 - What body fat should you cut and bulk at? 24:11 - Who rules the world? 24:26 - Should you work out fasted? 25:01 - What's your advice for someone hooked on cardio? 26:53 - How do you keep staying a badass? 27:02 - Which is best: occlusion training or rest-pause? 27:43 - If you can't lift heavy, can you make up for it with more volume? 27:57 - Can I workout in the evening for fat loss? 28:09 - How do you make yourself eat when you're not hungry? 28:33 - Is the hex bar just as good as the barbell for deadlifts? 28:56 - Thoughts on glycerol monostearate supplementation? Is it worth taking? Mentioned on the Show: My New Book Muscle For Life: https://muscleforlifebook.com/
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Getting fit, lean, and strong does not revolve around dubious biohacks for supercharging muscle
growth, melting belly fat, or optimizing your hormones. It doesn't require dietary strategies
like intermittent fasting and keto. It does not require exercise techniques like muscle confusion
and functional training. And it does not require esoteric pills and powders like collagen
protein and exogenous ketones. Instead, the real secret sauce of the fitness elite can be summed
up like this. One, they control their calorie and protein intake. Two, they mostly eat nutritious
foods. And three, they work out a few hours per week and mostly to gain muscle and
strength. In other words, the passport to the body you've always wanted is in the fundamentals,
not the fringes. The devil is in the details as always though, because there are a few correct
and many incorrect ways of executing those strategies. It's kind of like making music
because just knowing that the process amounts to using notes to create pleasing harmonies,
melodies, and rhythms, that's not enough to create an earworm. To do that, you have to understand
how to craft and how to combine those elements in very particular ways. And if
you're skeptical of people like me who say these kinds of things, good, because you should be. I
was skeptical when I first encountered the scientific research and the practical strategies
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Hi, hi, dear listener. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today. And if
you haven't already, please take a moment to subscribe to the show in whatever app you are
listening to me in so you don't miss any new episodes and so you help boost the ranking of
the show in the various charts, which helps me a lot. All right. This episode is another installment in my new Q&A series where I just answer the
questions quickly, clearly, usefully, hopefully, instead of rambling tangents, preambles, and
so forth, which I myself do like, of course.
I don't just like the sound of my voice.
I do like to learn that way personally.
If somebody is going to teach me what to do, I do like to learn that way personally. If somebody is going to teach me
what to do, I also like to know why, but I've been getting positive feedback on these shorter
Q&As. People have been telling me that they like the longer deep dives, but it's also nice to
have some appetizers sometimes as well, some hors d'oeuvres. So that'll be the format of
today's episode. And I will be answering questions about TRT, about vegetable and seed oils, about trap
bar or hex bar versus conventional deadlifting and many other things.
Now, if you want to get your questions to me, you can email me Mike at muscle for life.com
F O R life.com.
Or you can follow me on Instagram at muscle life fitness, and you can DM me, mike at muscleforlife.com, F-O-R-L-I-F-E.com, or you can follow me on Instagram
at Muscle for Life Fitness, and you can DM me, or you can wait for when I post. Usually once a week,
I'll do a post in my stories asking for people's questions, and then I will choose questions to
answer in the stories as well as questions to feature on future podcasts. Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the
podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health and fitness books, including the number
one bestselling weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger, Leaner, Stronger,
and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded
Chef. Now, these books have sold well over 1
million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can find them
on all major online retailers like Audible, Amazon, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play, as well as
in select Barnes & Noble stores. And I should also mention that you can get any of the audiobooks
100% free when you sign up for an Audible account. And this is a mention that you can get any of the audiobooks 100% free when you
sign up for an Audible account. And this is a great way to make those pockets of downtime,
like commuting, meal prepping, and cleaning, more interesting, entertaining, and productive.
And so if you want to take Audible up on this offer, and if you want to get one of my audiobooks
for free, just go to www.buylegion.com and sign up for your account.
So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, and if you want to learn
time-proven and evidence-based strategies for losing fat, building muscle, and getting healthy,
and strategies that work for anyone and everyone, regardless of age or circumstances, please do consider picking
up one of my best-selling books, Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for
Women, and The Shredded Chef for my favorite fitness-friendly recipes. Okay, the first question
is, when would it be a good option to consider TRT? Now, this is something I actually
want to write an article about or record a long form podcast on, maybe do both because it is
something that I've been getting asked more and more about over the last year or two as TRT has
been getting more and more popular. But the simple answer is it makes sense to me to consider TRT, testosterone
replacement therapy, by the way, that's what it stands for. It makes sense to consider it
when your testosterone is low. So let's say it is at the low range of normal, which is
three to 400 ish up to maybe a thousand to 1200 ish. That's the general range that we see naturally. And so
if you've gotten blood work done and you are at the low end of normal and you are, or maybe you
are even below the, the floor that I just gave. So let's say you come in at 200, 250, and that would be nanograms per
deciliter. You've probably heard NGDL, right? Nanograms per deciliter, nanograms of testosterone
per deciliter of blood. And so if you are coming in at 150, 200, 250, that is definitely low.
If though you are coming in at 300, maybe 400, that's where symptoms come into play.
Because if you are at three to 400, but you do not have symptoms associated with low testosterone,
you have good energy, you have good sex drive, you don't have anxiety, you are sleeping well,
you can just look up online the simple roster of side effects associated with low
testosterone. If you are not experiencing those things, but your testosterone is at the low end
of normal, for me personally, I'm not sure that I would go on TRT under those circumstances
because the primary reason I think to go on TRT is to improve quality of life,
not to chase muscle and strength gain. And the reason for that is to really make a big difference
in the gym, you have to go quite beyond the ceiling of normal, the range of normal that I gave earlier. You have to go quite beyond a thousand
to 1200 nanograms per deciliter to make a big difference in the gym. Now, if you go from,
let's say 300 to a thousand, that is going to make a difference. There's no question. It is
going to probably make a big difference depending on how muscular, how fit you already are. But if you look online at the steroid cycles
that many bodybuilders run, they can take their testosterone up to 5,000 nanograms per deciliter.
I've seen guys reporting 10,000 plus. Now, of course, they are also taking other drugs,
but most effective steroid cycles are powered by testosterone.
And then there are other drugs that are added in the mix.
Now, some people who are very familiar with steroids might quibble with me on that point
and talk about fringe kind of edge cases where you are going to run low testosterone and
much higher amounts of other drugs.
And you would probably be right. Steroids is something that I am conversant in,
but I've never used steroids. I've never been interested in using them. So I haven't taken
the time to really dive into the details and really get into the nitty gritty of what drugs
are used in what amounts and when and how they're combined and so on and so
forth. So I'm speaking more generally about how steroid cycles are formulated. And generally,
you have the base of a lot of testosterone and then you're adding other stuff in. And so in the
case of TRT, if I had low testosterone, I test low, I have symptoms of
low testosterone, and I've done everything that I can naturally to try to bring it up,
including training regularly and doing a lot of compound weightlifting, which positively
influences hormones. I would make sure that I'm eating plenty of dietary fat. I would probably
eat around 30% of calories from dietary fat. I would make sure that I'm getting a mix of saturated
and unsaturated. I would make sure I'm getting a good amount of monounsaturated fat. I would make
sure that I am sleeping enough and I'm making a priority to get good sleep. And I would make sure
that I am not overextending my body with too much vigorous
physical activity. And that would mean stuff inside and outside of the gym. And I would do
other things again that I'm going to get into. I don't want to turn this episode into like 15
minutes of me then creating this other episode. And I will get into these things in detail,
but I would do all the things I can naturally to bring my testosterone up.
And if that did not work and I'm still low testosterone and symptoms of low testosterone, that's when I would go on TRT because at that point it's about quality of life and health.
It is unhealthy for men to have low testosterone.
It raises the risk of various types of disease and health. It is unhealthy for men to have low testosterone. It raises the risk of various types
of disease and dysfunction. It is almost certainly healthier on balance to raise testosterone up to
the middle to maybe middle or higher end of the normal range, something like 600 to 800 nanograms per deciliter. Now, one of the downsides
to TRT is it's something you're going to have to do for the rest of your life. And that is one of
the reasons why I recommend doing everything naturally that you can to try to correct the
problem before turning to the magic bullet. Okay, that was kind of a long answer, but let's move on.
When should I start using
straps for conventional deadlifting? Well, I would recommend that you avoid straps and you avoid
mixed grips and even the hook grip, unless you just hate your thumbs, for as long as you can.
So just use a double overhand grip, a conventional, simple, just grip the barbell and hold onto it. But eventually as you
get stronger, what you'll find is you maybe can get away with that on your first working set,
but then by your second working set or hard set to use another term, the sets that you are going
to be taking close to muscle failure, you can't finish your second set because you can't grip the bar. It
starts to slip out of your hand. And once that happens, your entire body basically shuts down.
The whole lift shuts down and that's it. So at that point, you have a couple of options. You
can start using straps. So in this case, you would not use straps on your warmup sets.
You would try to do a hard set, maybe two hard sets, as many hard sets as you
can before your grip starts to fail. And then that starts to become a limiting factor to your
progress. And then you would introduce the straps or you could introduce the mixed grip. But if
you're going to do that, then I'd recommend alternating the palm up hand at least every month or so, maybe every week.
Let's say you're deadlifting every week.
So every week you would switch the hand that is palm up.
That is awkward to me.
I tried it a couple of times and I didn't care to put in the work to get used to it.
I'd rather just use straps personally, but that is an option. And also the hook grip is an option. It just hurts your thumbs
a lot, especially when the weights get heavy and I don't mind pain, but it was excruciating
actually. And I guess if I, if I just stuck with it, eventually, I probably would get used to it.
But some people, they will complain about the front squat and how uncomfortable it is
to get the bar in the right position.
It's up against their throat.
They can feel it on their collarbone.
Well, I never had any issues with the front squat.
Maybe it was slightly uncomfortable the first couple of times I tried it and then I quickly got used to it. Not because I'm such a badass, but my point is
I'm not oversensitized to pain, but the hook grip, wow, that was painful. And also I hurt my thumb
skiing about a year ago. I sprained it and it's fine, but it's still a little bit gimpy and hook gripping would mess it up. And if you want to learn more about how to make the mixed
grip work, how to make straps work, if you want to learn a bit more about the hook grip, head over
to legionathletics.com, search for deadlift grip, and you'll find an article I wrote on the topic.
Okay. Next question. I see so many women doing bands and body weight
exercises. Is that a waste of time? Mostly? Yes. Especially when people, and I guess I see more
women than men doing banded stuff, but when people are doing banded exercise instead of loaded
exercises. So instead of the heavy barbell squats, they're
doing stuff with rubber bands and bands are also a waste of time when they're randomly added to
loaded exercises. So trying to do the heavy barbell squat with a rubber band around your knees,
bad idea. Adding the rubber band to really anything, any heavy compound movement,
not a good idea. Next question. Do you change your macros slash calories during your deload week?
I do. I generally just eat a little bit less. So I will eat about 200 ish fewer calories per day.
And if I weren't still doing cardio when I deload, which I do, I do 30 minutes of
moderate intensity cardio. I hop on an upright bike for 30 minutes a day, five to seven days
per week. And if I weren't doing that, I probably would cut another 200 ish calories or so from my
daily intake. So that would be a total reduction of 400 ish, which is probably about the number of calories that I am
not burning while deloading because my workouts are shorter and less intense and I'm not doing
cardio, but because I am doing cardio, I just cut about 200 calories. And to do that, I eat the same
stuff. I just eat a bit less of it. So at night, instead of a cup of dry oatmeal,
which I cook, I'm not a savage. I have a half of a cup of the dry oatmeal, which I cook.
And my vegetable slop for dinner, which you've probably seen on Instagram if you follow me there,
is a little bit smaller. And maybe I will have a little bit less dark chocolate. I usually have
one to 200 calories of dark chocolate every day. All right, next question. I am working on the BLS program. At
which point should I bump up to beyond BLS? And in case you're not familiar with the acronyms,
BLS is Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which is the name of my flagship book and program for men.
And then beyond BLS is Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which is the sequel to that book. And it is my program for intermediate and advanced weight
lifters. So Bigger, Leaner, Stronger is for guys who have yet to gain, let's say their first 25
ish pounds of muscle. That's really who that book and who that program is for. But if a guy has
already gained 20 to 30 pounds of muscle and is trying to gain the last maybe 10 to 15
pounds, maybe 20 pounds genetically available to him. That's beyond bigger than you're stronger.
That's what that book is for. And so to answer the question, you change from BLS to beyond BLS
when you're no longer progressing on BLS, despite getting the most important things in the kitchen and in the
gym mostly right most of the time. Don't need perfection, just good enough most of the time.
And so what most guys will find is that bigger, leaner, stronger is good for about their first
20 to 25 pounds of muscle gain. That is pretty smooth sailing. It takes about a year and a half,
probably for most guys, maybe two years and progress in the first year is faster than in
the second year. So most guys can gain 15 to 20 pounds or so of muscle in year one. And then about
half of that in year two. So as long as you understand the right, as long as you have the right expectations, then you can know if you are progressing appropriately. And so most guys
find that BLS takes them smoothly through their, their second year, some even through their third,
which is about half of the potential gains of year two, by the way. And those proportions also apply to
women. It's just the numbers are smaller. So the numbers are also halved. Your average woman can
probably gain about 10 pounds of muscle in her first year of weightlifting, maybe five to eight
pounds in year two, four-ish, let's say three to four-ish in year three and so on. And so bigger,
leaner, stronger for the first two years, maybe three years. And then what guys
find is they just can't keep their one rep maxes moving up on the big lifts. They stall out whole
body strength stalls out. Maybe they can continue to make progress on different isolation exercises,
but if you are not making progress on your squat,
on your deadlift, on your bench press, on your overhead press, if all of those big key lifts
are stalled, it's going to be very hard to gain appreciable amounts of muscle, regardless of what
you're doing with your isolation exercises. So at that point, when it has been three, four, five,
exercises. So at that point, when it has been three, four, five, six months of stagnation on bigger, leaner, stronger, and you have already gained 20 to 25 pounds of muscle, it's time to
move on. It's time to move to beyond a bigger, leaner, stronger, which is very similar to bigger,
leaner, stronger in its programming, at least in its underpinnings. But one of the big differences
is with beyond a bigger, leaner, Stronger, you are
just going to work harder, more volume, some heavier weights, also some lighter weights,
some more reps. It's just a more difficult program. Okay, next question. What do you think
about vegetable and seed oils? Well, I prefer olive oil, walnut oil, and avocado oil. I like to use really any of those. I just switch between
them based on how I feel when I'm ordering groceries on my little app, I suppose. But
sesame oil is quite tasty. I'll use that sometimes. And in general, you should know
that vegetable and seed oils are not as nutritious as olive or avocado oil, but they are not dangerous
like many people claim. You can eat them without worry so long as you are getting enough omega-3
fatty acids in your diet, so long as your diet isn't chock-a-block with omega-6 fatty acids,
which vegetable and seed oils are abundant in. Next question is how should your diet look when you are sick?
Well, my horse paste, obviously lots and lots of horse paste. No, I'm kidding. Maintenance
calories. So if you are cutting, go into maintenance mode while you're sick, it will
help you feel better. It may help you recover a little bit faster. Make sure you eat plenty of
protein, eat what you would normally eat, which should be plenty of protein. Don't allow your protein intake to
plummet because it is not appetizing when you're sick. I do understand I have been there myself,
but I also have just forced myself to eat the meat or eat whatever it is that I needed to eat
for protein. Maybe have a little bit more protein powder than usual. So just try to keep that protein intake up so you can preserve muscle.
And research shows that the availability of amino acids is crucial to the proper functioning of our
immune system. So if we are not eating enough protein, we are starving our immune system of
nutrients it needs to help fight off the invaders. And so by eating enough protein, we are starving our immune system of nutrients it needs to help fight off the invaders.
And so by eating enough protein, then again, we may be able to get better a little bit faster.
Next question is, do you recommend using a weightlifting belt when lifting heavy?
And the answer is yes, generally, but not for the reason generally believed. So many people think
that just putting on a belt makes weightlifting
safer, that it just reduces the risk of a lower back injury. And that's not the case.
It is mostly to improve performance, but it has to be used properly. You have to have the right
kind of belt and you have to use it properly. And if you want to learn more about those things,
just head over to legionathletics.com, search for weightlifting belt, and you can find an article I wrote. I probably have
recorded a podcast on that as well. Next question is, do you trust any politician? Well, here are
some things I trust more than politicians, uh, dining with Jeffrey Dahmer, smoking Bill Clinton's cigars, and tying Anthony Weiner's shoes.
Next question. What body fat to cut and bulk at? So for men, stop bulking when you are between 15
and 20% body fat. Stop cutting when you are between 7 and 10%. And for women, stop bulking
or lean gaining, as I prefer to call it, between 25 and 30% body fat
and stop cutting between 15 and 20%. The next question is who rules the world? Well, I put up
a poll on this one, Illuminati or aliens, and 60% said Illuminati, 40% aliens. So I think the survey gods have spoken. The next question is working out
fasted and not unless you like it or are cutting with your him bean. Otherwise I don't think it's
worth it. You are going to have better workouts fed than fasted. And if you want to learn more
about that, because there is quite a bit more to learn about it. If you are currently working
out fasted and now you are wondering if you should stop, or if you're wondering why would you do it
with your hymn bean, head over to legionathletics.com search for fasted, and you'll find an
article called what is fasted cardio and can it help you lose weight? Check that one out.
Next question is best advice for someone hooked on cardio running spin on top
of lifting. Well, if you really like the cardio and it's not ruining your health, if you're not
overdoing it in the extreme, I would say keep it up. There are lots of benefits to doing higher
than normal, especially in the bodybuilding world or in the body composition world, higher than normal, especially in the bodybuilding world or in the body composition world, higher
than normal amounts of cardio, even if it's not great for muscle and strength gain.
And there is a point where it is going to impair muscle and strength gain, but that
doesn't mean that you can't do a fair amount of cardio and gain a fair amount of muscle
and strength.
You just have to understand that there is a trade-off.
And once you get over, let's say,
about half of the amount of time you spend
training your muscles doing cardio,
that's when it can start to get in the way.
And particularly if your cardio is high intensity
or if a lot of it is high intensity and high impact.
So let's say you're
lifting weights four hours a week and you're doing four hours of cardio per week and one to two hours
of that is very high intensity. Maybe it's playing soccer. It's a lot of sprinting. There's impact,
even though it's not the same as sprinting on concrete, but it is not as low impact as biking,
for example, then that is probably going to get in
the way of your progress in the gym to some degree, but that doesn't mean that you are not
going to be able to make progress. And if you want to learn more about that topic, concurrent
training, head over to legionathletics.com and search for concurrent, and you'll find an article
that explains all of the details of what I just summarized and gives you some practical advice on how to best combine cardio and lifting.
Next question is, how do you keep staying a badass?
Well, I think it's just a natural consequence of natural immunity, right?
Next up is, which is best?
Occlusion training, blood flow restriction,
those are synonymous, or rest-pause sets. Well, rest-pause is easier to implement, but BFR is
better for working around an injury. And some people just like it better, particularly for
training their arms. They prefer to do BFR sets over rest pause sets. And if you have no
idea what I'm talking about with rest pause or blood flow restriction, you can learn about both
of them over at legionathletics.com. I have articles and podcasts on both. So if you search
for blood flow restriction, you'll find that rest pause. You will find that. Let's move on.
If you don't have the ability to lift heavy, can you make up
for it with more volume? Yes, you can. You can train in higher rep ranges. You can train close
to failure. You can do enough hard sets per major muscle group per week. You will do fine. Can I
work out in the evening for fat loss? Yes, absolutely. I actually answered with the Jack Nicklaus crazy man nodding his head gif. Yes, you can.
How do you make yourself eat when you're not hungry? I need to eat more carbs.
Listen, I'm going to have to go with tough love on this one because right now there are pure blood Aussies under permanent lockdown who will soon be subsisting off of state-mandated
soylent shakes and hormone-blocking clot shots. So don't be an ingrate. Finish your damn food.
Is the hex bar just as good as the barbell for deadlifts? Yes, yes it is. I actually alternate
between the hex bar, also known as the trap bar, and the straight bar, the conventional deadlift,
hex bar, also known as the trap bar and the straight bar, the conventional deadlift every four months or so. So I'll do four months of hex bar, trap bar deadlifting, and then four months
of conventional deadlifting. And I have made nice progress that way. What are your thoughts on
glycerol monosteerate? It's an interesting supplement. It's an interesting molecule to supplement with because it can help you get
bigger pumps. Some people, I'm thinking of one person, he swears by it. He says he gets a much
bigger pump if he takes some glycerol before he trains. Now, the downside is most people have to
take quite a bit to notice a difference, 15 to 20 grams. And that means 60 to 80 calories because glycerol has
four calories per gram. But if that doesn't bother you and you want to give it a go,
then try 15 to 20 grams about 30 minutes before you train.
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
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listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.