Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Q&A: Wine and Fat Loss, Building Aerobic Fitness, NMN Supplements, Low Back Tightness, & More
Episode Date: January 10, 2024How can you manage lower back pain during workouts? What's really happening when you're feeling full on a calorie deficit? And is the X-3 Bar a worthwhile investment? In this episode, I'll... explore these topics and many more, giving you the insights you need to adjust your fitness routine effectively while ensuring long-term health and performance. As always, these questions come directly from my Instagram followers, who take advantage of my weekly Q&As in my stories. If you have a question you're dying to have answered, make sure you follow me on Instagram (@muscleforlifefitness) and look out for the Q&A posts. Your question might just make it into a podcast episode! 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! (1:02) - Tips for encouraging a male partner to work out and eat better? (1:46) - Favorite dictator? (2:21) - Feeling full in a calorie deficit, what's going on? (5:29) - Whose cocaine was it at the White House? (5:58) - For weight loss, is it better to do more reps with lower weights or higher weight with fewer reps? (9:10) - Thoughts on the X3 Bar? (13:27) - Lower back getting tight after a couple of sets of deadlifts and squats, any solution? (18:05) - Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! (20:41) - Is it okay to just supplement vitamin D if the sun feels too strong? (21:37) - Why does the new Legion cookie have multiple sugars and sweeteners? (23:15) - Do you have any comments on the state of the union? (23:51) - Noticing a lack of meme content, is everything alright? (24:17) - Biceps curl: start with palms facing up or hammer grip to palms up rotation? (25:40) - Why are you the best fitness influencer on the internet? (26:21) - Thoughts on NMN supplements? (27:53) - Are ice baths good for recovery and what temperature is too low? (30:29) - What are the odds of tearing a muscle at the joint? (32:14) - Best way to develop your aerobic base? (32:38) - Your take on wine and fat loss? (33:33) - Advice on starting a business? Mentioned on the Show: Try Whey+ risk-free today! Go to buylegion.com/whey and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, hello, and welcome to Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me today
for another Q&A episode, number 55, according to my records, where I answer questions that people
asked me over on Instagram, at Muscle for Life Fitness, come follow me. And I answer them there
on Instagram briefly, because it's in my stories. And then I bring everything over here to the
podcast, and I answer all the questions in more detail. And so in today's episode, I am going all over the place. I am answering questions
relating to starting a business, relating to wine and fat loss. What's my take on that? Relating to
building your aerobic base, your aerobic fitness, how to do that most effectively. I answer a question regarding NMN, a very popular
supplement right now. Does it work? Is it worth it? I answer a question regarding lower back
tightness and soreness after squatting and deadlifting. Is that a good sign? Is that a
bad sign? Should you do something about it? And quite a few more. Shannon9585 asks tips for encouraging male partner to work out plus eat better without
sounding nagging or patronizing. What about, hey, babe, this fitness guy on Instagram said
that strong people have better sex. Do you think he's right? Okay, I'm just kidding. Well, kind of kidding,
because that may actually work. But generally, getting a partner to start eating better,
exercising, etc. can be tough because they have to be ready to make the change. However,
if you set a good example by doing it yourself, and if you invite them to join you,
doing it yourself. And if you invite them to join you, that is always a good place to start. Adam Camsell asks, favorite dictator? In more modern times, probably the founding fathers who
were benevolent dictators who willfully abdicated. If Western civilization is going to survive the next 50 to 100 years. I think we are going to need more
people like them in positions of power. We are going to need fewer psychopaths, sociopaths,
parasites, degenerates, mercenaries, and the like. Bdeblick2 asks, feeling full in a calorie deficit, what's going on? Well,
the first thing to check is if you are actually in a calorie deficit, if you are consistently
losing weight or losing fat as indicated by, let's say, your waist measurement shrinking.
Body weight can be misleading if you are also strength training and especially if you are new
to strength training or you are coming back to it newly, because that is going to add weight in the form of muscle mass,
but also intramuscular fluid. Your muscles are going to be generally holding more water,
holding more glycogen, all that adds weight. And so at least for the first couple of months,
weight loss or fat loss can be obscured by the weight gain associated with the strength training.
However, if that's not the case, if you have been strength training consistently for some time, at least multiple months, and you are in a calorie deficit, then you should be seeing your body weight going down over time.
And if you want to be doubly sure of your body
fatness going down, you can also measure the circumference of your waist at your navel. If
that is shrinking, you are losing body fat. If that is growing, you are gaining body fat. And
so assuming you are in a calorie deficit and you are also just generally feeling full, that doesn't mean that anything's
wrong. Appetite can fluctuate when cutting. My experience, for example, is no noticeable
increase in hunger when cutting until I've been in a consistent deficit for at least two or three
months. And that means that now I'm pretty lean. And if I'm still cutting, I'm trying to get really
lean. I haven't done that in some time, but I've done it several times in the past to get really lean,
you know, six, 7% body fat or so for a photo shoot. And so again, for the first couple of
months, I'm a little bit hungry here and there, but generally fine. And I only really notice an
increase in hunger when I'm lean, wanting to get really lean.
And I'm in the last, let's say, four to six weeks, maybe four to eight weeks of the cut to get really lean.
And ironically, if I compare that with the first couple of months, two or three months of lean bulking,
I am generally much hungrier during the first couple of months of lean bulking as my body
is acclimating to the increased calories. And so both of those experiences can throw people off.
They can start cutting and maybe even feel less hungry than they normally are, let's say eating
maintenance calories, and then become concerned that they're doing something wrong because aren't
you supposed to be hungry when you're dieting? Or on the flip side, they can start lean bulking from, let's say,
maintenance calories and feel a lot hungrier, especially leading up to meals, at least for the
first couple of months. Both of those things are normal. It doesn't mean anything's wrong. It's
just a consequence of physiology. There probably are some psychological factors as well, and you don't
have to worry about either of them. Just keep going. Big Head Nary asks, so whose cocaine was
it at the White House? Obviously, it was Barron Trump's, and obviously they should indict Donald
over it. Seriously, though, jokes aside, Hunter is only 53 years old. I mean, everyone is entitled
to at least a few youthful indiscretions, right? The real question with the cocaine is, was it used
intravenously or anally? Candygirl1218 asks, for weight loss, is it better to do more reps with lower weight or less reps with
heavier weights? Well, some people say that higher rep training is better for weight loss because you
burn more calories or burn more fat, which is true, but only barely, so little that it really
doesn't matter. Now with heavier training, you are going to better preserve
your strength while you're cutting, and that's going to help you better preserve your muscle,
or at least it probably will. Generally speaking, it is a better strategy to lift heavier weights
when cutting if you want to preserve as much muscle and as much strength as possible, especially if
you are an experienced weightlifter. And so then practically speaking, I would say that doing sets with anywhere between,
let's say, 75 to 85% of one rep max. So let's say four to 10 reps per set, pushing close to
muscular failure or up to muscular failure, depending on the muscle you're training and the exercise,
that is going to work well when cutting. And also push for progress when you're cutting.
You may not be able to make progress, but you may be able to at least for the first month or two before the unwanted side effects of a consistent calorie deficit really start to take
hold. Don't go into a cut with a defeatist kind of mindset. Don't
assume that now that you're cutting, you simply can't gain any more muscle. You can't gain any
strength. In fact, you are going to start losing muscle pretty quickly. You are going to start
losing strength pretty quickly. Physiologically speaking, those things are not true. Now, if you
are a very experienced and very muscular weightlifter, then you probably are not true. Now, if you are a very experienced and very muscular
weightlifter, then you probably are not going to gain any muscle or strength to speak of when
you're cutting. But unless you are trying to get stage lean, like striated glutes lean, you also
should not lose any muscle, any actual contractile tissue over the course of your cut. Now, if you
are using some sort of technological method of assessing your body composition, you are going to
see a reduction in lean mass, especially if you are losing quite a bit of weight, losing quite a
bit of fat, but that doesn't mean that you're losing muscle tissue per se. If you are doing
the most important things in the kitchen and gym
right most of the time, basically all of that is going to be comprised of intramuscular fluids.
Your muscles are going to be holding less water, less glycogen in particular, because as a
consequence of reducing your calories, you are almost certainly going to be eating a lot less
carbohydrate than you
normally would. And that carbohydrate, at least some of it gets stored in your muscles in the
form of glycogen. And then the glycogen also is stored with water and that can pump your muscles
up or shrink them. And that will register as a loss of lean mass if you are getting, let's say,
a DEXA scan, maybe before and after your cut. And then there's also intramuscular fat that you're going to lose that would also register as a loss of lean mass.
Okay, Chino Free asks, thoughts on the X3 bar? It's overhyped marketing. That's my opinion.
Bands and bars are fine, but they are far less effective for hypertrophy and strength compared
to free weights and
compared to machines.
Now, that isn't to say that you can't generate an effective training stimulus with the X3
bar or bands or other such combinations of bars and bands.
And they can be useful if, let's say, you're traveling and that's all you have access to.
If let's say you're traveling and that's all you have access to, or if you want to have something at home for doing a simple maintenance workout, just giving major muscle groups enough stimulus to stick around just enough to maintain the muscle that you have and thereby at least maintain some of the strength you have. You are not going to maintain all of the strength if you're going from, let's say, traditional barbell dumbbell strength training to band and bar training
because of the specificity effect. If you want to be good at doing one rep maxes or two or three
rep maxes, if you want to be strong, you have to train those one RMMs and those 2RMs and those 3RMs. And that obviously isn't feasible
with something like the X3 bar bands. However, if you can maintain your muscle, and that's very
easy to do, that does not take more than a handful, say three to five hard sets per week.
So those are sets taken close to muscular failure or maybe to muscular failure per week for any individual major muscle group.
That's enough to maintain the muscle that you have.
And the muscle that you have is really the primary driver of strength, of achieving,
let's say, your maximum potential for strength.
It's not neuromuscular.
It's just muscular.
There is a neuromuscular component.
There is a skill component
to being really good at squatting large amounts of weight. But the vast majority of your strength
that you will ever gain is going to come from the amount of muscle that you have. So you can become
detrained, quote unquote, in your strength training because you are not able to get in the gym and do proper
strength training and you are using workarounds to maintain your muscle, but you are not detrained
in the case of maintaining your muscle mass. And so what you'll experience is you could be
out of the gym for a long period of time. It could be six months, it could be 12 months, and you are using body
weight training, you are using bands, you are using bars plus bands, doing whatever you can
to maintain the muscle that you have. You eventually get back in the gym and you are
going to be weak. It's going to be a bit odd because you could actually be carrying a fair
amount of muscle. You could look pretty jacked, but you are going to be very weak when you get back to, let's say, squatting and deadlifting and bench pressing. However,
you are going to regain your strength very quickly. It's going to come back a lot faster
than it took to build it in the first place because primarily you have the muscle, you have
the engine of the strength. It just needs to be tuned now. It needs to be calibrated. You have to reacquaint yourself with the exercises. You have to reactivate the neuromuscular components of lifting heavy weights that don't get activated in nearly the same way when you are lifting lighter weights, which is the effect that
band training often has. You are usually doing higher rep sets and you are just taking them to
failure. And of course, your exercise selection is limited with bars and bands. You can't stimulate
your muscles in nearly as many different ways as you can with free weights and with machines. And so again,
I think bars and bands are great for doing boring but effective maintenance workouts.
The TRX trainer should also be included in that category. But if you have access to free weights,
if you have access to machines and you're trying to gain muscle and strength as quickly as possible,
if you have access to machines and you're trying to gain muscle and strength
as quickly as possible,
you wanna be using those free weights and machines.
Clay Minick asks,
lower back getting really tight slash sore lately
after a couple sets of deads slash squats solution?
Well, this suggests that you may need to address your form
because even with a deadlift,
you should not be getting a big lower
back pump. If you are, you're probably using your lower back too much in the lift. Many people don't
know that the driving forces of the deadlift are the hamstrings and the glutes. The lower back is
just a stabilizing force, but your lower back should not be working in a deadlift
like it does in a good morning. For example, if you try to turn a deadlift into a good morning,
that's how you can get hurt because you are probably going to be using way more weight on
the deadlift than you would on the good morning. And so the first thing would be address your form.
A common mistake that people make is when they are getting down into position to pull,
they are not getting their hips back enough to really feel a lot of tension in their hamstrings,
to feel the tension in their glutes, to feel the tension in their hips before they pull
off the ground.
You can see this just by looking at people's shins when they are getting
ready to pull. So they've kind of squatted down, they're getting into position. If their shins
are not anywhere even near to perpendicular to the ground, straight up and down, then they are
probably not deep enough back into their hips and they are probably not feeling a lot of tension in
their hamstrings, in their glutes before they
start to pull. I've made this mistake myself many times over the years. I've had to train the habit
out. Actually, it's a habit I developed earlier on when I didn't know as much as I know now. And
it didn't prevent me from getting fairly strong in the deadlift, but it did make my deadlift a little bit too squatty, which in turn
can put a lot of stress on your hips and that can cause problems over time. And so if you are
getting a big pump in your lower back, or if your lower back is getting very sore after deadlifting
or squatting, assess your form. Now on the squat, the mistake that often causes the
lower back soreness or excessive lower back soreness or excessive lower back pump is the
hips rising too quickly. So you get down into the hole and then the mistake that many people make
is they start the ascent with their hips, but their shoulders stay in the same position. So their hips shoot up and
now their back is approaching parallel to the floor. Maybe it doesn't get to parallel, but the
hips are moving up. The shoulders are staying in place. The bar is staying in place. And then to
get into a standing upright position, they of course have to lever their lower back like a good morning. So they
are starting the ascent of the squat by putting themselves into a good morning position. And then
they're finishing the rep like it was a rep of a good morning rather than a squat. And again,
the problem here is the weight on the squat. And we're talking about a back squat here, is going to be much higher than
a proper weight they would use on a good morning. And that can lead to a lot of stress on the lower
back. Now, if you know that your form is correct on the squat in the deadlift, because you have
videoed yourself and you have scrutinized the footage and you are still dealing with excessive lower back tightness or soreness after squatting and deadlifting, it may just be a
repetitive stress issue. Maybe you've been squatting or deadlifting for a couple of months
and you've been pushing hard and your body just needs a break. Your lower back needs a bit of a
break. And to do that, you just change exercises. So maybe you go from a back squat to a front squat,
which is friendlier to the lower back, or you go to a safety bar squat, which is also a very
back-friendly and knee-friendly variation of the barbell squat. And if your gym doesn't have a
safety bar, you can jerry-rig one with a regular barbell and lifting straps. You can find videos
online on how to do that. And deadlift, you could switch from, let's say with a regular barbell and lifting straps. You can find videos online on how to do
that. And deadlift, you could switch from, let's say, a traditional barbell deadlift to a trap bar
deadlift, or maybe from a conventional deadlift to a sumo deadlift if you can perform both comfortably,
or maybe even to a Romanian deadlift for a bit, which is also a bit more back-friendly than a
traditional barbell deadlift.
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Daniel Mufti One asks,
I feel the sun is too strong these days. Can I just supplement vitamin D?
Yeah, you can if we're just talking about vitamin D, but you will miss out on some of the other
benefits of exposing yourself to the sun. You're going to miss out on the mood boost, for example,
that the sun can provide. And it doesn't require that much sun to get that. I'm in Florida, for example,
and during the summer, it is basically a nuclear reactor. And so what I do is around 8 a.m. or so
when the sun is out and it's hot, but it's not infernal yet, I take a 15 minute walk or so.
And then I do that again around noon with my shirt off to expose more skin to the sun. And then I take one more walk,
usually around 6 or 7 p.m., maybe 8 p.m. as the sun is starting to go down. And that works well.
It's enough to feel good and it's dermatologist approved. DukeDuke07 asks, the new Legion cookie,
why is there a multitude of sweeteners and sugar? Well, unfortunately, when you are using natural
ingredients, getting the sweetness and the flavor right is very difficult. It's almost like an
arcane art. You can't go study it anywhere official. You can't go to school for it. You
have to basically be apprenticed under people who know how to sweeten and flavor supplements and food products naturally. And so
the lab that I work with, it's very good. They had to try many, many variations of ingredients
and doses to get it to taste right. And with something like a protein cookie, it's important
that it tastes really good. And I think more important than a protein bar, because often a protein bar is standing in for a protein shake. It's something that is just a,
maybe it's a midday snack and the person might even prefer to have a protein shake, but they're
out and about, they're busy. They are not going to be carrying around a shaker with them. So they grab a protein bar instead. Whereas a protein cookie is often standing in for a treat, an
indulgence, a little dessert of some kind. And so it needs to taste something like the quote unquote
real thing. It needs to taste something like an actual cookie. And so to get there with our
protein cookie, we had to use a couple of different natural sweeteners and we had to use a little bit of sugar. And if you want to see how we did,
if you want to try the cookie, head over to buylegion.com. That's buylegion.com slash cookie.
Greg Salisbury 622 asks, comments on the current state of the union. Well, I envision it like this.
So imagine we are sitting in a theater, the lights go down, the curtains
go up, a spotlight shines on a car that comes out and stops in the middle of the stage and the door
opens and a clown comes out and then another clown comes out and another one and another one
and another one. It's unbelievable. It's a magic trick.
How can so many clowns be stuffed into such a little car? Hayden NG asks, I'm noticing a lack
of meme content. Is everything all right? And he's referring to my Instagram stories.
And unfortunately, my meme dealer, who has been very reliable for quite some time, unfortunately, he's been busy with other stuff that is purportedly more important than mining for memes.
I can't even imagine what that could be.
It's me. Luca1 asks, biceps curl, palms facing up at the start versus starting it with a hammer grip and rotating to a palms up
position. Well, when you are biceps curling and you are using a neutral grip, so your palms facing
each other or a pronated grip, your palms facing down, you are biasing the forearm extensors as
well as the biceps brachialis, which is a smaller muscle that is between the bigger biceps muscle, the biceps brachii. That's
what most people think of as the biceps and the triceps. And the neutral and or pronated curling
is worthwhile. However, if you want to fully and maximally train your biceps, you want to
also do palms up curling because palms up curling biases
the biceps brachii. And so a simple way to put that into practice is to do palms up curling.
So your palms are facing up at the start and are ending facing up as well as something like a
hammer curl. So that's a neutral grip curl. Or you can do pronated
curls, palms down as well. But in my experience, simply doing plenty of palms up curling and
neutral grip curling is enough to get great biceps development. James Stepanuk asks,
why are you hands down the best fitness influencer on the Internet?
Well, I put this to my followers in a in a poll.
So I gave them options on vaccinated pattern recognizer, X, Y chromosomes and white privilege.
And thirty nine percent chose unvaccinated.
Eighteen percent chose pattern recognizer.
chose unvaccinated. 18% chose pattern recognizer. Only 10% chose XY chromosomes and 33% chose white privilege. So the people have spoken. Apparently the secret formula to being a great fitness
influencer is pure blood and white privilege. Who would have known? KixinRoute66 asks, thoughts on NMN supplement? Well, there has been a lot of
marketing money behind NMN, and particularly in the last year or so, and that inevitably results
in exaggerated claims, unwarranted hype, and in this case, flawed research as well, which is used
to accomplish the first two. And so here's my position.
NAD levels do decline with age, that's clear, and with disease.
And that may contribute to some of the negative side effects associated with aging that may
contribute to losses in metabolic health and physical performance and some factors related to body composition.
However, the evidence is not clear that NMN reliably increases NAD levels. And even if it
does, the evidence is not clear that simply doing that is going to produce desirable benefits,
that simply doing that is going to, let's say, reverse some of the negative side
effects associated with aging. And so if it were me, I would rather spend that money. If I had some
speculative longevity money that I wanted to spend, I would put it into flush type niacin
and PQQ, which in the context of longevity, vitality are still a little bit speculative,
but I think have stronger evidence currently than NMN. Luke Wilkins 33 asks, ice baths,
a good thing for recovery and what temperature is too low? Well, ice baths are totally unnecessary
for everyday gym goers and possibly even counterproductive because they can blunt
muscle growth by dramatically reducing whole body inflammation levels and acute inflammation
in the context of strength training of resistance training is a good thing you work out and there's
a lot of inflammation in your body inflammation your muscles and that then triggers some different responses in your body
that ultimately lead to muscle growth, for example. However, ice baths are useful for
athletes who have very rigorous training schedules and really need all the recovery that they can get,
especially when they are in season. There's a lot of practicing, there's a lot of playing,
and there is, let's say, some strength training. And the point of the strength training is really
just to maintain muscle, to maintain performance. And they are just basically feeling beat up all
the time. Inflammation is out of control. And so ice baths can be used to bring it into a more
desirable range, even if it generally is going to be quite high.
Now, as for an effective protocol, the water has to be cold. It has to be no warmer than,
let's say, somewhere in the 50s. It can be colder, depending on your preferences. Immersion has to
be substantial, so you have to be up to your neck, and you have to spend a bit of time in the ice
bath, let's say five to seven minutes. That's commonly used in studies that have shown benefits. So you have to be up to your neck and you have to spend a bit of time in the ice bath.
Let's say five to seven minutes. That's commonly used in studies that have shown benefits.
And of course, you have to do it consistently to really notice a difference.
Let's say five to seven days a week.
And again, if you are someone who is not doing many, many hours of intense training slash
playing per week, and you are not dealing with excessive soreness basically everywhere in your body and pain and so forth, then regular ice baths probably don't have
much to offer you in terms of physiological benefits that really matter.
However, you may still want to do it for the psychological benefits.
For example, many people like it because they don't want to do it and they feel like it helps them build more mental toughness by just forcing themselves to do something that is very uncomfortable every day.
And I think that's perfectly valid and maybe even a good idea if somebody tends to struggle with that in other areas of their life, if they tend to struggle with doing the hard things that most people don't want to do that lead to the results that most people can't
get. MB Haywood asks, what are the odds of tearing a muscle at the joint? I keep cringing at the
videos I see. They're very low unless you are on a lot of drugs and you are handling loads that are
far bigger than your tendons and ligaments can deal with. And unfortunately,
there are many people out there, usually dudes, who learn that lesson the very hard,
very painful way because they don't understand that the cocktail of anabolic steroids that
they're on and usually have been on for some time have allowed them to gain a lot of muscle
very quickly compared to what it would have taken naturally. And depending on their
circumstances, they may have gained far more muscle than they could have ever gained naturally.
And they don't understand that that muscular development is much faster than the development
of the tendons and ligaments. And again, if they've gained way more muscle than they could have ever
gained naturally, then their tendons and ligaments may never really be able to catch up, which means
that they are going to have these very big muscles that are capable of producing a lot of strength.
And maybe they're also taking certain drugs that are particularly effective at increasing strength. And so they're in the gym and very heavy loads feel very light. And so they figure that they can use those heavy loads and they can push right up to failure because they have the energy and they have the drive. and a tendon rips off the bone or a ligament tears because, again, those tissues were not
able to handle the amount of stress being put on them. Sports Circus asks, slightly off,
but what is the best way to develop your aerobic base? The best way is a combination of moderate
and high intensity cardio, probably in a ratio of, let's say, three or four units,
so to speak, of moderate intensity to one unit of high intensity. It's that combination
that will maximally improve your aerobic fitness. Tiffany Marie asks, what's your take on wine and
fat loss? Well, unfortunately, you are probably going to have to have a striking
realization, and that is that you're just going to have to drink less wine to finally lose your gut.
Okay, so not quite, but practically speaking, kind of. Wine per se doesn't preclude fat loss,
say doesn't preclude fat loss, but it just contains a lot of calories. And it's so easy to overdrink that it really cannot be a regular indulgence unless you are doing many, many hours
of exercise per week. Practically speaking, the people who do best with weight loss, with fat loss,
minimize their alcohol intake, at least while they're cutting and
definitely minimize their intake of wine because of the calories as opposed to maybe hard alcohol.
Okay. Final question comes from Victor Santoro and he asks one advice for someone starting a
business. Don't quit your day job until your new business is paying all of your bills. And the reason for
that is quitting your source of regular income is going to put financial pressure on you. And
that can lead to many bad business decisions. And that's not just my opinion, by the way,
there's research on this. Statistically speaking, entrepreneurs who don't quit their day jobs too
early are much more likely to succeed in their
new venture than those who do. So keep the regular income coming, keep the financial stability there,
and then in your extra time outside of your normal job, work on the new business until it can replace
at least a large enough portion of your existing income to allow you to
make decisions that are best for the business, particularly longer term decisions, as opposed
to decisions that are driven by the immediate need to make money. 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.