Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Sam Miller on Managing Stress More Effectively
Episode Date: October 25, 2023Is chronic stress holding back your progress towards your fitness goals? It’s possible. While stress is a scapegoat for some (stress can’t make you fat, but eating too much food while stressed c...an), for others it’s too often overlooked in discussions about health and wellbeing. In this podcast, Sam Miller returns to the podcast to shed light on the surprising impact of stress on your metabolism, muscle growth, and overall quality of life. He also offers practical advice for dealing with it, going beyond typical stress management tips. In case you’re not familiar with Sam, he’s a best-selling author with over 15 years of experience as a health, fitness, and nutrition coach, helping coaches and health professionals improve their clients’ results. As an educator, podcaster, certified nutritionist, and licensed, board-certified health practitioner, he shares simple, strategic methods for physique and health transformation. And because he recently penned a book called, Metabolism Made Simple, he’s the perfect guest for discussing the role of stress and how it affects our metabolism. In our conversation, we unpack the myriad ways stress manifests in the body, from micronutrient depletion and reduced stomach acid production to its insidious effects on strength gains. We also delve into the nutritional aspects of stress management, exploring the role of diet and potential supplements that can aid in bolstering your body’s resilience. You’re going to learn tangible strategies for mitigating stress, as Sam offers a comprehensive toolkit for tackling stress head-on. Whether you're struggling with visible signs of stress like disrupted sleep and poor dietary choices, or grappling with the unseen repercussions on your physical health, this episode provides a wealth of knowledge and actionable advice. So, tune in as we navigate the complex landscape of chronic stress and uncover strategies to enhance your resilience, optimize your fitness, and elevate your quality of life. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (9:20) - What exactly does "chronic stress" entail? (18:06) - Could you elaborate on the physiological system responding to stress? (20:57) - How do most people perceive and identify stress in their lives? (25:06) - Are there noticeable symptoms indicating an excess of stress? (33:22) - Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip (35:46) - Do you have actionable strategies for effectively handling stress? (52:14) - How should one approach individuals causing significant stress in their lives? (57:00) - In what ways can our diet influence, or be influenced by, stress? (01:02:04) - Are there particular supplements beneficial for stress management? (01:06:08) - How can listeners connect with you and explore your work further? Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip Sam’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sammillerscience/ Sam’s website: http://www.sammillerscience.com/ Sam’s Book: www.metabolismmadesimple.com Sam's Podcast: https://sammillerscience.com/podcast-page/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Muscle for Life. I am Mike Matthews, your host. Thank you for joining me
today to learn about stress and how it can hold you back from progressing toward your fitness
goals and particularly how chronic stress can get in the way. And this is a tricky topic because
stress can be a scapegoat in certain cases. For example, stress can't make you fat, but eating too much
food because you're stressed can make you fat. However, stress is also often overlooked. Many
people leave stress out of their fitness equation, so to speak, or they focus only on the stress that
is caused by training and not the other sources of stress in their life
and how the totality of stress in their life is impacting their physiology, impacting their
performance, and impacting their well-being. And in today's episode, my guest Sam Miller is going
to shed some light on those things, how stress can impact your metabolism,
how it can impact muscle growth, how it can impact quality of life. And he's going to share some
practical advice for better dealing with stress and hopefully share at least a few things that
you haven't heard many times already. A few tips for managing stress that go beyond the typical
for managing stress that go beyond the typical listicle advice that many people share. And in case you are not familiar with Sam, he is the author of a bestselling book called Metabolism
Made Simple, as well as a health, fitness, and nutrition coach with over 15 years of experience
helping health and fitness professionals get better results with their clients.
Hey, Sam, it's good to see you again. Thank you for taking your time to do this.
I appreciate you having me back, Mike.
Yeah, yeah. Our first interview did quite well. So here we are with number two to talk about
chronic stress and how that affects metabolism, how that affects other elements of our physiology,
and really just of our quality of life.
And I thought this would be a good topic because it's something that I have spoken and written
about here and there on and off for many years.
I'll comment about this topic, but I think it's been some time since I've had a more
in-depth discussion.
I may never have actually here on the podcast.
since I've had a more in-depth discussion, I may never have actually here on the podcast.
And I think it's also just topical because a lot of the educational material that I see,
at least even in the evidence-based space, and not bad educational material and not people who are trying to mislead or do anything wrong per se, but a lot of the material is focused on
optimizing diet and optimizing training. And that is what most people are looking for because most people who
are trying to get into better shape, that's what they think. They think I just need to either start
working out or need to work out better. I need to start eating better or I need to take, I'm eating
well, but I need to take it to the next level somehow. And there is less focus put on all of
the stuff that we do outside of the kitchen and outside of the gym. And that stuff,
though, can have a big impact on what we're able to do in the gym, what we get out of what we do
in the gym, how well we can do what we want to do in the kitchen, how well we can even stick to
a plan that makes sense, a meal plan. So here we are. I thought that would be a great discussion
and something that you have a lot to say about. Yeah. When you mentioned the idea of discussing the intersection of stress and
metabolism, a few things pretty much instantly came to mind. And many of those were centered
on what's really going on the other 23 hours of the day outside of the gym. Now, granted,
a lot of the conversation around stress and quality of life will bleed into our training
performance and recovery, but pretty much instantly, when we begin the discussion of stress and metabolism,
we have to first kind of go to an overview of what kind of happens when we're stressed
in more of that state of fight or flight. And then what are the consequences of chronic stress
when it comes to our transformation? When I think of stress and when I've seen it play out for
clients over the years, really what we're talking about is the impact on sleep, dietary decision-making, micronutrient status. There's definitely an impact
on our gut health as well because chronic stress can lower stomach acid. And we can talk about some
of the implications of that. And really all of those things, even if it's only a few percentage
points here or there to start, if we're consistently in an irregular sleep routine,
if we're consistently in a state sleep routine, if we're consistently
in a state of micronutrient depletion.
Those sort of, I think I've heard you refer to them as almost like a subclinical state
over time, kind of compounds to where, okay, maybe if this happened just a couple days
out of the month, maybe not a huge deal or a little bit across the year, but if this
is a daily thing for you, that can really make a difference in terms of your training
and that daily dietary decision-making because so much of what we do in a fitness journey relies on, you know, consistency. And so if we have this high stress environment impacting our sleep, our nutrient status and our ability to show up and do our best in the gym, that's really bleeding into our consistency and then our long term transformation results.
our long-term transformation results. And something that immediately comes to mind is some research that I recently posted about over on X that in this study found that people with higher levels
of chronic stress gained less strength over, I believe it was a couple months or so, eight weeks
or so of strength training compared to the group of people who had lower levels of chronic stress. And as strength and muscle gain
become closely related, especially when you're no longer a newbie, like if you're no longer
gaining strength, if you're an intermediate or an advanced weightlifter, you're not getting
stronger anymore, you're probably not gaining much muscle to speak of. And so it would be
reasonable to assume that if that study's finding were generally true, which anecdotally speaking, I would say is in alignment with what I've experienced myself
and what I've seen now with virtually meeting so many people over the years now and keeping tabs
on them just because they share updates via email and just getting a lot of data points that does
seem to hold true and that you would also see less muscle
growth than over time. So just a comment on some research that shows there's a direct effect
there and there's it impairs performance and there are some physiological reasons for that.
So just an interesting study that I just came across, I think, a week ago that is relevant.
Yeah. And this is one area where the research sort of makes sense from a common sense perspective.
Sometimes we see research and we're like, okay, but is this actually what's playing out in the
real world? I think when dealing with chronic stress and remembering that cortisol is a
catabolic hormone, it would make sense that there'd be consequences in terms of strength and also
muscle gain. Now, cortisol is not all bad
if we have it kind of in the right time
as far as our diurnal rhythm or circadian rhythm.
But if it's wreaking havoc over a long period of time
and we're someone who's chronically stressed,
that's a completely different story.
Also pointing out, I think you mentioned
that study was about eight weeks in length.
So let's say we were to extend that over eight months
or someone who's been in their fitness journey
for eight years, there's definitely this sort of implication in terms of your long-term results. If we're already
seeing a difference in strength over an eight-week time period, there's definitely going to be a more
significant impact over the long haul. So really, I think what could explain a study like that
is first thinking, in terms of strength, we obviously need to be performing our best in the
gym and then recovering from those training sessions. And how are we able to progressively
overload those workouts? If we think of the basics of strength training and fitness, we know that
that's paramount. And so really where I think this starts for most people, if you have a stressful
day or maybe a stressful week, or maybe you're chronically stressed over time, and instantly,
the first thing to go is typically your sleep. You're wired and tired in the evenings, or you're just not having that
restful sleep that you were previously used to. And that can show up in a number of ways,
not just in that your cortisol is high. A lot of people think of it in a vacuum of cortisol is bad,
I'm stressed out, and this is what's impacting my ability to build muscle or lose fat.
It's really, okay, well, what are the downstream consequences of that? And now are we, because we're not sleeping well, maybe we're not optimizing things like testosterone
or getting that appropriate recovery and modulating inflammation when we sleep,
which is really all part of our body's natural process on a day-to-day basis.
Then we mentioned things like micronutrient depletion earlier on. We know that when you
train, we already may have a greater need for
certain vitamins and minerals, things like zinc, for example. When you add stress to the equation,
that's then increasing your need for B vitamins, zinc, magnesium, and other nutrients. Then
compound that with low stomach acid because stress can impact our vagus nerve and also just our
ability to reduce stomach acid in the first place. And now we're potentially looking at iron and B12
deficiencies from that lack of stomach acid and popular plant-based diets now. So many people are
eating less red meat and things like that. Couple that with stress and you just have a recipe for
disaster in terms of your micronutrition, which can really be undervalued. From a training
perspective, obviously we need to have our macros in order, our total calorie intake and energy
availability. But if our micros aren't where they need to be, we know that that can have an impact over time on our overall training. So those are really the,
to me, I think what's less obvious in the social media conversation around stress,
but really speaks to, okay, this is how our lifestyle actually impacts how we show up in the
gym. And when you say chronic stress, what does that mean exactly? So for people listening who are wondering, we all have stress. Most people listening probably live busy lives and there are various stressors that they just have to deal with and maybe wondering, well, yeah, I'm certainly stressed now and then, but am I dealing with chronic stress? What does that mean? At what point does
it become an issue? I'm really glad you mentioned this because as a business owner myself, I'm not
someone who's delusional to think that our clients in a transformation or anyone listening to this
podcast is going to go through a meaningful life with zero stress. Actually, there's a very
interesting Japanese concept and kind of the word ikigai in their culture really is tied to purpose.
So even though you may experience stress, I think there's really different types of
stress and how we are experiencing that in our life.
If it's tied to something of significance, like our mission or meaning, maybe for you,
you really truly enjoy muscle for life and legion.
And while there's some stress associated with it, it may be different than someone who's just kind of running around with their hair on fire all the time, you know,
so to speak. When I think of stress and kind of classifying this inside a transformation,
there are certain aspects of the stressor that may make it a little bit more of an insult to
your physiology compared to other, you know, just stressors in day-to-day life. And this is another
great case for resistance training because resistance training can actually sort of buffer against future stressors and support that resiliency
of your HPA axis. So it's not always necessarily just about less stress, less stress, less stress.
It's also what can I be doing in terms of my daily habits that can support my physiology
in dealing with life stressors rather than thinking, okay, I'm going to live in this
vacuum with zero stress.
Nothing's ever gonna come up.
There's never gonna be problems in my life.
That's not necessarily realistic.
And I think we have to take a realistic approach
to transformation or it's just not gonna be sustainable
for most people.
Just to make a quick comment there,
I also think that taking that approach
where we're talking about some practical behavioral changes
that we can make, some lifestyle adjustments
we can make, some things you're going to go into. That approach makes a lot more sense to me than
simply trying to make internal changes, try to change the way that we view these stressors we're
dealing with. And I am familiar with even research on that. And I do understand there is validity in that. However,
in my experience, I would say personally, but also just working virtually, mostly with many,
many people now over the years, especially people who are busy, it seems like generally,
it's more effective to change behavior and allow that to change your mind and change your attitude
rather than try the reverse. There are exceptions,
but that seems to be the rule. And it's something that I keep in mind in my life,
where if there's a problem of I'm not happy with something, and it makes some sense,
then I'm inclined to figure out, all right, how do I deal with this here externally? And how do
I change behaviors? How do I change environment? How do I change factors that will then change my attitude or my beliefs or change my mind rather than go,
well, if I just tell myself that it's okay, then it's going to be okay.
Correct. Like psychological judo with myself and then I just don't address the issue. But now maybe
I'm not as stressed about it because I don't view it as stressful as I did previously.
And I do think attitudes are important,
but I lean more towards your side as well,
where if I can engage in a behavior
or better manage my time or do something proactive
to manage my stressors is very,
I think that's more powerful than just wave a magic wand
and tell myself, okay, this actually isn't that's more powerful than just wave a magic wand and tell myself,
okay, this actually isn't that stressful. I'm just excited about this. And I know which research
you're referring to. I think there's a professor from Stanford and she was sort of popularized,
I think, after a TED Talk around, well, we just need to view it as you're not stressed,
you're not anxious, you're just excited, or your body's just preparing. Yeah, you're challenged
for this. And there may be some people who respond well to that.
And there's research to support that idea that she has.
But for me, just anecdotally in my own life and also with a roster of clients similar
to you, and there's lots of other stress management research.
Most of the stress management research focuses on shifting someone out of rumination mode,
thinking about past or future events.
Either they're worried about something that has happened or something that will happen
and bringing them into the present moment, which usually involves some form of creative
therapy.
This is where some people also like cold exposure, breath work, journaling, really all of the
stuff that sometimes gets classified as a little bit more woo-woo in a way.
Even those stress management interventions, you're doing a thing.
It's not you thinking, oh, my stress is different.
And that includes human randomized control trials
on everything from being in nature, going for a walk,
spending time with loved ones or pets.
A lot of times it's doing an actual activity
that maybe either supports your physiology
to deal with future stressors
or it gets you out of that
mental state of just constantly thinking about the stressors that you have in your life.
So I'm really glad you mentioned that. I do want to make sure that for the audience,
we kind of unpack what might make something more stressful for someone because I think that plays
a big role in the stress they're experiencing. And usually it has to do with, it's something new,
you haven't experienced it before, right? So let's say you have something in your life,
it's something new. You haven't experienced it before, right? So let's say you have something in your life. You don't necessarily have a track record with it, right? That could be stressful.
If you have a track record and evidence of completing something in the past, it's probably
going to be less stressful for you. Another thing that can impact the stress level is if it's
predictable or not. If you know that going to get your kids from school and bringing them to soccer
practice is a stressor for you.
There are certain things you can kind of plan
or buffer against the stressor.
Maybe you go a little early
so you don't get stuck in rush hour traffic
and you decide I'm going to get there early,
reading the school pickup line,
or I'm going to go and check my emails
while I wait for my kids.
There's a level of predictability
that allows you to manage the stress.
The next thing would be,
is there some sort of continued threat of a stressor? And this is where I think, especially for folks who experience stress
and trauma earlier in life, if there's kind of this repeated insult on our physiology, that
definitely plays a role in terms of our stress and immune system because no longer is this acute,
but we have this continued threat of stress. We see this mostly in animal studies. It's not super
ethical to do to
humans as far as around restraint stress and different things that may impact our stress and
cortisol levels, also our immune system, and then our future behaviors as a result of that.
And then the last thing is just, does this person have some level of control over the stressor?
Because if it's, let's say you just have really poor time management skills or you're just really busy, if you have a sense of control over that, it's probably not going to feel as overwhelming
or daunting versus some of the most significant stressors I've seen for clients over the years.
Maybe it's taking care of a loved one and being the primary caregiver for someone who's not doing
well from a medical or health perspective. Maybe it's you don't feel like you have a sense of
control over, you have limited experience as far as finances go, and so that's a stress or health perspective. Maybe it's you don't feel like you have a sense of control over,
you have limited experience as far as finances go.
And so that's a stressor for you.
But for most everyday people,
it's usually, is this something new?
Basically, you don't have the reps of dealing with it yet.
But obviously, if we adopt the appropriate mindset of kind of getting those reps,
maybe you get better at dealing with the stressor over time.
Maybe when you have your first kid,
it's a stressful but exciting experience. But over time, you kind of get used to doing things
that help you manage that overall. And then I think the regularity of it, the predictability
of it, that makes a big difference too. So for most people, when they're talking about a chronic
stressor, it's usually something that's a continued threat of stress all the time. Maybe it's not as
predictable as they would like. It's kind of like whether it's, let's say, you get a stressful email that you didn't expect and you had limited
control over it, but something's happening more frequently in your workplace, or maybe there's
some toxic relationships or things going on. Those types of stressors can be very different for
someone that say, you just have poor time management and you're fairly busy. That I think is kind of
the compass I try to use to navigate stress. And then similar to you, rather than just saying, oh, this really isn't that stressful,
we try to create the appropriate habits and behaviors in someone's daily life that may
kind of buffer against that future stress or a big word that gets thrown around a lot is resiliency.
But we can actually see this in some of the research around things like
resistance training, HPA axis function. There are things we can do and techniques we can deploy in
our life to actually make us better equipped, especially from a physiological perspective,
to not have quite as extreme a response when it comes to our HPA axis, which really is just the
scientific term for the connection between our brain and adrenals and how our body produces
cortisol. And that was just going to ask, because you've mentioned that a few times and
it's an important part of this discussion, can you talk more about that physiological
system in the body and how it responds to stress and how it can become, I suppose you could say,
deranged, can become dysfunctional by being exposed to too much stress too often.
Yeah. So typically what's happening is we'll perceive some sort of threat in our environment
or some sort of stressor. And the brain, we essentially have a few different important
regions. We have our hypothalamus and pituitary. And then the pituitary is going to communicate
with the adrenals to produce the hormone cortisol, which is in a family of hormones called corticosteroids. Now, unfortunately, what
happens when we're under chronic stress or we truly perceive as though we are a highly stressed
person, we identify as a very stressed person, we actually see brain structural changes where
the amygdala, which is a fear center in the brain, actually increases or hypertrophies. And the other
aspects of managing stress in our mood state, our hippocampus may actually shrink or atrophy
in size overall. So this will impact... It's kind of like a vicious stress cycle. So you get stressed
and then you continue to be stressed and it makes you subject to future stress because you're more
stress reactive as a result of those brain structural changes. And so a lot of people blame the hormones when in reality,
a big part of it is our habits, our behaviors, our environment, and then that environmental
stimulus, how our brain is perceiving that stimulus. And the brain is really the governor
or kind of captain of this whole system. And it's sending essentially a releasing hormone
to your pituitary.
And then the pituitary sends another hormone that goes to the adrenals that then produces that
cortisol. Meanwhile, if it was up to late night infomercials and social media, we would just blame
cortisol all the time. But cortisol has sort of a specific purpose and you can leverage it,
you know, in a transformation and you can kind of keep it situationally at bay as needed.
The problem most people run into though is, you know, cortisol is elevated at the wrong times. So it's not
necessarily, oh, cortisol is this really bad thing. You actually need cortisol. I mean, it's one of
the, one of the things that helps us have good workouts, right? Yeah. You actually, you know,
if you have that appropriately heightened physiological state, that actually helps to
mobilize energy and you will have a better training session. But the problem is having
that cortisol being elevated in the evenings or a time when you need to be in more of that
parasympathetic rest or digest state. So the process I just talked about from a scientific
or physiological perspective is referred to as a sympathetic state or fight or flight versus that
rest or digest. And as the name implies, that's really where the implication comes from in terms
of our digestion and not being able to get into that sort of restful mode that we need to,
to optimize other aspects of recovery. There are a few things I want to follow up on that you said.
The first one is just a comment you made about how people self-identify regarding
stress. And I just want to hear your thoughts. And some of this may sound like it's going to
run contrary to what we were saying earlier, which was maybe downplaying some of the psychological
aspects of it. But I don't want people to get us wrong in that. I mean, I think we're probably
both on the same page that we fully acknowledge that there is a psychological aspect to how we respond to stress, our stress sensitivity, so to speak.
There's a physiological component that is strictly regarding a portion of the brain.
And if this portion of the brain gets bigger, your body's stress system, so to speak, is now stronger.
And so that's a part of it.
And then there's our subjective experience, which, I mean which goes down to what is consciousness nobody really knows yet.
And those two brain centers are what impacts that subjective experience.
So let's say you, even if you were to look at other species in the animal kingdom, animals that have that larger amygdala react very differently in certain situations.
And so it's going to impact you socially and how you show up in the world. Even if you are trying to cultivate a different sort of attitude about your stress,
the fact that you've experienced significant stress may be kind of playing against you.
And so what Mike is saying is, yes, the physiological aspect of it and what's
happening anatomically may impact how you show up in your stressors. And that's why a combination
of both the behaviors themselves and yes, maybe you view your stressors. And that's why a combination of both the behaviors themselves,
and yes, maybe you view your stress slightly differently, but I think that comes with
actually taking some form of action versus sitting back and having this sort of passive
attitude about your stressor and just wishing that you're going to experience it differently
or viewing that it's a good thing when really your body and your brain are still thinking otherwise.
Yeah. Yeah. Or just venting to other people. It might feel good in the moment, but I've never
found that to be an effective stress management strategy. It often just will make it worse
because you get all riled up about whatever's going on, right?
Yeah. And most of the people who identify, I think where you're kind of going with that,
as far as the folks who identify as stressed, those are the people that like to vent about the stress. They like to experience that day to day. It's almost a part
of their personality. There's usually always that person that for some reason, there's a level of
attachment to their stress. And there may be different rhyme, kind of a different rhyme or
reason behind why each person identifies
that way. Probably a lot to do with their childhood upbringing and environment, different
psychological factors that are probably beyond the scope of what Mike and I are going to talk
about today. But that really does play into a health and fitness journey because I think
sometimes when we have that sort of self-identifying stress behavior, it can also play into other
not so great attitudes around a
health and fitness journey that limit our ability to make progress, especially if that same
self-identification pushes us more towards the really the term that comes to mind is kind of
that victim mentality of things happening around you. You're very reactive to it. You just kind of
blame, you point the finger a lot versus taking responsibility. And I think so much of a health and fitness journey is really showing up, keeping promises to yourself, developing kind of blame, you point the finger a lot versus taking responsibility. And I think so much of a
health and fitness journey is really showing up, keeping promises to yourself, developing kind of
this bank of personal integrity from taking action, even if it's not always perfect and
progressively overloading that over time, not just your weights in the gym, but your ability to kind
of stack these behaviors and keep promises to yourself, whether it's going to bed at the time
you said you're going to go to bed, going for that walk, eating the protein you said you were going to eat.
It's just all of these daily deposits that stack in that direction. And I think it's very hard
for someone to do that and live the congruent lifestyle that they need that's aligned with
their goals if they're someone who is this self-identifying stress cadet that also points
the finger and has the victim mentality around everything from their body composition to the reason that they're stressed in the first
place. I want to come back to something else that you had commented on. And that is,
for people listening, and again, if they're wondering where they place on the spectrum of,
let's just say it goes from healthy to unhealthy
amounts of stress. What are some of the telltale signs or symptoms of too much stress too often
that would necessitate some sort of intervention as opposed to a healthy amount of stress?
And this is going to vary individual to individual. Some people can
deal with tremendous amounts of stressful things, pretty even headly, and other people seem to
respond much more negatively to much smaller problems. So I'll kind of run around different
aspects of the stress response and how this might be showing up for you. I mean, some of the
aspects of the stress response and how this might be showing up for you. I mean, some of the conventional things that we might look at, especially from a Western medicine perspective,
might be elevated blood pressure, for example. So if you have high blood pressure,
that would be something. As far as something you can track at home on your own would be something
as simple as, are you having a hard time falling asleep? Are you fatigued in the morning when
you're trying to wake up? It's okay to have a little bit of fatigue or lethargy, but if it is really kind of this burdensome level of
fatigue where you have a hard time getting going no matter what, whether it's movement, sun exposure,
eating appropriately, you're fueling enough, you're not chronically under eating, and you still have
a really hard time, there's probably a level of stress there that might need to be examined.
If your recovery from workouts is consistently
compromised, I would definitely look there. So let's say you keep a logbook and you kind of
check the boxes from a nutritional perspective. You're keeping a food log, you're eating adequate
protein to recover from your workouts, and you notice that despite your nutritional efforts and
giving your best in the gym, so let's say you're tracking on like an RPE or RIR scale
and you believe that you are,
let's say you've worked with a coach before
and you have some idea
of what training to failure looks like
and you're training with that requisite intensity
and your food is checking out
as far as what you may need to maybe,
let's say you're eating maintenance calories
and you're still struggling to recover from your workouts.
That to me would be an indication
that there's something else going on
from a recoverability perspective.
So that's a very tangible thing
that the everyday person can do.
If you are a little bit more into metrics
and tracking a more novel sort of tool
in the fitness industry is HRV,
which I think we're still,
I think there's still more that needs to be done there.
I don't know that it warrants a full podcast discussion here,
but HRV and looking at recoverability or even your resting heart rate, that could be a tool. I don't know that it warrants a full podcast discussion here, but HRV and looking
at recoverability or even your resting heart rate, that could be a tool if you don't have
something like an Oura Ring. You could just take your morning resting heart rate and examine those
elevations over time. If you have a chronically elevated resting heart rate, that might be an
indicator to me, if coupled with some of those other symptoms and factors, that you might want
to examine your overall level of stress. And I think if you're someone who's a more laid back individual and you find yourself being more
reactive or changes in your mood, I think we can also look to other hormones to assess
our levels of stress. So for a male client who's not taking any sort of exogenous hormones or
testosterone therapy or anything like that, we will see a transient decline in
testosterone levels and free testosterone. So we can look outside of just cortisol when we're
examining stress. For a female client, this might impact their menstrual cycle in terms of ovulation
and that healthy flow between the follicular and luteal phase. That can be expressed via
basal body temperature. Or if you were to draw serum labs, that would be reflected in the luteal
phase in terms of your progesterone levels. So I would start if you're kind of just the
lifestyle enthusiast in your transformation, trying to get healthier, leaner, build muscle,
start with the basic things. If your food log's in check and you're training appropriately,
but you're not recovering the way you should or progressing as you should, look at that.
I think looking at your sleep and resting heart rate could be important. Everyone should be periodically monitoring their blood pressure
just for long-term cardiovascular risk. So when you go in for a physical or even if you have the
opportunity, some grocery stores have the little cuffs now. You can go in and check your blood
pressure as well. So start with sleep, food, training, and then from there, we can progress
to some of the deeper items, I would say, which would include things like your overall lab markers or that conversation around HRV.
If you have the tools to do that, that wouldn't necessarily be my first thing, though.
And then just overall being mindful of your mood.
And it requires some level of self-awareness to kind of think about your mood and energy levels and all of those things.
But I think if we audit and track it, that can be good over time.
One little sort of acronym or device I use is SHRED. So sleep, hunger, recovery, energy,
digestion, and stress. And we can kind of evaluate that for ourselves almost like a weekly check-in
and give ourselves a quantitative score and a qualitative sort of subjective score.
And if we track that over time and we notice it's deteriorating, probably means that something needs
to change in our overall lifestyle in order
to make the progress that we're really looking for. And I think tracking some of these things,
especially some of these subjective things that you can just rate on a scale, is a good idea,
especially if you're a busy person. And a lot of people listening, the idea is probably not
to get away from stress. It's probably more toward what you commented on earlier,
which is let's improve our tolerance of stress.
Let's improve our capacity for dealing with stress
so we can do more, so we can take on more.
And yeah, people can take that to the point of pathology,
that's true, but fundamentally speaking
or generally speaking, it's not a bad thing
if people want to figure out how they can
get more engaged with the different things that they're involved in and different people
in their life. It's not just about, can I work out two hours a day now instead of one hour a day?
For many people listening, it's, can I do what I need to do in my fitness, but then also be able to do what I want
to do in my work and do what I want to do in my relationship, in my family, in my social life.
The more things we try to do, inevitably, the more stress we experience. And hopefully,
we're also experiencing joy and pleasure, but with anything it has ups
and downs. Yeah. I'm glad you mentioned the ups and downs because there's a seasonality to it,
right? Just like, you know, you're not meant to be in one phase of your nutrition all the time
forever, like a calorie deficit. You may have seasons of your life that you're pushing for
that job promotion, or you're getting ready for a wedding or something, and there's some
stressors present, or you you're kind of in a phase of training
that requires accumulating some additional volume
or intensity to work towards a goal that you have.
So there's definitely a seasonality to life stressors.
I think Mike and I are pretty much in agreeance on,
the goal is not the avoidance of stress.
And I would encourage anyone listening to,
similar to how you might track your food
or keep a food log,
look at like a time audit and how you're spending your time and how you're allocating these different resources.
Because a lot of times our stress can stem from where we're placing this emphasis and focus and
how we are managing our resources in our life. And so some of the same tools that may make you
effective at getting better in terms of your exercise and your fitness or being more mindful
of your nutrition, we can apply some of those tools and skills to these other areas of life
to be more successful and better manage our stress. It's not that we're going to have
zero stress. It'll probably ebb and flow in different departments and categories.
But I think if we were honest, do that self-assessment of our time, we look at,
okay, am I actually, like Mike said, maybe the stress isn't so bad. Maybe I'm just not participating in things that bring me joy and experiencing these different dimensions
and emotions in life. A stressor might be more tolerable if there's some joy on the other side,
or there's other things that you have to look forward to in your daily life.
And one of my favorite questions for clients way back in the day on intake forms and stuff is like, what brings you joy during your week? What do you actually
have fun doing? Because sometimes as adults, we get away from that. It's like, what did you do
before you were an adult with bills to pay and responsibilities? Was it, did you like to play
music and you had an instrument that you played? Did you go outside on the swing set or go to the
jungle gym at the park? Was it you like coloring books and you like
to draw and sketch and all of these things? And I think as adults, we get away from that. But having
some of those activities and basic habits that can serve as sort of tools in your arsenal can
be helpful. It doesn't need to be an everyday thing, but it can be a nice way to kind of round
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And that's a good segue to my next question, because that can also be a great strategy for dealing with much of the stress that we need to deal with to achieve our goals, to achieve
meaning. You had mentioned that earlier. I think there's a direct relationship. It's hard to think
of any activities that are deeply satisfying and deeply meaningful
that are not also stressful to some degree that don't involve exposing ourselves to stress.
So my question for you is, what are some of these practical strategies? I'll let you go wherever you
want to go with that. If you want to start with diet or if you want to start with things related to sleep or even having fun, I think that's a great place to start because it's not talked about much.
And it's something I've experienced myself where I don't want to hijack the conversation and just
talk about my life, but I've gotten to that point. And then I decided to change some things,
but I had gotten to that point where I had filled my days with a lot of work that needed to be done. It was important work, but it got me away from the work that I enjoyed the most. And really, the work that got me into this in the first place, which was writing books and creating content. That's what I like to do the most. And as I became more of an entrepreneur and more of a business owner, business operator,
I had to do more and more of that stuff that was rewarding and it was satisfying in various ways,
but it didn't bring me the joy of just writing an article that I really liked.
I really liked how it came together. Like over here, do something for Legion
that makes a big difference in Legion's revenue, let's say.
So it's pretty significant and that's great.
And I'm not saying that doesn't mean anything,
but as far as just what brought me the most joy,
the actions that went into that were not as joyous to me
as the actions that go into just writing
the next fitness book that may or may not matter at this point in the scheme of things.
Like I may just be doing this more for my own.
I mean, people read the books and like them.
But if I have to objectively assess what's the highest and best use of my time,
what's the highest leverage thing I can do with my time,
if the goal is simply to grow Legion's top and bottom line as much as possible,
writing another fitness book, number nine or whatever, probably not very high. However, it means something to me because I enjoy
the work. And so anyway, I had to kind of audit my life and how I was spending my time and really
look at what are all these things I'm doing? And do I find any of them, how much interest,
how much fun is in those activities and how much value truly is in
those activities. And it makes some changes because I mean, I would joke about it. I guess
maybe at least I had some self-awareness that I'd gotten to a point where I didn't really have much
fun like at all because I was working six or seven days a week. And again, most of the work
wasn't particularly fun. It just needed to be done. I would joke that it's kind of like chores. Like, well, today I have, I sweep them off the
floor and then I'll clean up the kitchen and then I'll go do my chores. So, I mean, again,
I'm not asking for sympathy and I'm not even complaining. It's just, I can just say that
personally, I've experienced a bit of the imbalance that can come about when you are no longer giving
any priority to what you really enjoy and what is actually fun. Really inside work or outside of
work because there wasn't much time outside of work because there was so much time into work.
You know what I mean? One of the reasons why I'm not the CEO of Legion anymore, and I have
somebody who, I mean, he's been with me since the beginning and he's come up,
he started in customer service actually.
And not that there's anything wrong with customer service, but that's where he started.
And now he's the CEO of the company.
He does a very good job and he's a very good guy and he loves it.
He loves running the business and being that operator.
That was something that I never loved.
I did it and I did it professionally and I read
books and I took it seriously, so to speak. And I think a lot of the people who worked with me,
they wouldn't have necessarily thought that I didn't particularly, it wasn't something that
sparked joy in me per se, because I was going to do it as a professional. But that helps.
That helps to have somebody now to just fully take all the CEO-related things,
all the business management things, and do them and allow me to spend time on things that
are more fun to me. Yeah. And so for you, hitting, again, there was seasonality there,
so for a period of time, you needed to be the CEO of Legion. And now you're able to spend your time
on other things, really more your zone of genius and content creation, the stuff you really love. And so for some folks, that may just be
that little bit of an audit and self-awareness that you had to realize, hey, I'm doing six or
seven days a week of this stuff and not actually carving out any time for mic-centered activities.
And for you, maybe that's writing. For someone else, that could be music. It could be going for a walk. It could be family time. We don't all have the same preferences and priorities, just like we know that fruit is good for us, but Mike may prefer a certain berry compared to the berry that I like, right? But they both have nutritional value and we can incorporate them in our day-to-day intake as part of that. So a lot of these same things that we talked about from nutrition and fitness can directly apply. And I think because you had
some tools available, you were able to go through that season of higher stress. And, you know,
I appreciate you didn't take on the victim mentality there and point the finger at other
folks, but... No, no, I was a victim of my own tendencies.
Yeah, I think we realize that we all have such a high level of
sort of that personal responsibility or extreme ownership over
some of the stuff we get ourselves stuck into at times.
And I can definitely relate to that in coaching and business and life.
I think the further you go along, you realize,
oh, that was actually my fault that that happened.
And then we did that.
But I mean, that's my default now.
Even when things happen to me that seem kind of out of the blue, and it's not just random
things that can happen in life and you just deal with them, like something negative that
happened that I didn't seem to have any control over, didn't seem to play any part in. I still have just fully adopted that
extreme ownership perspective. And I still always look at situations through the lens of what did I
do to contribute to this? I mean, I would be hard pressed to think of anything probably in the last
10 years where I couldn't find an answer to that. And not something, an answer that is, there's a direct cause and effect relationship. Even if maybe the reaction
seems completely disproportionate to my input, like fine, but I can find some element that I can
take personal responsibility for, even if it was not paying enough attention to something
or not thinking enough about it and maybe taking action before I should have or whatever.
And then what lesson can I learn from this to prevent something like this from happening again?
And I find that to be very productive.
I find that it helps emotionally.
It helps prevent extreme emotional outbursts and helps me stay pretty well balanced
by being able to accept, all right, I actually did have, I did play a role in this. It wasn't
just their fault, or maybe it was, it was actually more my fault than their fault.
So now I just have to deal with the consequences and then looking for that lesson of, okay, so is there something I can take with me
now that can help me win next time or help me do better in such a situation next time?
Which probably makes it less stressful to learning from those lessons and having
kind of that lens of, I think when you do take responsibility, it gives you a greater sense of
control because you realize you played a significant part in the outcome.
There was a contribution that happened there, whether good or bad.
So that's probably something in your life that's played a pretty big role as far as interactions.
And I think it kind of takes the sting out a little bit if you're always looking at through the lens of how did I contribute to this or what was the role that I played?
I think that's super important. One thing you also mentioned earlier that I wanted to just
include for the audience on the fitness side of things is, you know, you mentioned fun and joy and
finding things that you like. I think we get very caught up in our programming from time to time
where we forget that part of training is meant to be recreation. And it's important to take it seriously and exert effort,
but that doesn't mean that you abandon the idea
of doing some fun things that contribute to your fitness.
So if that's riding a bike,
that can be done in a way that's good for you,
contributes to your fitness, gets you outside,
but also may be good for your stress management.
Yep, or running.
And I say that in particular
because I'll often hear from people who they like running, but they're concerned that the running is
going to get in the way of their muscle and strength gain. And it can, if you do too much
running out of all the different types of cardio that most people do, running is probably the one
that would get in the way the most. However, you do have to do quite a bit of it to get in the way. And even if it did get in the way to a small degree,
it's going to be for most people of your muscle and strength gain.
If you really like running, then you should include it in your regimen.
You shouldn't drop it because maybe that is not maximally scientifically optimal
for maximizing the hypertrophy. But if
it is optimal for maximizing your enjoyment of your life and of your lifestyle, then it's important.
Yeah. And just showing up to do it, right? So if that makes you more active overall and makes you
more consistent with the rest of your routine, then probably good to have it in there. I think from a resistance training perspective where I
see this, I think continuity and having some mainstays in your programming is important
for progressive overload. And maybe that's a metric-based movement in your training sessions.
But with your accessory work, I think that's an opportunity where you can keep training fun from a resistance training perspective. So also understanding how to be kind of adaptable and flexible in our programming where, okay, I know that I need this row-'s going to be consistent. Well, there's opportunities to do things you enjoy and there are going to be weak
points that maybe are things you don't enjoy that you still need to do from time to time.
But I think sprinkling in things that you regularly do in your accessory work gives
you something in your sessions that maybe you look forward to. And there's a way to have that
well-rounded approach. And that's one of the great aspects of coaching is a coach can work with you
to kind of give you what you need,
but sprinkle in a little bit of what you want
in order to make it a more enjoyable journey
towards your goals.
So I think that's true of whether it's Mike's example,
like a preferred cardiovascular activity,
or I think it holds true with your weight training too.
I think there's ways that you can
still have a science-based approach
and follow the evidence and try to optimize things so that you can still have a science-based approach and follow the evidence
and try to optimize things so that you make the best progress. But there's room for some
individual preference along the way, too, I think. Last comment on fun, and then we can get back to
other strategies for either reducing stress or increasing our capacity to deal with stress.
I'll let you go wherever you want with it. And that is just a simple little task,
some little homework for people listening. If you feel like you're not having enough fun,
if fun has fallen by the wayside because of obligations is usually how it goes. And again,
I understand it. I've been there. Try to just end every day with something fun. And if you can't end the day because of your schedule, just try to give some part of your day, even if it's 15 maxdevelopment activity. It's not a meditation or breath work,
unless you really find that fun. Most people don't find it fun per se. It's a means to an end. No,
it's something like you said, playing an instrument. Maybe it's drawing. Maybe it's
playing a board game or playing Legos with your kid, whatever it is, but you're doing it just because you like to do it.
Yeah, that's great. You know, so for me, probably music and maybe it's playing fetch with the dogs
or something, just getting outside. For other people, we all have our sort of individual
interests and flavors and preferences. And I think that's important. It's a balance of both.
So some of it is kind of expanding your horizons and testing that threshold and incorporating
things and trying them on for size, knowing that there are some health benefits.
You know, obviously, cold exposure, heat exposure, exercise, they're all hormetic stressors.
So in a way, even if it is something that you enjoy doing, there's a little bit of still a good stress that can come with that, but we can overdo it at times.
And so I'm glad Mike mentioned everything from Legos to just, you know, maybe for you, it's...
Even listening to music.
I mean, some of the, they just, you know,
you just like to, if you just like to sit down
and listen to some music you really like to listen to
and for 15 minutes, 30 minutes, whatever that is,
and it's, it just brings you joy.
Yeah.
Ideally not on social media,
hopefully for folks listening to this.
It's like, I feel like we're all plugged
into technology enough.
I'm glad Mike had some non-technological examples. I think aside from having fun and joy,
just to kind of round out the episode, a lot of the things we can deploy inside a fitness journey,
fortunately, fitness does seem to help us with managing our stressors. But I think the biggest
practical takeaways from today's episode, aside from
resistance training, would be things like getting outside. Nature is actually very powerful. Natural
settings seem to reduce people's perception of stress. Also, pets and animals can be very
powerful, sticking on the natural front. As far as creative therapies, there's research on art,
music, and different creative avenues that can play a role in your stress management.
That's a very research-based kind of human trials approach to that. There's certainly more
mindfulness-related exercises, whether that's journaling, breath work, even things like
counseling and therapy can be considered a form of stress management if you are someone who
finds value in that and you feel that you're in a season of stress management if you are someone who finds value
in that and you feel that you're in a season of life where that would be beneficial to you.
So there's really no shortage of techniques. I think like many things when it comes to food,
exercise, and other elements of a transformation, it's trying some stuff on for size and what can
you be consistent with, participate in, and what are you deriving the most value from
as far as your personal ROI goes?
And just remember, there are probably things in your life right now where maybe you can make some of these stressors more predictable or you know that there's something that's
bothering you.
And Mike was able to delegate some stressors maybe for other folks.
It's just planning and time management or communication that can go into it.
Being mindful of finding ways that we might be able to better control
or prepare for those stressors, kind of auditing what's coming up in our day-to-day,
almost like you would with just tracking your macros or keeping a food log,
and then exploring ways that you can contribute to being part of the solution.
Instead of pointing the finger and kind of viewing everyone else or your environment as
the problem, obviously that will play a role. But all of these things can go a really long way. And then if you are
someone who's in a season of your life where there's some stress, just do what you can in
terms of your sleep hygiene. Obviously, Mike has a ton of different episodes on recovery
and things like that. Increase your micronutrient status to support that state of heightened stress
as much as you can. And understand that when you are stressed,
if it's impacting your sleep, it may play into some of the decisions that you're making and
behaviors that you have. So some level of kind of tracking in there might be helpful just to
audit and have kind of some tools for self-awareness as you're moving through those
seasons. Those would probably be some of my best advice. Hopefully, through this episode,
people are able to adopt some of those strategies. I would say don't do all of them best advice. Hopefully, through this episode, people are able to adopt some of those
strategies. I would say don't do all of them at once. Pick something and apply it in their journey
to hopefully improve their health and their training and ability to stick with their nutrition
as well. And what are your thoughts about dealing with people who are causing stress? That has to be
one of the major factors. And I'll just lead with something that just has
kind of stuck with me that if you look at the people who you deal with on a regular basis,
and if you were to just look at the amount of stress, the amount of problems that this person
brings into your life, and you were to rate that on a scale of one to five, and then you look at the amount of joy or value or meaning or satisfaction that this person provides, a scale of
one to five. And any people who are bringing a lot more problems and stress than meaning value
satisfaction, you should, and again, I've done this myself, so I'm not trying to moralize, but I think that it's worth considering who these people are and how you are interacting with them.
And should you change that?
It doesn't necessarily mean getting rid of them because sometimes you can't.
Sometimes it's your boss.
Sometimes it's somebody in your family.
But you almost always can take some actions to maybe you can't even change the proportions, but you can
turn the volume down. You can bring the amount of problems that they're in stress that they're
creating down. And what are your thoughts though on navigating? I think that's a great perspective.
I really like the radio analogy of turn the volume down on the people who are stressful. And in some ways, there are times where you kind of outgrow certain friend groups or
people who maybe become more distant in your life. Yeah, there are people that may need to be cut out
of your life. Now, I'm not the person who's qualified to tell you to do that. I don't know
everyone listening to this well enough to make that determination for you. But I think as Mike said, if you're kind of weighing some of these inputs and outputs and
the level of stress relative to growth and contribution and joy that the person's bringing
you, I think it's a fair discussion to consider who's just like, you know, in a health and
fitness journey, who's supporting my goals and these decisions I need to make with my nutrition
and who's the person who's encouraging me to hit that workout? Or who wants to tag along and go with me and get that
training session in versus the person who's being critical of your choices to better yourself?
And I think there will be times in your life where you either have to have that conversation or
you just slowly kind of remove yourself from that stressful group and ideally surround yourself with
people who contribute more to the joy or growth in your life.
And generally speaking, if just kind of Mike mentioned,
if we have some level of personal responsibility
in terms of stress,
most human conflict seems to stem from miscommunication
and unfulfilled expectations.
So if you find yourself in a situation
where you are repeatedly ending up in conflict with folks,
kind of audits the role that you played, as Mike mentioned earlier, as far as did I set expectations that would lead this person to be upset with me or stressed in the way that they're
acting? Or did I maybe miscommunicate and they're just upset with me because this is a miscommunication?
So I think if you can look at that fairly and say, because it's one thing you have the
occasional miscommunication, but if this is happening all the time, maybe there's just
something deeper going on.
But I think if you can look at yourself and say, hey, I haven't really set expectations
in such a way where this person should be upset with me or that there should be this
level of conflict or stress, then maybe it is that conversation Mike talked about of
kind of distancing yourself
or removing them from your life.
I don't think Mike and I are really the ones
to make that decision,
but this is a helpful frame to look at
in terms of thinking of that.
And with miscommunication,
I think the occasional one-off,
someone misunderstood you or something, that's fine.
But if someone's constantly either overreacting
or dragging you down,
that's probably a red flag or good indication.
We've seen this with clients over the years where, you know, someone is kind of this person who's repeatedly sort of inserting themselves and interjecting in a not so positive way when it comes to your goals or making it known that you're trying to better yourself.
And that can be anything from your fitness journey to educating yourself or growing a business.
A lot of times people will root for you in the beginning and then you start to grow and those folks maybe are less positive than they used to be upset with me. But if that's not the case, then they may just be a negative individual
that doesn't belong in that same dose in your life. So kind of like Mike was talking about,
turn that dial down in terms of the volume. And hopefully, you know, you're able to kind of move
on towards better things. Absolutely. And I also wanted to ask you about diet and how that can play into
minimally exacerbating stress. Like for example, because just we're talking to a lot of people who
care about body composition, maybe that's not all they care about. So you often will have a lot of
dieting going on. You'll have, especially for people who want to stay fairly lean, I'm sure
as you know, that means that generally you're going to under eat rather than overeat. Like if
you're a guy and you want to be at least, let's say you want to be 10% body fat or lower, or you're
a woman, you want to be 20% body fat or lower, you're just going to have to err on the side of
being in a small calorie deficit rather than a small calorie surplus. And so there's that.
There's also low carb. That's obviously very popular, but that can make stress even worse.
So I just want to get your thoughts on those things and any other dietary considerations that
people should be thinking with in this context of improving our ability to do all the things
that we want to do and not get overstressed.
Undereating can definitely contribute to your overall stress. And think of the calorie gap
that you're creating as kind of compounding some of the existing stressors that may be present.
And the longer we're dieting now truly in a deficit, not just the feeling or sensation of
thinking that I'm on a diet, but if I am restricting my energy intake for long periods of time.
Like my body fat levels are going down.
Yeah. If your body fat levels are very low and you've been lean for quite some time and
you're restricting calories, what happens as far as the physiological response to dieting
and what's known as metabolic adaptation in the health and fitness world actually has a lot of
parallels as far as what happens when we are stressed. So when we go through a season of
chronic dieting or we're just trying to stay very, very lean and we're under eating, we actually have
that elevation in cortisol and the HPA axis that we talked about earlier. We're down-regulating
thyroid hormone and reproductive hormone. A lot of those same things happen to a person under
chronic stress. So you're almost adding insult to injury if we were to chronically diet through a phase like that.
We can use certain macronutrients to help as far as from a recovery perspective,
getting adequate carbohydrate post-workout. Insulin serves as sort of this counterbalance.
It's a bit counter-regulatory to cortisol. So you can use macronutrition and supplementation
to help offset some of that. But I think really we shouldn't... A lot of that is making minor
tweaks to optimize things. Ideally, you're not doing this all the time because hopefully you're
applying some of the things we've discussed in today's episode with Mike to where we're not
always having to hack our nutrition to make up
for this highly stressed lifestyle. But you can do that getting adequate protein intake
and remembering that if we are on a lower carb diet, we may exacerbate some of the effects of
that chronic stress. So chronic dieting, low carb dieting, and not managing our lifestyle overall
will contribute to that.
And some folks notice on that low-carb diet, they may have a harder time sleeping. So that sleep then will make us less resilient to future stressors. So really, we want to structure
our nutrition in a way that allows us to recover from exercise and optimize sleep. And then if we
can optimize sleep, that may help deal with life's daily stressors. And if you happen to be in a
deficit for a period of time,
probably not a huge deal or the end of the world. There's a lot of good things that can happen
there. But if we're overdoing that or overstaying our welcome.
Making the calorie deficit the lifestyle. I remind people,
this is a dietary intervention. It's not meant to be a lifestyle.
Right. I think, yeah, we have very similar thought process on this.
I think I've tweeted or now it's X as well.
I've talked about how if a deliberate calorie deficit for fat loss is not a problem, but
attempting to achieve that calorie deficit in perpetuity, that is the problem, right?
So what is meant as a temporary dietary intervention is not meant to be something that you do over
the long haul.
Ideally, we make those body composition changes and then we adjust our caloric intake and
have some sort of seasonality in our approach or what people in the evidence-based community
refer to as periodization.
We can apply that to help maintain our body composition while not eating minimal bare
bones rabbit food to try to keep our abs year-round.
So definitely, there are some nutritional strategies. I would say if the low-hanging
fruit is your lifestyle, though, don't step over dollar bills to pick up pennies.
Or don't avoid the bigger, more powerful changes that you don't want to make,
but, oh, that sounds nice. I'll just eat more carbs.
Yeah. If you're like, I'll have carbs after my workout,
but you're dealing with a lot of the things
we've discussed in today's episode,
we might be missing the forest for the trees.
So there's definitely something to be said about,
yes, use these tools at your disposal,
but let's not kind of ignore the big rocks, so to speak.
Yep, yep.
And the last question I wanted to ask was supplements.
Are there any supplements that you particularly like
for helping deal with stress?
There are supplements that certainly are sold
as effective stress busters at worst,
or maybe stress modulators
if they want to be a little bit more honest.
But what are your thoughts? So in the evenings, if sleep is the issue,
big fan of glycine, theanine, and magnesium. Those are some really great low side effects
options that can be titrated and dosed in a way that I think can be used responsibly.
And there's some good evidence to support their use. You can get fancier than that,
but I think for most beginner to intermediates, that's a good place to start with glycine coming
in at probably the highest dose. You need several grams of glycine. I do about three grams,
about an hour before bed. We're waiting for that reformulation, Mike.
Well, it's actually, it's in the gummies phase of this. So the formulation is done. I like it. And I want it to be gummies
because we have a lot of powders already. We have a lot of pills. And especially if it's
something you're taking before bed, yeah, you don't want more water. At least I don't.
So glycine, I think, is great. Theanine, usually most capsules are going to be in a 100 to 200
milligram serving size.
And the dose, you'll kind of figure out what's best for you there.
As far as magnesium, usually most capsule sizes there are going to be anywhere in the 150, 200 milligram range.
And you can kind of titrate.
Most better quality magnesiums will avoid kind of that gastric upset that you see with
magnesium citrate.
So you should be able to increase your dose accordingly. But I always recommend with things that are micronutrients,
check your food log and see if you have good dietary sources of these versus solely relying
on supplementation. And then as far as the morning goes, we can use certain things to
combat fatigue like rhodiola. It has evidence as an adaptogen. There are other adaptogens
that exist on the marketplace.
But as far as ones that I've personally found success with, and there's also good research behind them and overall pretty good safety profile, Rhodiola.
I think there's other evidence for Ashwagandha, KSM-66, and other products.
I think there's differences slightly in response in regards to mood and how people really achieve
kind of maximal benefit from that product. But I do think those are probably the two most
researched herbal adaptogens, or like you said, kind of modulating your stress response.
But I usually start people with more basic items and then dealing with some of the micronutrient
depletion that may happen under chronic stress, which is getting your good B-complex vitamins in,
depletion that may happen under chronic stress, which is getting your good B-complex vitamins in,
magnesium, zinc, in some cases, vitamin D. But that's really where we start. And then if someone's experiencing digestive symptoms as a result of their high stress, we may want to consider looking
at what's going on with their stomach acid levels and just kind of monitoring certain foods that may
or may not be irritating them as well. But I start pretty basic on the supplement side.
We want to assess that response first.
And then you can always scale and titrate your dosing
or incorporate a variety of products there.
And then the last thing would just be your workout recovery
because typically if you're in a season of higher stress,
other than supporting sleep,
really the other thing we could do there
is just support workout recovery to help you
as you move through that season, which is going to be adequate protein
intake, creatine. And then depending on the person, we may adjust that carbohydrate intake
up or down depending on their total macronutrient allocation and overall energy balance that that
person has as far as their day-to-day intake goes. Great answer. And that's more or less exactly how
I would answer it. So great
advice. Well, this was a great discussion, Sam. Again, thank you for your time. Thank you for
your patience. We were having some technical issues before and it turned out it looks like
it's a hardware thing on my end that it held. So it looks like my hypothesis was probably true.
So thanks again, Sam.
And why don't we wrap up with where people can find you
and find your work?
And if there's anything in particular
that you want them to know about,
anything new coming out?
For sure.
So I'm Sam Miller Science on all major platforms.
And by the time Mike and I will record next,
who knows, one of these platforms will have a new name that happened between last time and this time.
Sam Miller Science, I spend a lot of time on the podcast and Instagram a little more so than some
of the other platforms. My website, sammillerscience.com. In 2022, I wrote a book called
Metabolism Made Simple. You can grab that either on the website or metabolismmadesimple.com.
And then my program for health and fitness professionals is metabolism school. And you can find that at metabolismschool.com. Really the name of the game there is
kind of bridging this gap. A lot of the stuff that Mike and I talked about today, as far as
components of health, the other 23 hours of the day, we do look at nutrition and fitness,
obviously, but also conversations around things like stress management and making sure that this
next wave
of health and fitness professionals
understand how to help people in their daily lives
and actually getting some traction
in their transformation to move forward.
So those are really the places I hang out,
best places to find me.
And you can really all find it from that main hub,
which is samlarscience.com.
Awesome.
Well, thanks again, Sam.
I appreciate it.
And I look forward to the next one.
Okay.
Thanks, Mike.
Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And if you did,
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