Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Says You! Natty Expectations, Low-Fat Dieting, and "Cheat Meals"
Episode Date: March 5, 2021I’ve written and recorded a lot of evidence-based content over the years on just about everything you can imagine related to building muscle, losing fat, and getting healthy. I’ve also worked with... thousands of men and women of all ages and circumstances and helped them get into the best shape of their lives. That doesn’t mean you should blindly swallow everything I say, though, because let’s face it—nobody is always right about everything. And especially in fields like diet and exercise, which are constantly evolving thanks to the efforts of honest and hardworking researchers and thought leaders. This is why I’m always happy to hear from people who disagree with me, especially when they have good arguments and evidence to back up their assertions. Sometimes I can’t get on board with their positions, but sometimes I end up learning something, and either way, I always appreciate the discussion. That gave me the idea for this series of podcast episodes: publicly addressing things people disagree with me on and sharing my perspective. Think of it like a spicier version of a Q&A. So, here’s what I’m doing: Every couple of weeks, I’m asking my Instagram followers what they disagree with me on, and then picking a few of the more common or interesting contentions to address here on the podcast. And in this episode, I’ll be tackling the following . . . 4:41 - “Your natty expectations are unrealistic.” 17:50 - “Your BLS and TLS books are beginner lifting programs, but the macros are designed for elite athletes, and the fat recommendations are horribly low.” 25:43 - “Your books include cheat meals, but that’s an unproductive way to view food because it implies that eating off plan is bad and this can result in feelings of guilt which can lead to more off-plan eating.” Mentioned on The Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm your host, Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining me
today. Now, I've written and recorded a lot of evidence-based stuff over the years on just about
everything you can imagine relating to building muscle, losing fat, and getting healthy. I've
also worked with thousands and thousands of men and women of
all ages and circumstances and helped them get into the best shape of their life. But that does
not mean you should just blindly swallow everything I say, because let's face it, nobody is always
right about everything. And especially in fields like diet and exercise, which are always evolving thanks to
the efforts of honest and hardworking researchers and thought leaders. And that's why I'm always
happy to hear from people who disagree with me, especially when they have good arguments
and evidence to back up their assertions. Sometimes I can't quite get on board with
their positions, but
sometimes I end up learning something. And either way, I always appreciate the discussion. And that
gave me the idea for this series of podcast episodes, which I call Says You, where I publicly
address things that people disagree with me on, and I share my perspective. It's kind of like a spicier Q&A.
So what I do is every couple of weeks, I ask people who follow me on Instagram,
at Muscle for Life Fitness, please follow me, what they disagree with me on. And then I pick
a few of the more common or interesting contentions to address here on the podcast. So if there's something that you disagree
with me on, and it could be related to diet, exercise, supplementation, business, lifestyle,
I don't care, anything, go follow me on Instagram at MuscleForLifeFitness and look for my says you
story that I put up every couple of weeks where I solicit content for these episodes,
or just shoot me an email, mike at muscleforlife.com. All right, so here is what I'll be
tackling in today's episode. My natty expectations are unrealistic. This comes from Marco Eckstein
over on Facebook. And then my BLS and TLS books are beginner lifting programs, but the macros are
designed for elite athletes. And this comes from Claire over on Facebook. Specifically,
she's objecting to the fat recommendations for women. And last, we have that my books include
quote unquote cheat meals, but that's an unproductive way to view food because it implies
that eating off-plan is bad and this can result in feelings of guilt, which can lead to more
off-plan eating and so forth. And I don't have who this came from, but it is something that many
people have mentioned over the years and is still talked about, not necessarily in reference to me
and my stuff, just in general on social media. So I think it's worth addressing. Also, if you like what I'm doing
here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my health and fitness books, including
the number one bestselling weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger Leaner
Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger, as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef. Now, these books have sold well over 1 million copies
and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can find them on all major
online retailers like Audible, Amazon, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play, as well as in select Barnes & Noble stores.
And I should also mention that you can get any of the audiobooks 100% free when you sign up for an
Audible account. And this is a great way to make those pockets of downtime, like commuting, meal
prepping, and cleaning, more interesting, entertaining, and productive. And so if you
want to take Audible up on this offer, and if you want to get one of my audiobooks
for free, just go to www.buylegion.com and sign up for your account.
So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want to see more of it, and if you want
to learn time-proven and evidence-based strategies for losing fat, building muscle, and getting
healthy, and strategies that work for
anyone and everyone, regardless of age or circumstances, please do consider picking
up one of my best-selling books, Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for
Women, and The Shredded Chef for my favorite fitness-friendly recipes. Okay, let's start with the first one, which is that my natty
expectations are unrealistic for most people. So what are my natty expectations? Well, first,
what is Marco talking about? He's talking about expectations for muscle gain, I'm assuming,
and maybe strength gain as well, but probably muscle gain. And what are my natty expectations? Well, maybe expectations isn't the
right word, maybe more like limits and most likely outcomes. So as far as limits go, for men,
I would say it's probably around 45 pounds of muscle, period, in their lifetime, starting from
a normal body weight. If a guy is starting underweight, maybe he can do a bit better than
that, but starting from a normal body weight, somewhere around 40, 45 pounds of total muscle
gain in his lifetime is going to be the ceiling for most guys. Now, there are going to be guys
out there who can get bigger than that. They're just going to be rare. So if we think of this as
a bell curve, like a normal distribution, we're now moving to the right. Anybody who can get up
to 50 pounds of muscle gained is certainly a genetic outlier, maybe even a genetic freak. They are not common
and they are usually people who have been big and strong their entire life. They're usually the guys
who were jacked at like 13 and started lifting weights at 16 and then did it for 35 years and
have big skeletons and were just made to be big and strong.
And then by the same token, on the other side of the curve, we're going to have guys who
can gain maybe no more than 30 or 35 pounds of muscle. And that could be because they don't
respond as well to training. They are just smaller people. So they have a smaller skeleton. Maybe
they are shorter or just have small bones.
The amount of bone mass that you have, for example, has been shown to be a reliable indicator
of how big and strong you can get. And another factor is when they start training. So if a guy
starts training when he's 35 or 45, he is almost certainly not going to be able to get as jacked as
he would have been able to get
if he would have started when he was 16, 17, 18. Now, as far as women go, you can cut those numbers
in half. Basically, the average woman is going to be able to gain probably 25-ish, 20, 25 pounds of
muscle in her lifetime, assuming that she is starting at a normal body weight and is a normal responder to weightlifting
and has a normal sized body. And if she is genetically and anatomically predisposed to
being big and strong, maybe she can get up to 30 pounds or even 35 pounds. And if she is the
opposite, if she is a very small person or just doesn't have the body to be big and strong,
maybe she can only gain 15 or 20 pounds of muscle. I don't think Marco is referring to strength. I
think he was referring to muscle, but I might as well quickly comment on strength potential.
I would say your average guy can reliably work toward 3, 4, 5, 3 plates on the bench on either
side. So 3, 15, 4 plates on the squat, both sides, obviously 4, 0, 5 and 5 plates on the bench on either side. So 315, four plates on the squat, both sides,
obviously 405 and five plates on the deadlift 495. And those are one rep maxes. Most guys
should be able to achieve that. And it may take upward of seven to 10 years, but they should be
able to achieve those strength standards. Now there are going to be many guys out there who
can beat those strength standards, no doubt. But again, I'm just talking about the middle of the curve. Most guys,
60% to 70% probably of guys are never going to see 1RMs much higher than those numbers.
And for women, it's 1-ish, 2-ish, 2-ish. So 135-ish on the bench and 225-ish on the squat and deadlift. Again, that's
a realistic target to shoot for, for most women. There certainly are women out there who are going
to be able to get quite a bit stronger than that without drugs. All of these numbers, by the way,
are without drugs, 100% natural. But your average woman is probably not going to be able to get
much stronger than one-ish, two-ish,
two-ish, no matter what she does in the gym and no matter how long she does it for.
So now that I have shared my natty expectations or my limits and likely outcomes, let me address
the claim that they are unrealistic for most people, that most people will not be able to achieve those numbers that I
just laid out. And I guess my reply is kind of lame because I'm just going to say that there
is quite a bit of research behind what I just shared. That's not just my opinion. I'm really
just interpreting the existing research and studies show that people do respond very differently to exercise. So that's one
factor. At one end of the spectrum, you have high responders, people who build muscle very quickly
when they lift weights, who gain strength very quickly, or even who improve their cardiovascular
fitness very quickly. And then on the other extreme, you have people who exhibit either
no response or sometimes even a negative response to exercise. Now, the chances that you
are a non-responder or a very low responder are very low by definition. Similarly, the chances are
you are not a very high responder. Most of us are somewhere in the middle. I, for example,
have been a slightly better than normal responder to exercise, but I've also been hindered by the
fact that I have a small skeleton. I have small bones, like six inch wrists, circumference,
for example, seven inch circumference ankles. And I have long legs. I'm six two with long legs
and that makes squatting harder. I have long arms that makes bench pressing and overhead pressing
harder. And my long legs and long arms basically cancel each other out on the deadlifting. My long legs
are bad for it. My long arms are good for it. And so I've been an okay deadlifter basically. Maybe
good, not great, just good. My 1RM has been in the past the highest, I believe probably 460s.
And that's pretty good considering that I wasn't following
pure strength training programming. I was following Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger 1.0,
which was a reverse pyramid, push-pull legs with some bodybuilding stuff thrown in.
And now I'm following Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger 2.0, the program that is currently in the book that I
updated last year. And I am getting back to my previous PRs. So my deadlift 1RM is probably
about 445 right now and I'm making steady progress on it. So I hope to be in the high 400s 1RM by the
end of this year. I think that's doable based on my slow but steady
progress on the strength front. As far as muscularity goes, I'm not going to be gaining
any more muscle to speak of. The best I can hope for is probably not even a pound per year. At this
point, it's probably less, but I still can gain some of the old strength that I had back. And I may be able to get a bit stronger beyond
that, but based on my experience now lifting properly for 10 plus years, it is clear to me
that 3-4-5 is going to be it for me. If I were willing to get fat, if I were willing to gain 30,
40 pounds, and most of it would be fat mass. Some of it would register as
lean mass because it would be additional glycogen in the muscles, for example, water in the muscles.
But if I were willing to get a lot fatter, carry around a lot more weight, maybe I could get a bit
stronger than 3, 4, 5. But 4, 5, 6, for example, no way. It's just not in the cards genetically.
So anyway, getting back on track here, Marco was
referring specifically to people who do not respond well to training and who struggle to gain muscle
and strength. And he assumes that there are many more of those people out there than there are.
He also doesn't realize that research shows that exercise non-response is mitigated by changing different training
variables. For example, studies show that increasing workout intensity, increasing workout
frequency, increasing workout volume are all viable ways to get non-responders to start responding.
And true training non-response is potentially exaggerated by how research measures what non-response is. So for
example, a study may find that 10% of the participants didn't experience any muscle
growth after let's say 10 weeks of resistance training and then label them non-responders.
That doesn't mean though that their body didn't respond in ways that weren't measured like strength
gain or improvements in insulin sensitivity
or fat loss. Research also shows that in the case of hypertrophy, some people respond better to
higher rep ranges. Some people respond better to lower rep ranges. Now, most people are going to
respond more or less equally well as far as muscle building goes, but lower rep ranges are going to produce more strength. And so again, in the case of a guy who is struggling to gain, let's say just 30 pounds
of muscle, the assumption should not be that he can't do it. It's just not possible for him. It
should be that the standard approach that works for most guys doesn't work for him. And so then
he'll have to find what does work for him
by playing with those training variables that I mentioned. And then there is diet to consider as
well. I've heard from many, many quote unquote hard gainers over the years and almost always,
these were guys who just didn't have big appetites. They thought they were eating a lot
more calories than they actually were, sometimes protein as well. And so what was happening is they were not consistently in
a calorie surplus, which is necessary to maximize muscle and strength gain, especially when your
newbie gains are behind you. And so in many cases, these were guys who were maybe lower than average,
slightly lower than average responders to training, but they were not
eating enough food. And often they were pretty active outside of the gym. Sometimes they had
jobs that involved physical labor, or they just were walking around a lot for whatever reason,
clocking in many thousands of steps every day. So high energy expenditure, sometimes also just
high NEAT types, non-exercise activity thermogenesis,
people who just move around a lot. So burning a lot of calories, not eating enough calories.
So often in a slight calorie deficit, let's say four or five days out of the week,
they are in a slight deficit. And then the remaining days, they are maybe in a slight
surplus. So their weight doesn't really change over time. It fluctuates a little bit throughout the week, but it is more or less the same over
time. However, just being in that deficit four or five days per week, even if it's small,
can be enough in some guys to make it very hard to gain muscle and strength. But one for one,
once we corrected their diet and in some cases corrected their training program,
although often it really wasn't the training, it was just the diet. And when we did have to
address training, sometimes we needed to add volume. Sometimes we needed to play with different
rep ranges, have them train heavier more often or lighter more often. So doing more sets of four,
or lighter more often. So doing more sets of four, five, and six and focusing more on compound exercises or sometimes doing more work in higher rep ranges, eights, tens, twelves, of course,
still focusing on compound exercises. And so one for one, we were able to get the needle moving.
And the good news is if you're a guy or a girl, you don't need to gain that much muscle to have the look that you
probably want. The look that most guys are after is probably 30-ish pounds of muscle gained with
plenty of it in the upper body. And then a body fat percentage, maybe around 10% or so where you
have abs and you're going to have some vascularity and you look very fit. And for women, it's probably 15-ish
pounds of muscle gained in the right places on their body. Most women are going to have to work
more on their lower body to get what they want than their upper body. And as far as body fat
levels go, something around 20% is what most women like. That's where you still look feminine,
but you look very athletic and you look lean, but you don't look jacked. You don't look like a bodybuilder. And I would say that the vast
majority of people can accomplish those things. The number of guys out there who can't gain at
least 30 pounds of muscle, if they're willing to work hard and be patient, is very small.
And the number of women who can't gain 15 to 20-ish pounds, very small.
If you want to learn more about this topic and if you want to get an idea of what your potential
for whole body strength and muscularity is, go over to legionathletics.com, search for naturally,
and you'll find an article that I wrote on how much muscle you can gain naturally. And there
are some calculators in there that allow you to put in some information about your body and get
a sense of how big and strong you can get. Okay, let's move on to the next contention here,
the next point of contention. This comes from Claire via Facebook. And my BLS, TLS books are
beginner lifting programs, but the macros are designed for elite athletes and the fat recommendations are particularly low, horribly low, she says.
And I understand where she's coming from because the macros in BLS and TLS are a very
different way of eating for most people.
They're so far removed that they may seem like they're designed for elite athletes,
but that's not really the case.
like they're designed for elite athletes, but that's not really the case. Multiple studies show that there is no one-size-fits-all diet for elite athletes. Different types of athletes need
different types of diets depending on what sport they play, what it requires. Is it a power sport?
Is it an endurance sport? Is it a strength sport? And ironically, the calories and macros that I give in BLS and TLS don't really resemble any of those diets because I am teaching people how to make big changes to their body
composition quickly and safely and healthily. And that is very different than what elite athletes
are trying to achieve, which is maximum performance. Now, as far as body composition diets go, I would say that BLS and TLS are moderate.
They're middle of the road. They are not how elite bodybuilders eat, at least many of them,
for example. It is not uncommon for bodybuilders to get as little as 15% or even 10% of their
daily calories from fat, especially as they get leaner and are trying to eat as many
carbs as they can to have some energy for working out and just in general to feel a little bit less
like they are dying. And so they often will keep their protein very high and bring their fat down
to very low levels so they can just squeeze in as many carbs as possible.
And in the case of BLS and TLS, the general recommendation is getting 30% of your calories
from protein, 45% from carbs, and 25% from dietary fat. If you want to go up to as high as 30% from
dietary fat, that is fine. But when cutting, I recommend that most people start around 20 to 25% and see
how they do. Now, why those numbers? Well, the protein intake is going to come out to about one
gram per pound for most people. And several studies show that somewhere in that range of
0.8 to one gram of protein per pound per body weight per day is ideal when you are not just cutting actually,
just ideal in general for preserving muscle and maximizing muscle and strength gain. If you can
gain muscle and strength even when cutting, it's just a good number. And if you are muscular and
lean, wanting to get really lean, you may even want to eat more than that. You may want to go
as high as 1.2 or even 1.5 grams of protein per pound of body weight per day.
And eating about one and a half to maybe 1.75 grams of carbs per pound of body weight per day
is going to give you a lot of flexibility in your meal plan. Chances are you like carbs
and you want to eat a lot of carbs. And eating a lot of carbs is also going to mean better workouts
for basically everyone, and especially with more
intense weightlifting. And studies even show that high carb diets are better for gaining and
maintaining muscle than low carb diets. So that's why I have always given people a high-ish carb
diet as the default and then told them that they can reduce carbs and increase dietary fat if they
want. If they don't like high carb or they don't do well with high carb and they would prefer,
they just do better with more fat, that's okay. You can bring the carbs down and bring the fat up
and find the sweet spot for you. The non-negotiables, I would say, would be the calories.
You have to make sure that your calories are in the range that they need to be in to create the deficit or the surplus or to just stay at
maintenance. And protein intake, that is also non-negotiable. If we're talking about body comp,
a higher protein diet or a high protein diet is just better than a lower or low protein diet,
period. Carbs and fat, though, are negotiable, not as important. Again, most people
are going to do better with higher carb and lower fat, but if you know that's not you, or if you are
not sure and you want to see the difference between higher carb, lower fat and lower carb,
higher fat, totally fine. Now, just to comment quickly on the amount of fat that I recommend people eat, let's talk about a
study that was conducted by scientists at the National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development. And in this experiment, researchers analyzed the hormone levels of 259 women,
16 times throughout two menstrual cycles. And what they found is that those who ate the most
fat, which was about 36 to 49% of their daily calories, had just
4% higher testosterone levels than those who ate the least amount of fat, which was 18 to 32%
of daily calories. And the differences in estrogen, progesterone, follicle-stimulating hormone,
luteinizing hormone, all involved in fertility and menstruation were also so small as to be
insignificant.
Similarly, a study conducted by scientists at the National Cancer Institute involved the analysis
of the hormone levels of 43 men who followed two diets that provided different amounts of dietary
fat. So we had one group which got 19% of their calories from fat, the other group 41% of calories
from fat, and after five and a half months, the scientists found that the men in the high-fat group had just 13 percent
higher testosterone levels than those in the low-fat group. And while that may sound like a
pretty significant outcome, that may sound like something that could impact your body composition,
other studies show that it is not enough to make a difference in terms of muscle or strength gain. And lastly, just to comment on health implications, the current weight
of the evidence is that something around 0.3 grams of fat per pound of body weight per day
is all you need to maintain optimal health. And if you want to go lower than that when you're
cutting, for example, that's totally fine because we're only talking about, what, a couple of months for most people, between two and four months. And if going to, let's say, 0.2 grams of fat per pound of body weight per day helps you better stick to your diet, just helps you enjoy your cut more because it allows you to eat more carbs and that's what you prefer when you're cutting, there's nothing wrong with that. It may negatively impact your hormone profile a little bit, but not enough to make a significant
difference in any way. And remember, calorie restriction does the same thing, but we're not
afraid to restrict our calories to lose fat because of what it may do to our hormone profile
temporarily. No, we know that, yeah, our body doesn't want to be in a calorie deficit and it
also doesn't want to get less fat than it needs. But so long as we know what we're doing and we
are not massively restricting calories and then restrict protein and maybe eating a really
inappropriately low fat diet, we know that once we bring our calories back up to normal, and once we bring our dietary
fat up from, let's say, 0.2 to 0.3, or maybe even 0.4 grams per pound of body weight per day,
again, depending on your preferences, that the negative side effects quickly dissipate.
Within a month or so, maybe even sooner, we will be back to normal.
we will be back to normal. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
definitely check out my health and fitness books, including the number one bestselling weightlifting books for men and women in the world, Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner
Stronger, as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef.
as well as the leading flexible dieting cookbook, The Shredded Chef. food because it implies that eating off plan is bad and then that can make people feel guilty and that can lead to more off plan eating and so forth. And I understand this sentiment and I agree that
it can be problematic, although I haven't come across anyone I can think of in the many years
I've been doing this who was failing because of cheat meals, because they were called cheat meals
and not free meals, for example. But I can agree that it can contribute to problems if the cheat
meal is understood in the context of labeling certain foods good and healthy and other ones bad and unhealthy. That is unproductive. Assigning moral
values to food, good food, bad food, is not only not true because no foods are good or bad in and
of themselves, it can lead to developing an unhealthy relationship with food. It can lead
to feeling guilty when you eat quote- It can lead to feeling guilty when you eat
bad foods or stressed when you eat those foods or anxious about eating because you're not sure
which foods are good and bad or how bad bad foods are. It can also lead to overeating. It can lead
to under eating, binging, and so forth. Similarly, claiming that individual foods are healthy and unhealthy is misleading because while you can say
that some foods are more conducive to good health than others, which by definition would be healthy,
quote unquote, none, no foods can meaningfully enhance or impair our health unless they're
eaten frequently. And now we're talking about the diet on the whole, which can
be more accurately characterized as healthy or unhealthy or maybe good or bad. So if your diet
is healthy, if you regularly eat a variety of nutritious foods that promote good health,
while it is semantically correct to say that ice cream is unhealthy in that that food is not very nutritious. It is not
very conducive to good health. It doesn't promote health. It's not unhealthy in that it will
negatively impact your health. So if your diet is healthy, if you're eating a lot of nutritious
foods, that ice cream is actually not unhealthy in the way that most people understand it. For
that to be a problem, you'd have to eat
way too much ice cream way too often, in which case your diet would no longer be healthy, right?
By the same token, if your diet is unhealthy because you eat too much non-nutritious food
and too little nutritious stuff, a serving of vegetables is technically healthy because those vegetables do foster health, but it's not enough
to make a difference in your health because you're going to have to eat several servings of those
vegetables every day more often than not to experience real tangible health benefits,
in which case now we're moving your diet in the direction of being healthy. Now, I make all of that very clear in my books
and articles and podcasts. No food is good or bad or healthy or unhealthy, at least in the way that
many people think or many people understand those terms. And so in that context, in the context that
I provide in my work, a cheat meal is defanged. It's just the same as free meal,
unplanned meal, or any other moniker. It doesn't really matter how you refer to it at that point.
Something else to keep in mind is cheat meals, regardless of what the name implies,
call them whatever you want, are useful. They are good for your mental well-being. They are
maybe even good for your physical well-being as well. And
research backs that up. So long as cheat meals are planned, which I talk about in my books,
pick one or two meals per week and pen them into your calendar, cheat meal. Even think about what
you're going to have, that if you do that, it can improve your compliance. It can improve your ability to just stick to your meal plan
on the whole and over the long term, which is the key to not just succeeding in dieting,
but in training as well. You don't have to be perfect. You just have to be mostly good
most of the time. And again, studies show that cheat meals can help with that.
They can also ease feelings of restriction and restraint, which are
inevitable when you get deeper into a cut, even when you know what you're doing. When you are
using the principles of flexible dieting, you're eating foods that you like every day, and you're
eating on a meal schedule that works for you. When you're restricting your calories consistently over
time, you do start to feel it. And cheat meals can function as an effective release valve for that pressure that builds up.
And finally, research shows that regular planned cheat meals can also increase motivation to just
keep going, to keep working toward your body composition goal.
And those three benefits are things that anybody who has lost a considerable amount of fat and
incorporated cheat meals into that process has experienced and understands. Those are things
that we really don't need science to tell us are true because they're very easy to experience
firsthand, but it is cool that there is good evidence for them in the literature.
And so what all of that means is you shouldn't feel guilty when you indulge. You should plan
your indulgences and make sure you don't go way overboard. Don't eat 8,000 calories or 5,000
calories in a cheat meal. Keep it reasonable. For me, for example, 1,500 to 2,000 calories is
great for me. That is maybe even a little bit more than is necessary, honestly, but that is
very satisfying. And so if I'm going to have a cheat meal when I'm cutting, what I will usually
do is just eat a bit less throughout the day. So if I am eating some carbs at lunch or maybe some
carbs in the middle of the morning or in the afternoon.
Usually that would be in the way of fruit. That's when I'll have my fruit servings in the morning.
For example, when I wake up, I have a banana. And then in the middle of the morning, I might have
some blueberries or strawberries. And then in the middle of the afternoon, I'll have some more
blueberries or strawberries, or maybe if we have apples, I'll grab an apple. So I might cut all of
that out in preparation for my cheat meal, just to create a bit of grab an apple. So I might cut all of that out in preparation for my
cheat meal just to create a bit of a calorie buffer. So I can go into that meal and really
enjoy myself and end the day around maintenance. I'm totally fine if I'm in a slight surplus,
even when I'm cutting, because who cares? It's one day per week, right? Maybe two,
if you want to be very indulgent. And so long as those surpluses aren't
enough to significantly cut into the deficit of the week total, the cumulative deficit,
and the worst case scenario would be to wipe it out, right? So the worst case scenario would be
to come into the weekend, let's say with a cumulative calorie deficit of 1500 calories,
and then over the course of the weekend, overeat by 1,500 or maybe 2,000 plus calories,
because your body's not going to store every excess calorie as body fat. So let's say over
the course of the weekend, you overeat by 2,500 or 3,000 calories. Unfortunately, you are going to
almost certainly have regained all of the fat that you lost in the week. So that is the one
caveat with cheat meals is you do have to
make sure that they are not too excessive and don't do cheat days. Those can really get out of
hand, especially if you add alcohol. It is very easy to end a cheat day several thousand calories
over your expenditure. And if you add alcohol, you're going to be storing fat more efficiently. Cheat
days make it too easy to screw up your diet. So don't do cheat days. Do cheat meals. And if you
want to further optimize your cheat meals, if you can go high protein and high carb, that is going
to be better if we're talking about fat gain from an individual meal than high fat. But don't worry
too much about that. Just try to keep the calories
in a reasonable range. It's okay if you end the day in a slight surplus. Try not to go too much
higher than maybe 300 or 500 calories over your expenditure for the day, which would basically
cancel the fat loss of one day of dieting because chances are you are sustaining a daily calorie
deficit of probably
300 to 500 calories. So with your cheat meal, if you're going over your expenditure, three to 500
calories, again, you're not going to store every additional calorie as fat, but let's just keep it
simple and assume that you're not going to lose fat on that day, obviously, and you are going to
be canceling the fat loss of one other day during the week. But that's not a big deal. That's totally fine. And also, if you want to view your cheat meals as rewards for following
your meal plan throughout the week and doing well, that's totally fine. Some people say that that
lens is unproductive and that looking at those meals as well-deserved meals for quote-unquote being good can then lead to
excessive feelings of guilt when you're being bad and can create too much focus on eating food
versus improving health and body composition. I just haven't really seen that pan out in
actuality. What I've seen is many people succeed in losing fat and gaining muscle and then keeping
it off and really just transforming their physiques, reporting that cheat meals helped
because they did make it easier to stick to the plan, to stick to the meal plan throughout the
week when they knew that come Friday or Saturday evening, they were going to go to their favorite
restaurant and they were going to indulge and they did not have to feel bad about it. Quite to the contrary, they knew
that doing that was actually going to improve their chances of long-term success. All righty,
friends, that's it for this episode of Muscle for Life. Thanks again for joining me today.
I hope you liked it. I hope you learned at least a few things you can use to improve your fitness and reach your fitness goals faster. And next week, of course,
I have more coming. I have a monologue on how top athletes and coaches think about their fitness
goals. And although it says fitness goals, what I talk about in that episode really applies to
any goals. I also have another
Q&A coming where I'm going to be talking about deload timing, birth control, and performance,
and popular exercises I don't like. And there is going to be another installment of Best of
Muscle for Life 2 where I share hand-picked morsels, little snippets, highlights from
some of the most popular episodes that
I have recorded over the years.
All right, well, that's it for this episode.
I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting and helpful.
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