Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Almost Nearly Perfect Diet
Episode Date: October 12, 2020This episode is one of the chapters of the new second edition of my bestselling book for experienced weightlifters, Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger, which is live now at www.bblsbook.com. In this book, ...you’ll learn science-based and time-proven formulas for eating and training that’ll help you shatter muscle and strength plateaus, set new personal records, and build your best body ever. And better yet, you’ll do it without following restrictive or exotic diets, putting in long hours at the gym, or doing crushing workouts that leave you aching from tip to tail. Also, to celebrate this momentous occasion, I’m giving away over $6,000 of glorious goodies, including . . . 30-minute Zoom call with yours unruly Vitamix blender WHOOP fitness tracker $200 Lululemon gift card One month of Legion VIP coaching Inzer weightlifting belt And much more . . . All you have to do for a chance to win is… Head over to bblsbook.com, and buy a copy of BBLS 2.0 (any format) Forward the receipt email to launch@legionsupplements.com . . . and voila, you’re entered in the giveaway. You have to act fast, though, because the launch bonanza ends and the winners will be chosen on October 16th. You can also increase your chances of winning by buying extra copies of the book (any formats). Specifically . . . If you buy 3 copies, you’ll get 5 giveaway entries (+400% chance to win). If you buy 5 copies, you’ll get 8 giveaway entries (+700% chance to win). If you buy 10 copies, you’ll get 15 giveaway entries (+1400% chance to win) plus an autographed copy of the book. So, for instance, if you buy the paperback, ebook, and audiobook, you’ll get 5 entries to win, and if you buy 3 paperbacks as well as the ebook and audiobook, you’ll get 8 entries, and so forth. And what are you going to do with extra books, you’re wondering? You could give them to your workout buddies, donate them to your local library, hurl them at unpleasant children, I don’t know—there are so many options when you think about it. Anyway, to learn more about the giveaway and get your copy of Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger 2.0, head over to www.bblsbook.com. Alright, let’s get to the episode. --- Timestamps: 10:12 - Dietary compliance and it’s correlation on long term weight loss success 13:47 - Meal planning 20:52 - Mini cuts 28:07 - Intermittent fasting 42:23 - Calorie cycling --- Mentioned on The Show: Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger 2.0: www.bblsbook.com --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
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Hey, Mike Matthews here, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life.
Thank you for joining me today.
And what do I have in store for you?
Well, this episode is one of the chapters of the new second edition of my best-selling
book for experienced weightlifters, Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, which is live right
now over at www.bblsbook.com.
Now in this book, you will learn science-based and time-proven formulas for eating and training
that will help you shatter muscle and strength plateaus, set new personal records, and build
your best body ever.
And better yet, you will do those things without following restrictive or
exotic diets, without putting long hours in at the gym, and without having to do crushing workouts
that leave you aching from tip to tail. Also, to celebrate this momentous occasion, I'm giving away
over $6,000 of glorious goodies, including a 30-minute Zoom call with yours unruly.
That's priceless, of course.
A Vitamix blender, a Whoop fitness tracker, a $200 Lululemon gift card, one month of Legion VIP coaching, and more.
more. Now, all you have to do for a chance to win all those cool things is head over to www.bblsbook.com and buy a copy of BBLS 2.0, any format, ebook, paperback, audiobook,
whichever one you want, and then forward the receipt email to launch at legionsupplements.com,
L-E-G-I-O-N supplements.com, and voila, you are entered in
the giveaway. You have to act fast though, because the book launch bonanza ends and the winners will
be chosen on October 16th. Now you can also increase your chances of winning by buying extra
copies of the book. Again, any formats, and specifically if you buy three copies of the book. Again, any formats. And specifically, if you buy three copies
of the book instead of one, you will get five giveaway entries. So that is a plus 400% chance
to win. If you buy five copies, you'll get eight giveaway entries. That is a plus 700% chance to
win. And if you buy 10 copies, you are going to get 15 giveaway entries, which is a plus 1400% chance to win.
And if you buy 10 copies, you are going to get an autographed copy of the book as well. That you
don't have to win. You're just going to get it. So for instance, if you buy the paperback, ebook,
and audio book, that's three copies, you'll get five entries to win. And then if you buy
three paperbacks, as well as the ebook and audiobook, that is five copies and you'll get
eight entries and so forth. And what are you going to do with extra books, you're wondering? Well,
you could give them to your workout buddies. You could donate them to your local library. You could
hurl them at unpleasant children. I don't know. There are
many options when you think about it. Anyway, to learn more about the giveaway and to get your
copy or copies of Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger 2.0, head over to www.bblsbook.com.
Chapter eight, the almost nearly perfect diet. The heights by great men reached and kept
were not attained by sudden flight, but they, while their companions slept, were toiling upward
in the night. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The true secret to successful long term dieting for
optimizing your health and body composition is summarized by an influential
figure in Japanese Zen Buddhism, Hakuin Ikaku, who said the following about the path to enlightenment.
It's like chopping down a huge tree of immense girth. You won't accomplish it with one swing
of your axe. If you keep chopping away at it, and do not let up, eventually, whether it wants to or not, it will suddenly topple down.
When that time comes, you could round up everyone you could find and pay them to hold the tree up, but they wouldn't be able to do it.
It would still come crashing to the ground.
But if the woodcutter stopped after one or two strokes of his axe to ask the third son of Mr. Cheng, why doesn't this tree
fall? And after three or four more strokes, stopped again to ask the fourth son of Mr. Li,
why doesn't this tree fall? He would never succeed in felling the tree. It is no different for
someone who is practicing the way. The way to dietary nirvana is much the same. Conscientiousness and consistency are the
keys, and impatience and impulsivity are the enemies. Here's a situation that's all too common.
A guy starts lifting weights and is thrilled at how his body responds. Every week he gets a little
stronger, and every month a little bigger and more defined, like clockwork. Even better,
while he understands the fundamentals of proper dieting, energy balance, macronutrient balance,
and the like, he isn't following a meal plan or tracking his calories closely. He's just making
sure he eats a fair amount of food and protein, does his workouts, and lets his body take care
of the rest. As time goes on, progress slows.
He's no longer adding weight to the bar every week.
His workouts are growing more difficult and his progress pictures are losing their luster.
He soldiers on.
Soon, progress grinds to a halt.
He's lifting the same weights he was a couple of months ago and more or less looks the same. He has to
accept that what was once working well is no longer producing results. Off to the internet,
our guy goes to find out why. And before long, he feels like he's on the floor of the stock
exchange at the closing bell, facing an overwhelming cacophony of contradictory opinions, orders, and objections, he wonders what the heck to do next.
So begins this poor fellow's search for the elusive better way, the silver bullet that'll get the needle moving again, and his descent into a confusing morass of complexities.
A couple of weeks later, he has overhauled his diet and training
to conform to the recommendations of one guru or another. Maybe it's intermittent fasting or
reverse pyramid training or other sophisticated methods of eating and exercising, all promising
that he'll gain like a newbie again. In a couple of months, the air is out of his balloon. Nothing has changed and he
doesn't understand why. What did he do wrong? Is it just his genetics or are more strength and size
not in the cards for him? And then the next shiny object appears in his social media feed, a new
guru with new methods and new promises. Maybe it's not too late after all. Maybe this is the better way.
On to another regimen he goes, only to be disappointed again and again and again,
until his ambitions drift away and he either quits or settles for going through the motions.
I was once that guy. And while it wasn't agonizing, we are just talking about
working out after all, it wasn't fun or encouraging. I no longer had a clear vision and plan for my
body, looked forward to my training, or wanted to further optimize my diet. Working out and eating
well had become chores. What I and everyone else who has walked in those shoes was missing
is that the solution wasn't hiding in esoteric theories or advanced tactics, but waiting in the
spotlight of the fundamentals, the 20% of the information and techniques that produce 80% of
the results. This is true of any activity. Mastering the basics produces most of your growth.
And only those who've summited that mountain have the wisdom and experience to benefit from
more elaborate ideas and methods. As far as diet and performance, health, and body composition are
concerned, the 20% comes down to doing just four things well. One, managing your energy balance. Two,
managing your macronutrient balance. Three, managing your micronutrient balance. Four,
maximizing your compliance. In other words, maintaining positive, negative, or neutral
energy balances as desired, regulating how those calories break down into protein,
carbohydrate, and fat, emphasizing nutritious foods, and remaining consistent.
If your dietary habits revolve only around those targets and nothing else,
you can't go wrong regardless of how ambitious your fitness goals are.
The real trick to intermediate and advanced level dieting is paying attention to the details that many beginners overlook, not following strange or special eating rituals and routines. balance, the quality of the weight gain and lost in terms of muscle and fat, micronutrient balance,
the quality of your overall health and well-being, and compliance, the quantity, pounds and inches,
of your long-term results. To go back to the tree felling analogy, you can think of energy balance
as the strokes you make to cut down the tree, macronutrient balance as the force you apply
to those strokes, micronutrient balance as the sharpness of the blade, and compliance as your
persistence at the task. So long as you keep striking the tree with enough force for enough
time with a sharp enough blade, the tree will fall as sure as water's wet and fire burns.
the tree will fall as sure as water's wet and fire burns. Similarly, so long as you control your calories, macros, micros, and consistency, your body will respond to your training. In fact,
research shows dietary compliance, consistency, alone is one of the single best predictors of
long-term weight loss success. A salient example of this comes from a study
conducted by scientists at Merck. The researchers combed through all the research they could find
on obese people on low-calorie diets who failed to lose as much weight as expected, including
papers on just about every weight loss diet you can think of. Weight Watchers, the Zone Diet, the Ornish Diet,
the Atkins Diet, low-carb diets, low-fat diets, and others. The scientists analyzed many reasons
why weight loss was impaired, including decreased metabolic rates or activity levels and increased
calorie absorption from food. In the end, they concluded the culprit was simply poor patient adherence.
In other words, the reason these people didn't lose much weight wasn't due to metabolic hobgoblins,
hormonal disruptions, or digestive dysfunctions. It was because they weren't sticking to their
diets. What's more, the researchers also found that when they looked at the participants in these studies who lost almost no weight, these people were also the least consistent with their diets.
And the ones who lost the most weight, you guessed it, the most consistent.
Several other studies have echoed this finding.
In almost every case where people said they couldn't lose weight, the real problem was they couldn't
stick to their diets. Although there's no scientific research available on the topic,
dietary adherence is a major factor in successful long-term muscle gain as well.
Here's how Dr. Eric Helms, a natural bodybuilder, coach, researcher, and member of the scientific advisory board of my sports nutrition
company, Legion, explains it. Adherence is rarely talked about in terms of muscle gain. People don't
struggle with a calorie surplus the same way they do with a deficit, and the barriers of combating
hunger, social pressure, and physiology don't occur when trying to gain muscle. However, consistency is still the most
important thing for putting on mass, just like it is for taking it off. The hard fact is, once you're
no longer a novice, gaining muscle and strength takes not only effort but time. Meaning, you can't
have the same bomb and blast attitude toward training, follow the seafood diet, or program hop from
influencer to influencer and expect much to happen. What's left? It isn't sexy, it's consistency.
Gain up to 1% of your body weight per month, eat enough protein every day, sleep at least 8 hours
each night, make small increases in load or reps
mesocycle to mesocycle, remember to take your creatine, don't go out drinking on the weekends,
and get in your fruit, vegetables, and water. Simply put, lifestyle changes accumulated over
years allow you to achieve your potential. Remember, whether you are dieting or gaining,
achieve your potential. Remember, whether you are dieting or gaining, consistency is always key.
What strategies, techniques, and tools can you add to your bag of tricks to improve your ability to manage your energy, macronutrient, and micronutrient balances better and maximize your compliance and
consistency? The four most popular and effective strategies are one, meal
planning, two, mini cuts, three, intermittent fasting, four, calorie cycling. Let's learn about
each. Meal planning. If you've read Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, you know all about meal planning and
have experienced its benefits firsthand. Meal planning is the easiest way to guarantee long-term results
because it helps minimize errors.
By planning the food you eat every day,
you're less likely to accidentally under or overeat or screw up your macros,
which are major pitfalls that become more punishing as time goes on.
This is why I'm such an ardent proponent of
meal planning for those beginning their fitness journeys. It's the easiest way to increase their
chances of success regardless of whether they want to lose or gain weight. Many people tire of it,
however, and choose to eat more intuitively, especially after they've achieved their first
major body composition milestone or
two. They don't want to weigh and measure everything they cook. They don't want to fiddle
with my fitness pal every day and they don't want to bother with trying to count macros on the fly.
Instead they just want to eat a few balanced enjoyable meals every day without gaining weight
or ruining their body composition.
And that's understandable. No matter how devoted you are to your fitness, it's nice to put the
Tupperware and food scale away for a while and reclaim your Sunday afternoons that you used to
spend meal prepping. Moreover, as an experienced meal planner, it's much easier to eat according
to your body's natural appetite because now you
have a better awareness of how the foods you like to eat relate to your energy and macronutrient
balance. Additionally, studies show that people who are good at eating this way are leaner,
healthier, and less likely to gain weight than those who aren't. They're also better at sticking
to their diets and less stressed and happier with their bodies.
That said, this style of dieting also has significant downsides if you're trying to optimize fat loss or muscle gain.
While it's great for staying lean without having to crunch numbers, it's not well suited to building your ideal physique.
Meal planning is far better for this. To understand why, let's talk about intuitive
eating because despite what many people think, it's not eating whatever you want whenever you
want. That's more like anarchic eating, which will result in weight gain and other non-optimum
health conditions. Intuitive eating is a system of controlling what you eat based on your body's internal cues rather than meal plans
or other external means. It's a scientific term, and we can summarize it in three precepts. One,
eat when you're hungry. Two, stop eating when you're full. Three, don't restrict your food
choices, except for medical reasons. It sounds simple enough, but it's also easier said than done
for most people. For instance, studies show that many people eat a sizable portion of their daily
calories for reasons other than hunger. Boredom, procrastination, peer pressure, hedonism,
and convenience are all common triggers that sway us to eat more than we should and often food we don't even want.
As you well know, meal planning and calorie counting are effective countermeasures for
dealing with these temptations to overeat. A good example of this is a study that found
that intuitive eating helped people lose weight just as fast as calorie counting at first.
Eventually though, weight loss ground to a halt among the intuitive
eaters but continued at a steady clip in the calorie counters. There are two primary reasons
for this. One, it's tricky to eat our true calorie needs because it's easy to think we're eating only
to satisfy our hunger when that's not the case. We're highly susceptible to small triggers in our environment that
encourage overeating. Take portion sizes, for example. A study conducted by scientists at the
University of Technology, Sydney, found that for every doubling of portion sizes, most people
subconsciously ate about 35% more. That is, if someone serves themselves two cups of macaroni instead of one, they'll
likely eat more. Other research shows that eating from bigger packages and plates can result in
eating more calories. Our hunger levels are influenced by what we see. Even when we know
we've eaten enough, if someone shows up with a plate of fresh baked cookies, our brain can shift back to hungry.
Another potent trigger for overeating is food variety. Scientists have known for decades
that giving people more food choices, especially when those foods are tasty and calorie dense,
can encourage overeating. We can only handle so much of the same flavor, texture, smell, etc. before we get bored with it and stop eating.
So, food companies present us with a cornucopia of chow that has been painstakingly engineered to look, smell, and taste delightful.
Faced with this abundance, it's all too easy to turn into Augustus Gloop from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory gobbling up one goodie after
another. Two, the more weight we lose, the more our body becomes resistant to further weight loss.
This is because of various physiological mechanisms known as metabolic adaptation
that work to increase our energy intake and decrease our energy expenditure. The main mechanism at play here
is hunger, which rises as you lose weight, making it more difficult to maintain a calorie deficit
when eating by feel. Intuitive eating doesn't work well for gaining weight either because this
requires eating more food than you want to. You don't have to drink a gallon of milk per day.
In fact, don't do that. But there's truth
in the bodybuilding adage that you have to eat big to get big. That's easy to do. For a bit.
In time, however, your calorie intake will creep downward without you even realizing it,
and so will your progress in the gym. That's just how the appetite works. Your body doesn't want to overeat for long periods
of time. Yet another drawback to intuitive eating is it makes it hard to get your macros right.
You must be a skilled, flexible dieter to wing it and get enough protein every day,
let alone optimal amounts of carbs and fats too. All this is why intuitive eating is best for
maintaining your body composition and not transforming it. That is why intuitive eating is best for maintaining your body composition
and not transforming it. That is, when you're more or less happy with your physique and aren't
striving to get bigger, leaner, or stronger, you can do well with intuitive eating. But if you're
looking to lose fat or gain muscle quickly and effectively, a more structured approach to dieting
like meal planning will serve you better. I've learned this lesson several times now and eat intuitively when
I'm maintaining a comfortable body fat percentage, about 10%, but still create and follow exact meal
plans when cutting and lean bulking. I recommend you do the same. Mini cuts. No matter what you do
with your training, macros, meal timing,
or anything else, a calorie surplus is a calorie surplus and your body fat levels will rise.
Many people struggle with this. They want to gain more muscle and strength, but don't want to lose
their tight waist, washboard abs, and vascular arms. And I understand there's a strange satisfaction
that comes with being very lean. You look good and you know it. You love what you see in the mirror.
You get more attention from others. You feel special. It's hard to give all that up for
glacial changes in your physique, especially when the chirpy devil on your shoulder reminds you of it
every chance he gets. Wouldn't it be nice to have that six-pack again? Is this lean bulking stuff
really necessary? There's got to be a better way. Unfortunately, there isn't a better way.
No amount of natural pills or powders or changes to your dietary and training protocols can stand in for a calorie surplus. Lean gains of
all muscle and no fat is a mirage that only leads you deeper into the desert. Lean-ish gains of a
bit of muscle and fat is the oasis to set up camp in. That's where mini cuts enter the picture.
They're an effective tool for reducing fat gain
during a lean bulk phase without sacrificing much in the way of muscle gain. This prevents your body
fat from ever going too high, which is aesthetically pleasing and eliminates the need for longer
cutting phases, which can be draining. As you might have guessed, a mini cut is a shorter than usual cut,
normally between three and four weeks. This is long enough to produce a couple of pounds of fat
loss, but not so long that your body lights the afterburners on its weight loss countermeasures.
With mini cuts, then, you get to spend several months building muscle on a lean bulk phase,
flip into a deficit to carve off a bit of the fat
gained, and then switch back to a surplus before the penalties catch up with you. Now, there are
plenty of people who lean bulk successfully without using mini cuts, and I've done it before
too. You can just maintain a steady surplus until reaching the body fat ceiling of 15 to 17% and then begin a cutting phase.
But there are two downsides to this approach.
One, as you get deeper into your lean bulk,
you'll probably become more uncomfortable
with your body fat levels.
Two, once it comes time to cut,
you'll have a rather long journey back to lean ahead of you.
This is why many people find
that mini cuts make lean bulking more enjoyable. They help keep your body fat in a more attractive
range and minimize the time you have to spend in an ongoing calorie deficit. For instance,
let's say you're a 190 pound guy at 10% body fat and you're starting a lean bulk phase. As a natural
intermediate or advanced weightlifter, you should look to gain around 0.25 to 0.5% of your body
weight per month while lean bulking. And if you have ordinary muscle building genetics, about half
of that weight should be lean mass and half fat. That means that on average,
you should gain 0.5 to 1 pound per month, consisting of 0.25 to 0.5 pounds of lean mass
and fat per month. Many people gain weight faster than this while lean bulking because they overeat
too often, vacations, holidays, accidents, and so forth. But let's say
you execute your gaining phase flawlessly. In this best case scenario, you'd be able to lean bulk for
nearly 20 months before having to call it quits, gaining somewhere around 40 pounds of body weight
with a 50-50 split between lean mass and body fat. In reality, you're more likely to reach the
finish line somewhere around the 12 to 16 month mark, and sooner if you overeat too much. But
either way, this plan would be a fantastic opportunity to gain a significant amount of
muscle and strength. The bad news, however, is you must go without abs for a while as they fade around 13-14% body fat. And then, after celebrating your gains, you have to face the music and strip fat, which will take anywhere from 18 to 25 weeks
to accomplish, depending on how well you stick to your diet and training plans and how many
breaks you take. Also, if you don't properly manage your calorie and protein intake,
sleep hygiene, and cardio, you're likely to lose at least some muscle too. A picture-perfect cut back to 10% then would entail losing about 30
pounds, 20 pounds of fat, and around 10 pounds of intramuscular water and glycogen, as well as
some food weight, which technically counts as lean mass. So by the end of this castle in the sky
case, in just over two years, you've gained about 10 pounds of muscle tissue,
which is outstanding progress for an intermediate weightlifter. Let's now look at how mini cuts can
change things. If you were to do one four-week mini cut after every four months of lean bulking,
a reasonable strategy, lose two to three percent of your body weight on each mini-cut, a reasonable target, and maintain flawless discipline and compliance throughout, a tall order,
in two years, your body fat percentage will hover around 11%, and you'll have gained about 15 pounds of lean mass and just 5 pounds of body fat. In other words, you'll have gained almost as much muscle tissue
as you would have continuously lean bulking and then cutting, but you didn't have to sacrifice
your abs along the way. In reality, you'll probably gain more fat when lean bulking and
lose less when cutting, mostly because of compliance, but using mini cuts properly can help you gain almost as
much muscle as continuous lean bulking with significantly less fat gain. At this point,
you may be wondering why not use mini bulks too? Why not stay in a calorie surplus for 4-8 weeks,
gain a little body fat and muscle, and then strip away the fat with a mini cut.
Unfortunately, this rarely works well. We don't need to get into the nitty gritty details, but
it takes time for your body's muscle building machinery to warm up and get into high gear when
you enter a calorie surplus. Thus, by entering a calorie deficit too often, you prevent this from happening.
Or put differently, muscle building is a slow process that takes time to gain momentum,
and you'll hamstring this by pumping the brakes every month or so with mini bulks.
This is why you should aim to lean bulk for at least 12 weeks at a time.
weeks at a time. If you are liking this episode, you should know that it is one of the chapters of the new second edition of my best-selling book for experienced weightlifters, Beyond Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger, which is live right now at bblsbook.com. Also, you should know that to
celebrate this momentous occasion, I am giving
away over $6,000 of glorious goodies, including a 30-minute Zoom call with yours unruly, a Vitamix
blender, a Whoop fitness tracker, a $200 Lululemon gift card, one month of Legion VIP coaching,
an Inzer weightlifting belt, and much more. And all you have to do for a chance to win
is head over to bblsbook.com, buy a copy of the book, any format, and forward the receipt email
to launch at legionsupplements.com. And voila, you are entered in the giveaway.
You have to act fast though, because the book launch bonanza ends and the winners will be chosen on October 16th.
Intermittent fasting.
Intermittent fasting is simple.
At bottom, you don't eat for most of the day.
Then you cram all of your calories into an eating window that can last anywhere from
four to eight hours.
If that sounds stupid, uncomfortable, or even unhealthy, I understand.
I thought the same thing when I
first heard about it years ago. Eat nothing for 16, 18, 24, or even 36 hours and then feast?
That will help you lose weight, build muscle, improve mental performance, age slower, and
prevent sickness? Come on, that's a diet that sounds like it belongs in the bargain
bin with the rest of the fattish nonsense that health gurus churn out every January.
It surprised me to learn, however, that intermittent fasting can be an effective
tool for improving dietary compliance. It has good science on its side, and it doesn't have
to be unpleasant. In fact, many people enjoy intermittent fasting
more than traditional eating patterns because it allows them to have fewer, larger meals.
Scientific research on intermittent fasting has also helped tip some of the biggest,
doddering sacred cows of diet and nutrition. Accordingly, intermittent fasting is here to
stay. What it isn't, however, is the
quantum leap in dieting that some people would have you believe. It won't automagically help you
recomp, burn away belly fat, or stave off aging. It can, however, help you stick to your diet better
and improve your long-term results. That's why you should understand what it is, how it works,
and how to use it. To get there, let's start at square one. Why is it called intermittent
fasting? Well, the term is only a semi-perfect description of what it is. You fast, but depending
on the protocol, not necessarily intermittently. Sometimes you do the opposite and fast on a regular schedule.
And what is fasting? Many people assume it means not eating food or having an empty stomach,
but it's more than that. When you eat food, it gets broken down into various molecules that
your cells can use, like amino acids, glucose, and fatty acids. These molecules find their way into your blood and
are met by the hormone insulin, which shuttles them into cells. Insulin levels rise in proportion
to the size and composition of the meal. The larger the meal and higher in protein and
carbohydrate it is, the larger the insulin response. The size and composition of the meal also determines how
long insulin levels remain elevated, anywhere from two to six plus hours. When your body is
digesting and absorbing the food you've eaten and insulin levels are up, you're in a fed or
postprandial state. Prandial means having to do with a meal. Once your body has finished
processing the food and nutrients, however, insulin levels drop to a low baseline level,
and now you're in a fasted or post-absorptive state. As intermittent fasting is a style of
dieting that concerns itself most with when instead of what you eat, the general goal is
to spend more time in a post-absorptive, low-insulin state
than post-prandial, high-insulin one. So for instance, with a normal diet, you might eat food
every few hours from, let's say, 8am until 9pm. That is, every day you'd eat food intermittently
for about 13 hours and eat nothing for about 11 hours. Because of the time required to process
food and depending on the size and composition of your final meal of the day, most of your body's
time in a post-absorptive state occurs when you're asleep. With intermittent fasting, you flip this
around. For instance, with the protocol, you eat food intermittently for 8 hours and eat nothing for 16 hours.
This way, your body spends more time in a post-absorptive state.
Why all the emphasis on fasting?
This is why I was skeptical.
One of the easiest ways to invent a fad diet is to isolate some aspect of eating and hang everything else on it.
and hang everything else on it. For example, low-carb crusaders hold up carbs as the gateway drug to obesity, disease, racism, keeping up with the Kardashians, and everything else wrong in the
world. Paleo advocates claim that our dietary habits should follow a flawed understanding of
what our ancient ancestors ate. Gluten-free muppets bang on about how a protein harmless to the vast majority of
the population is destroying our bodies and must be stamped out of existence. Then there's
intermittent fasting, which puts fasting up on a pedestal. Hence my early cynicism. And I wasn't
entirely wrong. The health and body composition benefits of intermittent fasting are wildly overblown, and many claims—reduced acne, increased longevity, and others—are essentially made up out of whole cloth.
That said, if you have a hard time sticking to your diet with a traditional eating pattern, intermittent fasting may be able to help. For instance, the single biggest hurdle we face when cutting is controlling
calorie intake, and if intermittent fasting makes that even slightly easier, it's worth considering.
Despite what intermittent fasting fanboys would have you believe, however, there isn't much else
to be said about this style of eating. For instance, a study conducted by scientists at Texas Tech University split 18 active men with an average age of 22 into two groups.
One, group one ate all of their calories in a four-hour window, four days per week.
They could eat whatever and as much as they wanted, but couldn't eat outside of those four hours on those days.
And on the other days, they could eat
whenever they wanted. Two, group two followed their normal eating habits and schedules.
Both groups lifted weights three days per week, and before and after the study, the researchers
measured their total body fat and lean mass with dual x-ray absorbed geometry, DXA, their barbell,
with dual x-ray absorbed geometry, DXA, their barbell, bench press, and leg press strength,
and their biceps and quadriceps muscle thickness. After eight weeks, there were no statistically significant differences between the groups on any measure except calorie intake. Group one ate
several hundred calories per day less than group 2 and lost some weight as a result,
though not enough to be statistically significant. Perhaps the single best study conducted on
intermittent fasting to date was performed by scientists at Kennesaw State University.
In this case, the researchers divided 26 resistance-trained men with an average age of 23 and an average weightlifting experience of 5
years into two groups. 1. Group 1 consumed all of their calories in an 8-hour feeding window,
eating their meals from noon to 8 p.m. or 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. 2. Group 2 consumed their calories
whenever they wanted throughout the day. A nutritionist created meal plans for the participants that ensured they ate 25% fewer calories than they needed to maintain
their weight and at least 1.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day. The men also did
three full-body weightlifting workouts per week that resembled those you'll do in the Beyond
Bigger Leaner Stronger program.
And the scientists took extensive measurements before and after the study, including body
composition, upper arm and thigh thickness, bench press and leg press one rep max, muscular
endurance, and many more.
And again, no statistically significant differences were found between the groups on any measure.
Yet another study performed by scientists at the University of Padova found almost identical results.
In this case, people using intermittent fasting gained the same amount of muscle and strength as people following a normal meal schedule, but lost slightly more body fat.
lost slightly more body fat. The reason for this, though, is they were eating about 200 fewer calories per day than the people following the normal meal schedule, which is enough to explain
more or less all of the difference in fat loss. Another issue with intermittent fasting is research
shows that pre-workout carbs enhance performance and pre-workout protein may enhance recovery.
The better you can perform in your workouts and recover from them, the better your progress. Finally, studies suggest that eating at least
30 grams of protein across at least three to four meals per day is probably better for gaining
muscle than having one or two large meals containing most of your daily protein, as many
people do when intermittent fasting. All this is, again, why I
only recommend intermittent fasting if it helps you better stick to your meal plan. But won't I
lose muscle and slow down my metabolism by going for 12, 14, or 16 hours without food? A good
question and long-standing belief among bodybuilders. Thanks to scientific insights into what happens when we
fast, however, we now know that's not the case. To understand why, let's review how fasting relates
to muscle tissue breakdown. Glucose, or blood sugar, is a great source of energy for your cells
and organs. The easiest way to provide your body with glucose is to eat carbs, but it can also create glucose out of other substances such as amino acids found in proteins and glycerol primary sources for this. One, glycogen stored in the liver. Glycogen is a form
of carbohydrate that can be converted into glucose. Two, body fat. When fat cells are mobilized,
fatty acids are released into the blood, which many of your cells can burn for energy,
along with glycerol, which can be converted into glucose. So long as the body can turn to these
two energy sources to sustain itself, it has no reason to break down muscle tissue. When the liver
runs out of glycogen, however, the body won't continue burning body fat alone. It'll also
cannibalize muscle to obtain amino acids for conversion into glucose. For example, a research review conducted by Dr. George F. Cahill
Jr. found that amino acids produced by the breakdown of muscle tissue were responsible
for about 50% of glucose maintenance at the 16-hour mark of fasting and 100% at the 28-hour
mark. For this reason, many intermittent fasting protocols designed for
athletes and bodybuilders don't involve fasting for over 16 hours at a time. The other fable
intermittent fasting has dispelled is the claim that it can cause your metabolism to faceplant.
Most people connect hunger and starvation. I'm starving, they say, just a few hours after their last meal.
But physiologically, these are very different things. Hunger is a spark, while starvation is
a four-alarm fire. And it takes a lot of hunger to turn into real starvation. Case in point,
a study conducted by scientists at the University of Rochester found that metabolic rate didn't decline until
60 hours of fasting, and the reduction was a mere 8%. What's more, research shows that the
metabolism speeds up after 36 to 48 hours of fasting, which makes sense from an evolutionary
perspective. If we haven't eaten in some time, what does our body want? Food,
of course. And how does it stimulate us to find food? By increasing production of two chemicals
that sharpen our minds and urge us to move around, adrenaline and noradrenaline. Incidentally,
these chemicals also increase our metabolic rate. Studies show that true starvation begins at about three days, 72 hours, of not
eating, at which point the primary source of energy becomes muscle tissue. This causes muscle
loss, but even that tapers off as time goes on because lean mass is vital to preserving health
and life. So here's the bottom line. Like any popular brand of dieting, intermittent fasting is a victim of unreal hopes
and expectations. People will always hunt for shortcuts and hacks, and there will always be
astute marketers ready to oblige them. It would be great if manipulating your eating schedule alone
could significantly improve muscle gain, fat loss, and health, but it can't. Only a lifestyle that includes regular
exercise, nutritious foods, minimal alcohol, and good sleep hygiene can move the needle in a major
way. What intermittent fasting can do, though, is make eating fewer calories easier and more
enjoyable. That's it. Calorie cycling. Calorie cycling is a method of eating that
involves planned increases and decreases in calorie intake, usually by eating more or less
carbohydrate. There are many calorie cycling protocols to choose from, but most alternate
between high, medium, and low calorie days throughout the week. On high calorie days,
you typically consume more calories than you burn. On medium calorie days, you typically consume more calories than you burn.
On medium calorie days, you typically consume as many calories as you burn. On low calorie days,
you typically consume fewer calories than you burn. The exact mix of your high, medium, and
low calorie days depends on your goals and preferences. For example, if you want to lose
fat, you could maintain a calorie deficit for
five days per week and eat at maintenance on the remaining two days to give your body a break.
As an advanced weightlifter, this can help with muscle retention as you get leaner,
especially if you're dieting to very low levels of body fat. If you want to gain muscle and
strength while minimizing fat gain, you can flip this layout around and maintain a slight
calorie surplus five days per week and eat at maintenance or even a deficit on the remaining
two days of the week. Proponents of calorie cycling claim it's superior to traditional
dieting in several meaningful ways, including faster fat loss and muscle gain and fewer unwanted
side effects when cutting and
lean bulking. Unfortunately, it's not that cut and dried. Calorie cycling is a minor improvement
over the norm for some people under some circumstances, but definitely not a breakthrough
in diet and nutrition. Let's start by looking at how calorie cycling affects weight loss,
which is its most powerful draw.
Calorie cycling and weight loss. As you know, any diet that has you maintain a calorie deficit over
an extended period will cause weight loss, regardless of when and how you consume those
calories. According to some people, calorie cycling augments calorie restriction by boosting
your metabolism and fat burning, resulting in more
fat loss. This is hogwash. To understand why, you first have to understand what happens at a
cellular level when you lose fat. When you restrict your calories for fat loss, several chemical,
hormonal, and metabolic changes take place in your body. Chief among these fluctuations is a drop in a
hormone produced by body fat known as leptin. This drop in leptin underlies the constellation
of side effects associated with dieting known as metabolic adaptation, or more inaccurately,
metabolic damage. Leptin plays an important role in many bodily functions, but its main job is to keep
the brain alert to how much energy is available for survival. The brain pays close attention to
the relationship between the energy burned through basic metabolic function and activity
and the calories available from food and body fat. In the short term, hours, days,
leptin rises and falls based on your daily calorie intake,
especially your carb intake. It increases after you've eaten a meal and energy is plentiful,
signaling your brain to reduce hunger, increase physical activity levels,
and maintain a high metabolic rate. And it decreases as the energy provided by a meal
begins to run out and body fat must be tapped, signaling
the need for more food. In the long term, weeks, months, years, leptin rises and falls based on
your body fat percentage. When body fat levels are high, leptin levels are high, and your brain
responds by bolstering fullness after meals, physical activity levels, and metabolic rate.
When leptin levels are low
and remain so for at least several days, as they do when dieting, this sends a strong signal to
the brain that it should take measures to increase food intake and conserve energy.
You've likely experienced this firsthand. In the early stages of dieting, the first three to five
weeks for most people, it's duck soup.
The scale keeps ticking downward, your waist keeps shrinking inward, you're rarely hungry, and you feel like your normal self.
Sometime around the two-month mark, though, you begin to feel it, the bodybuilding equivalent of bonking.
Your energy levels, motivation to train, and dietary compliance start to sag,
and your hunger cravings and irritability spike. As far as your body's concerned,
you're starving to death, and it's ready to fight hammer and tongs to survive.
And its prime directive has become to eliminate the calorie deficit. Sadly, this is something you can only manage, not cure.
So long as you're dieting, your body is going to resist your efforts to get leaner.
Now for the good news.
When you eat more, leptin levels rise and you feel like someone turned the lights back on.
In a sense, that's what's happening.
Your body is rewarding you for shrinking or erasing the calorie deficit it perceives as a
threat to its survival. Once you've stopped dieting altogether, your leptin levels will be lower than
they were when your body fat levels were higher, but they can still be high enough for you to feel
healthy and vital again. That's true of the lower body fat levels people pursue for aesthetics, 10-15% for men and 20-25% for women.
At such levels of body fat, leptin production stabilizes, creating a new normal or settling
point, as scientists call it. As long as you stay sufficiently active and eat plenty of nutritious
foods, you can maintain such a physique with relative ease.
What if you want to plumb the lowest levels of body fatness though? What if you want to get
shredded, you know, sub 10% body fat for men and sub 20% for women? This is different and more
difficult territory, the stuff of low leptin bugbears. Once your body fat reaches these levels,
leptin production becomes vanishingly low, and for many, this means unyielding hunger,
lethargy, and irritability. There's nothing much they can do about it either because,
aside from injecting synthetic leptin, which costs around $1,000 per day, there's no way to nullify the leptin-mediated
side effects of low body fat levels besides gaining body fat. You can stick to your guns,
but it'll take its toll in the form of energy, mood, strength, and hormonal health. Basically,
you just have to choose between being peeled and feeling like a normal human.
I've been there myself several times.
It's fun to look photoshoot ready, but it's not so fun to deal with the fallout.
Losing about 5% of my strength on the big compound exercises,
less drive, energy, and enthusiasm in my workouts,
careful and consistent control of my calorie intake,
which meant little in the way of cheating and especially not with high-fat foods.
Never feeling fully satisfied from meals despite eating enough to maintain my weight.
Now, I'm not saying you shouldn't get shredded.
In fact, I think most intermediate and advanced weightlifters
should experience the process at least once. It's a game of discipline, perseverance,
and delayed gratification, and those are always skills worth honing. But anyone who says you can
flaunt a shrink-wrapped physique 365 days per year without sacrificing some of your health and well-being
is lying. And anyone who appears to be doing it effortlessly is posturing or using steroids.
The latter point deserves emphasis because with the right drugs, everything changes. Suddenly,
you can maintain ridiculously low body fat levels, crush workouts, gain muscle and strength, and eat a good 20 to
30% more calories than you'd be able to otherwise. For instance, it's not uncommon for enhanced
bodybuilders to spend just 10 to 12 weeks getting stage lean, eating upward of 3,000 calories per
day, just shy of my lean bulking calories, and doing little cardio. We
mortals, however, have a much harder time of it, but we get a consolation prize. Our body doesn't
go to pieces. Steroids are a sexy but sinister mistress that wreaks physiological and psychological
havoc. There is a way for us natural weightlifters to
at least ease the pain of low leptin living though, calorie cycling. Recall that leptin
levels rise and fall based on two factors. One, your daily calorie intake in the short term. Two,
your body fatness in the long term. When you're dieting to get lean, there's nothing you can do about number two, but you can
exploit number one to raise your body's leptin production temporarily. Specifically, by periodically
raising your calorie intake, you can increase your leptin levels for a few hours or even days,
and this can ease some negative side effects of calorie restriction in particular. Think of it as coming up for a breather before going heads down for another lap around the pool. Calorie cycling
can help when you're maintaining low body fat levels as well, but it's of limited utility
because no matter how much food you eat, your body can only produce so much leptin with so
little body fat. Either way, to calorie cycle correctly,
you need to follow two rules. One, you need to get most of your extra calories from carbs.
Research shows that eating dietary fat has no effect on leptin levels, whereas significantly
increasing carbohydrate intake causes a substantial spike in leptin production that can persist for as long as you
maintain your higher carb eating. It's unclear what effect protein has on leptin levels, but
it's likely insignificant compared to carbs. That said, some research suggests that high protein
dieting may improve leptin sensitivity, so it's a good idea to keep protein intake high when using carbs to boost your body's
leptin production. Two, you must eat at maintenance calories for two to three days per week. Why not
just eat a very high carb diet when cutting or maintaining low body fat levels? If carbs boost
leptin levels, wouldn't this keep leptin production perpetually elevated?
Unfortunately, that won't do the trick because the leptin-enhancing effects of carbs are short-lived. Thus, over time, your average leptin levels will be about the same regardless of how
much or little carbohydrate you're eating every day. A single high-carb meal or day won't make
the grade either because it doesn't raise leptin levels enough to
impact your physiology. It takes at least a couple of days and sometimes up to a week or two for your
brain to recognize and trust the increase in leptin and respond positively. Therefore, by raising your
calories to maintenance two to three days per week and staying in a deficit
otherwise, you can make getting ripped more tolerable. So in summary, calorie cycling can
make cutting more enjoyable, especially when you're lean and working to get very lean. It's
not a game changer, but when leptin levels get low, every bit of help counts. Calorie cycling and muscle building. Calorie
cycling isn't for people new to weightlifting who want to maximize muscle gain. So long as they eat
enough calories and protein every day, they'll make rapid progress and complicating things with
calorie cycling will only detract from that. Even an intermediate lifter is better off keeping it simple when lean bulking. He should
eat about 10% more calories every day than he burns, do a lot of heavy weightlifting, and once
he's around 15 to 17% body fat, cut down to around 10% body fat. Rinse and repeat until he's an
advanced weightlifter, someone with at least several years of productive training,
who has achieved 80% or more of their genetic potential for muscle growth. Only then does
calorie cycling become useful for muscle building. When an advanced lifter wants to make slow,
steady muscle and strength gains while staying lean, 10-12% body fat, calorie cycling can help.
It works well for advanced weightlifters
because once they've gained most of the muscle and strength available to them genetically,
progress slows to a crawl. After four or five years of proper dieting and training,
you'll be lucky to gain a pound of muscle every six months. And by the time you've been training as long as I have, nearly 17 years now,
you'd have to sacrifice a kid to the dreadlord Cthulhu just to gain a pound of muscle per year.
We'll talk more about this in chapter 11, but basically, when you start lifting weights,
your body's muscle building machinery is ready to run at full throttle, whereas later in your bodybuilding journey, it never gets out
of first or second gear. Thus, for your first 6 to even 12 months of training, you can get great
results with a larger daily calorie surplus, upward of 500 calories above maintenance,
because of the substantial muscle building demands being placed on the body. As those demands shrink, however, and they do as you progress regardless of what you do in the gym,
your body doesn't need as many additional calories to meet them.
In other words, it requires a much larger calorie surplus to build 20 pounds of muscle,
which many guys can do in their first year, than a couple of pounds.
In the latter case,
two to 300 calories over maintenance is sufficient. The good news is, while muscle
growth becomes more elusive as we get bigger and stronger, the smaller calorie surplus required to
keep progressing diminishes fat gain. So much so that you can lean bulk for many months before
your body fat levels rise high enough to warrant
a cutting phase. And if you use calorie cycling when lean bulking, you can go even longer. By
placing your body in a calorie surplus four to five days per week and a deficit on the remaining
days, you create a maintenance with benefits scenario where you can gain muscle slowly with
very little fat storage. Here's how I like to do
it. First, you want to be in a calorie surplus on the days you train. The surplus doesn't need to
be large, 5-10% above maintenance is enough. Then, you restrict your calories on your rest days to
lose the fat gained while in a surplus. As roughly half of the weight gained while lean bulking is
muscle, and your body needs to utilize a portion of the weight gained while lean bulking is muscle, and your
body needs to utilize a portion of the extra calories to build that muscle, you don't need
to offset the entire calorie surplus for the week, but only half of it. For example, my total daily
energy expenditure is around 2,900 calories on my lifting days, 5 per week, and 2,500 on my rest days, two days per week, putting my total
weekly calorie expenditure around 19,500. Thus, if I were cycling my calories, I'd eat about 3,200
on my training days, 10% surplus, producing a total surplus of around 1,500 calories come my first rest day.
300 calorie surplus times five days.
As it's fair to assume, about half of those surplus calories went to muscle building
and the other half to fat storage.
I'd eat 700 to 800 fewer calories than I burn on my rest days,
about 2,100 calories per day, to lose fat gained during
the week. The overall effect of this is slow but steady progress in my workouts with no visible
change in body fat levels, which is great, but not without its downsides. For one thing,
muscle growth is a process that begins in the gym and completes several days later, not several hours.
By restricting your calories even a couple of days per week, you tap the brakes on muscle growth and sacrifice some potential gains.
Additionally, many people find it difficult to stick to the plan because it takes some enjoyment out of lean bulking.
Even if you're not much of a foodie,
it's nice to eat a bit off plan now and then. When you're calorie cycling, however, you must
pay closer attention to your day-to-day calorie intake. Also, as many people train during the week
and take the weekends off, eating in a deficit on rest days can make dinner outings, social events, and off days less enjoyable. As with
everything fitness, however, you don't have to be perfect to make calorie cycling worthwhile.
If you eat a bit too much on a surplus day or two, you can always eat less on your deficit days to
compensate. And if you eat too much on a deficit day, putting you closer to or even over maintenance calories, you can always
correct it by eating less on your next deficit day or turning your next surplus day into a deficit
day. The fewer mistakes you make, the better your results will be in the long term. But so long as
you get things mostly right most of the time, you can still benefit from calorie cycling. If you're
wondering about eating in a slight surplus on training days and maintenance on rest days, this can make sense
if you're only training two or three days per week because it'll noticeably reduce fat gain.
If you're training more than that, however, it's not going to help much, so I'd recommend either choosing the lean bulk and mini cut approach or eating in a surplus
on training days and deficit on rest days. It's also worth noting that if your primary goal is
to stay lean while making gradual progress, you can simplify things and opt for mini cuts and
mini bulks. This isn't optimal for maximizing muscle growth, but if you just want
to hover around the same body fat percentage while nudging your numbers up in the gym, it can work
well, at least for a time. One reason I like this approach is it makes your day-to-day routine much
simpler. You eat more or less the same amount of food every day, and I'd argue the time spent micromanaging the exact amount of calories you're eating every day to be over, under, or at maintenance would probably be better spent squeezing a few more sets into your workouts, getting a bit more sleep, or doing basically anything else that's even halfway pleasurable or productive.
So to maintain body composition with mini bulks and cuts, I like to lean bulk for four to eight weeks and cut for about four weeks to get rid of the minimal amount of fat I gained,
if I did it right. In a sense, this approach is a longerterm style of calorie cycling that's spread over months instead of days.
Another option, if you don't want to overthink it, is to simply stay in a slight surplus and
deficit a few days per week while keeping an eye on your body weight and strength on your key lifts.
If your weight creeps up too quickly or too much, dial back your calories. And if your weight is falling and you're
stagnating in your training, dial them up. Out of all the advanced dietary methods and tactics
out there, including many popular ones we didn't discuss here, like paleo, ketogenic, alkaline,
and carnivore dieting, as well as strategies like reverse dieting, carbohydrate cycling, and
backloading, and others, I've shared with you the four that matter the most. One, meal planning.
Two, mini cuts. Three, intermittent fasting. Four, calorie cycling. Unlike the other techniques I
mentioned, and many I didn't, these four can make a positive difference
in your body composition, training, and progress. None are necessary, of course. You can simply stick
with the fundamentals taught in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, and Do Fine, but chances are incorporating
at least one of those four methods into your regimen will improve your long-term results.
those four methods into your regimen will improve your long-term results. And in chapter 20, we'll talk more about how to do this. Beware experts who say otherwise and insist on the importance
or superiority of their pet diet or restrictive form of eating. In fact, this is often a reliable
way to spot a charlatan. If they're promoting one style of dieting,
training, or supplementing as optimal for everybody under all circumstances,
give them the gimlet eye. Personally, I beat the drum for flexible dieting and heavy compound
weightlifting, but I also understand that these aren't the health and fitness master keys. They work well for most
people looking to get and stay fit, but there are cases where flexible dieting leads to more
overeating than more rigid, restrictive dieting, and where heavy squatting, deadlifting, and pressing
doesn't make as much sense as more moderate forms of resistance training. So my point is this, if you're reading
this book, you've likely made it farther in your fitness journey than most guys ever will. Don't
lose sight of what got you here, consistent application of the fundamentals, and fall into
one of the many open manhole covers strewn about the rest of the road. Stay curious but skeptical, rigorous but flexible,
and patient but vigilant, and you'll make it all the way. None of that means you can't further
enhance your eating and exercising though. And in the next chapter, we'll discuss evidence-based
methods of supercharging your meal plans for more health, performance, and longevity.
Key takeaways. The real trick to intermediate and advanced level dieting is paying attention
to the details that many beginners overlook, not following strange or special eating rituals and
routines. Energy balance will always influence what mode your body is in losing or gaining weight
macronutrient balance the quality of the weight gain and loss in terms of muscle and fat
micronutrient balance the quality of your overall health and well-being and compliance the quantity
pounds and inches of your long-term resultsency is just as important for gaining muscle as it is for losing fat.
The four most popular and effective strategies for managing your energy, macronutrient,
and micronutrient balances and maximizing consistency are meal planning, mini-cuts,
intermittent fasting, and calorie cycling. While intuitive eating, eating according to your body's
natural appetite, can be a healthy, sustainable, enjoyable approach to maintaining your body
composition, meal planning is far better for building your ideal physique. Lean gains of
all muscle and no fat is a mirage that only leads you deeper into the desert. Lean-ish gains of a bit of muscle and fat
is the oasis to set up camp in. A mini-cut is a shorter-than-usual cut, normally between 3 and 4
weeks. Using mini-cuts properly can help you gain almost as much muscle as continuous lean bulking
with significantly less fat gain. Intermittent fasting can be an effective tool for improving
dietary compliance, but it's not the quantum leap in dieting that some people would have you believe.
If you have a hard time sticking to your diet with a traditional eating pattern,
intermittent fasting may be able to help. Many people who practice intermittent fasting also
train fasted, but research shows that pre-workout carbs enhance performance and
pre-workout protein may enhance recovery. Calorie cycling is a method of eating that involves
planned increases and decreases in calorie intake, usually by eating more or less carbohydrate.
Calorie cycling isn't for people new to weightlifting who want to maximize muscle gain,
and even intermediate weightlifters are better off keeping it simple when lean bulking. When an advanced lifter wants
to make slow, steady muscle and strength gains while staying lean, 10-12% body fat, calorie
cycling can help. To calorie cycle correctly, you need to follow two rules. You must get most of your extra calories from carbs,
and you must eat at maintenance calories for two to three days per week. To calorie cycle when
lean bulking, you want to be in a calorie surplus on the days you train. The surplus doesn't need
to be large, 5 to 10% above maintenance is enough. Then you restrict your calories on your rest days to lose the fat
gained while in a surplus. To maintain body composition with mini bulks and cuts, I like to
lean bulk for four to eight weeks and cut for about four weeks to get rid of the minimal amount
of fat I gained if I did it right. Well, that's it for this episode. I hope you found it helpful. And in case you didn't
listen to the intro, I understand it's okay. This was one of the bonus chapters of the new
second edition of my best-selling book for experienced weightlifters beyond Bigger,
Leaner, Stronger, which is now live over at www.bblsbook.com.