Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Best of Muscle For Life: BCAAs, Signs of Overreaching, and Ode to the Gym
Episode Date: November 12, 2021Some people do make the time to listen to most or even all of my podcasts, but my wizbang analytics tell me that while many listeners tune in on a regular basis, they don’t catch every installment o...f Muscle for Life and thus miss out on insights that could help them get a little better inside and outside the gym. And so I got an idea: how about a “best of” series of podcasts that contains a few of the most practical and compelling ideas, tips, and moments from my most popular episodes? This way, people who are new to the show can quickly determine if it’s for them or not, and those who enjoy what I’m doing but don’t have the time or inclination to listen to all of my stuff can still benefit from the discussions and find new episodes to listen to. So, in this installment of The Best of Muscle for Life, you’ll be hearing hand-picked morsels from three episodes: What Can BCAAs Actually Do For You? (According to Science) (Originally published 7/13/2018) 8 Signs of Overtraining That Most People Don’t Know (Originally published 3/15/2019) Motivation Monday: An Ode to the Gym (Originally published 6/18/2018) And we’ll be starting with number one, what can BCAAs actually do for you? Timestamps: 2:47 - What Can BCAAs Actually Do For You? (According to Science) 13:44 - 8 Signs of Overtraining That Most People Don’t Know 21:49 - Motivation Monday: An Ode to the Gym Mentioned on the Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/
Transcript
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Hello, and welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews. Thank you for joining
me today. And if you haven't already, take a moment to subscribe to the show in whatever app
you are listening to me in so you don't miss any new episodes. And so you help me by boosting the
rankings of the show. It really does help. I really would appreciate it. Okay, so this episode is a new installment in the Best Of series, where you get
to hear hand-picked morsels from the most popular episodes that I have recorded over the years,
highlight reels, key takeaways. And if you like what you hear in these Best Of episodes,
then chances are you are going to like the full episodes that
the highlights came from. So this time around, the three episodes that will be featured on this
episode are what can BCAAs actually do for you according to science, eight signs of overtraining
that most people don't know, and an ode to the gym.
Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out
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including the number one best-selling weightlifting books
for men and women in the world,
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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, so let's start with the takeaways from what can BCAAs actually do for you according to science.
For people listening, just to answer that question of what BCAAs are, why are people using them, and what can they do, what can they not do, and so forth.
All right.
So BCAAs, the branched chain amino acids, just to get the obvious out of the way, they have three amino acids that have branched chains. The other amino acids are pretty much straight lines. These ones
are all bendy. And they were grouped together specifically for that purpose, just structural.
The three BCAAs, leucine, isoleucine, and valine, do different things in the body. And truth be told,
we don't know anything about valine. It's just nobody really wants to research it
but leucine is the primary one that stimulates muscle protein synthesis and
This led to BCA is being marketed initially because it was claimed that they could build as much muscle as protein
But because you're taking in less amino acids overall, it's less calories
Then this you know fueled But because you're taking in less amino acids overall, it's less calories.
Then this fueled consumption of BCAAs.
It was later found out that this was not the case.
You needed all essential amino acids to sufficiently build muscle.
Shouldn't that have been obvious from the outset? It was not necessarily obvious from the outset because there are stores of amino acids in the body mostly the intestines and liver so i thought that if you could just tell the muscle to start
building it will start taking amino acids from the liver and intestines and then that those stores
would be replenished the next time you eat food but it seems that it's not so simple you can't
just take amino acids from the liver because it's incredibly greedy
so it needs a surplus of most amino acids probably all the essential ones in the blood
when you stimulate the muscles so because legion is a whole premium sports company company we can
only sell stuff that has an effect which is why i tried to look into a legitimate effect of bcas
and i technically did find one but it's not something most people would you know use it for
because bcas seem to have a role in preventing central fatigue so central just refers to the brain in the like in a way that is probably due to the I'd say I'm going to give a little nod to Valiant here.
But the truth is, the mechanisms of how BCAAs prevent fatigue is just due to the fact that they're literally branched.
You want to you want to explain that?
So when you're working out, you just have muscle breakdown and
amino acids go into your blood. And they just float around. Some go to the brain, realize,
we have nothing to do here. So they just leave, go to the kidneys and eventually get processed out.
But the more you work out, the more amino acids go in your blood and ammonia builds up and this does lead to fatigue but another
thing that happens is tryptophan the turkey amino acid as many people know it by that also produces
serotonin and thus melatonin can go into the brain and start to accumulate and when it accumulates in
the brain that is strongly associated with not just fatigue but also fatigue related to heat stress.
So tryptophan does this because tryptophan turns into neurotransmitters but it's also
a large neutral in charge amino acid.
There's actually a transporter into the brain so the door of which it goes through called
the large neutral amino acid transporter.
Very aptly named.
It just looks for large neutral amino acids.
Tryptophan is one of them, but not the only one.
If you pump
a lot of BCAAs into the system,
they're also pretty large and neutral.
And they just kind of float around
the body. They sort of clog up
this transporter a little bit.
So the tryptophan that would normally go into your brain
just hangs around in the
periphery for a bit longer.
It delays the buildup of trip command in the brain.
Not perfectly, because eventually the BCA is just going to leave or the BCA is just going to eliminate it.
But by delaying this, it can delay prolonged fatigue with specific reference to a heat.
specific reference to a heat but also uh more like when you get fatigued and your finite motor control goes down a bit that's also the fatigue that bcas can prevent a little bit so not so much
crossfit not so much repetitive like running where you just do one repetitive motion all the time
but more so in highly technical sports like tennis or badminton.
Those are the ones where BCA supplementation can really interesting.
The main thing that I want to get into,
and this is like the part where I can say BCA is actually work because for a
long time,
BCA is despite these mechanisms did not show much strength.
Like they technically delayed fatigue,
but it was like,
you got one
extra swing in a tennis match like oh no that just makes such the difference it
doesn't this is because when I mentioned earlier how amino acids are breakdown
products ammonia is produced in ammonia causes fatigue BCA's themselves will
produce ammonia so they cause fatigue in a way.
BCAAs, for the purpose of reducing fatigue, shoot themselves in their own feet.
Which is why I wrote this article for Muscle for Life recently.
BCAAs paired with citrulline.
Because citrulline, through the urea cycle, can help reduce ammonia buildup in the blood.
So BCAs do their unique effect on preventing fatigue.
There is the natural side effect of increasing ammonia,
which would normally shoot themselves in the foot.
Then citrulline takes care of the ammonia issues
and allows the BCAs to actually shine without being impaired.
And the studies that I went over on this article,
there's one looking at elite tennis players, where they're basically put through a few simulated
matches just to make them fatigue. And then they just shot tennis balls at them and said,
in a very sadistic manner, go until you fall. And in the last stages of fatigue,
citrulline seemed to stave off like half of the fatigue
that placebo group experienced.
The BCAA citrulline combo, I should say.
So yeah, there actually does seem to be a specific promise for BCAAs,
but it may require citrulline or potentially L-ornithine
in combination with BCAAs, but it may require citrulline or potentially L-ornithine in combination with
BCAAs to truly shine. And again, it only shines in like cognitively heavy fatigue prone sports.
So it's not really something everyone does. Yeah. It'd be more of an endurance supplement.
What about, we were talking about this before we started recording,
endurance supplement. What about, you know, we were talking about this before we started recording, um, a theory that has been bouncing around online that BCAAs may stunt muscle gain
as opposed to augment it. Okay. So that theory comes from the fact that leucine is the trigger
to stimulate muscle growth paired with the idea that the body is always in a state of homeostasis,
an active balance. Much like a grandfather clock swinging back and forth, if something goes in one
direction, it's going to go in another. You cannot just have a body at baseline, stimulate a process
in one direction, then expect it to go back to baseline without dipping into the opposite
direction for a little bit. It's very much like a sine curve rather than just a straight line.
And so if you stimulate muscle protein synthesis, but you do not give the actual amino acids to
build the muscle with, you will have no net gain. But then after the stimulation muscle
protein synthesis goes away, you'll be left with a
refractory decline in synthesis rates and you don't need to provide amino acids for that because
you have your muscles they can just degrade on their own so i said uh decline in most protein
synthesis but the theory is it might also stimulate catabolism so it's like the sine curve where the
stuff you want you're not optimizing but the stuff you don't want will happen regardless
and so the theory is if you keep on pulsing bcas throughout the day could you have a net loss
of protein if you don't optimize the positive spikes by actually just having whole foods.
And at this moment in time, there's no evidence at all assessing this in otherwise healthy
demographics. But the theory has been going around a lot with sarcopenia researchers,
those who are tending to the elderly and don't want them to lose any muscle mass.
And I can't really read their research all
that well but it seems like that's a valid hypothesis that they're still testing out
as for athletes if you wanted a reason to not pulse bcas each and every day then have that be
your reason but i don't think you're just going to like shrivel up into a little weightlifting raisin if you continue using BCAAs. I doubt it would actually cause any significant muscle loss.
And that's it for what can BCAAs actually do for you according to science. And that was
originally published in July of 2018. If you want to go back and listen to the whole episode and I wish it weren't so I wish BCAAs
were worth taking because I get asked multiple times a week and over at Legion, our customer
service team, they hear from people multiple times per week, asking us to make BCAAs asking
why we don't make BCAAs.
And so we have a simple explanation that links people to a more in-depth
explanation from me if they want it as to why we don't make BCAAs and probably never will because
the weight of the evidence is pretty heavy at this point. It would take some real convincing
breakthrough research to all of a sudden show that BCAAs in fact do help us gain muscle and
strength faster if we use this special type of product or if we use it in a special type of way.
But as far as your run-of-the-mill BCAAs go and the run-of-the-mill supplementation protocol,
unfortunately, it just doesn't do anything if you eat enough protein. And that's
why I don't sell BCAAs. But if that changes and I can get behind BCAAs, then I will happily sell
them because again, many people want them. I just don't want to sell them. Anyway, let's move on to
the highlights from eight signs of overtraining that most people don't know.
the highlights from eight signs of overtraining that most people don't know.
So one of the tricky things about weightlifting is it conforms to one of the basic laws of living,
which is that if you want more, then you need to do more. And so more for less, that is the motto as an intermediate slash advanced weightlifter. Now, what does all that
have to do with overtraining? Well, many people understand that and try to program their training
accordingly. They try to just work harder and harder and harder in the gym to continue gaining
muscle and strength. And it's the right idea, but it generally
leads to problems. Unless it's gone about intelligently, it leads to problems. So anyone
who has tried that before knows what I'm talking about. You start to struggle to finish your
workouts. The weights start feeling very heavy. You start losing strength. You start losing endurance. You start
sleeping worse. You start to struggle with just general fatigue and energy levels. You start
getting odd aches and pains, particularly joint pains. You start getting sick more frequently and
so on. Now, these types of things are all signs that there is a systemic imbalance between work and recovery.
And scientifically speaking, the symptomatology is known as overtraining syndrome.
And that is something that everyone does run into and does have to wrestle with at some point along the way in their weightlifting journeys.
There are two general schools of thought here.
So the first one says that there is no such thing as overtraining. There's only under-recovering.
The idea here is if you are feeling physically overwhelmed by your training, it's not really
that difficult in the scheme of what your body can actually handle. It's just that you are not recovering well enough.
And if you just did a better job recovering from your training, you would feel totally fine. And
you could even train harder than you are currently training as long as you are recovering well
enough. Now, the other school of thought is the polar opposite of that. It is that if you do more than, let's say, a couple intense weight
lifting workouts, heavy compound weight lifting workouts per week, and a couple cardio sessions
per week, you are going to overload your nervous system, which is then going to fall behind,
and that's going to negatively impact your performance and your health and well-being
in many different ways.
Well, as is often the case in the health and fitness space, the truth is somewhere in the middle. Yes, heavy resistance training workouts do place a lot of stress in the body and especially
when they involve a lot of compound exercises, exercises that train many major muscle groups and require or stimulate a lot of central
nervous system activity. And cardio workouts done in addition to the weightlifting often place even
more stress on the body. Now, if it's just walking, for example, then not really, but if it's high
intensity interval training, then yes, that definitely places an additional
load on the body, on the systems of the body.
But most people can train quite a bit harder, can spend quite a bit more time beating their
bodies up in the gym than they currently do without running themselves into the ground.
My rule of thumb that I use, not just with my own body and
training, but with all the people I work with, and this rule of thumb is really based on my
understanding of the scientific literature and my experience having worked with thousands and
thousands of people, men and women of all ages and circumstances over the last six or seven years,
of all ages and circumstances over the last six or seven years is most people can do three to six hours of heavy weightlifting per week and one to three hours of cardio per week, depending on what
they're doing, what their goals are. And if they are looking to lose weight, maintain a calorie deficit somewhere around 20 to 25% and be totally fine. Do well. And I know research
shows that overtraining may be more of a psychological state than a physiological state,
but regardless of the ultimate cause, it is real. The symptoms are real. If you push yourself too
hard for too long, you start to feel bad. So for example,
the first sign is something I mentioned earlier, and that is that your workouts start to feel
particularly hard. When your body becomes more and more fatigued, just in general, when you fall
further and further behind in recovery, the perceived effort of your workouts increases. And how this usually plays out
for me, at least, is toward the end of a training block, which is usually like a week six or week
eight, the weights just start to feel heavy. And I've slept well, I've been sticking to my diet well, but regardless, progression stops. So for a couple
weeks, I don't gain reps on really anything. I'm not adding weight to the bar. And then that weight
that I've been using for the last few weeks, let's say it's on a bench press or a squat or a deadlift.
I notice it particularly on the harder exercises. That weight just starts to feel heavier and
heavier. Another sign, the second sign, is that you lack the motivation to train. So if you normally
look forward to your workouts and you now have no desire to get in the gym and you have to drag
yourself through each rep, each set, that is a red flag that your body may need some extra recovery.
That brings me to the next sign, which is feeling depressed. In some people,
mood disruption extends beyond just training. They lose motivation to do anything, really.
The next sign, the fourth one, is feeling perpetually sore. So as you probably know,
muscle soreness isn't correlated with muscle growth. I rarely get all that sore these days,
regardless of how hard I train, yet I can continue to progress in my workouts and gain very small
amounts of muscle over long periods of time. But when overtraining syndrome has started to set in,
some people experience a persistent soreness that just doesn't go away. Muscle soreness.
The next sign is you are not sleeping well because when you're pushing your body too hard,
when the work has way outpaced the recovery. Your nervous system can become overstimulated,
and this makes it harder to fall asleep and stay asleep. So I want to quickly, though,
touch on what you can do to help prevent these symptoms, help stave them off for as long as
possible. So one is getting enough sleep. Most people need around
eight hours of sleep. So if you can prioritize that, then that is going to help. Another is
eating enough food. If you are in a calorie deficit, your body's ability to recover is
impaired. So unless you are intentionally maintaining deficit to lose fat, it is smart to
try to be in a deficit as little
as possible if you are trying to really push it hard in your workouts. All right, that's it for
the takeaways from eight signs of overtraining that most people don't know. And if you liked it
and you want to listen to the whole episode that was published in March of 2019, so you can go back
and find it. And now let's move on to the final episode featured in this episode, which is an ode to the gym. What I've experienced is that no matter
how smart and hardworking and tough you might be, or might think you are, the world will figure out
ways to break you. And while some people experience more painful and debilitating breaks than others,
we all get broken. And what really matters is what do we do about it? What do we do to heal
and come back stronger? And if you want to read more about that and learn from someone whose story
really inspired me, check out Ray Dalio's book, Principles. And a major theme of
that book is the process of progress whereby things get better and then get worse. And then
you have to figure out why they're getting worse, learn the lesson, use it to make things go better
again until they eventually go worse again. And then once again, you have to figure out why are they
going badly, learn the lesson, apply the lesson. In the book, he has a diagram of how he likes to
visualize progress as a series of upward loops. So you're moving up and then you're dipping,
dipping, things are getting worse, getting worse, you're going down. But if you handle that
correctly, you can then loop back around and make things go better again
until they start to go worse. And then you have to figure out why they're going worse and things
are going down, going down. And if you do your job well, you loop back around and start doing
better again and so forth. A lot of people like to think or want to think or want to believe that success in any area of life or any
endeavor is a fairly linear journey with some peaks and valleys, but on the whole, just a nice
upward climb. And that is just not the case. It is messier than that and doesn't just have valleys,
but has periods of regression and often
despair when you're not sure if you're going to be able to get things moving in the right
direction again. All that matters though, is that you do get things moving in the right direction
again. All that matters is in the end, what are you left with? What results did you produce?
How hard it was to get there or how chaotic it was just doesn't
matter in the end. The gym is a lot more than a place to move, grunt, and sweat. I think that it
is a miniature cosmos of sorts where we can make contact with the deeper parts of ourselves,
our convictions, our fears, our habits, our anxieties. It's an arena
where we can confront these opponents head-on and prove that we have what it takes to vanquish them.
The gym is also a setting where we can test the assumptions we've made about ourselves and the
stories underlying them. It calls on us to demonstrate how we respond to the greater
struggles of life like adversity, pain, insecurity, stress, weakness, and disadvantage.
And in some ways, the gym asks us to show who we really are. And in this way, I think that it is a
training and a testing ground for our bodies and minds and even our souls.
The conflicts that we learn to endure in the gym empower us in our daily lives as well. The
concentration, the discipline, the resilience that is required to build a great body are also required
to build a great life. And I really do think that if you can do one,
you can do the other because the way to do anything is at bottom the way to do everything.
The gym also calls on us to constantly attempt new things and thus is also a source of learning.
It's a forum where questions are at least as important as answers, and it cultivates what scientists call a growth mindset by teaching us that our abilities can be developed through dedication and hard work.
And that is a worldview that is essential for great accomplishment in any area of our lives.
The gym is practical as well,
not idealistic. It's a laboratory that's open to any and all ideas and methodologies,
and it gives very clear, very unqualified feedback. The ideas and methods either work
or they don't. So in short, the gym can be so much more than merely a place
to work out. It can be a refuge from the chaos around us. It can be a world of our own that we
create to satisfy our most personal and our most primal dreams and desires. And all this is why the
gym can give us so much more than just muscle and strength.
It can give us more life.
And that's it for the snippets from An Ode to the Gym. And if you want to hear the rest of it,
it was published in June of 2018. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it helpful.
And if you did, subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it increases the rankings of the show a little bit, which of course then makes it a little bit more easily found by other people who may like it just as much as you.
just as much as you. And if you didn't like something about this episode or about the show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just feedback to share, shoot me an email,
Mike at muscleforlife.com, muscleforlife.com. And let me know what I could do better or just
what your thoughts are about maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future.
I read everything myself. I'm always looking for
new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope
to hear from you soon.