Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Best of Muscle For Life: Science of Self-Control, Eating Less than 1,200 Calories, & Power of Habit
Episode Date: March 24, 2023In this installment of the Best of Muscle For Life, you’ll hear hand-picked clips from three popular MFL episodes: an interview with Menno Henselmans on the science of self-control and willpower, a ...Says You episode on eating less than 1,200 calories per day, and a motivational episode on the power of habit. Some people—my favorite people—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 of Muscle for Life and thus miss out on insights that could help them do at least a little better inside and outside the gym. That’s why I do “best of” episodes that contain a few of the most practical and compelling ideas, tips, and moments from the more popular episodes I’ve published over the years. This way, you can learn interesting insights that you might have otherwise missed and find new episodes of the show to listen to. So, in this installment of The Best of Muscle for Life, you’ll be hearing hand-picked morsels from three episodes: Menno Henselmans on the Science of Self-Control (Originally published 10/6/2021) Says You! Eating Less than 1,200 Calories Per Day (Originally published 10/1/2021) Motivation Monday: The Power of Habit (Originally published 5/7/2018) And we’ll be starting with number one, Menno Henselmans on the Science of Self-Control. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (4:10) - Menno Henselmans on the Science of Self-Control (14:53) - My free quiz to answer all your diet questions: www.muscleforlife.show/dietquiz (16:01) - Says You! Eating Less than 1,200 Calories Per Day (21:05) - Motivation Monday: The Power of Habit Mentioned on the Show: Take this free quiz to get science-based answers to all of your diet questions: www.muscleforlife.show/dietquiz
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the latest and greatest episode of Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews
and thank you for joining me today. Now, I have recorded hundreds of episodes of Muscle for Life
and I've talked about a huge variety of things related to health, fitness, lifestyle, mindset,
ranging from the basics of diet and exercise like energy and macronutrient balance
and progressive overload and training frequency and volume to fads like the ketogenic and carnivore
diet and collagen protein to more unfamiliar territories like body weight set point and fasted cardio. And some episodes resonate with my crowd
more than others, but all of them contain at least a few key takeaways that just about anyone can
benefit from. At least that's what I tell myself. That's what helps me sit down in the chair every
day and do this. And as cool as that is, it poses a problem for you,
my dear listener, especially if you are new here. And that is, ain't nobody got time for that.
We're talking about probably a thousand plus hours of content at this point. And while some people
actually do make the time to listen to most or even all of my podcasts, my whizbang analytics
tell me that while many listeners tune in on a regular basis, they don't catch every installment
of Muscle for Life and thus they miss out on insights that could help them get even just a
little bit better inside and outside the gym. Because if you just get a little bit
better consistently enough, that can add up to big results in the long run. And people have also
been telling me that they would like me to do more shorter multi-topic episodes like my Q&As
and Says You episodes. 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 going all the way back to
beginning. This way, people who are new in particular can quickly determine if this is
the droid they're looking for, if this podcast is for them or not.
And then those who are regulars and enjoy what I'm doing,
but just don't have the time or inclination
to listen to all of my stuff.
And I do understand that.
I don't take it personally.
You can also then benefit from the discussions
and the episodes that you are not listening to in full.
And you can also find new episodes to listen to
without having to give an hour of your time
to determine whether it was worth it or not.
So here we are with the best of Muscle for Life.
And in this episode,
you will be hearing hand-picked morsels from three episodes.
One is an interview I did with Menno Henselmans on the
science of self-control. And the next one is a monologue from my Says You series of episodes
where I address things that people disagree with me on. And this one is called eating less than 1200 calories per day. So somebody challenged me on this that
nobody, regardless of their body size, body composition, activity level, and so forth,
should eat less than 1200 calories per day. And that number changes. Some people say it should never be less than 1,000 calories per day, 1,500 calories per day.
And that episode addresses really all of those claims, even though the specific number in this case is 1,200.
And then the final episode featured in this episode is a motivational monologue called The Power of Habit.
And let's start out with number one,
Menno Huntsman's on the science of self-control. Two-system theory is a concept that has gained a
lot of popularity in psychology in the last years. I think Daniel Kahneman can be attributed
rightly as the source for most of this popularization. And Jonathan Haidt, I mentioned
both in the book.
Daniel Kahneman says system one, system two,
which is also the parlance that's used in a lot of psychology fields.
Jonathan Haidt uses the metaphor of system one
being sort of an elephant
and system two being the rider.
And I sort of combine these systems
and I talk about the emotional elephant
and the rational rider.
And it sounds a little bit uh childish almost i think but
it actually makes a lot of sense if you look at how the brain is structured and operates like you
can literally see in the brain that you have sort of the what's called the reptile brain which is
the brainstem and the more primitive parts and then on top of that you have the paleo mammalian
brain and that's basically system one.
It's where emotional processing takes place and intuitive reasoning.
It's fast.
It's very efficient, but it doesn't understand long-term consequences, investment strategies,
logic, math.
It's going to do those things.
And then on top of that, you have the prefrontal cortex, which is system two.
The rational part is the rational rider.
And it's literally like a rational rider sitting on top of this emotional elephant.
This is the part of our brain that has evolved pretty much to counterbalance the flaws in
the more intuitive system.
And it has serial processing, it's slow, it's effortful.
This is the part of our brain that we associate with our consciousness, with you.
If you think of how you are, then you're talking about this part of your brain
big central parts of understanding self-control is for one the tenet that humans are fundamentally
effort averse and basically yeah we are inherently lazy and evolutionarily speaking that makes sense
like why would we ever invest effort in something that we can do more easily or do something that
we don't strictly need to do. Evolutionarily speaking, we did not
evolve to go to the gym. We were just active because we needed food to survive. So we have
these drives to do things, but they were mostly out of necessity. And that makes things a lot
easier. And these days, we live in a society where food is supplied to us in abundance with
far higher energy densities than previous. And we are locked up in cubicles
trying to be productive for eight hours a day. And we have to force ourselves to go to the gym
rather than be forced to hunt to stay physically active. So self-control is much more important
these days than it used to be. And you actually see that people that have better self-control,
they consistently, they do better in school, they get better careers, they do better on basically anything.
They're happier. If when two things in the brain are not perfectly aligned with each other in
general, this creates a sensation of unpleasantness. So we also see that self-control failure is
more likely when we do difficult tasks as compared to simple tasks, because the cognitive
conflict in our brain is greater when we try something to process something that's difficult. That's in fact the essence of something being difficult, causing cognitive
conflict. And that's also why we laugh at a joke and we experience a sensation of pleasure when we
get the joke, because a joke usually creates this cognitive conflict. And then when we sort of get
it, this triggers a moment of relief. And that is part of the reason, actually, we have humor.
Self-control failure is a shift in intentional resources.
I think that's really good to understand.
A lot of people, it's almost like boredom.
It's a shift in intentional resource when the brain is, what you're currently doing,
you're currently doing some have-to activity, because if you're doing a want-to activity,
you almost never experience self-control failure.
And your brain shifts the attention from the have-to activity, you almost never experience self-control failure. And your brain shifts the
attention from the have-to activity. It's trying to find want-to activities which result in higher
immediate gratification. That's what happens. And that's also what you always see that you're doing
something that is not, it's more an investment activity. It's something you have to do or
something that you think is good for you in the future. And then what your brain ends up doing, what you end up procrastinating on is things that
give more immediate relief, like food or sex.
And research also finds that a dollar sign, Facebook pop-ups, those things become very
salient because they basically result in this instant high stimulation as opposed to doing
your taxes or resisting hunger.
Probably one of, I think, the most effective strategies
in terms of organizing your day,
and that's to take more breaks.
This is very counterintuitive,
but I think a big part of the book
is the central theme that people
have this disciplinary approach,
like you don't sleep,
which I think is the most stupid advice ever
for productivity.
You just work for like eight plus hours a day.
You know, the most productive people on the planet
are the people that work.
I don't work 40 hours.
I don't work 60 hours.
I work 80 hours.
And actually there's been good research on this,
especially in England and on Ford Motor Company
during the industrial revolution
where they had 80 hour work weeks.
And they find consistently that if you go from 80 to 60 hours
and from 60 to 40, there is an increase in productivity.
It's not even the same.
There is actually an increase in productivity
when they work half the hours.
People need to work a bit more deliberately,
but they need to take far more breaks
to avoid this state of ego depletion,
that you're really sapped
and you're forced to take a very
long break if you don't get out of that your productivity level just sinks to almost nothing
like almost everyone can can attest to this that at some point you know if you're in the office or
trying to write if you have writer's block and you just force yourself to sit and keep writing
you can spend the rest of the day writing one page. Or what you could do instead is take a break,
go see a movie or watch an episode of your favorite series or something, then get back,
maybe do a workout in between. There are lots of, in the book, I discuss a list of effective break options with exercise scoring really well on pretty much every criterion. And then you come
back and you have another productive bout. And if you do that, say four times a day,
then you're a really, really productive individual.
How do you like to structure your day?
The general template I outline in the book,
especially based on Ericsson's research,
doing your most creative
and most intellectually demanding work in the mornings.
You see that in almost all successful writers and professors.
And that's also in line with the biorhythm
of cognitive functioning,
which basically sees that, well, maybe there may be some boot up time in the morning, but it reaches a peak pretty fast in the day.
And after that, it's pretty much just downhill unless you're doing power napping or something.
And some other things I touch on in the book is that auditory presentation stimuli result in lower task fatigue.
So it's good to have your interviews and your podcasts, especially group meetings,
which have a social element because that's inherently stimulating for humans. Do that
later in the day. I can really see, at least for myself and based on research, that you can at
least keep productivity the same and often increase it when you come from crazy hours.
Now, I would say that we probably have higher numbers of hours because we're really passionate at what we do.
You know, we have this internal drive
and that on the one hand is a curse
in the sense that we're not naturally inclined
to take breaks,
but a lot of people may be too inclined to take breaks,
but they don't do it strategically.
And that's the problem.
Like they're not efficient about it.
They take their breaks too late
and they're not taking sufficiently rewarding breaks
because going to the coffee machine,
having a boring conversation with your coworkerworker hey how are you good how are you
you know oh fine weather today right that's not you know creativity enhancing that doesn't
replenish your willpower you need to do something immersive something fun like a cold shower
exercise video games are actually really good at this if they are time delimited because they are
so immersive watching an episode of your favorite series
and research finds that it works much better
if you're watching an entertaining series,
of course, than if you're watching horror or something
because you don't exactly feel good after that.
So it's really about being strategic,
taking the right kind of breaks
and just doing mindful work.
Yeah, if you can take naps that's great um i would say
though that if you find yourself really wanting to take a lot of naps you should consider if you're
not simply sleep deprived because there was sleep is one of those things that there's just tons of
research that far beyond the point where you think it impairs productivity and well-being
sleep deprivation hurts everything like like really, really badly.
One study that came out relatively recently,
well, about, I think, two years ago now,
showed that the sleep depth is linearly cumulative,
which means that, and this is exactly what they studied,
if you're sleeping one hour less per day for eight days,
the cognitive effects are the same
as missing an entire night of sleep so yeah i'd say naps are
great naps are an amazing like a 20 to 30 minute nap that's that's also crucial by the way you need
to take a power nap because if you enter deep sleep stages then you wake up you know feeling
like you're you wake up in a foreign body on a foreign planet you don't know who you are where
you are but if you take this kind of power nap and a recent study also find by the way that's
if you quickly fall asleep you can even take caffeine before the nap fall asleep and then the
caffeine sort of wakes you up and then you're extra sort of extra extra productive afterwards
a funny thing research actually finds that taking an imaginary break is also really effective how
does that work yeah it's basically it's like meditation so an imaginary you have to visualize yourself or something, someone you really empathize with.
I'd say just always focus on yourself, doing something really relaxing.
And then it's almost like meditation in the effect that it basically clears your mental cache.
And to use a computer analogy, if you're really focused on something that in itself does not evoke much emotion and doesn't take much cognitive processing power, then just focusing really well on that basically clears out working memory and all the other things you used to think about and sort of resets your mental state, like clearing a computer's cache.
So that's the exact same mechanism of meditation.
same mechanism of meditation. So in that sense, it kind of makes sense. But it's funny that it works that way, because you intuitively wouldn't say, you know, like the purpose of a
break is to actually take a break. But just imagining a break can be equally effective
because it has the same mental effects. Most research on meditation-like and mindfulness-like
practices finds that the exact method is not so important. Just the fact that you're going through
the same cognitive processes like
meditation and imaginary break, body scan methods, listening to really relaxing music or going
through memories. Like body scan method is like just focusing intensely on all your body parts
and just sort of moving them one by one gently or just really focusing on them. Counting sheep
is like a more folksy kind of traditional method,
which actually is essentially meditation. They all have a similar effect.
How many calories should you eat to reach your fitness goals faster? What about your macros?
What types of food should you eat? And how many meals should you eat every day?
should you eat and how many meals should you eat every day? Well, I created a free 60-second diet quiz that'll answer those questions for you and others, including how much alcohol you should
drink, whether you should eat more fatty fish to get enough omega-3 fatty acids, what supplements
are worth taking and why, and more. To take the quiz and get your free personalized diet plan, go to muscleforlife.show
slash diet quiz, muscleforlife.show slash diet quiz now, answer the questions and learn what
you need to do in the kitchen to lose fat, build muscle and get healthy. Well, that's it for my
featured snippets from my interview that I did with
Menno on the science of self-control. And if you want to listen to that whole episode,
it was published in October of 2021. So you can go back and find it. And now let's move on to the
says you episode eating less than 1200 calories per day. And so in this episode, I am going to be talking about something that I have heard many times lot, specifically for women. Sometimes it's 1,500 for women. And for men, sometimes it's a little bit
higher, 1,600, 1,800, or even 2,000 calories per day. Now, if you do eat less than whatever the
number is, the legend goes, many misfortunes can befall you, including metabolic damage, extreme hunger, malnutrition, hormonal disruptions, muscle loss, mood disturbances, menstrual irregularities, the list jabbers on and on. because some evidence-based formula or calculator, usually one of my own, is telling them to eat
what they believe is a dangerously low number of calories every day. Now, fortunately, a true
universal caloric minimum would be much lower than any of those numbers that I gave you because
many people just don't burn as many calories as they
think they do. And even when calories are inappropriately low, the purported consequences
are often overblown. For example, a five foot five, 130 pound woman who exercises one to three
hours per week burns about 1700 calories per day. And if she wanted to lose about one pound of fat per week,
and that would be moderate, reasonable weight loss, she would need to eat about 1,200 calories
per day. Now, if we make her 5'10 and 160 pounds, her total daily energy expenditure rises to nearly 2000 calories per day. And then if we increase her exercise to
four to six hours per week, it reaches 2300 calories per day. And finally, if we now calculate
her new caloric target at 510, 160, four to six hours of exercise per week, and we calculate for one pound of fat loss per
week, we get 1800 calories, virtually lean gaining for her smaller and more sedentary self.
So saying that nobody should ever eat less than some arbitrary amount of calories every day is
like saying that they should never drive slower than 55 miles per hour on the highway.
Well, what if they have engine trouble? What if there's traffic? What if it is raining pitchforks
outside? Now, how low should you go when you're cutting? Because there is a caloric threshold that
you shouldn't cross, right? Well, yes, there is, because if you restrict your calories too heavily,
you won't damage your metabolism. You won't detonate your hormones. You won't disintegrate
your muscle. You won't otherwise derange your physiology, but you're not going to have a good
time. Negative side effects often associated with semi-starvation dieting, very low calorie
dieting, can and often do become more pronounced if calories are too low.
So based on the findings of research on the effects of energy availability on athletic
men and women, when you're cutting, I recommend a cutoff of 8 to 10 calories per pound of
body weight per day for both men and women,
regardless of activity level, meaning don't eat less than eight calories per pound of body weight
per day. And that's probably most applicable to men. In women, I would say the cutoff
is going to be a little bit higher around 10. Now, one other matter I want to quickly comment on is the nutritional
component of dieting, because some people say that by eating significantly less food than usual,
by eating 1200 calories per day or 14 or 1800 per day, you can develop irritating insufficiencies
or even debilitating deficiencies. And that's just not true. Not if you get most of the calories that
you are eating from relatively unprocessed and wholesome foods like lean protein, fruits,
vegetables, legumes, whole grains, seeds, and the like. And if you really want to ensure that your
body is adequately nourished when you are cutting, just include a high quality multivitamin like Legion's Triumph in your regimen.
And that is the highlight reel from eating less than 1200 calories per day.
And if you want to listen to that episode, the entire thing, you can find it also October
2021.
And now we have a motivational episode, or at least I hope it's motivational, the power
of habit.
So I want you to think about yesterday when you woke up, what did you do first? And in what order?
Did you go straight into the shower? Did you check your email first or maybe Facebook and then your
email? What about brushing your teeth? Where does that fit into your routine? What about tying your
shoes? Which shoe did you tie first? Did you tie your right shoe first, your left shoe first?
What about tying your shoes? Which shoe did you tie first? You tie your right shoe first,
your left shoe first. What did you say to your family or your boyfriend or girlfriend or roommate before leaving? On your way to work, which route did you take? And then once you got to work,
what did you do once you sat down at your desk? Did you go straight to your email
or maybe did you chat to a colleague first? And then what about lunchtime? Did you have leftovers or a salad or something else, maybe a hamburger?
And then think about when you got home.
What did you do when you got home?
Did you go for a bike ride or a walk?
Did you pour a drink, have some dinner?
Now, I could go on and on with these questions, but I'll stop here and get to the point.
My point is that we truly are creatures of habit, and we all have deeply ingrained daily patterns of behavior.
In fact, according to a 2006 study conducted by scientists at Duke University, over 40% of the daily actions that people perform aren't really decisions, but are just habits, are things they do on automatic.
And in many cases, these habits are useful. They save us mental energy. We don't need to decide
newly each and every day how to put toothpaste on our toothbrush or how to go about washing our
bodies. But there are other habits that are much more complex and that can emerge without our permission, so to speak, and that can be quite troublesome.
For example, studies have shown that families that eat fast food regularly didn't originally intend to eat as much fast food as they do.
It started as a monthly habit, and then it became something that they did every other week,
and then it became a weekly habit, and then it became something they do a couple times a week
until finally they're just eating junk food every day. And any of us can fall into this trap in any
area of our lives. 30 minutes of TV per day can become 60 minutes and then 100 minutes and so forth.
Skipping a workout once per week can lead to skipping twice per week,
which can lead eventually to just quitting altogether. One drink per week can, for some people, easily multiply in both size or frequency or both.
And you see this habit creep, so to speak, it can be very insidious.
The ramifications of
these negative habits can be deceiving. There are the immediate and obvious things like you
fall behind your peers in your work and you get passed up on the promotion. You gain weight and
feel lethargic, your health deteriorates and so forth. But then there's the not so obvious. You
start to lose faith in your ability to put
your mind to something and see it through. You start to avoid challenges and opportunities for
fear of failure. You start to criticize yourself. You start to erode your self-esteem. You maybe
even start to become depressed and so forth. Now, of course, there's a positive side to this because
habits can cut both ways. Just 45 minutes of exercise a few days per week, if done for long
enough, can absolutely transform your body. 30 minutes of reading per day over time can turn you
into an expert in just about anything you might want to learn. An hour or two of more work per day
than your peers can help you outproduce them by a rather large order of magnitude.
The reality is thinking dim thoughts just doesn't make things happen. Our dreams
may influence what we're capable of, but it's our habits that will ultimately determine what kind of lives
we live. Anyone can get energized by tantalizing visions, but very few people can stick to the
daily grind long enough to actually get there. Now, if you show me a great achiever in any field
or activity, I will show you a master of habits, someone that has mechanically repeated
the same positive actions countless thousands of times until finally they had produced something
extraordinary, whether a skill, fortune, invention, or even a sublime relationship with another
person. Controlling our habits can be hard though, because some routines and actions are so ingrained that we find ourselves
almost slaves to them, unable to do anything but mindlessly comply. And that leads me to one of the
great unsung benefits of using diet and exercise to stay fit. You see, it improves your habit
mastery. Staying fit teaches us habit mastery. In other words,
it teaches us how to control our habits, how to break the bad ones and instill and protect
the good ones. Because you can't overcome bad habits with voodoo rituals or exorcisms or
self-mortification. You beat bad habits simply by creating new behavior patterns that overpower
and override them. Things that are more compelling to you than the bad things. So instead of watching
that hour of TV every night to unwind, you let off steam with an hour of weightlifting instead.
The enjoyment that is normally provided by that 3 p.m. cookie snack can be replaced by an equally enjoyable apple with peanut butter.
And interestingly enough, once you establish a new pattern of behavior, it quickly begins to feel just as automatic as the old one, no matter how different it is.
And this is just one of those psychological quirks.
it is. And this is just one of those psychological quirks. Whatever we repeatedly do is what we want to continue doing, whether it's eating ice cream in front of the TV or hitting the treadmill for
some late night cardio. And in this way, achieving fitness goals is actually fairly easy. It is
definitely straightforward. You just keep doing the things that start to feel more and more right.
forward. You just keep doing the things that start to feel more and more right. And then you make slow and steady progress. And over time, these small improvements add up to something
extraordinary, even if the whole process felt ordinary and maybe even mundane. When you do this,
though, you not only show yourself that you can change your behavior patterns, that you are in control, but you also
come to realize how powerful your daily routine really is. And this then begins to mold other
areas of your life. You become different than other people. If you can build your habit mastery,
and again, exercise and diet is a great way to strengthen that muscle, so to speak,
you start to look at all goals that you have a little bit differently. You start to realize that
new undertakings require new habits, and often old habits are going to have to go to make room.
And you also come to realize that the first month or two of a new habit is always the toughest.
that the first month or two of a new habit is always the toughest. But if you can get over that initial hump, if you can clear that initial hurdle, it becomes much easier as time goes on
because it just becomes more and more automatic and familiar and you become drawn to it naturally
more and more. So if I've inspired you to get more interested in harnessing the power of habit in your life,
I recommend you check out Charles Duhigg's book, Power of Habit, because it is one of the better
ones that I've read on the subject. And it will give you an in-depth understanding of how habits
work and how to get really good at creating and sticking to good habits and avoiding and breaking bad ones.
Alrighty, I hope you liked what I chose for you from The Power of Habit.
And if you did and you want to listen to the whole thing, it was published in May of 2018.
So you can go all the way back and find that and check it out.
Well, I hope you liked this episode.
I hope you found it helpful.
And if you did, subscribe the show, because it makes sure
that you don't miss new episodes. And it also helps me because it increases the rankings of
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who may like it just as much as you. And if you didn't like something about this episode or about
the show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just feedback to share, shoot me an email, mike at muscleforlife.com,
muscleforlife.com, and let me know what I could do better or just what your thoughts
are about maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future.
I read everything myself.
I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive feedback.
So thanks again for listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.