Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Top 5 Proven Ways to Build Muscle Faster
Episode Date: January 11, 2018“You have to change up your workouts more.”“You have to eat more protein.”“You have to increase your time under tension.”“You have to use more/less weight in your training.”If you’re... looking for advice on building muscle, you’ve probably heard plenty of one-liners like those.If you keep looking, you’ll hear a lot more. And, after it all, you’ll probably wind up like most people–confused, frustrated, and overwhelmed by a sea of contradictory tips, “hacks,” strategies, and shortcuts, with no idea who to believe and what to do next.Well, I have good new for you: Out of all the possible things you could know about diet and training, 20% are going to give you 80%+ of your results.In fact, I’d go as far as saying that the average person looking to build a lean, muscular, strong physique can learn everything they need to know in 7 to 8 hours of reading. (And that’s what I try to provide in my books.)Don’t get me wrong–I’m all for continuing to learn and improve, but if you don’t manage your “information flow” properly, you can easily fall into the trap of “analysis by paralysis.”So, this episode isn’t going to teach you everything you need to know, but it’s going to give you a thorough understanding of the fundamentals of muscle building. Put these five principles into use and you will see results. Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
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Hey, this is Mike and welcome to another installment in my in five minutes or less series where
I answer one common question quickly and simply because while long form content is great,
sometimes it is also nice when someone just gets right to the point and tells you what to do and how to do it in five minutes or less. And that's what I do in these episodes.
I am going to give you the five most effective things you can do to gain muscle faster,
to build bigger muscles faster. Now, these aren't the only things that you can do, of course,
because there are many, many things that you can do, of course, because there
are many, many things that you can do that will impact muscle building to one degree or another.
But these five things are really the 20% of muscle building that's going to give you 80%
of the results. These are the fundamentals, the non-negotiables, the primary factors that drive muscle growth. So if you're looking to
gain muscle faster, then make sure you're getting these five things right before bothering with
anything else really. Because if you don't get these five things right, then nothing else is
going to matter all that much. For example, if you're not eating enough protein and enough
calories every day, then your meal timing doesn't really matter. So whether you are following an intermittent fasting type of protocol or a more traditional type of protocol, whether or not you are eating before, during, or after your workouts, none of that matters if you don't first get the fundamentals of caloric and protein intake right.
fundamentals of caloric and protein intake, right? Okay. So the first tip is to train harder, but not too hard. Now, when it comes to working out, most people fall into one of two buckets.
They either push themselves way harder than they should in their training, or they don't push
themselves hard enough. And as far as mistakes go, I would say the former is probably worse because it eats up time. It eats
up your health. It eats up your motivation. And it also can eventually lead to overtraining.
Overtraining isn't easy to do. When many people think they're overtrained, they are factually not,
but you can get there if you push yourself hard enough for long enough, and if you are in a caloric deficit
as well, or at least in a deficit far more often than a surplus, you can get there. The key to
making long-term steady progress then is somewhere in the middle of those two extremes. So you want
to be training hard enough to overreach, to push your body a bit beyond its limits so then it can adapt.
But you don't want to go so far as to overtrain.
And you also don't want to fall into a rut of half-assed, kind of just good enough workouts that don't really produce any results.
workouts that don't really produce any results. And that last point is particularly important because it explains why so many people start out, do well, see great changes in the mirror,
see great progression in the gym, but then after six or nine months or so, fail to see any further
progress. What they don't realize is just how rigorous you have to be with both your diet and your training to continue making
progress as an intermediate and then eventually an advanced weightlifter. In terms of your diet,
your overall caloric intake and your macronutrient breakdown become very important and consistency
in particular becomes very important. When you start out,
you can be pretty sloppy with your calories and your macros. And simply because your body is so hyper responsive to resistance training, you are going to see results. Not so once you are
an intermediate and definitely not so when you're an advanced weightlifter. As the Instagrammers say,
you have to be on point with your diet if you
want to see consistent progress as an intermediate or an advanced weightlifter. And that means you
have to be very consistent with your calories. They need to be where they need to be every single
day or at least, you know, five or six days out of every week. And the same thing goes for your
macros. You can't have your protein
all over the place. You can't be eating a half a gram of protein per pound of body weight for
several days and then back up to, you know, the 0.8 to one gram per pound where it needs to be.
You really have to keep everything tight. And in terms of training, what many people don't realize
is just how much work it takes to continue building muscle and strength as an intermediate and
advanced weightlifter. It comes very easily in the beginning. So let's say for every unit of
effort or of work that you put in in the gym in the beginning, let's say you're getting one unit
of muscle or strength back, just for the sake of an analogy. When you go into your second year,
you probably are getting a half of a unit back for every unit you put in. As you go into your third year, it's probably now
a quarter of a unit back. And as time goes on, what you get back just gets smaller and smaller.
And what that means then is you can't get complacent with your training. You can't
turn it into exercise. If you want to continue progressing, if you want to continue gaining
muscle and gaining strength, you can't just go to the gym and go through the motions and get a bit of a
pump and not push yourself all that hard.
You know, just kind of maybe a little bit outside your comfort zone at most and then
leave.
You can do that if you want to just burn some energy and you want to reap the health benefits
of exercise.
Sure.
But again, if you want to continue improving
your physique, that's not going to work. You have to maintain the training mentality. And what that
means is you have to have clear goals in terms of progressive overload in particular, in terms of
increasing whole body strength, because that really is what it comes down to, especially as a natural
weightlifter. If you want to continue getting bigger over time, you have to continue getting stronger. So then that means you have
to program for that with that goal in mind. And you have to be structured with your workout
program. You can't just kind of show up and do whatever you want to do for as long as you want
to do it and leave. You have to pay attention to the details and you have to push yourself hard in
your workouts and your workouts are going to hard in your workouts. And your workouts
are going to get harder over time. They will, because if you want to continue forcing your body
to adapt, if you want your body to continue to get bigger and stronger, then you have to make it
work harder and harder. And you can look at that in various different ways. One simple way to look at it could just be heavy sets or hard sets.
So that's why you'll see many advanced weightlifters, especially bodybuilders.
And it's hard to say, of course, if any given bodybuilder is natural or not.
But if you look at someone like Eric Helms, for example, who I do think truly is a natural
bodybuilder, you'll see that his workouts are difficult.
He does a lot of work in his workouts, a lot more working sets than he would probably recommend
to something, somebody new just starting out.
And that's because that's what it takes, you know, for his body to continue to progress.
It takes that much work. Okay. So the next tip here
is something I mentioned earlier, and that is eating enough protein. Now, dietary laxity is
simply one of the biggest mistakes you can make as an intermediate plus weightlifter. The bottom
line is no workout program, no matter how well it's designed and no matter how willing you are to work hard at it,
can overcome a poor diet. And that's especially true when you are an intermediate plus
weightlifter. When you're new, you can get away with quite a few mistakes if your training is
set up correctly, because as I mentioned earlier, your body is just hyper responsive to it. So your protein intake can
be lower than optimal. Your calories can be lower or even higher than optimal, and you can still see
good results. But once the newbie gains are done, then you are simply not going to get very far if
you don't really get your food right. And a big part of getting your
food right, of course, is getting your protein right. And not just getting it right in terms of
a single number, but getting it right consistently, hitting that number every day. I really should
emphasize that because I've worked with thousands and thousands of people now over the years. And one of the most common mistakes that intermediate plus weightlifters make in terms of protein intake
is not eating enough consistently. For example, many people tend to eat a good amount of protein
on the days that they train and then eat a lot less on the days that they don't train because
they would rather eat carbs or fats than protein
because they're tastier. And while I understand that, that is a mistake. Remember that your body
is recovering from your workouts for the next few days. Protein synthesis rates start dropping,
I think around the 36 hour to 48 hour mark. So after a day and a half or two days, you're not
really building muscle
anymore, but there still are other recovery processes that are going on that in some cases
require amino acids. So if you train, eat enough protein on that day, that's good, but then drop
your protein intake to half of what it should be for the following days, your body is not able to
recover properly. Oh, and in case you're wondering how much is enough protein, somewhere around one gram of
protein per pound of body weight per day is good. If you are maintaining your bulking and you want
to squeeze in, I guess, a bit more carbs or fats, you can go as low as 0.8 grams per pound of body
weight per day. And if you're cutting, and especially if you are lean already and fairly
muscular and you're cutting, I recommend you actually go a little bit higher, go up to
somewhere around 1.2 grams per pound of body weight per day, just to maximize muscle retention.
Another thing worth mentioning, just because we're talking protein intake, is protein timing. So when
you're eating it and how frequently you are eating it. This isn't nearly as important as the overall amount of protein that you're eating. And I actually don't want to get into
all the details of it because it'll just make this way too long. But if you do want the details,
then you can head over to muscleforlife.com and search for protein timing and check out an article
I wrote on it. And I may have actually already done a video on this too. You may search my
YouTube as well. You might find a video too. But the long story short is that
eating 20 to 40 grams of protein every three hours or so may actually be better for muscle
building, especially over the long term than eating larger amounts of protein more infrequently.
Furthermore, having some protein before and after your workouts is probably better for muscle building over the long term than not.
So having 20 to 40 grams of protein anywhere from, let's say, an hour and a half to two hours before your workout to an hour to an hour and a half after your workout is probably better than not.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
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the little black book of workout motivation. Now these books have sold well over 1 million copies and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can find them anywhere online where you
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slash Audible and sign up for your account. Okay. So the next tip here is don't cheat your form.
And there's a reason why using improper form is called cheating because you are cheating yourself
out of gains. And also depending on the exercise, increasing the risk of injury.
Remember that the goal with every rep that you do is not to see how much weight you can move.
The goal is to make your muscles work as hard as possible.
And the better your form is, the better you are going to be able to do this.
and the better your form is, the better you are going to be able to do this.
Now, when I say form, what I'm talking about is technique and range of motion, right? Those are the two aspects of form. So examples of proper technique are moving the weights in a controlled
manner, keeping your elbows tucked in when you bench press, maintaining a neutral lower back when you deadlift and not letting your knees cave in when
you ascend on the squat. And as far as range of motion goes, we have getting the bar down to your
chest when you bench press, we have getting your hips slightly below parallel when you squat,
and we have getting the bar to your collarbone area when you're overhead pressing.
And it's very important that you get both of these things right because poor technique increases the risk of injury.
And in some cases, shifts the workload to muscles that you are not trying to target or emphasize.
And reducing the range of motion simply reduces the effectiveness of the exercise because it makes your muscles do less work.
So if you haven't put much time into learning or practicing proper form in the exercises that you
do most often, and I would say especially on the big compound exercises like the bench press,
overhead press, squat, and deadlift, it's time well spent. I'd recommend that you really groove it in so well that it becomes unconscious because
when the weights get heavy and the sets get hard, it can be easy to let your form slip without
realizing it. And if you let your form slip intentionally, so you can get an extra rep or two,
or if you use poor form intentionally so you can
move more weight, just stop. It's not worth the risk. Okay, so the next tip here is to eat enough
calories. Now, your body's ability to build muscle is heavily impacted by how much food you eat,
by how many calories you eat. Eating enough protein isn't
enough. If you want to build muscle as quickly as possible, then you need to make sure you're
eating enough calories as well. Because if you under eat, if you don't eat enough calories,
then your body's muscle building machinery is just not going to work as well as it could.
Now, this is simply a matter of energy balance, of course, which if you are not familiar with, I would recommend that you head over to muscleforlife.com and search energy balance
and check out the article I wrote on it. But the long story short is that if you are eating more
calories than you're burning, you're in a calorie surplus. If you're eating fewer calories than
you're burning, you're in a calorie deficit and you need to be in a calorie deficit to lose weight or lose fat,
of course, but there is a price to pay, at least in terms of muscle building, when you are in a
calorie deficit. Specifically, studies have shown that a calorie deficit directly impairs muscle
protein synthesis. So that means that your body is simply just not able to build muscle tissue
as efficiently when it is
being consistently fed fewer calories than it's burning. Research also shows that a calorie
deficit reduces anabolic hormone levels like testosterone levels, for example, and increases
catabolic hormone levels like cortisol, which is basically the exact opposite you want if you're
trying to maximize muscle growth. And a calorie deficit also just impairs your workout performance. It makes it harder to continue progressing in your workouts.
And especially for intermediate and advanced weightlifters, you can pretty much forget about
progression. Your goal is to maintain as much strength as possible. Really, you are probably
going to lose at least a few reps on your big lifts, especially on, well, it impacts some people
differently. Some people tend to lose more on their upper body than their lower body. And some
people it's the other way around, but regardless at the end of a cut, you are usually a bit weaker
than when you started. And of course you don't gain muscle by getting weaker. And so those are
all reasons why maximizing muscle growth requires that you stay out of a calorie deficit as much as possible.
So when you look at it on a day-to-day basis for every seven days, if you want to look at it at a week or a month or however you want to look at it, you want to be in a calorie deficit as few of those days as possible if you want to maximize muscle growth.
And the most reliable way to do that then is to overshoot
your body's caloric needs. So you calculate your total daily energy expenditure as accurately as
you can. Of course, it's always a moving target. It's always kind of a guess, but you try to get
it as accurately as you can. And then you eat about 10% more than that to make sure that you
are not in a deficit. And you do that every day. That is the
key to a good lean bulk and especially as an intermediate and advanced weightlifter.
Okay, so the next tip here is to track your progress and this is a hugely important part
of training as an intermediate plus weightlifter that many, many people get wrong. I used to get
it wrong myself. I used to get it wrong myself.
I used to show up and do more or less the same exercises every week with the same weights
and even probably the same reps because I wasn't tracking my progress and therefore I didn't know
whether I was going up or down. And I was stuck in a rut for quite some time and that's one of
the big reasons why. So what this boils down to is on the dietary side of things, tracking your
food intake,
using an app like MyFitnessPal, or just following a meal plan, which is what I prefer to do.
So I like to just work everything out, make sure that, you know, I have a perfect day
of calories and macros and also food choices, you know, that I'm eating enough nutritious foods.
Then I just eat those foods every day until I get sick of something and I make a substitution. So let's say, you know, if my lunch gets boring, then I will take my numbers that I've allotted to that lunch and just come up with something different that fits those numbers and then eat that every day until, you know, eventually Iing you are eating foods that you like i find that you know i don't
really get food burnout i keep the same things every day for months on end with slight variations
here and there and actually look forward to every meal and in terms of training it means tracking
what you're actually doing in your workouts so you can see if you're progressing because again
as i mentioned earlier your number one goal as a natural weightlifter is to increase your whole body strength over time. And to do that, you have to
be adding weight to the bar over time. And to do that, you have to be gaining reps on your exercises
over time because eventually you can turn those additional reps into more weight. And for tracking,
you can use an app. You could use my app stacked.
You could use another app. You can use the notepad app on your phone. You could use a
Google spreadsheet, or you could just bring a notebook into the gym. Whatever you want to do
works so long as you can see historically where your numbers are and where they're going and where
they need to go for you to be continually progressing. If you don't do that, then I promise you, you will get stuck in a rut unless you have
eidetic memory or something and you can perfectly recall every set of every workout that you do,
then you're fine. But if that's not you, then you need to track your workouts.
All right, the fifth and final tip is to do everything that you can to enhance your body's
ability to recover from your workouts. Because
as we all know, you don't build muscle in the gym, you build muscle out of the gym, right? So in the
gym, you're putting in the work. That is a stimulus, right? You're breaking muscle down
and you're telling your body, hey, you need to repair this muscle damage. And ideally, you need
to add a bit to it and you need to get stronger to better ready yourself for the next training bout.
And therefore, the better your body can recover from your workouts, the more you can benefit from them individually, the harder they can be, and the more often you can train, the more work you can do.
you can do. Now we've already covered a couple very important aspects of recovery, which are eating enough calories and eating enough protein, but there are a few others that are worth mentioning
as well. And one of them is to make sure that you are giving your muscles enough rest in between
the workouts that you're doing. This is particularly relevant these days because
high frequency and high volume and even just high load training is fairly popular.
So you have workout programs that have you training all the major muscle groups several
times per week with rather high amounts of volume and rather heavy weights. And that's dangerous
territory, at least for us natural weightlifters. For people on enough drugs, that's great. But if you're not on
the drugs, not so great. Now that isn't to say that you can't train a muscle group a few times
a week, but if you are not managing your total weekly volume and if you are not managing the
intensity, so the load, how much weight you are lifting in those workouts, it can get pretty grueling, pretty fast. And again,
that's the road to overtraining. That is how eventually you run yourself into the ground.
And if you want to learn more about all of that, head over to muscleforlife.com and search for
muscle building workout. And you'll see an article I wrote called how to create the ultimate muscle
building workout. It breaks it all down. Getting enough sleep is another hugely important aspect of recovery. Most people need about seven to eight
hours per night. And if you get less than that too often, it is going to impact your training
negatively. And if you have trouble sleeping, if you have trouble getting enough sleep,
there are a number of things you can do to improve the quality of your sleep and
also the duration of your sleep. Head over to muscleforlife.com and search for sleep and you
will see an article that I wrote on that. And lastly, we have supplementation, which is the
least important but worth mentioning because the right supplements can help speed up your recovery.
And the two in particular that I like for this purpose are creatine,
which I'm sure you've heard about. It is probably the most researched molecule in all sports nutrition and the weight of the evidence makes it very clear that it works. Most people are going
to respond well to it and it's going to help them gain muscle and strength faster. And research
shows it can also reduce exercise induced muscle damage and helps reduce
muscle soreness resulting from workouts and improves muscle repair. So it's just an all-around
great compound for improving recovery. And all that is why you find both creatine and L-carnitine
L-tartrate in my post-workout supplement recharge, which you can learn more
about at legionathletics.com slash recharge if you want to check it out. All right, so that's it.
You have train heavy, train hard, but not so heavy and hard that you eventually overtrain,
eat enough protein and enough calories, track your progress and always push yourself to be improving
over your previous workouts. Make recovery just as much of a priority as training and be patient.
If you do those things, you will have no trouble gaining muscle and strength. Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it
interesting and helpful. And if you did, and don't mind doing me a favor and want to help me make
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be better. I read everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback,
so please do reach out. All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode,
and I hope to hear from you soon. And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me. Seriously though,
I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead,
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