Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Which "Muscle Building Supplements" Work and Which Don't?
Episode Date: April 8, 2016In this episode, I talk about several supplements that are supposed to help you build muscle faster and explain which work and which don't. 03:48 - The truth about supplement companies and "muscle bu...ilding supplements." Which supplements don't help you build muscle? 13:53 - Natural testosterone boosters 20:41 - ZMA 25:03 - D-aspartic acid 29:20 - BCAAs 36:21 - HMB Which supplements help you build muscle? 40:50 - Whey protein powder 48:49 - Creatine 55:11 - Beta alanine ARTICLES RELATED TO THIS PODCAST: The Absolute Best (and Worst) Supplements for Muscle Growth: http://www.muscleforlife.com/the-best-supplements-for-muscle-growth/ How to Actually Increase Your Testosterone (and How Not to): https://legionathletics.com/how-to-increase-testosterone/ The Definitive Guide to Why Low-Carb Dieting Sucks: http://www.muscleforlife.com/low-carb-diet/ The Ultimate Guide to the Best Creatine Supplements: https://legionathletics.com/best-creatine-supplement/ 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: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
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Hey, it's Mike, and I just want to say thanks for checking out my podcast.
I hope you like what I have to say.
And if you do like what I have to say in the podcast, then I guarantee you're going to
like my books.
Now, I have several books, but the place to start is Bigger Leaner Stronger If You're
a Guy and Thinner Leaner Stronger If You're a Girl.
I mean, these books, they're basically going to teach you everything you need to know about
dieting, training, and supplementation to build muscle, lose fat, and look and feel great without having to give up all the foods you love or live
in the gym grinding through workouts that you hate. Now you can find these books everywhere.
You can buy them online, you know, Amazon, Audible, iBooks, Google Play, Barnes & Noble,
Kobo, and so forth. And if you're into audio books like me, you can actually get one of them for free with a 30-day free trial of Audible.
To do that, go to www.muscleforlife.com forward slash audio books and you can see how to do that there.
I make my living primarily as a writer, so as you can imagine, every book sold helps.
So please do check out my books if you haven't already.
Now also, if you like my work in general, then I think you're going to really like what I'm doing with my supplement company, Legion. As you may know,
I'm really not a fan of the supplement industry. I've wasted who knows how much money over the
years on worthless junk supplements and have always had trouble finding products that I
actually liked and felt were worth buying. And that's why I finally decided to just make my own.
Now, a few of the things that make my supplements unique
are one, they're 100% naturally sweetened and flavored.
Two, all ingredients are backed
by peer-reviewed scientific research
that you can verify for yourself
because we explain why we've chosen each ingredient
and we cite all supporting studies on our website,
which means you can dive in
and go validate everything that we say.
Three, all ingredients are also included at clinically effective dosages, which are the exact dosages
used in the studies proving their effectiveness. And four, there are no proprietary blends, which
means that you know exactly what you're buying. Our formulations are 100% transparent. So if that
sounds interesting to you, then head over to legionathletics.com. That's L-E-G-I-O-N
athletics.com. And you can learn a bit more about the supplements that I have as well as my mission
for the company, because I want to accomplish more than just sell supplements. I really want
to try to make a change for the better in the supplement industry because I think it's long
overdue. And ultimately, if you like what you see and you want to buy something, then you can use
the coupon code podcast, P-O-D-C-A-S-T, and you'll save 10%
on your first order. So thanks again for taking the time to listen to my podcast and let's get
to the show. Welcome, welcome to another episode of the Most Full Life Podcast. I'm Mike, Muscle for Life are probably the, they probably account for the majority of the money spent in the supplement
space, but muscle building supplements are close third. And specifically, we're going to talk about
three of the more popular muscle building supplements, kind of air quotes, you know,
muscle building supplements that don't work. And those are testosterone boosters, BCAAs and HMB.
You know, a lot of people buy these products. They're heavily promoted as
helping with building muscle. And then we'll talk about three of the muscle building supplements
that do work and that I do recommend that you take and use if your budget supports it.
And if you want to take supplements, and those are whey protein, creatine, and beta-alanine.
And along the way, we'll talk about a few others like glutamine. A lot of people think glutamine helps build muscle. It doesn't and so forth. So let's just dive in.
Many years ago, before I was doing this and had my own supplement line and blah, blah, blah,
I was like most people in that I would spend a lot of money on supplements. I would probably
spend, I mean, there was a time when I was spending like $300 or $400 a month on supplements,
which is a lot of money and especially a lot of money considering that I wasn't getting really anything for it.
Most of it was on – I tried random different testosterone boosters and growth hormone boosters and muscle-building stuff, not so much on fat loss.
And then I'd buy protein powder and I'd try pre-workouts. But some of these
muscle builders that are in the back area, under lock and key, pretty expensive. I mean,
you could spend $60, $70, $80 on a single bottle. I never really noticed a difference.
There are probably a couple, I can remember a couple products where I actually felt the difference, which now that I know what I know about this, the supplement space,
uh, makes me wonder what was in it. Like there was a product called pink magic. Uh, it was made
by USP labs who now I would never, ever buy anything from USP labs just because of the
scandals that they've run into with jacked or jack 3d, or obviously it's Jacked is how they want it to be pronounced.
But a lot of people say Jack 3D, so you know what I'm talking about.
Which had, you know, there was the DMAA problem there,
and then an Oxy Elite Pro.
There was the liver failure problem, and then there was Prozac in it as well.
So do not trust this company.
Who knows what they put in their stuff.
But they had a product called Pink Magic that was supposed to be a testosterone booster. And I remember, I remember noticing a difference,
like feeling a bit more energetic and a bit more, uh, sex drive and feeling a bit stronger in the
gym for like the first bottle that I had taken. And then I had gotten another one later and then
didn't notice anything. So, you know, I don't know. It's very possible that what some
companies do is they may release a product that has some sort of chemical in it that obviously
they're not promoting that's in it as it could be a drug, it could be something. And then they use
that initial run. So let's say they run, you know, I don't know, 50,000 bottles or something that is
spiked with something that you will actually feel actually works. And then they get it out there and that generates word of mouth because,
because I mean, the, the similar to, to the book space, the supplement space is very much driven
by word of mouth. You know, a lot of people, they, people that are into working out, they
generally end up working out with other people and they get to know people in the gym and people
are talking about, you know, what supplements they've tried and it's kind of good water cooler
conversation.
Oh,
Hey,
so did you try this new pre-workout?
You try this new blog.
So you get 50,000 bottles out there that are spiked with,
in this case,
something,
I don't know.
I mean,
I don't know.
I don't know.
I never,
I never,
there was never any scandals that came out regarding pink magic.
So it could have just been straight placebo,
which is also something that something companies count on is just that your belief that it's going to work can very well
make it work. So, you know, I thought at that time that I was a bit naive in that I thought
supplement companies were, uh, I mean, I didn't take all their marketing at face value, but I
thought that they were generally like professional companies that, you know, were on kind of, at least some of them would, were on the cutting edge of research and they
really were trying to make good products. I mean, I didn't really realize it's just a dog and pony
show and they're really primarily just marketing companies that sell trash products. That's more
or less supplement companies. So I didn't know that at the time. So I, when I, you know, if
there was this new testosterone booster based on this new research and it has this new herb and blah, blah, blah. And I was like, okay, I mean, sounds
interesting. Sure. I'll try it with the belief that maybe it works. I mean, they, they say it
works. And maybe I heard from someone in the gym that it works. Um, so you get, you get those
bottles out there, uh, spiked and then generates a lot of word of mouth where people say, Hey, did you try
that new pink magic or whatever your, your next runs don't contain the molecule, uh, or the drug,
whatever it is. And because then you can't get caught. So, you know, if, if the only way you
can get caught is, is from a bottle from, from a batch that was run, who knows? I mean, it could
be by the time you get caught, it could have been, Oh, that, that was, that was a year and a half ago or something like that. But so you spike your
first batch, get word of mouth going, and then your batches going forward are, are clean. Um,
and of course they don't have the same results, but it doesn't matter because you know, that
initial impetus could sell you another, who knows, 200,000 bottles or something like that.
If you have big, you know, when we're talking about a big company with distribution into all, uh, all supplement
stores and online and everywhere. So that's, that's a formula. And I don't know if that's
what USP labs is doing or has done. Um, I mean, obviously you can look up the, the, the scandals
I was talking about previously are just public knowledge now. So you can just look that up online.
But I wouldn't be surprised if that's what they were doing just because, I mean, I guess it makes sense from a marketing standpoint.
It doesn't make sense from being a good human standpoint.
But, you know, again, I don't know.
Maybe, maybe not.
But so my point is I would try a lot of these random products that are supposed to increase testosterone or
increase this hormone or decrease estrogen or whatever. And for the most part, never really
noticed a difference. And now I know why. And that's really just because the vast majority,
I mean, this is one of the key takeaways of this podcast is the vast majority of muscle
building supplements are just worthless. There are a few that can help and yes,
they can help. And we know that scientifically, um, they are not anything like steroids. They're
not going to dramatically, you know, change the change your, your results. But when you are,
and I've said this, I've said this before that when you're, when you're a natural weightlifter,
you want to build muscle naturally. Um, you can, there are a lot of little things that you can do that by themselves don't do much,
but cumulatively actually do something. And that applies to fat loss too, where,
so if you take, you know, an individual supplement or take an individual molecule like caffeine,
for instance, it increases the, your, your basal metabolic rate by a certain
amount, depending on, depending on your sensitivity to it and depending on how, how often you take it
and how much and blah, blah, blah. But you know, just by itself, caffeine, you can't say caffeine
is a great weight loss drug or weight loss supplement or weight loss molecule because it
doesn't burn enough energy just by itself to make that big of a difference.
But when you start combining it, so if you have caffeine and then you have synephrine,
and then if you combine those with a couple other molecules that are found in the bitter
orange, like naringin and hesperidin, and then you combine that with green tea extract,
all of these things, they help you burn a little bit more fat, burn a little bit more
fat, or burn a little bit more energy and thereby burn more fat. You know, yohim beans are a good example. So you add
all those things together, which you can do safely if you just have your dosages right.
And now all of a sudden you're losing fat, you know, maybe 30 to 50% faster. So if you hadn't
taken any supplements, uh, you would, let's say you could lose a pound a week and then, you know,
you add all these supplements in and now you're losing a pound and a half a
week and you're losing it safely and there are no negative side effects, there's no reason not to do
it. It just costs a little bit of money. If you don't mind that, then that matters. So that applies
to muscle building supplements as well, where creatine, for instance, I'd say creatine by
itself is, I think it makes
enough of a difference that it really is just worth taking. If that's all you, if that's the
only supplement that you actually were taking, let's say a protein powder can be convenient.
Um, but let's say you don't even need that. You just eat your protein. If you're into weightlifting,
you should be taking creatine. If you have kidney disease, probably not. You should check with your
doctor, but if you're healthy, you should be taking creatine. But beta alanine is an example of it can, it does seem to increase muscle gain over time independently of increasing workout performance. But, you know, by itself, those effects are, they're not, they're not nothing. They're just minor. It's not, it's not steroids, but if you're combining, you know, beta alanine with creatine, then you're, you're adding a little bit
more to it. And unfortunately there aren't as many, you don't have as many options with muscle
building supplements as you do with fat loss. So you're not, there's no way that you are going to
take enough muscle building supplements to build muscle 50% faster. That's just not going to happen.
So, you know, if naturally, let's say you could, you could, you could gain, let's say 20 pounds of
muscle in your first year of weightlifting. There's no way that supplements are going to get you to,
to 30 pounds. I just, I mean, based on all the research and all the study I've done, I wouldn't
say that. Um, I would you, 25 pounds, maybe you could
probably get an extra three to five pounds with the right supplements if you are doing everything
else right, if you're eating right and training right. But, and even that, that might be a little
bit high, might be closer to, you know, maybe, maybe I would say probably 10 to 20% is what you
can get with natural supplements.
So if that's not all that exciting to you, I understand. Um, but that just is, that just is
what it is. So at least if you can go into, you know, if you're taking creatine or you're
considering taking creatine or the muscle building supplements that we're going to talk about,
you can go into it with realistic expectations and, you know, where you're not hinging your whole future of your training or
whether you're going to continue or not doesn't hinge on, oh, well, you know, if I can just add
in this creatine and finally, you know, I want to gain an extra five pounds in the next two months
of muscle, you know what I mean? It's just not going to happen. But if you have realistic
expectations and you're okay with that and you're thinking with over the next year or two, you could see an increase of let's say 10,
20% by doing what I want to talk about in this podcast, then that's the right frame of mind to
approach it from. So let's talk about bad or worthless muscle builders. And the first are
natural testosterone boosters. There's just so much wrong with these supplements. And they're very popular right now
because you can find, I've seen a couple studies that show that here in the West, in the US in
particular, the testosterone levels are declining in men. And this has a lot of guys worried. And
TRT, testosterone replacement therapy, is very popular right now and it's
very promoted.
And though, you know, if you're getting on testosterone, if you're on TRT, that will
make a difference.
You are going to feel different.
You're going to have more energy.
You are going to have more sex drive.
Depending on how what your dosages are, you are going to be stronger in the gym.
You know, if you're if you're
going very high like top end of normal then you will build muscle noticeably faster and get
stronger noticeably faster so you know it's there's an instant gratification to it it's just
hey you know inject uh just inject yourself every depending on what you're doing it could be i
actually don't know on standard trt if what type testosterone is it. Is it a once a week injection?
Are you doing it more frequently?
But regardless, hey, all you got to do is inject this stuff and you're going to feel
better immediately.
So, you know, testosterone is on a lot of guys' minds these days.
And a lot of people, though, they don't want to turn to drugs because of potential health
implications and psychological addiction, you know addiction risks and blah, blah,
blah. So they go, oh, I'll just turn to natural. What can I do naturally? And unfortunately,
the only things that you can do naturally to increase your testosterone that actually would
work are more lifestyle oriented and they are longer term solutions. There are no pills or
powders you can take that can make up for
bad lifestyle choices that lower testosterone levels, which if you want to learn more about
that, go over to legionathletics.com, go to the blog and search for testosterone. And I have a
pretty long article that I wrote on it that goes over what does and doesn't work in terms of
increasing testosterone naturally. And, uh,
and also might,
might ease your mind a bit.
And if you're really,
if all you're thinking about is muscle building and building a physique,
this is just a segue from talking about testosterone booster supplements in
general is that even if they did work and it's not going to make a difference
because it,
for you to really notice the difference in terms of, uh, muscle gain and, uh, and strength, uh, you're going to need to dramatically increase
your testosterone. You can't just increase it by 10, 15%. Uh, you might feel that you might feel a
little bit better. Uh, you might, you know, have a little bit more sex drive, but you're really not
going to notice much in the gym in terms of strength or
muscle endurance, if anything, and you're really not going to notice anything in terms of muscle
gain. So, you know, what a testosterone booster would have to do is it'd have to, let's say,
double or triple your testosterone levels, not increase it by 20, 25%, which even that would
be a ludicrous, that would be a, you know, over the top, uh, marketing claim
to say that, Oh, you could take this herb and increase your testosterone by, you know, 25%.
Um, that would, that would be, there's, they would not be supported by scientific research.
I can guarantee you that, but for, for it to, for such a product to deliver on how, you know,
the type of claims that are normally made to sell it, which is build muscle faster,
you know, get shredded, blah, blah, blah. It would have to double or triple your testosterone the type of claims that are normally made to sell it, which is build muscle faster,
get shredded, blah, blah, blah.
It would have to double or triple your testosterone levels.
And I guarantee you there is no way to do that naturally unless, I mean, you could do that through lifestyle changes if your lifestyle is really upside down.
If you have chronically high cortisol levels, let's say you don't sleep enough chronically,
high cortisol levels. So let's say, let's say you don't, you don't sleep enough, you know,
chronically or chronic, you're, you're an insomniac and you're deficient in, in various vitamins and minerals. You're deficient in like vitamin D and zinc, even a vitamin C deficiency
can affect testosterone levels, magnesium as well. Um, and you're doing a ton of cardio, uh,
and you're doing very little or no weightlifting. I mean, there are a lot of things you could do.
Low-carb dieting can lower testosterone levels because it can raise cortisol levels,
and there's an inverse relationship there.
As cortisol levels go up, it depresses testosterone levels.
So, yeah, if you took someone in an extreme situation
and you fixed all of that,
because let's say they could be bottomed
out. Let's say a guy was at 200 NGDL nanograms per deciliter of, of testosterone. So it's one
of the ways it can be measured. And whereas like, let's say normal would be around 600. So, so
because of a just terrible lifestyle, drink a lot of alcohol, blah, blah, blah. You know, so,
so he's down in the 150, 200 range. And also let's say overweight too,
just everything, everything you can do to lower your testosterone levels and then fix all of that
completely change, transform himself. Yes. I mean, then you can come back up to where his body would
normally be if he weren't doing all that stuff, let's say that's 600. And that person is going
to notice a difference in the gym. It may not be as dramatic as you would think, but they will
notice a difference in everything. But if you take someone who is, let's say, you know, has all that
stuff in, lives healthy, takes care of their body, doesn't, doesn't, isn't doing anything that is
really depressing as testosterone, you know, there's, there's just no way to double or triple
without exogenous, without, without injecting testosterone or pill or what is it?
Yeah, I think they do like a not pill pellet or creams or whatever. You have to introduce it
into the body externally. There's just nothing you can do to take someone that has normal
testosterone and double or triple it. And just to touch on a few ingredients,
if you look at testosterone boosters, you'll see that many contain tribulus terrestris.
And some of them like call that out as if that's a – and that's why you should buy this product because it has tribulus.
And several studies have shown that it does not work.
This isn't even one of those – because some ingredients will have like a rat study that increased testosterone in rats.
And then they'll say, oh, see, it increases testosterone.
You should take it. Well, we're not big rats. And then they'll say, Oh, see, it increases testosterone. You should take it.
Well,
we're not,
you know,
we're not big rats.
We're not big mice.
There are big differences in,
in terms of how our bodies work,
especially with metabolism.
When you,
when there are diet studies done with rats and certain types of rats can gain
fat a lot faster than humans.
And,
you know,
so this is a case though,
the,
where there's human research on tributous terrestris that shows it does not work.
It doesn't improve testosterone levels.
It doesn't improve body composition.
It doesn't improve exercise performance.
It's just worthless for if as a fitness person and trying to build a physique, it's worthless.
ZMA, zinc, magnesium, and normally vitamin B6 as well,
I believe, is another example of a supplement that if you're deficient in zinc or magnesium,
then that can depress testosterone levels. So fixing that can increase them. Same thing,
I think I mentioned this, but if I didn't, vitamin D, it's very important for many,
many reasons that you have enough vitamin D, but testosterone, there's a connection there between vitamin D levels and testosterone levels.
So ZMA, there's human research that shows that if you are not deficient in zinc or magnesium,
taking ZMA is not going to increase your testosterone levels. But that's not how most
supplement companies, well, if they sell a ZMA product, it's probably to promote,
it's either going to promote increased testosterone or better sleep. And I believe there's some research on magnesium
helping improve sleep quality. So I'd have to look on that. I'm not sure. I feel like I've seen that,
but I can tell you for sure that if you are not deficient in zinc or magnesium, it's not going
to increase your testosterone levels. And that's also why I kind of have an issue with the, um, even the title of a, of a, of a hormone booster
of a testosterone booster, because I've looked at for, for Legion for, for my supplement company,
I would, um, from a, from a financial standpoint, uh, I think I would love to have something that,
uh, it would be a hormone-type supplement for men.
And the reason why I don't is because of what I'm talking about in this podcast.
There's just no way.
I haven't found any formulation.
I haven't been able to, and I work with two very smart people as well, much smarter than I am, much more educated than I am, especially in this field with science reason, blah, blah, blah. And we just haven't come across
anything that would, that we would be able to sell with any enthusiasm. It would just be like,
well, if you're deficient in these couple of things that could help, but then again,
you could just take my multivitamin, which has all these things as well. So why would you even
want to take this? Because the multivitamin has much other good stuff as well. So, you know, it's just, and selling something as a hormone booster is kind of misleading because it's the best you
could hope for really is a, you could say hormone optimizer or because it would be if you're
deficient or if you have a situation where your hormone levels, your testosterone levels are being depressed, this could help you. But, you know, that's not, even from a marketing
standpoint, that's not, you're up against products that say, you know, 33% increase in testosterone.
And so, you know, what's somebody going to choose when they're looking at, well,
this one, you know, kind of says that it doesn't really even increase testosterone if I'm not deficient in certain vitamins and minerals.
And the best I can really hope for is a small increase, maybe temporary.
That would be like the honest sales pitch versus, oh, well, this like, you know, look at all the pictures of these shredded dudes and these girls hanging all over them.
And yeah, and bigger muscles and
better sex and better abs. Yeah, I want all that. I'll just buy that one.
So in the future, if there's more research and there are certain supplements that we're keeping
an eye on that are showing some promise, but it's preliminary research. It's not research that
we would be comfortable building a product around.
So we'll see, we'll see where that goes. But that's also why if you see a product that is really selling itself as a testosterone booster, it's getting increased your testosterone by so
much, just skip it. You know, I'll have people that will email me and say, Hey, what do you
think about this? Cause you'll have some of these, the, I guess you'd call them advertorials, but
they're on the internet where it looks like
it's some news website or some fitness magazine type of article or website. And it's really just
to get you to buy a product. And usually it's the shady rebill stuff. It's like the free bottle,
the free trial. If you ever come across those types of things, I don't care where they're
promoted. I don't care if it's men's health promoting or GNC's force factor or whatever.
Just skip it.
Oh, here's how Zac Efron got so jacked and shredded for his new movie or Chris Pratt for whatever movie or whatever.
And this is the product and it has all the pictures.
Just skip those.
They're all trash.
They are going to do nothing, I guarantee you.
So, diaspartic acid is another ingredient that you'll find in a lot of testosterone boosters. And the love affair with
diaspartic acid in the supplement industry kind of started, I want to say about six or seven years
ago, there was some research that showed that it could increase testosterone levels in both humans
and rats. And then of course, supplement companies jumped onto it and that became the thing.
I took diaspartic acid back in the day because I had heard about it.
And this is before I was educated.
And I was like, yeah, sure, I'll try it, I guess.
And I noticed that, funny enough, because now we know more about it because there's more research that has been done on it. And what basically what it boils down to is it looks like in some people, it can cause a
temporary mild increase in testosterone levels. It works. It seems to work in some people.
It seems to not really work in other people. Its effects are mild and they don't last very long,
maybe three or four weeks, which is interesting enough. I noticed when I first started taking
the aspartic acid, it wasn't a huge difference, but I noticed I was sleeping a little bit better and I had a little bit more energy, a little bit more sex
drive, and it lasted for a few weeks and then it went away. And then anytime in the future that I
tried it again, same product, it just did nothing. And that's in line with now we know, you know,
we know a bit more because there's, there have been more studies since that initial, it was like
a 2009 study that came out that, that kind of kicked off, uh, the, the diaspartic acid market, at least in, in the fitness space. And now we know more,
and that's basically what we know at this point. So when you see, you know, products that are
pushing those, those ingredients, tribulus terrestris, uh, ZMA and DMA DAA, you know,
just know that you're, it's, you're not going to get anything out of it. And
if, if you are deficient in zinc and magnesium or, or, or other even vitamin D or other things
like that, in my opinion, uh, a well-formulated multivitamin is, is a better choice because
you'll get more for your money, really. I mean, you're going to pay, uh, let's say $40 for a
bottle of a, of a hormone optimizer or testosterone optimizer or booster or whatever,
and you're going to get a few, let's say that what actually helps your body is the zinc,
magnesium, and vitamin D that's in there, and then you have a bunch of these other worthless
ingredients that you're paying money for, you might as well just get a good multivitamin that
has the zinc and the magnesium and vitamin D plus a bunch of other
stuff that's actually good, that's actually going to benefit you. And the same thing goes for
ingredients like salt palmetto. You'll see a lot in a lot of products and just sold by itself and
promoted heavily. Horny goatweed, uricoma, longifolia jack is another one, holy basil,
velvet antler. So you have a lot of boosting type of type of ingredients that again are just
either they've either been proven to not work or there's just not sufficient evidence that they do
work. Uh, and you know, that could be because there's just preliminary research or it's rat
research or whatever. Um, if you want to dive into this deeper, I would suggest going to examine.com
and searching for testosterone booster or just Google examine testosterone booster.
And you'll see that a pretty, pretty extensive collection of the ingredients that you'll find in testosterone boosting supplements.
And, you know, if you're not familiar with examine, I don't even know how many studies,
there are probably hundreds of thousands of studies cited now.
I don't even know how many studies, they probably have hundreds of thousands of studies cited now.
It's all about the science of supplements.
And they have a lot of very smart people and very educated people producing their content and doing their research.
And it's just a great place to go.
It's written for scientists, I'll warn you, it's not written for layman. Um, some of the, the product pages or some of the supplement pages have editors notes
that kind of explain certain things that break things down and make it simple, but it's a,
it's very technical. It's very dense, but there is enough. You can sort through it enough where,
you know, if you want to know what are the testosterone boosting effects of blah,
you go to that page and they'll have a section on testosterone boosting. There'll be a lot of
words that you don't know. And a lot of things that you're like, I have no idea what
they're saying, but you'll come to a point where you'll see, oh, okay. So in this study, did it
work or not? Yes or no. You can get answers to that. So I would recommend checking that out.
It's just a good resource. If you want to also fact check anything that I say or anything,
anybody says examines a good resource for that. All right. So now let's talk BCAAs.
Very popular supplement, a supplement that I get asked fairly frequently why I don't have one.
And the reason why is because if you eat enough protein and you don't train fasted,
which means that you don't train when your insulin levels are at a low baseline level
because you haven't eaten food in, let's
say, I mean, it really depends how big your previous meal was, but it could be anywhere
from three to six hours. So you eat food, your body processes it. Insulin plays a role in,
in processing the food that you eat. Once it's done processing and some levels come down,
you're now in a fasted state. So if you don't train in a fasted state, um, and if you didn't
have protein, there's just really nothing that BCAAs can offer
you. And if they're going to do anything, it's going to be so negligible, it's just not even
worth the money. And if you're not familiar with BCAAs, it's branched chain amino acids.
It's three amino acids, leucine, isoleucine, and valine. And out of those three, leucine for
muscle building purposes is the most important because it stimulates muscle growth is just a simple way to think about it on a cellular level.
So that's one of the reasons why whey protein is a great source of protein is because it's
very high in leucine, which makes it good for muscle building purposes, I guess you
could say.
And whereas proteins that would be very low in leucine wouldn't be, they wouldn't stimulate
as much protein synthesis as, so like 20 grams of whey would stimulate in an immediate sense, more protein synthesis than 20 grams of a
protein that would be much lower in leucine, which could be, you know, a protein, there'll be a plant
based protein, for instance. Nothing immediately comes to mind, but like, let's say protein you'd
find in something like broccoli. Broccoli, when compared to wh whey has a lot less leucine. Isoleucine has similar effects to leucine. They're
just not, uh, nearly as significant and valine for muscle building reasons, purposes really has
no role in things. It doesn't seem to do much of anything. Now, the reason why BCAs are just very
popular is because they're easy to sell. I mean, you can cite research that shows, oh, well, these people took BCAs before their workouts or in
during their workouts or throughout the day or whatever, and they gained more muscle than these
people. And it's clean, it's simple, and you know, it's convincing. But in some cases, I mean,
I feel the research is just biased.
You know, when it's funded by the company that is known for their BCAA product, that's all they – really what they push is their BCAA product.
That's their best-selling product.
I mean, yeah, that's an obvious conflict of interest.
In some cases, this comes back to the faster training point of where if you are, let's say, you know, let's
say you train first thing in the morning. So you, you stop eating at 10 PM at the, you know, at the
previous night, and then you go to bed at whatever, 11 or 12, and then you're up at seven, let's say.
So you haven't eaten in quite some time, obviously you're in a fasted state and then you go lift
weights and then you eat after. Um, in that case, if you were to take BCAAs before you go train
over time, there is a good chance that you're going to gain more muscle.
And the reason why is when you are training in a fasted state, muscle breakdown is accelerated.
So when you're training, you're obviously causing, uh, the breakdown of muscle cells,
you're damaging muscle cells.
And, uh, some of the, like to a, to a, to a point, that's good. That's what we want. That's one of the, you could say pathways to muscle
growth. That's one of the stimuli that causes the body to adapt and build muscles bigger and
stronger, but too much muscle breakdown is a problem because at the end of the day, muscle
gain is simply the difference between how much you could say muscle, how many muscle proteins
were synthesized were created versus how many were broken down or lost.
So if you can do anything you can do to increase protein synthesis, like, you know, that's one of the major things that steroids do is they just greatly elevate protein synthesis.
So your body is able to synthesize many more muscle proteins every day than normal.
So doing that increases, you know, total muscle gain or
decreasing, uh, muscle breakdown increases total muscle gain. That's one of the reasons why high,
high carb dieting, uh, can help you gain muscle faster. There are several reasons, but one of them
is if you have a high carb diet, generally your, your insulin levels are just generally higher
and insulin isn't a, isn't an anabolic hormone, but it's an anti-catabolic hormone, meaning that it lowers muscle breakdown levels. And this has been proven in many studies,
and I've written about it many times. So that high carb diet, what it's doing is, if you look
at it in terms of total muscle breakdown rates in a 24-hour period, it is lowering them because that's one of the effects of insulin
in the body. So when you're training in a fasted state, you are losing more muscle cells. You could
think of it, or they're getting damaged, they need to be replaced. And by having leucine in
particular, about three grams or so before training, what leucine does then is because
it stimulates protein synthesis, it counterbalances the acceleration and muscle breakdown that occurs
while you train fasted. And leucine does have an insulin response. It does stimulate the production
of insulin, but it doesn't cause the production of nearly as much as food as a, as food as a meal. And so in terms of an acute spike,
and then the L that your, your levels don't remain elevated for nearly as long.
So that's where BCAs can come in and where having, you know, 10 grams of BCAs will generally provide
you with two or three grams of leucine, uh, before fasted training that can help you gain muscle,
uh, faster over time. And it'll probably also improve
your performance a little bit as well. Now, those effects are minimal. Those are like going back to
the, to the beginning of the podcast. One of the just little things, a little tweak, you can give
you a little bit of, uh, a couple more percent and you add it to your routine kind of thing.
Um, it's not a, it's not a huge make break, but you know, I do a lot of, I do all my training
fast these days just because I've come to enjoy it really. Um, so if I'm not cutting, then I just have a, I just, I don't do BCAs. I
just do straight leucine. I just do three grams of leucine. It doesn't taste good, but at this
point I don't care. Mix it with water, drink it down. Um, you can mix it with pre-workout too,
but it makes your pre-workout taste quite a bit worse. So if you, I kind of like the taste of my
pre-workout. So I just kind of get my leucine down and be like, and then wash my mouth out and then
actually enjoy my pre-workout. If you are training fast get my leucine down and be like, and then wash my mouth out and then actually enjoy my pre-workout.
If you are training fasted, I would say just buy leucine.
You're going to save money because the other two amino acids aren't going to do anything.
And if you are not training fasted, then you most definitely don't need to be taking it before you train or during or after.
And if you are eating enough protein, then it has no use either.
And if you're not eating enough protein, you can't replace the protein that you should be eating with BCAAs because protein
contains quite a few more amino acids that your body needs to do everything that it does,
including building muscle. It's not just three amino acids that you get from protein.
And the last muscle building supplement that sucks is HMB or beta hydroxy beta methyl butyrate. And this is a metabolite would be the word. It's
a molecule that, uh, when your body, when it metabolized and it breaks down leucine and one
of the molecules that is, that comes out of this or that results from, from, from that process is
HMB. And, um, this has been sold for several years now as a very potent muscle
builder. There've been a couple of studies that, that demonstrate outrageous results. I mean,
results that you couldn't even get with steroids where you have like, you know, experience resistance
trained men lifting weights for 10 weeks with HMB and the, you know, the HMB group gained X, I don't remember the exact numbers, but a large
amount of muscle and lost a large amount of fat. And that's it. That was the only difference and
diets were matched and training was matched and blah, blah, blah. And that's just nonsense.
Again, if you look at who funded that research, it's the person that owns the patent on HMB. So
no surprise. And if you look at, there are the person that owns the patent on HMB. So no, no surprise.
And if you look at, there are several studies that don't have these biases or these conflicts
of interest and show that it basically had no effects on strength. I think there was one that
showed slight, a slight boost in strength. Um, but there, there are several others that the
general consensus is HMB doesn't make you stronger. It doesn't help you build muscle faster. It just,
is HMB doesn't make you stronger. It doesn't help you build muscle faster. It just, it just doesn't work like that. That said, one of my supplements contains HMB, uh, it's called forge.
And the reason why is because forge is it's, it's a, it's kind of a unique product in that it is
specifically for facet training because it has HMB and it has your hand being, and it has another,
uh, molecule called CDP choline and, or citicholine. And the reason why is because
research shows that while HMB isn't, isn't anabolic kind of similar to insulin, like I was
talking about earlier, it's not anabolic, but it's very anti-catabolic, which is what we want from
the leucine, you know, that I take before I train fasted. It's anti-catabolic. That's why I'm taking
it. It helps reduce muscle breakdown
rates. And, and research shows the HMB is about 20 times as anti-catabolic and it has no insulin
response whatsoever. So for the purpose of mitigating the downsides of, of a faster training,
HMB is great. And the reason why I take leucine before I train fast and not HMB is because I
don't need to be taking yourohimbine in particular every day.
I'm not cutting right now.
I'm just maintaining.
So there's no reason to take yohimbine every day.
I only take it when I'm cutting.
So I could buy HMB as a separate supplement, but it's also very expensive because it's overhyped and overmarketed.
So leucine works fine. HMB is better, but, but you know, leucine works fine. Um, and it's cheap.
So I just use that. All right. So those are the three most popular types of muscle building
supplements, at least right now that, uh, you shouldn't, you shouldn't waste your money on.
Um, I mentioned glutamine earlier glutamine. I feel like the hype on that has finally died down
like many years ago when I was wasting much money on supplements, on worthwhile supplements.
That's when glutamine is really being pushed as like, oh, this is powerful, particularly for
muscle for like post-workout. Like if you take this post-workout, you know, your muscles are
going to recover faster and you're going to build more muscle. And we know now that's 100% false.
That is not true. There's now research, again similar to tributous terrestris. There's
research, human research that shows this does not work. It's not just, you know, Hey, there's no
evidence for this. And theoretically it shouldn't work. We know it does not work. Uh, glutamine is
good for your immune system. It's good for your gut health. You could take it for that reason.
Um, and also if I remember correctly, there was one study I saw with, it was with college football players that were training
several hours a day between their workouts and between their practices and stuff. There was
several, several hours of intense exercise per day. And with those guys, glutamine helped with
recovery. So if that's you, if you're doing four to six hours of intense exercise, uh, a day, glutamine may help you recover faster. There may have been some performance
benefits as well. I don't remember. Um, but that's just not the majority of us. So I don't use,
I don't take glutamine, but you know, if I, if I were getting sick frequently or, you know, if I
were having gut issues, then there's a then depending on what they were, then it might
make sense for me to take it. But that's just not the case for me. So I just don't bother with it.
Okay. So now let's talk about good supplements. Let's talk about the three ones that I personally
use and recommend. And the first is protein powder. I personally use whey isolate because
it has great macros. It's basically just protein. I sell away isolate. And if I remember correctly,
it's somewhere around, I think it's like 22 or 24 grams of protein per scoop and either zero or a
few, anywhere from like one to a few carbs because certain flavor systems actually like, oh, you need
two grams of carbs in the vanilla to make it taste right, but you only need one gram of carb in the uh in the chocolate
whatever and uh you know 0.5 to like one maybe we have two grams of fat per serving i don't think
it's up to i think it's like basically no fat so so the macros are great the calories are great
and it tastes super good also i like that it has no lactose in it i'm not lactose intolerant but
there is a point where if I have too much lactose,
which I have three scoops of protein a day, and also I have some Greek yogurt at night,
sometimes some cottage cheese as well. And also these days, some Parmesan cheese I put on my food
or I just eat a little bit because it's super tasty. If I have too much lactose, it can upset
my stomach. So if I can just reduce the lactose load, then I do that, and whey isolate is good for that.
Now, you don't need a protein supplement.
You can just eat all of your protein, but that can be tricky because balancing your macros can be tricky depending on how much time you have to cook and what your pal is like.
How many foods do you like?
What are you willing to eat?
What are you willing to make?
Then there's time that goes with that.
You know, you have to shop, you have to prep, you have to cook, clean up and so forth.
You know, you're going to probably have to bring foods with you if you're in, if you
have like, okay, you need to eat some protein.
It's generally a good idea to have protein probably every three or five hours.
There is some research that shows that you, that will probably help you build muscle faster over
the longterm than if you just ate protein once or twice a day with many hours in between those
meals. Um, also, I mean, I, I, I like to eat every few hours, just have something, get a little
boost in energy and taste something good. So, um, you know, if you were to have a 3 PM snack of some
kind, if it's going to be protein and you want to just eat food, you're going to have to be carrying meals with you. And maybe you're going to need, you know, like a six pack
bags type thing or meal prep meal container type of approach. That's fine if you want to do that.
But personally, you know, I would rather just throw some protein in a shaker and just drink it
down. And then there's also depending on how much food you need to eat. I mean, if you're bulking
and you're increasing your calories over time, you get pretty sick of eating.
That's one of the ways you know you're doing it right when you're bulking.
If you're sick of eating after being a month or two into a bulk, you're doing it right.
And same thing with cutting.
After a month or so of cutting, if you – yeah, I mean, maybe you're not super hungry all the time, but you could really use some more food.
It's a sign you're probably doing it right.
So when you're just trying to get all your protein from whole foods, especially when you're bulking, sometimes a shake is just a nice reprieve from feeling full all the time.
As opposed to eating a chicken breast, maybe that would be much more filling.
So the pros of protein powder are obvious.
They make fast and easy snacks.
It's often preferable to have any
food. The macros, depending on the product, can be very good, which means that you get to spend
your calories and your macros on... You're not drinking carbs and fats, which I never like to do.
I want to eat my carbs and fats, and I'll drink protein. I want to eat my carbs and fats, though.
And protein powder also is very affordable. I mean, it can be, depending on what you're buying,
but when you look at it in terms of what you're paying per gram of protein, especially high-quality protein, you know, a lot of people think that supplements, they just see a price tag and go, that's expensive.
But then go look at what you're paying per gram of protein, you know, for that whey or whatever versus something else that you would buy, whether it be chicken or a meat of some kind or dairy or eggs or whatever,
and you'll see that it can be a good value, actually.
So in the case of whey, I should also mention that there is a bit of research that shows that because whey is rapidly digested
and it's very high in leucine, that it makes a particularly good post-workout protein, something to have.
I mean, it's not so much about the anabolic window per se, but it's, it's probably a good idea to eat protein, uh, within 30 minutes, 60 minutes or so have a
serving of protein, 30, 20 to 40 grams after you train over time there, it probably doing that,
it probably gives you a little boost to muscle gain over time. And there's some research that
shows that way is particularly good for that. So that's really, I mean, I, I have two scoops of protein. I train early in the morning. I come here to the
office. I have two scoops of protein of whey protein then. And I have a scoop in the afternoon,
um, just because, uh, because it tastes good. And I do try to eat protein every few hours or so. I
mean, I'm not like crazy about it. If I miss a meal or something, I'm not worried about it, but that's generally what I try to do.
So that is the post-workout aspect is a reason, I think, to if you don't have any problem with whey or whey isolate, that it makes sense to get a whey because you can now, you gain a little bit in your post-workout use.
And then if you take one or two scoops, you know, at another time of the day, it's going to be equally as good as anything else.
Sometimes I'll get asked by people, they'll say, well, isn't it better to have a slow-burning protein throughout?
If you had six servings of protein a day, isn't there research that shows that slower-burning proteins are going to help you gain muscle faster?
And there is some research
on that. There's not much. And it's not enough where I'm willing to, let's say, sell a casein
protein and sell it on that and say, hey, this is a better muscle builder protein like some
companies do. But what sometimes people forget is, yeah, but you're not taking six servings of
protein powder a day. Or if you are, you need to rethink your diet. I don't know of any off the top, like just simple pat, you know, here, here's
the study that shows that you should be getting, you know, that, that says, this is how much protein
powder you should be having per day. But I think it's a pretty sensible to, to, to say that you
shouldn't be getting the majority of your protein, your daily protein from a powder,
mainly because there are other nutrients that you should be getting. You have different sources of
protein or where you can get protein. It can be meat sources, animal sources, which have different
nutrients your body needs. It can be plant sources, which have a lot of nutrients that your body needs.
So it's not just about when you eat food, it's not just a macro. It's not just,
I'm getting protein, carbs, and fats.
You're getting macros and micros.
So there are a lot of micros, micronutrients, vitamins, minerals, and other things that you're not going to get from just a protein powder.
So that's why I personally, again, I have about 70 grams of protein.
I eat about 200 grams of protein a day.
That's my average intake, sometimes a little bit more, sometimes a little bit less. And I get 70 of those grams from protein powder and everything else from food.
And I get a variety of, my protein comes from, I eat chicken. I have some dairy. I have Greek
yogurt. I have one egg every day. I have, I get protein a little bit from vegetables that I eat.
It's not much, maybe 10 or 15 grams. And then I get some from, I eat oatmeal every day. So I get my protein from a variety of sources, which then also comes
with other nutrients that the body needs. So when people ask me how much of my daily protein can
come from powder, I say definitely don't go higher than 50%, but if you can get a little bit under that and get your protein from a variety of foods, of nutritious foods, then that's probably the best choice.
So that's why I say if you're fine with whey, just go with a whey because you're not going to be having seven servings of whey, you know, seven servings of a powder every day.
If you were going to do seven servings of a powder, maybe then a slower burning protein would be a better idea, but I wouldn't recommend
that to anyone. So next on the list is creatine and creatine is, you know, there's, there are
hundreds and hundreds of studies that have been done in creatine over the last several decades.
It's the most researched molecule in all sports nutrition, and it works. We know that for a fact,
you build muscle faster, you get stronger, faster
and improves the anaerobic endurance, uh, improves muscle recovery. There's just no question. It
works. It's not a steroids. It's not as, it's not going to be as effective as, as you know,
doing a large amount of injecting a large amount of testosterone, obviously every week. But if you
are, and I said this earlier, if you are a healthy individual, you don't have kidney disease or
anything like that, and you are trying to build muscle or build strength, build physique or whatever, you should be taking creatine.
Its effects are not dramatic, but you will notice within the first week or so that you're a bit stronger in the gym.
And then, of course, you can leverage that strength to progress better.
So the stronger, when you can get more reps now, you'll notice that like you have strength, which is pure power. And then you also have muscle
endurance. Um, you know, you'll notice, especially if you're doing some higher rep, cause then that's
more, we get into the anaerobic range. Um, but the, the stronger you are, the faster you can
add weight to the bar, the faster you can progress, the faster you can build muscle.
So there's that element. And then there also are other mechanisms whereby creatine
directly augments muscle growth. So you should be taking creatine in terms of forms. Creatine
monohydrate is just the proven winner. That's what the majority of the studies have been done on.
There are other forms like ethyl ester that just don't work. That's an example of one that
is just not as effective as monohydrate. And then there are some forms that are more water-soluble like creatine hydrochloride,
which, I mean, there's creatine malate, there's creatine citrate.
Those are all fine.
The only reason to go for one of those type of products is if creatine upsets your stomach.
Some people, it makes them gassy.
Some people, it causes just GI disturbances. So if that's the case, sometimes
it, in some cases, unfortunately, even switching to a more water soluble form doesn't do anything.
It's just some people's bodies just don't like creatine, uh, when supplemented like that. I mean,
obviously you're going to get creatine and you can get it from your diet. If you eat a big steak,
you're gonna get a few grams of creatine. Um, but you know, I, I wouldn't, I personally,
I wouldn't eat a big steak every
day necessarily. I'm not afraid of meat and the whole meat cancer thing, which if you want to
learn more about that, again, go to examine and Google for examine what they, uh, they've written
a few articles on it and they've really broken down the research that had been used to kind of
sensationalize this whole meat is going to kill you thing. But I do limit my, my red meat intake
just to kind of play it safe. I'll eat red meat
maybe once or twice a week, but I eat a lot more chicken and turkey and sometimes fish. I'm not a
huge fish fan, but I do like some fish. Unfortunately, the fish that I tend to like are
high in contaminants and pollutants where you're just not supposed to eat more than a few servings
per week. So that's just the way it is. Anyway,
so with creatine and body composition, it's basically all pros and no cons. It's not bad
for your kidneys. You don't have to cycle it. It's not a steroid. Bloating is usually not an
issue. Most people don't run into that. That was kind of a thing now that creatine processing
has improved. Some people still do find they get bloated with it, but most people don't have that
problem. It doesn't necessarily cause baldness. You've probably heard that there is one study,
maybe two that show that it can increase the hydrogen testosterone DHT levels, which if in men
that have male pattern baldness, you hire DHT is a problem and can cause, can accelerate hair loss.
higher DHT is a problem and can cause, can accelerate hair loss. So if that's you, then maybe it's better if you're really worried about that, then it'd be better. I'd say
don't use creatine and we'll see as more research is done. Was this an anomaly or is this actually
a thing? What's this mechanism? How does this work? Is there something we can do about it?
So yeah, it's just a very safe, it's an effective supplement. It's not very
expensive and it doesn't shut down production like drugs do. Your body will naturally produce
less creatine when you're supplementing, but research shows that once you stop supplementing,
your body just comes back up and brings its production back to where it needs to be.
So yeah, creatine is good. I do recommend it. And it's in my post-workout supplement called Recharge.
If you're interested in what I take, that's what I take, five grams of creatine monohydrate.
And actually, we're switching to a blend of creatines that are more water-soluble simply because we hear from customers every once in a while that do run into GI issues.
We hear from customers every once in a while that do run into GI issues.
And then we have to tell them, sorry, here, go find one of these more water-soluble forms that are equally effective to monohydrate.
And the mixability of monohydrate is not that great.
So we finally were just like, why don't we just ourselves just use more water-soluble form?
It's slightly more expensive, but whatever.
It just makes it a better product. So that will be coming in the next probably three months or so.
Most people don't have an issue. So we're always just looking to tweak things. How can we
make this a little bit better? You know, for each of our products, are there, you know, okay, so as
we're growing, we have these economies of scale. What can we do? Can we switch to, like in the case
of our multivitamin, you know, we're switching to a patented standardized form of our garlic extract
because we want to make sure that their allicin levels are at a certain level.
Or we're switching to a better form of B5, for instance.
So we're always looking at ways we can improve.
And in the case of recharging creatine, that's how we're doing it.
There are a couple other ingredients, actually, I'm looking at adding, but unfortunately so far they taste so bad. It's just,
uh, we've, I know I've said this before. We're trying it with pulse too. Like I would love to
get Alcar and pulse because it's a, it's, it's, it's a good for, it's a good cognitive enhancer,
but it tastes so bad. It makes, it makes pulse, which in my opinion tastes pretty good right now.
I take any flavor and you add, you add Alcar,
which I think it's two and a half grams is what you need somewhere between two and three grams.
And it goes from tasting like pretty good.
If you take pulse,
you know how it tastes to tasting like detergent,
like straight detergent.
Like,
so if it's,
if you like,
like I really like green apple pulse.
So it goes from like,
Ooh,
that's good.
Green apple candy drink to that's a green apple detergent mix.
It's just gross.
So anyways, that's it on creatine.
Pretty simple.
And the next supplement that I recommend and that I take is beta-alanine, which is amino acid.
Now, when you supplement with beta-alanine, it increases the muscular levels of a molecule called carnosine, which your body combines with beta-alanine.
It makes it from an amino acid called L-histatine, and it combines that with beta-alanine to form carnosine. And then
that carnosine is found in muscle tissue. Now, what carnosine does is it acts as a buffer in
the muscle against lactic acid buildup, which that's one of the reasons why, and you know that
when you are especially doing higher rep stuff, that burn you're feeling is, is lactate acid buildup.
And that is one of the ways that muscles fatigue and they finally give out and you can't do
anymore.
So carnosine, uh, let helps you do more before you hit that point of too much lactate acid
buildup, you know, fully fatigued muscle failure.
So that's why studies have shown
that beta-alanine supplementation
is particularly good for higher rep,
more endurance type stuff,
like you'd say CrossFit type stuff.
But there's also research that shows
that it can directly augment muscle growth
similar to creatine separate from any performance benefits
that you would see in the gym.
So that's why many people take both creatine
and beta alanine because they, creatine particularly helps with the lower rep with the
power stuff and beta alanine particularly helps with the higher rep stuff. And both of them help
you build muscle faster. So there's a good synergy there. And you'll, sometimes you'll find both in
pre-workout supplements. And the reason why I didn't put creatine in my pre-workout supplement is because there's research that shows one, that ingesting creatine with caffeine can interfere
with creatine's effects. There's also research that shows that it doesn't, we just don't really
know. Um, there's also, and then there's research that too shows that creatine is more effective
when taken post-workout. And we also know that when taken with carbs, uh, it is, it, it gets
shuttled into the muscles more effectively.
So in my opinion, creatine is just an all-around better post-workout supplement.
So you have beta-alanine, which again, similar to creatine, it accumulates in the body or it helps, it accumulates carnosine in the case of beta-alanine.
As you take it every day, your caritine levels are rising, rising, rising. And when you
supplement with creatine, your muscle creatine levels rise, rise, rise. That's why you usually
don't notice effects with either one of them for the first week or so, unless you are loading,
which you've probably heard that in the context of creatine, where you take 20 grams a day instead
of five. In the big picture, it doesn't matter whether you load or not.
It just, if you do load, it's going to accumulate in your muscles faster
and you're going to notice the effects sooner.
The downside is you're going to burn through that first bottle faster.
But once you've loaded, then you just go to five grams a day and you're good to go.
Beta alanine also is about five grams.
You want four to five grams a day and carnosine levels then rise.
And then you start noticing a difference in your training.
That's everything.
I know this went on a bit long. Hopefully you found it helpful. And again,
just kind of the key takeaway here is that supplements don't build great physiques. You
have to know what you're doing with your diet and you have to know what you're doing in the gym and
you have to be persistent and you have to work hard and work for a long period of time. If you
really want to dramatically transform your physique, if you have money to spend on supplements,
the right supplements can help can make it, uh, make these in some cases, make it more enjoyable,
like a pre-workout from, in my opinion, a good pre-workout makes for better workouts,
not just in our performance, uh, not just in performance, but also in, in, in how you
experience them. I enjoy, uh, my workouts more when I've taken pulse because I just feel
better. I have more energy and I'm able to get a bit more, push a bit more on my weights.
And so that makes it worth it to me. But you don't need supplements to build the body you want.
They are supplements. They're not vital. So I hope you found this helpful. And again,
if you want to check out what supplements I'm taking, obviously I just take my own stuff
because that's even how I develop products.
That's how each of the products I've developed.
And it's not just me.
I have a team of people I work with.
But it's been, okay, really, what do I – I wish there was a multivitamin that I actually
wanted to take and that actually impressed me.
All right, let's make that.
I wish there was a post-workout supplement that didn't have a bunch of crap that does
nothing. I don't want to pay for glutamine or other things was a post-workout supplement that didn't have a bunch of crap that does nothing.
I don't want to pay for glutamine or other things
that aren't HMB and stuff that isn't going to do anything.
I just want to pay for a few things
that are actually going to help, et cetera, et cetera.
So if you want to learn more about that
and learn what I'm taking
and the kind of stuff that I make and use,
then go to legion, L-E-G-I-O-N, athletics.com.
There it is.
All right. See you next week. Hey, it's Mike again. Hope you liked the podcast.
If you did go ahead and subscribe. I put out new episodes every week or two,
where I talk about all kinds of things related to health and fitness and general wellness.
Also head over to my website at www.muscleforlife.com, where you'll find not only past episodes of the podcast, but you'll
also find a bunch of different articles that I've written. I release a new one almost every day,
actually. I release kind of like four to six new articles a week. And you can also find my books
and everything else that I'm involved in over at muscleforlife.com. All right. Thanks again. Bye.