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777 views420 pages

Stronger Than Yesterday - Michael Matthews

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factguy045
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Stronger Than Yesterday
169 Insights for Transforming Your Muscle, Mind, and Motivation
First Edition
By Michael Matthews (www.mikematthews.co)

Copyright © 2024 Oculus Publishers, Inc.

All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner
whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief
quotations in a book review. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the internet or
via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law.

Please purchase only authorized electronic editions of this book. Don’t participate in or encourage
electronic piracy of copyrighted materials.

This book is a general educational health-related information product and is intended for healthy
adults age 18 and over.

This book is solely for information and educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice.
Please consult a medical or health professional before you begin any exercise, nutrition, or
supplementation program or if you have questions about your health.

There may be risks associated with participating in activities or using products mentioned in this
book for people in poor health or with preexisting physical or mental health conditions.

Because these risks exist, you should not use the products or participate in the activities described in
this book if you are in poor health or if you have a preexisting mental or physical health condition. If
you choose to participate in these activities, you do so knowingly and voluntarily of your own free
will and accord, assuming all risks associated with these activities.

Specific results mentioned in this book should be considered extraordinary, and there are no “typical”
results. Because individuals differ, results will differ.

Cover designed by Jason Anscomb (https://jasonanscomb.com)


Book designed by Jason Anscomb (https://jasonanscomb.com)
Edited by Mary Adams-Legge
Published by Oculus Publishers (www.oculuspublishers.com)

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DEDICATION

To the family, friends, followers, and fellow travelers who have


supported me and my work in any and every way, from sharing
words of encouragement and constructive criticism to telling
others about my efforts to simply believing in me. This, and
everything else I do in my work, is foremost for you.

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CONTENTS
Free Bonus Material (Workouts, Meal Plans, and More!)
Why You Should Read This Book
1: Stop Trying to Have Great Workouts
2: The Imperatives of Healthy & Sustainable Fat Loss
3: The Only Way to Fail
4: Simple Diet Hacks
5: Give Yourself Permission
6: Is Deadlifting Worth the Risk?
7: In Which I Give a Physique Update
8: Start Here
9: Screw It
10: The Body Recomp
11: Next Time
12: Should the Future Be Meatless?
13: Fitness White Pills
14: Simple Exercise Hacks
15: The Most Common Fitness Regret
16: Choose Wisely
17: I Salute You
18: Do You Gain Muscle Faster When You’re Leaner?
19: Funny Fitness Disappointments
20: Before You Laugh
21: Gentle Fitness Advice
22: Overrated and Underrated for Female Strength Training
23: If They Can Do It …
24: Maybe They’re Born With It … Or Maybe It’s … Something Else
25: Opportunities Are Whispers
26: Overrated and Underrated for Muscle Building
27: A Few Reasons to Be Fit
28: The Truth About Food Tracking
29: Exercise As Meditation
30: Early Birds Get the Gains Too
31: Do You Have a Personal Constitution?
32: Simple Mental Health Hacks
33: Don’t Let Them Convince You
34: Is Exercise Useless for Weight Loss?
35: The Common Thread
36: Every Day vs. Every So Often
37: The Best Motivation
38: Go For a Walk
39: You Are Not Your Body Composition
40: This Is Like That
41: The Best Way to Get Approval
42: How Fast Can You Lose Fat Without Losing Muscle?
43: It Happens
44: Don’t Get Your Tinsel In a Tangle
45: Are You Voting the Way You Know You Should?
46: Is Running Bad for Gaining Muscle and Strength?
47: The Supreme Warrior Virtue
48: The Science of Productive Daydreaming
49: No Shame
50: Is Strength Training Good for Weight Loss?
51: Your Fitness Is Yours
52: Do You Even Keto Fast Bro?
53: Tough Fitness Truths
54: 10 Top-Flight Training Tips
55: Don’t Just Learn—Do
56: Simple Health Hacks
57: Advice I’d Give My Younger Self
58: Does Cardio Burn Muscle?
59: Some Days
60: A Calorie Calculator Caution
61: Go to the Gym
62: Underrated Core Exercises
63: Everything’s Amazing and Nobody’s Happy
64: Simple Life Hacks
65: Lifting Yourself Up
66: So You’ve Hit a Weight Loss Plateau
67: You’re Getting Good
68: The Healthy Enough Diet
69: You Won’t Always Enjoy It
70: Is There a “Fat Burning” Zone for Cardio?
71: Life Periodization
72: Beware the Cults of Scientism and Credentialism
73: Train First
74: Simple Muscle Building Hacks
75: You Love to See It
76: More Simple Diet Hacks
77: You Get to Decide
78: The Diminishing Returns of Overreaching
79: We’ll See
80: The Worst Fitness Advice
81: Complaining vs. Doing
82: 10 Tips for Keeping the Weight Off
83: Never Say Die
84: Are You Sure You’re Overtraining?
85: The Problem With Progress
86: Your North Star
87: Easy, Fast, and Free
88: It’s Not Fat Shaming
89: When You Don’t Want to Work Out
90: Diet On, Diet Off
91: Look At You
92: The Best Supplements
93: Let Them
94: More Simple Exercise Hacks
95: Fun Fitness Goals
96: It’s Not Fit Shaming
97: The Maintain Gains
98: Targeted Fat Loss
99: The Great Vulnerability Hoax
100: Said The Diet Guru Who’s Full of Shit
101: A Simple Rule for Better Living
102: The Case for Isolation Exercises
103: Fun Fitness Wins
104: More Simple Health Hacks
105: Tough Love and Gentle Compassion
106: Weekend Weight Gain
107: The Best Antidote to Weakness
108: Does Protein Timing Matter?
109: You Have to Chase It
110: Said The Exercise Guru Who’s Full of Shit
111: The Worst Form of Stress
112: Stop Watching Porn
113: Three Reasons to Train Today
114: Leaning Into a Lean Bulk
115: Be Worthy
116: Is 1,200 Calories Per Day Dangerous?
117: If This Isn’t Nice …
118: The Mandatory Exercise Myth
119: Do You Believe?
120: More Simple Life Hacks
121: Nobody Owes Us
122: Dial 5-2 for Fat Loss
123: A Training Periodization Plan
124: Sick of Tracking Your Calories?
125: Yes, You Can
126: Should You Finish With “Finishers”?
127: So You’re Happy With Your Body
128: Said The Health Guru Who’s Full of Shit
129: The Paradox of Self-Confidence
130: The Best Exercises and Foods For Losing Fat
131: Take Your Time
132: How Fast Can You Lose Fat and Not Muscle?
133: The Rules Don’t Rule You
134: The Power of Double Progression
135: The Case Against Ambition
136: Believed vs. Checked Facts
137: Your Weight Isn’t Your Worth
138: Will Fasted Cardio Help You Lose Fat Faster?
139: Progress Isn’t One-Dimensional
140: Are Seed and Vegetable Oils Unhealthy?
141: Compassion > Shame
142: The Three-to-Five Formula for Strength
143: Winning = Priorities Priority
144: How Much Change Is Enough?
145: Is It This or That?
146: What Really Makes People Fat?
147: You’re Allowed to Enjoy Your Fitness
148: The Ancestral Eater
149: The Workouts That Matter the Most
150: When You Can’t Get Into the Gym
151: A Warm Welcome
152: Can You Really Do Your Own Research?
153: A Pretty Good Day
154: The Lean Vacation
155: Skip the Social Sizzle
156: This Is Your Brain on Carbs
157: To Strive or Savor?
158: Five of My Favorite HIIT Workouts
159: You Are What You Focus On
160: Resting Is Investing
161: Win Your Spurs
162: Does Energy Flux Matter?
163: So You Say
164: Is It Actually Hunger?
165: I Want You to Be a Pessimist (About Pessimism)
166: The Best Rep Ranges
167: No, You Don’t
168: The Catch with High-Tech Tracking
169: One Day
Free Bonus Material (Workouts, Meal Plans, and More!)
Would You Do Me a Favor?
Also by Michael Matthews
Additional Resources
References

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FREE BONUS MATERIAL
(WORKOUTS, MEAL PLANS,
AND MORE!)
Thank you for reading Stronger Than Yesterday. I hope you find it
insightful, inspiring, and practical, and I hope it helps you reach your goals
(fitness and otherwise) faster.
I want to make sure you receive as much value from this book as
possible, so I’ve put together free resources to help you, including:

3 bonus chapters that answer three common questions: “Am I too


fat to bulk?”, “How long should I cut?”, and “How much weight
can I gain in one day of overeating?”
20 flexible dieting meal plans for losing fat and gaining muscle
An entire year’s worth of my Bigger Leaner Stronger (men) and
Thinner Leaner Stronger (women) strength training workouts
neatly laid out and provided in several formats, including PDF,
Excel, and Google Sheets
Form demonstration videos of my favorite strength training
exercises
Product recommendations for workout equipment, gear, and
gadgets

To get instant access to those free bonuses (plus a few additional


surprise gifts), go here now:
➥ www.mikematthews.fitness/strongerbonus
OceanofPDF.com
WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS
BOOK
“It takes a wise man to learn from his mistakes, but an even wiser man to
learn from others.”
–Zen Proverb

It was four a.m., and I hadn’t slept in nearly three days. I was delirious,
holed up in a basement lab in the cloud forests of Guatemala, surrounded by
reams of arcane scientific literature, doing things frowned upon by the FDA
with stuff outlawed by most developed countries.
But I was also buzzing because I was on the verge of a discovery that
would change everything we knew about human optimization. If my
hypothesis proved true, the realms of health, fitness, and longevity would
enter a new era.
I’m talking about striking muscle and strength gain without stepping
foot in a gym, effortless fat loss without dieting, and superhuman health
without medicine or even supplements. A true magic bullet breakthrough,
watershed moment, sea change—a miracle.
And the capper? None of it is punishing. Or even hard. It just requires
small, specific, and sometimes slightly strange interventions.
Want to drop from 18.9 percent to 10.2 percent body fat in 14 days?
Forget calories in and out—a toxic colonial construct that’s faker than math
and triangles. Timed doses of handstands, bishop’s cap cactus needles, and
Sitali breathing exercises do just the trick.
Want to extend the muscle-building effects of whey protein powder?
Just do what your hunter-gatherer ancestors did to bulk up fast—add some
sprouted galangal root to your grass-fed whey protein shakes.
Want to indulge in weekly guilt-free carb orgies? You just need to train
your body to convert excess glucose into muscle-pumping glycogen rather
than waist-expanding belly fat. And we can thank Nazi scientists recruited
by the US government in Operation Paperclip for a little-known method of
doing just that: eating raw German red garlic one hour before the binge.
Cloves and cloves of raw German red garlic. The more the better, my
unfabricated data suggests.
So … yeah. None of that actually happened or works. But it gives you
an idea of what you won’t find in this book—page after page of
quasiscientific gibberish and pretense geared toward peculiarity and
persuasion rather than practicality and performance. Instead, this book
contains a few things:

1. Simple, evidence-based, tried and tested diet, exercise, and


supplementation techniques that’ll help you achieve your health
and fitness goals faster, including improving your body
composition, reducing the risk of disease and dysfunction, slowing
aging, and more.
2. Motivational musings that I hope will inspire you to wallow in
fewer “cheat days,” skip fewer workouts, and generally stay out of
your own way in your fitness journey.
3. Zany meanderings that I hope will earn your smile because, as
Victor Borge said, a smile is the shortest distance between two
people. And one of the reasons I wrote this book was simply to get
closer to more like-minded people, like you.

The main reason I wrote this book, however, is this:


You aren’t stuck with the body you have. You can make it better, even
if you’ve mishandled it, and it’s far simpler than many people believe. Even
better, once you start changing your body, you’ll realize that you also have
the power to change your life.
I’ve repeated those words many times over the last decade in my
books, articles, and podcasts because they encapsulate the mission that
inspires my work. Every day, your body’s biology is changing. It’s getting
stronger or weaker, younger or older, healthier or sicker, and the driving
factor behind these changes isn’t your genes, environment, or even your age
—it’s your lifestyle. How you eat. How you exercise. How you sleep. How
you supplement. And not just how, but how often. Because what you do
every day is far more important than what you do every so often.
Hence this daily reader—something to dip into every day for a morsel
of education, spark of encouragement, or moment of joy. Don’t overwhelm
yourself by thinking you must do everything in these pages, however. Focus
on the first few ideas that appeal the most and implement them as your time
permits. Then, when you’re ready for greater improvements, find a few
more to apply.
Want one to get rolling? If you’re unsure whether you should eat,
drink, or do something, ask yourself, “Is this good for my body or bad?” If
you can consistently answer that question with knowledge and love (for
yourself, your friends and family, and your fate), you can build a body you
can be proud of.
It’s up to you how quickly you get through this book, but consider
committing to the “minimum effective dose” of one chapter per day. This is
just a few daily pages, but over time, it’ll change your body and mind as
you gradually upgrade just about every aspect of your health and fitness—
your mindset, diet, exercise, supplementation, rest, recovery, stress
management, and more.
Let’s get started.
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DON’T LET ANYONE
CONVINCE YOU THAT A
COMMITMENT TO YOUR
FITNESS IS A FLAVOR OF
NARCISSISM RATHER THAN
SELF-LOVE.
OceanofPDF.com
1:
STOP TRYING TO HAVE GREAT
WORKOUTS
“Success consists of going from failure to failure without loss of
enthusiasm.”
–Winston Churchill

What’s the enemy of great?


A montage of social media posts, motivational speeches, and self-help
books probably just flashed through your mind, all proclaiming that “good”
is the droid you’re looking for.
Good, they cry, is what’s holding you back from dreaming your quest
and manifesting your visions into fantasy. Good, you must understand, is
never good enough. To truly live, good must die. You must commit every
fiber of yourself—every day—to the pursuit of great. You must strive,
suffer, and surpass. You must go big or go home.
Beware satisfaction, as well, they say. It’s not enough to never come up
short; you must also never come down with a case of contentment.
Whatever you’ve accomplished, you could’ve done a little more if all your
chips were in the middle.
On and on this philosophy goes, winning wide approval among people
from all walks of life. It rings true because it’s not wholly misguided—by
definition, you can’t achieve the extraordinary through the ordinary—but
there’s a problem.
It’s impossible to be great all the time. Most of the time, good enough
is all we can muster. But that’s perfectly okay because, ironically, a whole
lot of “good enough” can make you great. In fact, it’s the only way to get
there without losing your nerve or sanity.
Think about it for a minute. When’s the last time you were truly
outstanding in your performance of any activity? When your faucet was
fully open and you were fully in a state of flow? Now think about how
much effort, energy, and presence that demanded, and how drained you
probably felt afterward.
Does it make sense to continually expect that from yourself? Of course
not. That’s a surefire way to destroy motivation and mood and eventually
burn out, because as sexy as perfect is, it’s equally as elusive. Like the
muse, it can’t be commanded, cajoled, or contracted. It comes and goes as it
pleases. Thus, appreciate the fleeting moments of perfection but don’t
calibrate your expectations by them.
Instead, demand something else from yourself—something mundane
but also achievable and sustainable. That something else is consistency.
The “big secret” to achieving excellence? Develop your ability to be
great at being consistent, not consistently great. This mostly comes down to
showing up, again and again, and being good enough to get a little bit
better. If you can do that—if you can make steady progress that compounds
over time—it relieves pressure and anxiety, reduces the risk of exhaustion,
and provides useful feedback.
By the same token, “Did I show up and put my hand to the plow?” is a
much more productive question to ask yourself at the end of every day than
“Was I great?” Or even worse, “Was I perfect?”
Not that standards don’t matter. “Good enough” doesn’t mean just
going through the motions, never forcing yourself to do difficult things, or
resigning yourself to mediocrity.
“Good enough” is about accepting and working with what you’ve got
where you are, not what you wish you had or where you wish you were. It
means acknowledging the fact that you can’t microwave real results. No
matter how “optimized” your approach is, results take time.
Consider dieting. Many people want to know the “best” diet for losing
weight, and many of those conversations revolve around carbohydrate
intake. According to research conducted by Stanford University scientists,
however, how much or little carbohydrate you eat doesn’t help or hinder
weight loss. What matters is maintaining a consistent calorie deficit.
(There’s that word again.) That is, people who are great at sticking to the
plan lose the most weight regardless of carbohydrate intake.
The same goes for training. Simple—even simplistic—programming
and rock-solid consistency beat even the most scientifically sound routines
and shaky compliance every time. Similarly, an obsession with heroic effort
in the gym is a vice, not a virtue—one that ultimately and inevitably leads
to disappointment, injury, and flameout.
So stop trying to have great workouts. Stop trying to be invincible.
Stop trying to rush the process. Strive for consistency instead. Stay patient,
and in time, once you’ve given enough “good enough,” you’ll find yourself
capable of great.

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2:
THE IMPERATIVES OF
HEALTHY & SUSTAINABLE
FAT LOSS
“A wise person is hungry for knowledge, while the fool feeds on trash.”
—Proverbs 15:14

Telling people who want to lose weight to simply “eat less and move more”
is too sweeping to be useful. Eat how much less and move how much more?
And eat what? And move how?
Here is more helpful advice:

1. Consistently eat fewer calories than you burn to produce steady fat
loss. 15-to-25 percent fewer works well for most people, which is
about 10-to-12 calories per pound of body weight per day.
2. Eat enough protein to retain lean mass and reduce hunger. Aim for
~1 gram of protein per pound of body weight per day, or if you’re
overweight, ~1 gram per centimeter in body height per day.
3. Eat enough “healthy” food to cover basic nutritional needs and
improve satiety. At least 80 percent of daily calories from
nutritious and relatively unprocessed food works best.
4. Do at least a couple of hours of strength training per week to
maintain muscle and strength. Just one or two upper-body and
lower-body workouts per week is enough.
5. Go for a couple of walks every day, and if you feel up to it, do an
hour or two of cardio workouts per week. Studies invariably show
that doing regular cardiovascular exercise in addition to strength
training produces the most fat loss.

And that’s it. Every other “do” or “do not” for trimming fat is about as
useful as a third nostril.

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3:
THE ONLY WAY TO FAIL
“Dripping water hollows out stone, not through force but through
persistence.”
—Ovid

Getting fit is like doing anything that most people fail at:

1. It’s harder than we think it’ll be.


2. It takes longer than we think it’ll take.
3. We make more mistakes than we think we’ll make.
4. We can’t fail unless we give up.

Consider my own fitness journey: twenty-one years now and countless


mistakes made. The one I didn’t make, though? I never stopped.
So don’t overestimate what’s possible in thirty days and underestimate
what’s possible in 365 days. You may be able to establish a habit in a few
weeks, but it takes at least a few months to start creating a lifestyle.
No single workout can change your body or life. But a bunch of them
can.

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4:
SIMPLE DIET HACKS
“Experience is the best teacher, but a fool will learn from no other.”
—Benjamin Franklin

A simple diet hack: Go unfollow anyone who says you should do a


“cleanse” or “detox” of any kind whatsoever. Because here’s what you
think happens on a cleanse:

1. Fat loss
2. Detoxification
3. And here’s what actually happens:
4. Fat and muscle loss
5. No detoxification
6. Mind-flaying hunger and cravings
7. Explosive tussles with the toilet
8. Hours spent cleaning the forty-seven different parts of your $500
juicer

Here’s another quick diet fix: Go unfollow anyone who says you
should take a microbiome test to improve your diet. Let me save you the
$100: eat vegetables instead of cinnamon rolls and drink water instead of
Oreo shakes.
And one more tip for the road: Go unfollow anyone who says you
should stop drinking diet soda because it’ll make you fat. Can artificial
sweeteners make you crave sweets? Maybe … but probably not enough to
matter. Artificial sweeteners don’t stimulate our brains in the same way that
sugar does, and studies have found that replacing sugar with artificial
sweeteners can help with weight loss.

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5:
GIVE YOURSELF PERMISSION
“You are never too old to set another goal or to dream a new dream.”
—C.S. Lewis

Some of the most common causes of weight loss breakthroughs are


receiving a surprise diagnosis or health setback, reaching an all-time high in
weight, and seeing oneself in a picture or mirror and being horrified.
Save yourself these torments. Commit now.
Don’t let someone convince you that you need their, or anyone else’s,
permission for your fitness, either. The only permission you need is your
own. Give yourself permission to follow a plan or wing it. Give yourself
permission to love the process today and to hate it tomorrow. Give yourself
permission to try, fail, try again, and succeed.
Give yourself breathing space to think on the wondrous pleasures that
achieving your fitness goals will bring, too. Imagine the glorious moments
in vivid detail. See and feel yourself admiring your fit body, savoring your
exceptional strength, appreciating your robust health. And then dream again
tomorrow and every day until you’re living it.

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SAYING THAT THE SUGAR IN
FRUIT WILL MAKE
SOMEONE FAT IS LIKE
SAYING THAT MONEY WILL
MAKE A MAN SEXY. IT CAN,
BUT IT TAKES A LOT.
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6:
IS DEADLIFTING WORTH THE
RISK?
“Friends may come and go. But two hundred pounds is always two hundred
pounds.”
—Henry Rollins

Some people say that unless you’re a competitive strength athlete, the
deadlift’s benefits are outweighed by the risks because the chances of
getting seriously hurt are too high and the injuries too severe.
They’ll also claim the deadlift wears your nervous system to a frazzle
and is far harder to recover from than other exercises, making it impractical.
Last, they’ll add, the deadlift is unnecessary, easily replaced with safer
exercises that train all of the same muscles.
While it’s true that you can get fit and strong without deadlifting, I
mostly disagree with each of these points. In fact, if I could only do one
exercise for the rest of my life, it’d be the deadlift. Here’s why:

1. When performed correctly, the deadlift is safe for most people.


The operative phrases here are “when performed correctly” and
“for most people.” That is, when us everyday gymgoers use
proper form (as I describe in my other books Bigger Leaner
Stronger, Thinner Leaner Stronger, and Muscle for Life), the
deadlift isn’t dangerous, even as the weights get heavy. Many
powerlifters and strength athletes, however, prime themselves for
injury in a few ways, including performance-enhancing drugs and
extreme training protocols. For these people, deadlifting can
become far riskier, what with their extraordinary loads, training
volumes, and competitive feats.
2. While an intense deadlift session is difficult, it doesn’t produce a
meaningful amount of central nervous system (CNS) fatigue. In
one study, for example, 30 minutes after doing 8 sets of 2 reps of
deadlifts at 95 percent of one-rep max, resistance-trained men
only experienced a 5-to-10 percent reduction in CNS output. At
bottom, CNS fatigue is a real phenomenon that can impair
muscular performance, but it’s also a nonentity for us recreational
weightlifters.
3. The deadlift isn’t essential for building a great physique, but it
does train nearly every muscle in your body, particularly those on
the backside, making it highly efficient. Think of how many
muscles the deadlift directly and indirectly trains (calves,
hamstrings, glutes, paraspinals, upper-back muscles, core, quads,
etc.) and how much time it takes to do a few sets of an isolation
exercise for each of those muscle groups versus a few sets of the
deadlift.

And so, if you’re a natural weightlifter who’s willing to learn, use good
form, and curb your ego, the deadlift is a marry exercise, not a shag
exercise.

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7:
IN WHICH I GIVE A PHYSIQUE
UPDATE
“Life is like an echo. We get from it what we put in it and, just like an echo,
it often gives us much more.”
—Boris Lauer-Leonardi

I don’t do many “physique updates” because, well, there isn’t much to


update.⁣ 6’2, 195-to-200 pounds, 8-to-10 percent body fat … until I leave
my body to the worms and toads.⁣

Why?⁣ Because I’ve gained more or less all of the muscle I can ever
gain, and I don’t want to pretend otherwise to make people think they can
always get bigger and stronger.⁣
Here’s the score:⁣

⁣ uys can gain about 40-to-45 pounds of muscle in their lifetime if


G
they have good genetics. If they don’t, their ceiling will be in the
30s. Women can cut those numbers in half.
As muscle mass is a primary driver of strength, that too stalls out
eventually. There’s more variation in potential strength than
muscle gain, but a reasonable endpoint for men to strive toward is
“3-4-5” one-rep-maxes—3 plates (on each side) on the bench (315
pounds), 4 on the squat (405 pounds), and 5 on the deadlift (495
pounds), and for women, 1-ish-2-ish-2-ish (135, 225-to-275, and
225-to-275 pounds) is doable for most.⁣
Guys and gals will gain, more or less, all the muscle and strength
available to them in their first five years of high-quality training.
And after that, nothing much will change regardless of what they
do, short of getting on a chemical cocktail of anabolic #dedication.⁣

⁣ ence, the goo-roos who blather about how their physiques are
H
decades in the making, and always improving by meaningful amounts, are
ignorant, lying, or secretly using steroids.⁣
In reality, what we’re seeing in these people is either five-ish years of
productive work and a bunch of maintenance, or drugs that have enabled
them to gain far more muscle and strength than they ever could’ve gotten
naturally.⁣ Some of ’em are” tricksy little Hobbitses” too, using just enough
drugs to keep the needle moving (“TRT”) without making it obvious.⁣

Do yourself a solid, then, and immediately unfollow anyone who
claims to have years of quality training behind them yet brags about some
new diet or exercise trick that’s supposedly adding yet another pound (or
three) of muscle to their jacked physiques, or plate (or three) to their
impressive totals.⁣

None of that means training has to become a dreary, pointless grind,
however. It just means our goals and expectations need to evolve with our
body.⁣ We have to learn to appreciate what we’ve got and find a deeper
motivation to keep training than bigger biceps.
This can take many forms. It can be feeling more confident and
competent inside and outside of the gym⁣⁣, being more productive at work⁣⁣,
setting a good example for your kids⁣⁣, tackling new physical challenges like
sports, hiking, biking, or running⁣⁣, avoiding disease and dysfunction, or
slowing down the processes of aging and retaining a youthful vitality.
For me, it’s several things. It’s doing workouts I enjoy that’ll allow me
to stay in peak shape and health for the rest of my life, without pain or
injury. It’s keeping the spark alive in my marriage and helping my kids
develop a positive relationship with food and exercise—lessons they can
pass on to their kids, too. It’s a matter of personal pride and responsibility,
of physically expressing my values and worldview, of producing and
presenting my best self.
These are privileges and prizes, not compromises or comedowns.
Things to celebrate, not understate.

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8:
START HERE
“It’s the job that’s never started that takes longest to finish.”
—J.R.R. Tolkien

Don’t know where to start with this fitness stuff? For the first couple of
weeks, do this every day:

1. Eat a hearty, filling meal every few hours, and skip the snacks.
2. Eat 30-to-40 grams of protein each meal.
3. Eat at least one piece of fruit and one fist-sized serving of
vegetables per day.
4. Drink nothing but water and zero-calorie beverages (coffee, tea,
etc.).
5. Go for a 10-to-30-minute walk.
6. Get 7-to-8 hours of sleep.

Once all that’s well in hand, here are two more achievements to unlock:

1. Eat another serving of fruit and a couple more fist-sized servings


of vegetables every day.
2. Do one-to-three strength training workouts per week.

If all you do is master that simple playbook, you can enjoy outstanding
health, fitness, and wellness for the rest of your life.
And if you want to go even further on the path, you can augment your
program with tactics like meal planning, more vigorous strength training,
and endurance exercise (check out my book Muscle for Life for the
blueprint).

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9:
SCREW IT
“Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing
himself.”
—Leo Tolstoy

Throughout your powerful, transformative, and occasionally miserable


fitness journey, you’ll meet many people who will tell you many things. In
fact, these fleshy automatons will have so much advice that if you scribbled
it all down on pieces of paper, you’d singlehandedly decimate entire
swathes of the world’s forests.
Keep your eyes and ears open, but don’t let their moonshine move you
off target. “You shouldn’t do that,” they’ll say, wheeling out a litany of
reasons why it’s not going to work out, why you should put time and effort
elsewhere, why you’ll regret it if you keep going.
To which you’ll say: “Screw it, I’m doing it anyway.” “Screw it, I’m
going to wake up an hour early and exercise every day.” “Screw it, I’m
going to follow a proper meal plan for a couple of months.” “Screw it, I’m
going to drink less alcohol and eat less junk food.”
You’ll probably be afraid, too. Anxious. Uncertain. All that is normal.
Remember the first time you rode a bike? This is no different. You move
past all the head trash by getting to work. You put in effort, and you get
better. You get better, and you build confidence. You build confidence, and
you want to do more. It’s a virtuous cycle.
The hobgoblins of fear and doubt will always hop around in your mind,
sometimes more noisily than others, and that’s okay. Some of it’s even
good; it keeps you moving, doing, working. It reminds you that, as Robert
Frost said, “ the best way out is always through.”

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10:
THE BODY RECOMP
“Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do
better.”
—Maya Angelou

Most everyone in a gym wants to build muscle and lose fat, among other
things. What most people don’t know, however, is that these goals are at
odds with each other because losing fat requires a calorie deficit, which in
turn impairs muscle growth (so much so that it can effectively halt muscle
building).
There’s a notable exception to this rule, though: People who are new to
strength training or getting back into it newly can gain muscle and lose fat
at the same time. In fact—plenty.
An impressive example of this “body recomposition” effect in
greenhorn trainees was demonstrated in a study conducted by scientists at
Brigham and Women’s Hospital on 38 overweight male police officers.
On average, the officers were 34 years old and mildly obese (about 27
percent body fat), and none had any previous strength training experience.
After twelve weeks of doing four resistance training workouts per week
lasting 30-to-35 minutes, maintaining a 20 percent calorie deficit (eating
about 80 percent of the calories they burned every day), and eating 0.7
grams of protein per pound of body weight per day, the participants lost 9-
to-15 pounds of body fat and gained 4-to-9 pounds of muscle.
Outstanding results for just a few months, but even more so when you
consider they were achieved with such a gentle program. A few easy tweaks
that would’ve improved overall outcomes by 100 percent or more include:
More strength training (up to 3-to-5 hours per week)
Some cardio (up to 1-to-3 hours per week)
A larger calorie deficit (closer to 25 or even 30 percent)
More protein (closer to 1 gram per centimeter in body height per day)
That, by the way, is the formula for body recomposition: do a lot of
strength training, a bit of cardio, aggressively (but not recklessly) restrict
your calories, and eat a lot of protein.

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OBESITY IS A PROBLEM YOU
CAN LITERALLY RUN FROM.
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11:
NEXT TIME
“By replacing fear of the unknown with curiosity, we open ourselves up to
an infinite stream of possibility.”
—Alan Watts

In fitness, you don’t have to get it right the first time. Or the second. You
have as many chances to lose fat and build muscle as you’d like.
Moreover, you often have to first discover what doesn’t work (for you)
before you can root out what does. So it’s okay to fail at a diet or training
program. That means you tried. And learned. And now can use that
wreckage to climb a little higher next time.
Just make sure there is a next time.
Because just as courage is the supreme virtue that guarantees all others,
showing up is the master fitness habit that forms the nucleus of all others.
Knowing what to do is only ten percent of getting fit. Ninety percent is
consistently doing it regardless of how you feel.

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12:
SHOULD THE FUTURE BE
MEATLESS?
“It may be true that you can’t fool all the people all the time, but you can
fool enough of them to rule a large country.”
—Will Durant

There’s a concerted campaign underway to convince us that we can save


our health and possibly even the planet by eating plant-based meat
alternatives instead of the real thing. Does the weight of the scientific
evidence agree? Is the matter as “settled” as some people would have you
believe? Hardly.
Nutritionally, while these “meatless meat” products contain sources of
protein with amino acid profiles that are comparable to meat, a number of
studies have shown that purified plant proteins elicit a lower anabolic
response in muscle compared to meat—a strong indicator of the quality of
the source of protein.
One reason for this discrepancy is that plant proteins tend to be low in
the essential amino acids lysine, methionine, and leucine, constitutive
components of muscle that must be obtained from food.
A popular workaround for this deficiency is to combine different
sources of plant protein to increase the amount of essential amino acids
provided per serving, but curiously, research shows that this may not work
as well as we’d hope.
In a study published in the journal Nutrients, scientists created several
blends of plant protein powders (pea, pumpkin, sunflower, and coconut)
that contained the same amount of essential amino acids as whey protein.
Despite this, the participants who ate the plant powders subsequently had
30-to-40 percent lower levels of amino acids in their blood than the
participants who ate the whey protein.
Swapping meat for meat-from-plants also makes it difficult to meet
other basic nutritional needs, including vitamin B12, iron, zinc, essential
fatty acids, creatine, anserine, taurine, and carnosine.
“But the plant foods are nutritionally fortified,” some people would
retort, “and you can supplement with whatever else is required.” That’s true,
but studies show that in many cases, fortification and supplementation with
vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients doesn’t support our health and
vitality as effectively as obtaining the same substances from whole foods
that naturally contain them.
And then there’s controversy over the carbon footprint of farming for
meat versus plants. Research shows that producing plant-based meat may
impact the environment less than raising cows, but the methods matter. For
instance, a study published in Global Change Biology found that several
land management and food production strategies, including using organic
soil amendments and restoring trees and perennial vegetation to areas of
degraded forests, woodlands and riverbanks, can reduce the greenhouse gas
emissions of beef production by as much as 50 percent in certain regions,
with the most potential in the United States and Brazil.
What’s more, a 2017 study published in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences estimated that removing all animals from
U.S. agriculture would reduce U.S. emissions by only three percent—a
conclusion that was supported by a 2019 study in Agricultural Systems that
estimated emissions from beef production at three percent of total U.S.
emissions.
These analyses have been criticized, however, for failing to account for
the emissions associated with devoting land to agriculture rather than
allowing it to return to its natural state (forests and native vegetation can
store more carbon than farmland). Even so, it’s uncertain how much of that
land could ultimately be given over to nature rather than to plant farming
(to meet growing food demands), which can produce significant carbon
emissions as well (especially when considered on the basis of carbon-per-
calorie).
At any rate, climate researchers who argue for cutting beef
consumption like those at the World Resources Institute aren’t even calling
for universal abstinence. They claim that a reduction in meat to about 50
calories per person per day, or 1.5 burgers per week, would be enough to
nearly eliminate the need for additional beef-related agricultural expansion
and associated deforestation.
So, while fake meat can make for a fine addition to an omnivorous diet
(maybe you love meat but would like to eat less of it), switching to it
exclusively isn’t as healthy or as virtuous as many people believe.

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13:
FITNESS WHITE PILLS
“Inspiration is for amateurs. The rest of us just show up and get to work.”
—Chuck Close

Sometimes, fitness is a bowl of cherries. You groove from one portion-


perfect meal and pitch-perfect workout to another without a hitch.
Sometimes, however, you’d rather drink a bucket of warm spit than
stick to your diet for another day. Sometimes your alarm goes off and a
workout sounds about as appealing as boiling your head. Sometimes doing
the workout anyway feels like you’re trying to walk a feral 220-pound dog.
These things happen. They’re unavoidable. However, there are
consolation prizes too, and many are shinier than you think.

1. People who say fitness “doesn’t get easier; you only get better”
are missing something: it takes far less effort to stay fit than it
takes to get fit in the first place.
2. Much of the weight people gain during the holidays isn’t fat but
extra a) water and glycogen (due to sodium and carb orgies that
dramatically increase water retention) and b) stool weight
(whatever goes in takes 24-to-72 hours to worm its way out).
3. There are no “fattening” foods or macronutrients. If someone
insists otherwise, challenge them to eat nothing but 700 calories of
their nutritional bogeyman for seven days straight and see what
happens.
4. You don’t have to hit a PR to have a fitness win. Sometimes it’s
going for a walk. Or doing some push-ups. Or just not eating the
whole pizza or box of cookies.
5. You can’t gain more than a pound or two of fat in an entire day of
feasting and imbibing, so don’t fret over the occasional “cheat
meal” gone awry. Even your worst won’t visibly disturb your
body composition, so just shrug it off and jog on.
6. What you see when you work out: Pumped-up pecs and biceps.
What you don’t see: Pumped-up willpower, confidence, morale,
consistency, and stick-to-it-iveness.
7. Calories always count, but that doesn’t mean you have to count
them. Calorie counting is just one way to calibrate your eating to
your goals, not the only way. And it’s okay if it’s not your way.
8. Training just once or twice per week is far better than training zero
times per week, and moderate but consistent training beats out
intense but sporadic training in every way. So take your time if
you need to.
9. Something to remember when scrolling: People who are always
super-fit don’t have special knowledge or methods. They’ve
simply made their physique a top priority, and often because it
makes them money, they view training as a form of therapy, and
they don’t have kids.
10. Fitness isn’t just for people who want to change their body
composition. Or to burn calories. Or to get stronger. It’s also for
people who want to relieve stress, have fun, get healthier, move
more, or simply feel good.

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14:
SIMPLE EXERCISE HACKS
“Nature is pleased with simplicity.”
—Isaac Newton

A simple exercise hack: Go unfollow anyone who says your knees should
never go past your toes when you squat.
If you’re of average height or shorter, forcing your knees too far
forward when squatting or lunging can increase the risk of injury
(especially with heavy weights). BUT—if you happen to have long limbs,
your knees will probably extend to or beyond your toes as you reach depth
in these exercises with good form.
Another exercise quick fix: Unfollow anyone who says that cardio
doesn’t help you lose fat. It literally burns fat, which doesn’t guarantee
you’ll get leaner, but when combined with a proper diet, can speed up your
results.
One more tip that’ll make an immediate difference in your training: Get
off your phone in between sets. And not for the reasons you might think.
Surprisingly, research shows that scrolling in between sets can
significantly hurt athletic performance. In a study conducted by scientists at
Federal University of Paraíba, sixteen experienced male and female
weightlifters did 3 sets of squats to failure, and then looked at social media
or watched a documentary for 30 minutes before doing another round of 3
sets of squats to failure.
The people who watched the documentary performed about 15 percent
fewer reps in their second bout of squats, whereas the people who diddled
around on social media performed 29 percent fewer reps and experienced
much more mental fatigue (~60 percent vs. ~15 percent).
This effect isn’t limited to just using social media, either—studies show
that any activity that produces mental fatigue can subsequently impair
athletic performance.
To immediately upgrade the quality of your training, then, do your
workouts—and only your workouts—when you’re doing them.

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15:
THE MOST COMMON FITNESS
REGRET
“If it is to be, it’s up to me.”
–William Johnsen
The most common fitness regret is not starting sooner. So start now.
Because a year from now, you’ll reap the fruits of whatever you’re doing
right now. Remember that.
But you’re not motivated yet? Of course you aren’t. Motivation doesn’t
create action that creates results. Action creates results that create
motivation.
But you’re afraid you don’t have enough willpower to see it through?
Ask yourself this instead: Are you sure you need more willpower, or do you
just need a routine that requires less willpower?
For example, did you know that doing just one strength training
workout per week puts you ahead of 58 percent of Americans? Do two per
week, and you’re ahead of 70 percent. Do three-to-four per week, and
you’re in the top 13 percent.
Start walking a lot, too, and you’re truly a breed apart. Most people
take just under 5,000 steps per day—about 40 minutes of walking—so if
you can beat that, you’re at an advantage, and if you can double it, you’re at
the top of the pile.
And did you know that eating just a few servings of vegetables per day
makes you a top-10-percenter? And eating less than 50 grams of added
sugar per day is well above average? And drinking eight cups of water per
day is a habit of the top 22 percent?
When you look at it that way, the wannabe fit person’s week is almost
the same as the actual fit person’s. The fit person does a few workouts, and
the wannabe does none. Otherwise, 98 percent of their days can be the
same, but in time, the fit person has a physique, and the wannabe has …
nothing.
None of this is to say that staying on the beam is easy. It’s hard. But it’s
much harder to live life completely out of shape than it is to do a few
strength training workouts per week, go for a walk every day, and eat like a
responsible adult.

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IF YOU SCROLL ON SOCIAL
MEDIA FOR TEN MINUTES IN
BETWEEN SETS OF
BENCHING WHEN ALL THE
OTHER BENCHES ARE
OCCUPIED, NOBODY LIKES
YOU.
SINCERELY,
EVERYONE IN YOUR GYM
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16:
CHOOSE WISELY
“Until a person can say deeply and honestly, ‘I am what I am today because
of the choices I made yesterday,’ that person cannot say, ‘I choose
otherwise.’”
—Stephen Covey

Much of the Western health crisis is the result of excess consumption of


highly processed food and alcohol, and this mass devastation will continue
in lockstep with these lifestyle decisions. Choose wisely.
The risks associated with strength training are far smaller than the risks
associated with not strength training. Choose wisely.
“Health at every size” makes about as much sense as “tall at every
height” or “rich at every means” or “smart at every IQ.” Choose wisely.
Your sleep hygiene is like your diet—it’s either working for or against
you, enhancing or injuring your life. Choose wisely.
And because pseudoscientific “primal” plant denialism is stylish at the
moment: Eating moose testicles instead of vegetables is like wiping with a
hand scraper instead of toilet paper because it rhymes. Choose wisely.

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17:
I SALUTE YOU
“Don’t bend; don’t water it down; don’t try to make it logical; don’t edit
your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense
obsessions mercilessly.”
—Franz Kafka

Whether you’re squatting the bar or a pile of plates, if you’re in the gym,
you deserve to be there. To take up space. To take up time. Anyone who
tries to make you feel otherwise can choke on a rusty spoon.
Whether you ate a bag instead of a bite, ordered a cheeseburger instead
of a chicken breast, or drank a barrel instead of a bottle, you’re not a bad
person. Or a sad sack. Or anything other than someone who ate some food
or drank some drink.
Whether you want to build a few ounces of muscle or a few stones,
lose a drop or two of fat or a gulp or three, or gain a whisker of strength or a
bushel, you belong in the gym. Just the way you are. Just the way you want
to be.
Whether it’s your first year or fourteenth, workouts will feel awful
sometimes, like you don’t know what you’re doing, like you’re chasing the
wind, like you should quit. It’s okay. Shrug it off, plow on, and it’ll pass.
Whether you did a workout today or just a single set, I salute you. If
you hit a PR, I salute you. If you didn’t hit a PR, I salute you. If you didn’t
train today but trained yesterday or will train tomorrow, I salute you.
Many people just talk. You’re trying. Salute.
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18:
DO YOU GAIN MUSCLE
FASTER WHEN YOU’RE
LEANER?
“We do two things here. We work hard. And we win. The reason we win is
that we work hard. So really, we only do one thing here.”
—Ben Rosenfield

Does your body fat percentage (the percentage of your body weight that’s
fat) affect how much muscle and fat you gain when you’re lean bulking
(consistently eating more calories than you burn to maximize muscle
growth)?
Many people say it does. The leaner you are, they claim, the more
muscle you’ll gain rather than fat (and vice versa). This concept goes back
to a series of papers published in the ‘70s, but it came of age in research
published by Gilbert Forbes in 1987. This research purportedly
demonstrated that when people with higher body fat levels gain weight, it’s
mostly fat, whereas in people with lower body fat levels, it’s mostly muscle.
Later, this theory was enthusiastically adopted by fitness thought
leaders, and a dogma was born: lean bulking when you’re lean (usually
between 10-to-15 percent body fat in men and 20-to-25 percent in women)
produces more muscle and less fat gain than when you’re “fluffy” (over 15
percent in men and over 25 percent in women).
This interpretation has problems, however. Most notably, Forbes’ work
didn’t include, and was never meant to apply to, people doing strength
training. Some of his data even came from people who were recovering
from anorexia, and in a subsequent review of the research, scientists
concluded that once the recovering anorexics were removed from the
analysis, there was insufficient evidence of a relationship between body
composition and the composition of weight gain.
Here’s what we know absolutely does impact the ratio of muscle and
fat gain when lean bulking, however:

1. The number of calories you eat.


2. The amount of protein you eat.
3. The effectiveness of your workout routine.

To optimize your results when lean bulking, you should maintain a


small calorie surplus (around 5-to-10 percent), eat a lot of protein (~1 gram
per pound of body weight per day), and follow a well-designed training
program like my Bigger Leaner Stronger program for men, Thinner Leaner
Stronger program for women, or Muscle for Life program for middle-aged
men and women.

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19:
FUNNY FITNESS
DISAPPOINTMENTS
“The value of a thing sometimes lies not in what one attains with it but in
what one pays for it— what it costs us.”
—Friedrich Nietzsche

Who else can vividly remember the disappointment when you realized just
how many calories are in a tablespoon of peanut butter?
And just how lean you have to get to have a six pack?
And just how little protein is in most plant foods?
And that losing “only” one pound of fat per week is actually a win?
And just how small a serving size of cereal, pasta, and ice cream is?
And that the real reason so many fitness influencers are so jacked is
just vitamin S(teroid)?
And just how much exercise it takes to burn just 100 calories?
And that nuts are basically pure fat, not protein?
And just how hard it is to bench a few plates?
And that you’re going to have to drink less wine to finally lose your
gut?

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20:
BEFORE YOU LAUGH
“The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas
in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.”
—F. Scott Fitzgerald

Before you laugh at people who think the earth is flat, remember that some
of y’all don’t eat carrots because “they have too much sugar.”
And before you laugh at people who think Hillary Clinton is a reptilian
shapeshifter, remember that some of y’all still think creatine is a steroid.
And before you laugh at people who think Elvis lives, remember that
some of y’all avoid pre-cut and frozen veggies because they’re “processed.”
And before you laugh at people who think 5G is making us sick, not
Covid, remember that some of y’all think that artificial sweeteners are more
fattening than sugar.
And before you laugh at people who think Greenland doesn’t exist,
remember that some of y’all stopped eating broccoli because a smelly
juicebag who eats raw beef liver said it’s bad for you.
And before you laugh at people who believe the earth is hollow,
remember that some of y’all think adding butter to your coffee will help
you lose weight.
And before you laugh at people who say we invaded Iraq to shut down
Saddam’s ancient Sumerian stargate, remember that some of y’all won’t
microwave food because of “the radiation.”
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THE ONLY GENES YOU NEED
TO GET AND STAY FIT ARE
THE ONES THAT
CONSISTENTLY PROD YOUR
TIRED FLESH INTO THE
GYM RATHER THAN ONTO
THE COUCH WHILE
EVERYONE ELSE MUCKS
ABOUT AND GETS FAT.
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21:
GENTLE FITNESS ADVICE
“To know and not to do is not to know.”
—Wang Yang Ming

So much fitness advice is framed like this:


UNFOLLOW ME IF YOU CAN’T WAKE UP AT 3 AM AND
DEADLIFT DOUBLE YOUR BODY WEIGHT FOR DOUBLES IN
YOUR DRIVEWAY IN THE DEAD OF WINTER.
Here, I want to talk to you in gentler tones about fitness, because
although it requires work and effort and can feel like a stormy love affair
that you just can’t quit, too much lectern-pounding bust-your-assery can
hold you back and even burn you out.

1. Everyone wants to tell you what to eat, what not to eat; what burns
fat, what doesn’t; what’s evidence-based, what isn’t. But
ultimately, whatever works for you is valid. Your fitness is yours.
To explore. To evolve. To enjoy.
2. Train at your own pace. Progress is progress. Sometimes it’s in
stone’s throws, sometimes in country miles. I’m cheering for you
just as you’d cheer for me because we all want to live in a fitter,
healthier world.
3. Some days are easier, and some are harder. Your best workouts are
rarely the easy ones, though, and your hardest workouts aren’t
write-offs. This is just the way the cards come out sometimes.
4. It’s okay to feel like you don’t know what you’re doing because
even the fittest people in the gym didn’t always know what they
were doing. They learned as they went along, and they made many
mistakes. You can too.
5. Some workouts you just have to finish and get rid of as best as
you can. Sometimes, as Jerry Garcia said, you go diving for pearls
and come up with clams. And that’s okay. You did what you could.
Tomorrow is a new day.
6. Even a little of the right stuff can go a long way. A 30-minute walk
every day can kickstart the process that transforms your body and
life. A huge triumph. Most people transform themselves once
every never. So start slow if you need to.
7. Occasionally, you have to trundle through a spate of not-great
workouts before you have a great one again. It’s normal. The good
and bad are just part of the game. Press on.
8. Motivation isn’t a puddle that fades in a balmy afternoon. It’s an
ocean. It ebbs. It flows. But it never runs dry. It has murky depths
and roiling whirlpools, shiny treasures and sparkling beaches.
Sometimes you sink. Sometimes you swim.
9. Comparing yourself to other sweat junkies is a sure way to feel
lousy. There’s always someone who looks better, lifts more
weight, and has more of whatever you want. The deck is stacked.
You can’t win. So turn your gaze inward instead, looking only at
who you were, are, and hope to become.
10. Once you’ve upgraded your body and health, offer your setup to
others for their consideration. Leave a light on and ladder out for
those coming up behind you. Show them your map so they can
better draw theirs.

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22:
OVERRATED AND
UNDERRATED FOR FEMALE
STRENGTH TRAINING
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of
knowledge.”
—Stephen Hawking

Wholly overrated for female strength training:

Using lighter weights to “tone” your muscles


Never resting in between sets to keep your heart rate in the “fat
burning zone” (see chapter 70)
Measuring workout effectiveness by calories burned
Trying to sweat more for a bigger “afterburn effect”
Getting really sore

And utterly underrated:

Using heavy weights to get strong


Consistently achieving progressive overload (i.e. increasing the
amount of tension your muscles produce over time)
Getting really good at the elementary exercises (the simple ones
that involve squatting, hinging at the hips, and pressing and
pulling horizontally and vertically)
“So women should just train like men?” Yes and no.
Men and women should generally do the same types of exercises, work
in the same rep ranges, and use the same kinds of progression models
because …

1. The physiological mechanisms that drive muscle growth (and fat


loss) are fundamentally the same in men and women and thus
respond to the same training stimuli in much the same ways.
2. Male and female fitness goals usually don’t differ in substance
(muscle, strength, and body fat), only degree (how much muscle
and strength and how little body fat). In my experience, the
physique most men want (muscular and lean) requires gaining
about 25-to-30 pounds of muscle and achieving about 10 percent
body fat, whereas with women (who usually want to look “toned”
and athletic), it’s usually around 10-to-15 pounds of muscle gain
and 20 percent body fat.

That said, whereas most men want to prioritize their upper body
development and most women their lower body, their workout routines
should differ (which is why my programs for women in my books Muscle
for Life and Thinner Leaner Stronger are different than those for men in
Muscle for Life and Bigger Leaner Stronger).

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23:
IF THEY CAN DO IT …
“Service is the rent we pay for the privilege of living on this earth.”
—Nathan Eldon Tanner

Thanks to the “contagious” nature of behavior, your actions can influence


the conduct of others in your orbit, especially those who are close to
making positive changes to their lifestyle.
For example, studies show that people are more likely to eat healthy
foods, exercise regularly, quit smoking, drink less alcohol, and even feel
happy when they see others doing the same.
Don’t discount the impact this alone can have. The world desperately
needs more people to show what they’re capable of and inspire others to try.
And so, by getting and staying fit, you’re doing a little good every single
day.

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24:
MAYBE THEY’RE BORN WITH
IT … OR MAYBE IT’S …
SOMETHING ELSE
“Show me a man who is not a slave! One is a slave to lust, another to greed,
another to ambition, and all men are slaves to fear.”
—Seneca

How jacked and shredded influencers tell you they’re on a shitload of


steroids without telling you they’re on a shitload of steroids:

“I’m on TRT.”
“I did a steroid cycle or two when I was younger.”
“It’s just good lighting and a pump.”
“I look bigger in pictures than I actually am.”
“You’re just underestimating your genetic potential.”
“I tried prohormones once.”
“My dad was a bodybuilder.”
“A fat-free mass index of 28 isn’t that special.”
“My monthly bloodwork is looking great.”
“This new shampoo made me break out.”

Social media is lousy with these “fake natty” clowndicks, and in many
cases, their covert drug use harms more people than just themselves.
First, steroid users that have had little experience or results as a natural
trainee often give bad advice to naturals because with the right drugs, you
can get a lot wrong in the kitchen and gym and still build an outstanding
physique.
In fact, research shows that if men inject themselves with enough
testosterone, they can gain significant amounts of muscle without any
training whatsoever. And in one study, a group of men who only got
testosterone injections for ten weeks (no training) gained more muscle on
average than a group of men who didn’t get injections and trained three
times per week.
Many people “on gear” don’t realize how big of an advantage they
have, though, and unwittingly teach their followers to make major mistakes
that hobble their progress and, ironically, can bend them toward using
steroids too.
Some of these secretly steroided guys and gals do give good diet and
training advice, however, and rationalize that this “noble end” justifies the
means. I disagree. It’s still immoral to lie about using performance
enhancing drugs to build a body that wins people’s attention, trust, and
business.
Second, many enhanced lifters create false expectations in others that
lead to feelings of disappointment and failure. We can all look great without
steroids, but no matter how much moxie we muster, we’ll never be as big,
lean, and strong as our chemically augmented peers.
So, give a big side-eye to anyone who in some way makes money from
a physique that somehow always looks stage-ready. Maybe they’re born
with it, or maybe it’s … something else.

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25:
OPPORTUNITIES ARE
WHISPERS
“People say that what we’re all seeking is a meaning for life. I don’t think
that’s what we’re really seeking. I think that what we’re seeking is an
experience of being alive.”
—Joseph Campbell

Success in any endeavor or aspect of life requires opportunities.


Opportunities to grow knowledge and abilities. Opportunities to make
profitable use of skills. Opportunities to meet the right people.
Everyone knows this, of course, but here’s something most people
don’t know: opportunities are whispers, not foghorns.
Every day, everywhere we go, we’re surrounded by the soft lilts of
opportunity. But most of us aren’t tuning in. We’re not listening for
murmurs—we’re waiting for thunderclaps. That’s not how the world works.
Opportunities don’t announce themselves with trumpets and confetti. They
don’t come with a 110 percent money-back guarantee. They’re often
nothing more than narrow openings to make something other people are
already doing just a little bit better.
Thus, success often stems from quietly noticing and seizing on “minor”
details that others have dismissed or overlooked. “While there might be
more glamour in coming up with the brilliant new ideas,” wrote the
billionaire investor and hedge fund manager Ray Dalio “most of success
comes from doing the mundane and often distasteful stuff, like identifying
and dealing with problems and pushing hard over a long time.”
And how do you find problems worth solving (i.e. opportunities)? Be
curious about the world around you. Ask questions. Do research. Go deeper
than most people are willing to go. That’s how you get ahead.

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RESISTANCE TRAINING IS
THE ELIXIR OF LIFE. SLEEP
IS THE PANACEA OF THE
GODS. DARK CHOCOLATE IS
THE AMBROSIA OF HEAVEN.
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26:
OVERRATED AND
UNDERRATED FOR MUSCLE
BUILDING
“I think the abilities of the average man could be doubled if it were
demanded.”
—Will Durant

Wholly overrated for muscle building:

Getting a huge pump (“finisher sets!”)


Sweating buckets (“metcons!”)
Getting really sore (“negatives!”)
Burning lots of calories (“circuits!”)
Training until bone-tired (“10 x 10s!”)

And utterly underrated:

Getting really good at the basics


Getting stronger
Staying patient

The more “boring” a training program is (familiar exercises, simple


progression, repetitive workouts, etc.), the more likely it’ll produce long-
term results.
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27:
A FEW REASONS TO BE FIT
“To be independent of public opinion is the first formal condition of
achieving anything great.”
—Georg Hegel

Reason #951,856: The epiphany that you’re far more physically capable
than you gave yourself credit for.
Reason #214,647: The chance to look in the mirror and think, “I did
that. That’s awesome. I’m awesome.” And believe it.
Reason #19,788: The joy of taking off your clothes without even a
whisper of embarrassment.
Reason #17,354: The opportunity to pay it forward and help others find
their way to a better body and life.
Reason #3,021: The freedom to have high standards without being a
hypocrite.
Reason #2,478: The feeling that your body accurately reflects the best
parts of your being.
Reason #1,714: The realization that you don’t have to settle for a body
you don’t like.
Reason #932: The soreness that reminds you to feel proud for not
quitting.
Reason #107: The moment you can look back and say, “I’m glad I did”
and not “I wish I had.”
Reason #1: Fitness isn’t everything, but everything is harder if you
aren’t fit.

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28:
THE TRUTH ABOUT FOOD
TRACKING
“If the day and the night are such that you greet them with joy, and life
emits a fragrance like flowers and sweet-scented herbs, is more elastic,
more starry, more immortal—that is your success.”
—Henry David Thoreau

Flexible dieters be like:


“I love you, but I made exactly the amount of oatmeal that fits my
macros right now.”
“But I just want—”
“Exactly the amount.”
You don’t have to live like this to get and stay fit, but if you haven’t
done any food tracking yet, try it out for a week or two. It’ll help you
understand your eating habits and find easy ways to better align your
calories, macronutrients, micronutrients, meal timing, meal composition,
and food choices to your goals and preferences.
For instance, you might spot an opportunity to replace a high-calorie or
highly processed food or two with something “lighter.” Instead of fried
chicken, baked or air fried. Instead of a frappuccino, a cappuccino or
americano. Instead of a cookie, a protein bar. Instead of sugar-sweetened
soda, a diet one.
Or you may realize that you need to trim your portions because you’re
simply eating more calories than you should—a common mistake that even
veteran fitness folk make. Or that you’re eating larger meals when you’re
less hungry (mornings, maybe) and smaller ones when you’re famished
(evenings), making it harder to stick to the plan. By doing the opposite,
then, you could score an easy fitness win.
Think of a food log like a video reel of you doing key exercises—a
handy tool for auditing your habits and finding improvements that’ll help
you reach your fitness goals faster. Some people like to log and film more
often than others, but everyone can benefit from the occasional check-ins.

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29:
EXERCISE AS MEDITATION
“Self-control is strength. Right thought is mastery. Calmness is power.”
—James Allen

Exercise is my preferred form of meditation. To exorcize my demons, I


exercise them.

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30:
EARLY BIRDS GET THE GAINS
TOO
“The first step to win yourself is wake up early.”
—Sukant Ratnakar

If you want to train with some of the fittest, healthiest, and most consistent
people in your gym, start going between 5 and 6 AM. Dabblers would
rather lick a cane toad than wake up when the birds start yelling at them and
go grab some iron.
“But is that the best time to lift weights?” you might wonder.
On the whole, most studies show that you’ll probably gain muscle and
strength a little faster if you train in the afternoon or evening than if you
train in the morning.
For example, a 24-week study conducted by scientists at the University
of Jyväskylä found that men who lifted weights in the evening gained more
muscle than men who did the same workouts in the morning. The
researchers also found that the difference in muscle growth between the two
groups only became apparent halfway through the study, indicating it may
take up to three months or more for the benefits of evening training to
become apparent.
This effect has been replicated in other studies as well, suggesting that
training in the evenings is probably at least somewhat superior to training in
the mornings. But that doesn’t mean you can’t effectively gain muscle and
strength with early workouts.
While most research shows that people are usually weaker in the
morning than in the evening, if you consistently train in the morning, this
handicap disappears over time. Specifically, if you switch from training in
the evening to training in the morning, you can expect your strength to dip
about 5-to-10 percent at first, but it should return to normal after about a
month or so.
What’s more, your personal preferences affect your workout
performance and results. In a Samford University study, scientists found
that college-aged, experienced weightlifters who preferred to train in the
morning exhibited a bit more physical fatigue (measured by bar velocity on
the bench press) in morning workouts than evening ones, but they were also
more motivated to train and reported a lower perception of effort (the
workouts felt easier).
So, while training later in the day appears to be physiologically
advantageous, if that doesn’t work for you (or you simply don’t enjoy it as
much as training earlier in the day), don’t agonize over it. When you work
out is far less important than how and how often you work out.

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THREE REASONS TO DO YOUR
SQUATS AND DEADLIFTS:
1. THEY’RE GREAT EXERCISES
FOR BUILDING A STRONGER
BACKBONE. LITERALLY AND
FIGURATIVELY.
2. AN HOUR OF THEM > A YEAR OF
PLANKS.
3. THEY GREATLY REDUCE YOUR
RISK OF GIVING A SHIT ABOUT
YOUR HATERS.
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31:
DO YOU HAVE A PERSONAL
CONSTITUTION?
“Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you
come alive and then go do that, because what the world needs is people who
have come alive.”
—Howard Thurman

In his classic self-development book The 7 Habits of Highly Effective


People, Stephen Covey recommends that you develop a “personal
constitution” based on your vision and values—a changeless sense of who
you are and what you’re about that can guide your short- and long-term
goals and decisions.
Here’s mine:

1. Exemplify orderliness. Show me how someone spends their time


and money, and I’ll show you who they really are.
2. Take extreme ownership. Some of your problems may not be your
fault, but they’re always your responsibility.
3. Always be willing to exert more effort. “In this age, which
believes that there is a shortcut to everything, the greatest lesson
to be learned is that the most difficult way is, in the long run, the
easiest.” —Henry Miller
4. Always be growing. You don’t attract what you want. You attract
who you are.
5. Make it go right. “The successful person has the habit of doing the
things failures don’t like to do.” —Albert E. Gray
6. Refuse to complain. “When you complain, you make yourself a
victim. Leave the situation, change the situation, or accept it. All
else is madness.” —Eckhart Tolle
7. Think for yourself, even if it runs afoul of orthodoxies. “To be
yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you
something else is the greatest accomplishment.” —Ralph Waldo
Emerson
8. Don’t associate with people who don’t share your key values.
While there’s nobody in the world who will share your point of
view on everything, there are people who will share your most
important values and how you choose to live them out. Make sure
you end up with those people.
9. Tell the truth and do what’s right even when it costs you
something. “It can ruin your life only if it ruins your character.” —
Marcus Aurelius
10. Give far more to people and society than you take. “That the
person who lives on the labor of others, not giving himself in
return to the best of his ability, is really a consumer of human life
and therefore must be considered no better than a cannibal.” —
Elbert Hubbard

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32:
SIMPLE MENTAL HEALTH
HACKS
“There are people who do not live their present life; it is as if they were
preparing themselves, with all their zeal, to live some other life, but not this
one.”
—Antiphon

If shrinks prescribed the following lifestyle changes as zealously as they


prescribe drugs, there would be a lot fewer mental health problems.

1. Eating lots of nutritious food


2. Getting enough sleep
3. Quitting porn, alcohol, and recreational drugs
4. Reading good books
5. Exercising
6. Helping others without any expectations
7. Smiling more
8. Having difficult conversations
9. Deleting social media apps
10. Going outside
11. Giving compliments
12. Turning off notifications on your phone
13. Watching less TV
14. Eliminating “maybes” by making decisions
15. Embracing personal responsibility

And if all that sounds about as manageable as boiling the ocean, lower
your sights to just one item to start—one that you can make one stride
toward by the end of today. One nutritious meal, one chapter, one workout,
one smile—you pick. And if you can do that, you can do it again tomorrow.
And with one more tomorrow, you’ve got yourself a pattern—the embryo
of a habit.
You can tackle your whole life this way—in manageable chunks.

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33:
DON’T LET THEM CONVINCE
YOU
“He who wrestles with us strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our skill.
Our antagonist is our helper.”
—Edmund Burke

Don’t let anyone convince you that exercise should be viewed as


punishment and food as a reward for enduring it.
Or that weighing ingredients when baking to get the outcome you want
is “smart cooking,” but weighing foods to get the outcome you want is
“disordered eating.”
Or that drinking and eating excessive amounts of alcohol and junk food
is just “enjoying your life.”
Or that you can’t eat really boring food and still live a really interesting
life.
Or that you should exercise because you hate your body rather than
because you love it.
Or that you need more “superfoods,” burpees, fasting, HIIT, or
supplements instead of better nutrition, sleep, hydration, “work-walk
balance,” and strength training.
Or that you should mostly exercise to get really sweaty rather than to
get really strong.
Or that there are investments that’ll pay bigger dividends than the ones
you can make into your health and fitness.
Or that there’s a type of exercise more “functional” than strength
training.
Or that a pile of pills, powders, and potions can fix problems caused by
your lifestyle.

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34:
IS EXERCISE USELESS FOR
WEIGHT LOSS?
“Only those who will risk going too far can possibly find out how far one
can go.”
—T. S. Eliot

According to some, exercise is about as useful for losing weight as seawater


is for quenching thirst. Although working out burns calories, they say, it
also steps up appetite, making it difficult, if not impossible, to restrain
yourself from overeating.
Science shows otherwise, however. While it’s true that exercise can
temporarily increase hunger levels (as it should—otherwise humans
would’ve died out long ago), studies show that regular exercise has a
moderating effect on appetite and promotes a state of neutral energy balance
(where calories eaten match calories burned and weight is maintained).
Furthermore, research shows that sedentary living has the opposite
effect, short-circuiting our body’s machinery for controlling hunger
according to actual energy requirements.
Another related myth is that the body offsets many or most of the
calories burned during a workout by simply burning fewer throughout the
rest of the day, especially when calories are restricted for fat loss.
This isn’t entirely incorrect. When dieting, our body does have sneaky
ways to bring energy expenditure down and intake up—but studies show
these effects aren’t significant enough to cancel out the extra calories
burned through exercise.
Why, then, do so many habitual exercisers lose little if any weight?
Usually, it’s because they don’t realize that exercise doesn’t drive fat loss.
Diet does. So when meal planning is awry, even enormous amounts of
exercise can produce no discernible improvements in body composition.
This is particularly true of endurance training (“cardio”), which is often
people’s first choice for fat loss because it burns more calories than strength
training. What cardio doesn’t do, however, is help you build and maintain
muscle while you lose fat, which is crucial for achieving a lean and fit
physique rather than a “skinny fat” one. Only strength training can do that.
So, where does this leave us? Except in the case of extreme athletics
(10+ hours of vigorous physical activity per week), exercise alone of any
kind is usually ineffective for weight loss; but if you eat and exercise
properly (starting with the simple prescription I gave in chapter 2), you can
lose fat rapidly while also adding lean muscle to all of the right places on
your body.

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35:
THE COMMON THREAD
“A healthy person has a thousand wishes, a sick person only one.”
—Agnes Karil-Schwester

Of all the positive traits embodied by the people who lose the most fat and
gain the most muscle and strength, the factor most responsible for their
success is this: they’re the ones who miss the fewest workouts and make the
fewest dietary mistakes.
Not that they’re perfect—they’re just good enough most of the time.
They live by the motto: “Enough and often and over the long run.”
This is the special sauce of the fitness elite. They show up. They stick
to the fundamentals. They approach their fitness as nature approaches her
work—atom by atom, little by little, never in a hurry. Because it’s
astonishing what you can do if you just don’t stop.
And the key to continuing to show up? It’s not having a lot of time. Nor
is it having the right mindset or motivations. It’s just establishing and
keeping a routine—deciding what to do every day, when to do it, and then
doing it exactly that way at exactly that time regardless of how we feel.
This orderly march is the cardinal hallmark of the professional. They’re
not always the brightest, nor the most talented. They’re just always locked
into forward gear. Even when the ride is bumpy. Even when the engine
splutters and threatens to stall. Even when they lose their bearings. They
just don’t stop.
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THINKING THAT TAKING
CREATINE OR PROTEIN
POWDER WILL MAKE YOU
“TOO BIG” IS LIKE
THINKING THAT EATING
BANANAS WILL MAKE YOU
“TOO SIMIAN.”
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36:
EVERY DAY VS. EVERY SO
OFTEN
“If you can’t solve a problem, then there is an easier problem you can’t
solve: find it.”
—George Polya

It’s never the single pizza, pastry, or pint of ice cream that produces
noticeable weight gain. It’s the consistent overconsumption of calories.
Remember: what you do every day is far more important than what you do
every so often.
For example, overeating can occur through too many oversized
portions and too much snacking, but sometimes it’s insidious. Sometimes, it
looks something like this:

Monday: (~1,800 calories)


Tuesday: (~1,800 calories)
Wednesday: (~1,800 calories)
Thursday: (~1,800 calories)
Friday: (~1,800 calories)
Saturday: (~4,000 calories)
Sunday: (~4,000 calories)

Average daily calorie intake Monday through Friday? 1,800. Average


daily calorie intake Monday through Sunday? 2,400.
And so, if this person were burning ~2,300 calories per day throughout
the week, they’d lose nearly a pound of fat by the weekend, but then, if they
were burning ~2,000 calories per day on Saturday and Sunday, they’d gain
it all back by the time they return to “dieting.”
Hence the many people struggling to lose weight “despite eating so
little.” Often, they just have selective memory about how they eat. They
quickly recall the 1,800-calorie Mondays and conveniently forget the 4,000-
calorie Saturdays.
Remember: energy balance is simple, but it isn’t forgiving. Likewise,
losing weight is straightforward, but it isn’t easy.

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37:
THE BEST MOTIVATION
“Death is nothing, but to live defeated is to die every day.”
—Napoleon Bonaparte

Workout motivation is a tough nut to crack. I post a shirtless picture on


Instagram, I get immediate feedback—some likes, some LOLs, some digital
high-fives, a troll or two. It’s dopamine-on-demand. Poke the button and get
the tickle.
Building a great body is nothing like that. It’s spitting into a bucket
every day. And nobody cares until it’s almost full, including you. “TRUST
ME, THIS HERE SPITOON IS GONNA SHINE ONE DAY!” *hawwwk*
*ptoo* *plunk* “YOU JUST WAIT!”
Fitness is completely self-driven. Wanna know what it feels like? It
feels like this: You bust your ass through a workout, look in the mirror, and
whisper to yourself, “Was that any good?” Then you utter: “I have no idea.”
“Oh, okay. Should I keep doing it?” “I really don’t know. Please stop
talking to me.” “Okay.” “Okay.” You then try to use your quick-drying,
anti-stink, strategically vented workout shirt to soak up your tears, but it’s
water-resistant so it’s not even good for that.
How do you do it, then? How do you motivate yourself to drag your
draggy body up to the barbell and muscle-feck it until a physique is born?
How do you build the body you want, one sweat-brick at a time? Day after
day, one month, one year, one decade if that’s what it takes?
Look, sometimes, training is hard—shaving with an ax hard, reading a
Dickens novel hard, wrestling a porcupine in heat hard. But when you get
right down to it, you either appreciate training and it motivates you—or not.
You either have the spark or you don’t. You can only fan embers, not dirt.
So if you’re only looking for little tricks and tips, you need to think
deeper about this thing you say you want to do. Training is a stormy love
affair, a glittering slot machine, a flickering neon sign. You’re drawn to it,
even when it sucks, like a raccoon to last week’s garbage.
And that’s what ultimately separates the Aspiring Not-Really-Fit
People from the Really Fit People—the latter train even when the
motivation carcass is being picked by crows. They hook up the defibrillator,
crank up the dials, and make the damn corpse dance again. Looks dead, but
isn’t.
Every day you train is a revival—a resurgence of ability and action that
leads to more training. The best motivation to train, then, is training. So
train when it’s hard. Train when it’s easy. Train when life doesn’t want you
to. Train when you don’t want to. Train when people say not to. Just train.
You can love the process and then hate it. You can love some workouts
and then hate others. You can thrill at how your body responds and then
curse it. Keep going, however, and I can promise you this: As difficult as it
is, you’ll learn to love having trained. There’s no other feeling like it.
So go, my friend, and train. Let that be your motivation. And then train
again. And then train some more. Build a fire that feeds itself.

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38:
GO FOR A WALK
“Walking is man’s best medicine.”
—Hippocrates

You don’t need to do cardio to lose weight. But you should still do cardio
because it’s great for your health. And that doesn’t mean you have to do
“cardio workouts,” by the way. Walking is indeed exercising, and it’s not a
waste of time.
In fact, walking more is the absolute easiest way to speed up fat loss,
incorporate active recovery into your lifestyle, and even reduce the risk of
death.
According to scientists at Semnan University of Medical Sciences who
analyzed the results of seven studies involving 28,141 participants, all-
cause mortality (death from all causes) dropped by about 12 percent for
every 1,000 steps people took every day.
When the researchers compared the people with the highest and lowest
daily step counts, they found that walking 16,000 steps per day was
associated with a 66 percent reduction in all-cause mortality compared to
walking just 2,700 steps per day.
So, while the popular target of 10,000 steps per day is more of a
marketing message than an evidence-based prescription, it does represent
about 5 miles and 1.5 hours of strolling, which is enough to reduce the risk
of disease and burn a significant number of calories (300-to-400 for most
people).
Also, if you want more bounce for the ounce, take “nature walks” in a
nearby park or trail whenever possible—research shows this can be
particularly effective at alleviating depression, improving mental health,
function, and well-being, and reducing feelings of fatigue and stress.

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39:
YOU ARE NOT YOUR BODY
COMPOSITION
“The greatest disability is attitude. To change the way we behave, we have
to change the way we think.”
—Unknown

You can want to lose fat and gain muscle without hating your body just as
you can want to learn new information and skills without hating your mind.
On the other hand, just because you don’t want to get “jacked” or
“ripped” doesn’t mean you’re lazy or living with low standards. Often, the
lifestyle tradeoffs required to go from “fit” to “swole” simply aren’t worth
it.
For example, here’s something that really lean people often don’t want
to admit: They’d feel a lot better with a bit more body fat. They’d be less
hungry, irritable, and fatigued, and they’d sleep better, have better
workouts, and worry less.
They’d also realize that nobody cares about their body fat percentage
nearly as much as they do, and the only people who say that being shredded
feels better than eating pizza are people who have never been shredded.
I guess what I’m trying to say is this:
You don’t have to force yourself to choose between being a little too
hungry and a little too fat. You can care less about your body measurements
than your strength, health, and confidence.
You are not your body composition.

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40:
THIS IS LIKE THAT
“Comparison is the death of joy.”
—Mark Twain

The greatest thing by far, according to Aristotle, is to be a master of


metaphor.

cracks knuckles
dons toga
grabs stylus

Eating according to your blood type is like eating according to your sun
sign.
And exercising according to your body type is like exercising
according to your zodiac sign.
And trying to out-exercise an out-of-control diet is like trying to shovel
sand against the tide.
And taking BCAAs in addition to eating plenty of protein is like
watering your lawn … after a storm.
And sacrificing too much sleep to have more time for just about
anything is like trying to cure dandruff with a guillotine.
And relying solely on caffeine for energy is like trying to borrow your
way out of debt.
And avoiding plant foods because you don’t like them is like staring at
the sun because you don’t like the shade.
And not lifting heavy weights for fear of getting “bulky” is like not
wearing makeup for fear of looking like a clown.
And avoiding foods you like in the pursuit of “health” or “wellness” is
like wearing a straitjacket in the pursuit of flexibility.
“But Mike,” you sneer, “those are similes, not metaphors.”
Okay, and? We get it, Shakespeare—things are like other things. The
audacity. Here, have one more simile, dingus:
Viewing exercise mostly as a way to burn calories is like viewing
marriage mostly as a way to get laid a lot.

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LEARN FROM THE PERSON
WHO CAN TRAIN WITHOUT
PRE-WORKOUT OR
HEADPHONES.
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41:
THE BEST WAY TO GET
APPROVAL
“The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause,
while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.”
—J.D. Salinger

The best way to get approval is to not need it—to live up to your own
standards of what’s right and admirable rather than those that please or
impress others. “The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority,”
Marcus Aurelius once said, “but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of
the insane.”
Don’t be afraid to speak out against offenses, either. If something’s
ugly, say so. If it’s trashy, unacceptable, excessive, unreasonable,
degenerate, destructive, or demeaning, don’t let it pass. If we won’t shield
worthy virtues and values from the slings and arrows of the deranged and
depraved, who will?

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42:
HOW FAST CAN YOU LOSE FAT
WITHOUT LOSING MUSCLE?
“Well-being is realized by small steps; but it is truly no small thing.”
—Zeno

Search “how fast should I lose weight” online, and you’ll get the same
answer pretty much everywhere: One pound per week.
And while that’s a good rule of thumb for many people, if you have 25,
50, or 100+ pounds of fat to lose to reach a healthy body composition, that
would require months or even years of dieting. I do not like this apple, Sam
I Am.
Luckily, however, the more fat you have to lose, the faster you can lose
it with few if any of the unwanted side effects associated with dieting. In
fact, with the right diet and workout routine, some people can lose two,
three, or more pounds of fat per week without sacrificing their muscle,
scrambling their hormones, or scuttling their metabolism.
For instance, in a study conducted by West Virginia University
scientists, untrained, obese people did three resistance training workouts per
week and ate 800 calories per day for twelve weeks and lost 32 pounds of
fat on average, while maintaining all of their muscle mass and increasing
the speed of their metabolism.
I wouldn’t recommend that weight loss protocol, but it gives valuable
context for the following targets. Assuming you want to get no leaner than
10-to-15 (men) or 20-to-25 (women) percent body fat (achieving lower
levels eventually requires less than 1 pound of fat loss per week), here are
practical guidelines:

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43:
IT HAPPENS
“When things are going sweetly and peacefully, please pause a moment,
and then say out loud, ‘If this isn’t nice, what is?’”
—Kurt Vonnegut

Did you eat too much yesterday? Here’s a hall pass to eat and move
normally today. You don’t have to atone by slashing your calories or carbs
or grinding out an extra hour of cardio. You don’t have to exercise more to
“earn your food.”
Did you lose a rep or two on an exercise compared to last week or
month? That doesn’t mean anything is wrong or you’re about to plateau.
Maybe it was a few days of extra stress, mediocre sleep, or inadequate
nutrition. Or maybe it just wasn’t a day for prime performance.
Did life throw your fitness habit out of gear and you’re still sputtering?
It happens to all of us—we move to new cities, start new jobs, get married,
have kids, lose family members, and suchlike, and our routine swiftly
unravels.
But we can always reassemble ourselves. We’ve done it before, so we
can do it again.

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44:
DON’T GET YOUR TINSEL IN A
TANGLE
“Live your life to the fullest; and then, and only then, die. Don’t leave any
unlived life behind.”
—Irvin D. Yalom

How to diet during the holidays, according to science:


Don’t.
Seriously though, people who eat and drink more than usual during the
holidays gain weight. Womp womp womp. But! They also have fun. And
can then lose the weight. Remember that.
So, for the sake of Santa’s sacred nipples, don’t count calories on
Christmas. Feast. Drink. Hug your loved ones. Hakuna matata.
If you’re so inclined, however, you can enjoy plenty of cheer while also
limiting the “damage” to no more than a couple of pounds of fat gained
(that can be lost in a couple of weeks of proper dieting). Here are seven tips
that’ll help:

1. Focus on things other than food. Visit friends and family, shop and
wrap presents, go for walks, whatever makes memories that don’t
center on food.
2. Create a calorie buffer before big dinners. Leave room for evening
feasts by eating more or less nothing but protein throughout the
day to stay full. And if that can’t sustain you, add in some fibrous
fruits and vegetables like apples, oranges, carrots, or celery.
3. Limit snacking. It’s hard to eat far more calories than you burn on
just a couple of meals per day, but fairly easy to do if you add in
several rounds of snacking.
4. Keep your protein intake up. The satiating effects of protein help
manage the temptation to overeat, even when you’re surrounded
by treats.
5. Stay active. Even relatively small amounts of activity every day
can increase calorie burning, reduce appetite, and boost insulin
sensitivity. Staying active also keeps you in the habit of moving
and exercising, which makes it easier to resume your normal
routine once the holidays are over.
6. Don’t go to parties hungry. Just a serving or two of protein before
you surround yourself with a smorgasbord of sweets and savories
can be enough to moderate your desire to eat everything in sight.
7. Imbibe thoughtfully. Binge drinking rapidly accelerates fat
storage, but if you limit yourself to a few servings of tipple per
day, you can mostly sidestep this pitfall.

And lastly, once the fun (and fat gain) is over, create and follow a
proper meal plan to dial in your diet for easy fat loss. This will take all the
guesswork out of what, how much, and when you should eat—eliminating
basically all food-related decisions—which in turn will reduce stress and
improve compliance.

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45:
ARE YOU VOTING THE WAY
YOU KNOW YOU SHOULD?
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”
—Aristotle

Your daily actions will mostly determine the trajectory of your life. Just
forty-five minutes of exercise every day can banish disease and
dysfunction. Just thirty minutes of reading every day can turn you into an
expert in just about anything. Just a few hours of deep work every day can
produce a legacy.
As James Clear says in his bestselling book Atomic Habits: “Every
action is a vote for the type of person you wish to become.” Are you voting
the way you know you should?

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YOU’RE AT A BIRTHDAY PARTY.
THERE’S CAKE AND PIZZA. YOU
DON’T KNOW HOW MANY
CALORIES THEY HAVE. IF YOUR
BODY WERE A COMBUSTION
ENGINE, YOU WOULDN’T FUEL IT
WITH ARBITRARY AMOUNTS OF
CAKE AND PIZZA. BUT YOUR
BODY ISN’T A COMBUSTION
ENGINE, SO YOU EAT THEM
ANYWAY. THE NEXT DAY, YOU
LOOK AND FEEL THE SAME. THE
END.
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46:
IS RUNNING BAD FOR
GAINING MUSCLE AND
STRENGTH?
“The important thing is to not stop questioning.”
—Albert Einstein

Running isn’t “bad” for gaining muscle and strength per se, but in some
cases, it can crimp your efforts to get bigger and stronger. There are three
primary reasons for this:

1. High-volume running wears you out physically and mentally,


making it harder to push yourself in your strength training. If you
don’t believe me, go run an “easy eight” (miles) and try to squat
heavy the next day.
2. Running can cause a fair amount of muscle damage and soreness
that hinders performance in the gym. Your body has to work hard
to recover from a challenging strength training program, and if
you also run a lot, it won’t be able to keep up.
3. Research shows that endurance training can cause adaptations at a
cellular level that are at odds with the adaptations produced by
resistance training. This is known as the “interference effect,”
which states that our body (and muscles in particular) can’t
effectively adapt to both endurance and resistance training at the
same time.

Fortunately, there’s an easy way to minimize these downsides of


running: Don’t do too much of it. Specifically, don’t do more than 2-to-3
hours of running per week, and for most of it, maintain a low-to-moderate
pace (as fast as you can run while still being able to speak in full sentences).
You may also want to consider something other than running because
lower-impact activities like cycling, rowing, and swimming don’t seem to
negatively impact strength or muscle gain as much.
In summary, I’m not “anti-running,” but I’m “anti-lots-of-running-
when-your-main-goal-is-to-gain-muscle-and-strength.”

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47:
THE SUPREME WARRIOR
VIRTUE
“Far better to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though
checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither
enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that
knows not victory, nor defeat.”
—Theodore Roosevelt

Someone once asked the Spartan king Leonidas to identify the supreme
warrior virtue from which all others flowed.
He replied: “Contempt for death.”
Remember that whenever you’re having a hard time. Nothing defangs
adversity like defiance.

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48:
THE SCIENCE OF
PRODUCTIVE DAYDREAMING
“Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars.”
—Norman Vincent Peale

Imagine you’re given the choice of $50 now or $100 in two weeks. Which
would you choose? Many people would take the $50 because “good now”
is more enticing than “better later.”
This tendency to prefer a smaller, immediate reward over a larger,
delayed one is known as hyperbolic discounting, and it underlies a host of
self-destructive behaviors, including substance abuse, pathological
gambling, risky sexual behavior, and an inability to stick with health-
promoting habits.
One way to short-circuit this psychological quirk is something
scientists call episodic future thinking, which involves imagining a specific,
personal, and detailed future event linked to a personal goal. Productive
daydreaming, essentially.
In a study conducted by scientists at the University at Buffalo School
of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, researchers instructed 29 overweight
or obese women who wanted to lose weight to use either an episodic future
thinking (EFT) protocol or an episodic recent thinking (ERT) protocol.
The EFT protocol asked participants to think of five health goals they
would like to complete and five exciting events that would occur in the next
three weeks. Then, participants were told to vividly imagine (location, time,
emotions, context, and so on) and describe how achieving their health goals
will contribute to the experience of the events.
This process produced statements like the following:

In three weeks, I will go to the concert with my friend. We will sit


near the back so we can chat more easily. I will be feeling strong
and proud of myself after having achieved my goal of going to the
gym three times per week. I will be feeling excited and happy to
see the band play for the first time.

The ERT protocol was different. It asked participants to list and rate the
importance of five things they did regularly, and then to vividly remember
and describe five events that had happened in the past 24 hours.
All participants recorded themselves reading their statements, and on
the following day, were taken to a food court full of tempting “diet-
unfriendly” food. They played their recordings back to themselves, and
then, without being given any nutritional guidance, were told to eat
whatever they wanted.
The results showed that the “future thinking” group consumed
significantly fewer calories than the “recent thinking” group and chose
foods containing less fat and more protein. By contemplating the attainment
of goals in the future, people made better decisions in the present.
We can use this strategy to help us achieve our goals, too, fitness and
otherwise. For example, imagine you’ve just set a wedding date, and you
want to look fit on the big day. Paint a mental picture of the following:

Where you’ll be on your wedding day


How happy you’ll be to see your closest friends and family
How pleased you’ll be with the event, including your attire,
venue, decorations, wedding party, etc.
How confident and satisfied you’ll feel in front of everyone, and
how comfortable you’ll feel having your picture taken because
you stuck to your fitness plan and you know you look great.

Next, you’d write down all of the details in your mental movie, and
once you feel you’ve put enough flesh on the bones, record yourself reading
what you wrote aloud. Then, you can listen to the recording (and relive the
dream) at least a few times per week (many people do it every day), and
you’ll have an easier time sticking to your plan and making good on your
goal.

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49:
NO SHAME
“One can be instructed in society, one is inspired only in solitude.”
—Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

No matter how zany our reasons for staying fit may seem to others, if we
can use those reasons to fire the fitness furnace, there’s no shame in
exploiting them to the fullest.
That includes anything related to what you see in the mirror, by the
way—don’t let anyone convince you that a commitment to your fitness is a
flavor of narcissism rather than self-love.
So there’s no shame in admitting that at least 50 percent of the reason
you work out is that you have a “complicated” relationship with carbs and
sugar and don’t want to get fat.
Or that you literally can’t afford to gain weight because then you’d
have to buy a new wardrobe.
Or that you want a good excuse to buy a new wardrobe.
Or that you want to refute people who have doubted you and put you
down.
Or that you don’t want to be fatter than your friends.
Or that you want people to check you out now and then.
Or that you love checking yourself out, especially when you have a
pump.
Or that you need the hours of sweaty solitude.
Or that you want to lose your gut so your dink looks bigger.
Or that your life just feels a little out of order when you’re not going to
the gym.

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50:
IS STRENGTH TRAINING
GOOD FOR WEIGHT LOSS?
“You want to go where a question takes you, not where your training left
you.”
—Sean Eddy

Strength training isn’t a popular prescription for weight loss, and rightfully
so—it’s not an effective way to lose weight because it builds muscle, which,
well, increases weight. What many people don’t know, however, is strength
training is fantastic for losing fat (and keeping it off).
First, strength training burns more calories than you might think—
about 250-to-500 calories per hour depending on how big you are and how
intensely you train (the more you weigh, the more weight you lift, and the
more reps you do, the more calories you burn).
Second, the muscle you gain with strength training does more than
stroke your ego—it also stokes your metabolism, making it easier to lose fat
and stay lean. Muscle is more metabolically active than fat, burning about
six calories per pound per day (versus just two calories per pound of body
fat per day), and it costs more energy to move a heavier (more muscular)
body than a lighter one.
Third, when we train our muscles, they release cells into our blood
called extracellular vesicles. When these cells leave our muscles, they carry
with them strands of genetic material called miR-1 and find their way into
nearby fat cells. When miR-1 is in muscle tissue, it hinders muscle growth,
but when it’s in adipose tissue, it augments fat burning. So, when you
strength train, you’re making your body better at both building muscle and
burning fat.
All of this is why studies show the most effective exercise strategy for
fat loss is a combination of cardio and strength training. And if you have to
pick just one, choose the barbell over the treadmill.

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IF I DIE WHILE LIFTING
WEIGHTS, ADD MORE
WEIGHTS, AND THEN CALL
911.
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51:
YOUR FITNESS IS YOURS
“Preach the Gospel at all times and when necessary, use words.”
—St Francis of Assisi

Many people in your life won’t take your fitness seriously. “Why do you
work out so much?” “Are you seriously dieting again?” “Can’t you just let
yourself live a little?”
Bat away their blarney. You don’t need their approval to take your
fitness as seriously as you need to. You shouldn’t be ashamed to make time
for it or to defend that time like your life depends on it. Because in many
ways, it does.
Without regular exercise—and strength training in particular—health
and vitality inevitably decay. And your health and vitality aren’t just “parts
of your life”—they literally are your life. By refusing to spend a few hours
per week on your fitness, you’re basically saying, “I don’t care about my
life.”
So, you’re allowed to look away from the ninnies and naysayers.
You’re allowed to seize and occupy a swath of your life to eat and exercise
the way you want to. Harrumph at anyone who says otherwise. They’re
entitled to their life—not yours.

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52:
DO YOU EVEN KETO FAST
BRO?
“The only way to keep your health is to eat what you don’t want, drink what
you don’t like, and do what you’d rather not.”
—Mark Twain

Her:
“I actually think intermittent fasting and keto are the solution to the
obesity crisis.”
Me:
*shakes head at waiter bringing the engagement ring*
Look, intermittent fasting isn’t a quantum jump in nutrition. It’s just a
method of meal planning that can work well for people who prefer it over a
traditional eating pattern—people who aren’t hungry in the mornings or
who enjoy eating larger meals, for instance—but not well for people who
like breakfast or more frequent feedings or who want to optimize muscle
growth. (Research shows that several servings of protein per day separated
by a few hours each is better for muscle building than one-to-two.)
Plus, there are several downsides to intermittent fasting that are often
left unsaid:

1. Studies show the more you have to change about how you’re
eating—particularly how you like to eat—the more dietary
compliance suffers, and the more compliance suffers, the worse
the results are.
2. Many people don’t take well to drastically reducing their meal
frequency—they experience uncomfortable levels of hunger,
irritability, and “brain fog.”
3. Research shows that fasting can encourage overeating by
increasing the reinforcing value of food, which refers to how hard
you’ll work to get food. Put differently, the more you abstain from
eating (by fasting), the more value you can place on being able to
eat, and this can cause you to eat more than you would otherwise.
4. Studies show that fasting reduces the plasma levels of the amino
acid tryptophan, which is required to produce the hormone
serotonin (the “happy hormone”). As serotonin levels fall, many
unwanted symptoms can arise, including depression, anxiety,
sexual dysfunction, hyperactivity, digestive difficulties, and more.
Cravings for carbohydrates are common when fasting, too,
because they help the body produce serotonin.
5. If someone is susceptible to disordered eating, research shows that
fasting diets can increase the risk of adopting dysfunctional eating
habits.

And what of keto? Mostly a clunker because studies show that


restricting carbs doesn’t produce faster fat loss so long as protein and
calories are equated, it impairs anaerobic performance, and it likely offers
no special health benefits compared to a balanced, nutritious diet (especially
in physically active people with a healthy body composition).
In fact, if you practice keto the way many people do (“Did someone
say bacon-wrapped barbecue sausage rolls with butter-and-cream-cheese
dipping sauce?”), your saturated fat intake will mushroom along with your
risk of cardiovascular disease.
That isn’t to say keto “can’t work,” however. Because it eliminates
many foods that people tend to overeat, including highly processed ones,
keto can produce weight loss (by greatly reducing caloric intake) and health
improvements (by causing weight loss and enhancing the nutritional quality
of the diet), especially when paired with regular exercise (which also
improves health and supports weight loss).
So, fast and feast on fat (with a heavy bias for the unsaturated variety)
if you want to. Or don’t. Either way, you still have to control your calories,
eat enough protein and plants, move your body more rather than less,
progressively overload your muscles, and get enough sleep. Most of your
results will come from repeating those actions over and over for a long
time. Everything else is window dressing.

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53:
TOUGH FITNESS TRUTHS
“You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end with the
discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality.”
—James Stockdale

Many people say the best diet and exercise programs are the ones you can
stick to. This is true insofar as compliance is concerned—consistency is the
watchword of winners—but it misses a crucial caveat: efficacy.
No matter how well you stick to a diet or exercise routine, if it’s fatally
flawed and simply can’t work, you’re nowhere. The goldilocks zone, then,
is the overlap between what you can stick with and what works.
That territory may be larger than you think—you have a lot of latitude
in how you can eat and exercise to achieve your health and fitness goals—
but there are boundaries.
For example …

1. Meat can make you fat. Grains can make you fat. Seed oils can
make you fat. Sugar can make you fat. Nuts can make you fat.
Cheese can make you fat. Fruit can make you fat. Starches can
make you fat. Eggs can make you fat. The moral? Just about
anything can make you fat if you eat too much of it.
2. You can look like a model of fitness and feel like a measure of
death. Equating big muscles and little waists with picture-postcard
health is like assuming someone’s “living their best life” because
they’re smiley on social media.
3. You only need a small calorie surplus (5-to-10 percent) to
maximize muscle growth, and you still have to watch your
calories when lean bulking or you just get fat.
4. If you try to lose weight too quickly (see chapter 42), your
chances of success (and satisfaction with the results) tumble. In
this game, patience is more important than pain tolerance.
5. To lose weight and keep it off, you first have to lose the habits and
attitudes that are keeping you overweight and then gain new ones
that allow you to succeed with weight loss and maintenance.
6. Organic/vegan/gluten-free/etc. junk food is still junk food. Sorry,
but not sorry.
7. Aside from maybe your closest family and friends, most people
either don’t care whether you reach your fitness goals or would
rather see you fail. So stop seeking validation.
8. The best way to lose weight if your blood is Type A? Calorie
deficit. Type B? Calorie deficit. Type AB? The Snake Diet. Just
kidding. It’s a calorie deficit.
9. It’s a lot easier to eat too much fat than it is to eat enough protein.
By a long way.
10. There are no “weird tricks” for melting belly fat; “ancestral” herbs
for packing on muscle; or “bulletproof” biohacks for
supercharging your chakras with higher vibrations of the green tea
infinity. There’s only the work.

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54:
10 TOP-FLIGHT TRAINING
TIPS
“To attain knowledge, add things every day. To attain wisdom, remove
things every day.”
—Lao Tzu

Behold! Not one, not two, but a camel-load of only the finest training tips
this side of Damascus!

1. Don’t do behind-the-neck pulldowns. They’re more likely to


irritate your shoulders, and they’re no more effective than front
pulldowns.
2. If the regular barbell squat riles your back, try the front squat or
safety bar squat (which you can jerry rig with a regular barbell and
lifting straps—search “safety bar squat with straps”). These
exercises are easier on the lower back.
3. If side raises bother your shoulders, you may be lifting your arms
too high. Raise them until they’re parallel with the floor, but no
farther. Also, if your torso is swinging around, the weights are
probably too heavy. To minimize body English, lighten the load,
and squeeze your glutes with each rep.
4. Train your calves with both bent- and straight-leg exercises.
Straight-leg exercises (like the leg press calf raise) emphasize the
larger and more visible gastrocnemius muscle, and bent-leg
exercises (like the seated calf raise) emphasize the smaller and
deeper soleus muscle.
5. If you tend to tip too far forward when you squat, try widening
your stance. This can help you maintain a more upright posture.
6. Unilateral exercises (ones that train one limb or side of the body at
a time) are particularly useful for improving sports performance—
research shows they’re better than bilateral exercises (ones that
train both limbs or sides of the body at a time) for improving
jumping, agility, and speed. A few of my favorite unilateral
exercises are the Bulgarian split squat, single-leg deadlift, one-arm
dumbbell row, cable side lateral raise, and single-arm dumbbell
bench press.
7. Although bench pressing with a slightly narrower grip emphasizes
your triceps, bench pressing with an extra-wide grip probably isn’t
better for training your pecs than a medium-width grip and places
more strain on your shoulders.
8. A weightlifting belt can improve your performance on key
exercises like the squat and deadlift, but it probably doesn’t reduce
your risk of injury. Simply wearing a belt doesn’t automagically
make you stronger, either—you have to “activate” it by tensing
your core muscles as if you were about to get punched in the
breadbasket and then pressing your abs out and against the belt.
This increases the amount of pressure in the abdominal cavity,
which helps stabilize the spine and create a mechanical advantage
that can result in better performance.
9. Partial-range-of-motion exercises can help experienced
weightlifters build strength where they’re weakest in
corresponding full-range-of-motion exercises. For example, if you
always struggle to lock out a difficult deadlift, try the rack pull. If
the last few inches of a bench or overhead press are often a grind,
work on the pin press. If you usually have to fight to get “out of
the hole” in the squat, do the box or pause squat.
10. A few of my favorite underrated exercises: dumbbell step-up,
chest-supported row, safety bar squat, good morning, trap bar
deadlift, one-arm press (horizontal and vertical), Nordic hamstring
curl, weighted carry, straight-arm cable pulldown, landmine press.

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55:
DON’T JUST LEARN—DO
“You are what you do, not what you say you’ll do.”
—Carl Jung

We humans don’t learn well in the abstract—we must be exposed to many


concrete examples and firsthand experiences, and that requires interacting
with the actual contexts we want to operate in.
When learning, then, we must ensure we regularly spend time doing
the thing we want to get better at, even if it requires creating a project or
environment to practice and work in.
And so, if you want to get good at something, don’t just learn about it
—do it, and consistently. Like every day for at least thirty or sixty minutes
or more. For a long time. And if you can’t do that, don’t expect to get very
far.

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“I REALLY REGRET GOING
TO BED AND WAKING UP
EARLY,” SAID NOBODY
EVER.
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56:
SIMPLE HEALTH HACKS
“If you don’t make time for your wellness, you will be forced to make time
for your illness.”
—Joyce Sunada

A simple health hack: Get outside in the sun every day and move around
until you get at least a little sweaty. You might be surprised at how much
this can help with your physical and mental well-being.
Also, try to get that sun on your skin soon after you wake up. This
helps regulate your body’s circadian rhythm, which impacts various vital
physiological processes like your sleep/wake cycle, eating habits, and
digestion, and can improve mood and metabolic health.
Make time to meet face-to-face with people you like, too. Texts, DMs,
and even video calls are a shabby substitute for real human interaction.
Yet another: Give yourself at least one day per week of no vigorous
physical activity (no intense training, sports, etc.). This will improve your
recovery more than just about anything else you could do.
One more: Go to bed and wake up at the same time every day as often
as you can (including the weekends). This too helps normalize your body’s
circadian rhythm so you can consistently get enough high-quality sleep,
which is a prerequisite for high-quality living.

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57:
ADVICE I’D GIVE MY
YOUNGER SELF
“Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch
excellence.”
—Vince Lombardi

On balance, the last ten years have been a bonanza. I had a couple of kids. I
wrote a slew of bestselling books. I started a booming sports nutrition
business (Legion). I bought a charming house and then a spectacular farm. I
read a lot of great books and took a few unforgettable trips.
But there have been many challenges as well, mostly of my own
making. I alienated loved ones. I mismanaged businesses. I lost friends. I
lost money. I lost special opportunities to make meaningful memories.
And although I’d rather not have made those mistakes and many others
like them, whenever a situation doesn’t turn out the way I hoped or
expected, I know there’s always a lesson to learn, so I try to find it. Because
while we can learn from success, sometimes it’s a lot easier to learn from
failure.
Here’s a handful of those hard-won lessons, in no particular order:

1. Celebrate the milestones and victories, including the smaller ones.


You and your team will appreciate it.
2. Doing something is usually better than doing nothing, but doing
only what you should be doing is best.
3. Stop trying to help people who don’t want to be helped. They’ll
just keep ignoring your advice, falling flat, and learning and
changing nothing.
4. Be nicer. Being “right” isn’t enough.
5. Don’t allow people you dislike to make you into someone you
dislike.
6. Give more consideration to your wife’s advice. She’s sharp.
7. Read more. And not merely to accumulate information but to
become a different person with a different way of thinking.
8. Stop looking at porn. I know, I know. See chapter 111.
9. Talk important things over with people you trust. You don’t
always know best.
10. Take a vacation already. You’ve earned it.
11. Sometimes the antidote to a dark day is a white pill. And no, I
don’t mean Xanax but “being a fountain, not a drain,” as the
saying goes. Finding a bright spot, a break in the clouds, a
spiritual salve to like, love, and rub all over yourself.
12. Be more thankful. And express it.
13. Don’t take it personally if people don’t like you. Many of them
don’t even like themselves.
14. Don’t mistake the relief of making a decision as a sign of making
the right decision.
15. Stop associating with hypocrites, parasites, and liars. Don’t
become emotionally entangled with them or let them bargain with
you—just leave.
16. Don’t be generous to a fault. There’s a word for that: sucker.
17. View any attempts to make you feel hopeless and afraid as
emotional assaults on your well-being. Protect your mind against
these psychological pathogens as you would your body against
physical ones.
18. Criticize less and coach more. The difference? The critic jumps on
weaknesses and ignores strengths, and the coach acknowledges
strengths and weaknesses while helping people realize their
potential.
19. Ignore people who use their knowledge and intelligence to tear
others down rather than build them up.
20. Have more fun. Have as much fun as you can because no amount
of money or “success” satisfies like it.

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58:
DOES CARDIO BURN MUSCLE?
“The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing you
will make one.”
—Elbert Hubbard

Many a bodybuilder has said that cardio and muscle go together like
laxatives and late-night liaisons, and they’re not entirely wrong.
At a cellular level, endurance and strength training send very different
messages and produce very different adaptations, but saying that cardio
kills your gains is like saying that credit cards ruin your finances.
True in some cases? Absolutely. Natural law? Absolutely not.
To enjoy the advantages of cardio (which include improved
cardiovascular health, reduced risk of heart disease, cancer, and cognitive
decline, more fat burning, and possibly even better strength training
workouts) without the muscle-related disadvantages, observe the following
evidence-based guidelines:

1. Do no more than three-to-five hours of cardio per week.


2. Do mostly low- and moderate-intensity cardio, and do no more
than one hour of high-intensity interval training (HIIT—a type of
exercise that alternates between short periods of high-intensity
effort and low-intensity recovery) per week.
3. Limit your cardio workouts to no more than thirty-to-forty-five
minutes per session.
4. Emphasize low-impact forms of cardio such as walking, cycling,
rowing, rucking, swimming, and battle roping over high-impact
forms like jogging, sprinting, various sports like football,
basketball, and soccer, etc.
5. Do your cardio and weightlifting on separate days if possible, and
if you have to do them on the same day, try to separate them by at
least six hours, and do your cardio after weightlifting, not before.

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59:
SOME DAYS
“Today I will do what others won’t, so tomorrow I can accomplish what
others can’t.”
—Jerry Rice

Some days, fitness isn’t training. It’s resting and relaxing and rejuvenating.
Some days the work is internal, not external.
Don’t let this make you feel ashamed or frustrated. A healthy and
sustainable routine isn’t a merry-go-round. It’s a seesaw. So give your
fitness the time and patience it needs. Stop hurrying.
Don’t slow down so much that you stop moving and fall asleep,
however. You can miss workouts, overindulge in “cheat meals,” and
undersleep. Just don’t repeat these accidents. Don’t miss two workouts in a
row. Don’t gorge two days in a row. Don’t stay up too late twice in a row.
Because before you know it, you haven’t gone to the gym or eaten a
vegetable in two months.

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60:
A CALORIE CALCULATOR
CAUTION
“Distrust and caution are the parents of security.”
—Benjamin Franklin

Even the best calorie calculators (like you’ll find at


www.mikematthews.fitness/caloriecalculator) come with an asterisk:
They produce informed estimates that should be viewed as starting
points, not pin-sharp and incontrovertible computations. (And in case
you’re wondering—activity trackers are even worse. See chapter 167.)
There are a few reasons for this:

1. The majority of your total daily energy expenditure comes from


your resting metabolic rate (RMR)—the number of calories your
body burns at rest in 24 hours—and this number is different even
among people with identical body compositions. Thus, calorie
calculators assume an average RMR for any given body
composition, but your RMR may be above or below this estimate.
2. The second-biggest component of total daily energy expenditure
comes from your physical activity level, and while most of this is
captured by inputting time and general intensity, actual numbers
will vary based on types of activity, types of exercises, amounts of
effort, and other factors that can’t be practically represented
mathematically. And so again, calorie calculators work with
averages that may or may not be accurate in your case.
3. Your physical activity level also includes non-exercise activity
thermogenesis (NEAT), which refers to the many miscellaneous
movements we engage in like standing, walking, fidgeting, and so
forth. Research shows the amount of calories burned through
NEAT can differ greatly among people, ranging from 100 calories
to 800 calories per day or more, and there’s no pat way to
determine where you are on that spectrum. Like most of us, you’re
probably close to the average (probabilities working as they do),
but if you’re not, a calorie calculator won’t account for this.
4. The final element of your total daily energy expenditure worth
discussing here is the thermic effect of food (TEF), which is the
number of calories you burn digesting food. Studies show this
accounts for 5-to-15 percent of total daily energy expenditure in
most people, and the two primary factors in TEF are
macronutrients (protein costs more energy to digest than
carbohydrate—about 20-to-30 percent and 5-to-10 percent,
respectively—and carbohydrate costs more than fat, which
requires almost no energy to digest and absorb) and food
processing (unprocessed foods cost more energy to digest than
highly processed ones). Calorie calculators don’t customize your
results according to exactly how much protein, carbs, and
unprocessed food you’re eating—they just assign middle-ground
numbers that hopefully are right for you—and this can lead to an
estimate of calorie expenditure that’s too high or low.

All that isn’t to say you shouldn’t use calorie calculators—they’re quite
handy—only that you may need to adjust your calories up or down, usually
in the range of 5-to-10 percent, based on how your body actually responds
(if you’re losing or gaining weight too slowly, you may need to eat less or
more and vice versa).

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CURLING IN THE SQUAT
RACK WHEN PEOPLE ARE
WAITING TO SQUAT IS LIKE
SHITTING IN THE URINAL
WHEN PEOPLE ARE
WAITING TO PEE.
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61:
GO TO THE GYM
“Keep busy. It’s the cheapest kind of medicine there is.”
—Dale Carnegie

Sometimes the best way to take the sting out of a bad day is to do a good
workout. So if it’s Monday, GO TO THE GYM. Tuesday? GO TO THE
GYM . Oh, it’s Friday? Well, especially when it’s Friday, GO TO THE
GYM.
Because remember: Every day is not a new day. Over time, our lives
take shape like a sculpture, carved by our habits and routines, one strike of
the chisel at a time. Thus, where we are is far less important than where
we’re going.
Like to the gym. You are going, right?

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62:
UNDERRATED CORE
EXERCISES
“We who cut mere stones must always be envisioning cathedrals.”
—Quarry Worker’s Creed

The ab wheel roll out is a very underrated core exercise. Especially when
you keep your lower back in a neutral position and your abs feeling tight
and “tucked into” your torso and you don’t rush the reps.
Aim for a set of 15 reps on your knees to start. Once you can do at least
a couple sets of 30 reps (with rest in between, of course), increase the
difficulty by slowing the exercise down or remaining on your knees but
lifting your feet off the ground.
A few other underappreciated ab exercises to consider:

1. Tuck-and-crunch. To start, work toward a set of 20 reps. Once you


can do a couple of sets of 30 reps, increase the difficulty by
bringing your knees toward your elbows when you crunch and
straightening your legs as you lean back. When doing this harder
variation, always keep your feet and shoulders a couple of inches
off the ground.
2. Boat pose. Hold this position for as long as possible, aiming for 30
seconds to start. Once you’re able to hold for two minutes, switch
to a more difficult exercise on this list.
3. Hanging leg raise. A set of 15 reps is the first milestone, and from
there, work up to sets of 30 reps. Once you can do that for a
couple of sets, increase the difficulty by slowing down your reps,
and once that’s fairly easy, pinch a 5-pound dumbbell between
your feet and increase the weight by 5 pounds when that’s no
longer challenging.
4. Toes-to-bar. Aim for 10 reps per set to start, and work up to sets of
20 reps. Once you can do a couple of 20-rep sets, slow down your
reps to make them more difficult.
5. Cable crunch. Use a weight that allows you to do at least 10 reps
per set but not more than 20. Once you can do 20 reps with that
weight, add 5-to-10 pounds (depending on the machine) and work
up to 20 reps with that new weight. Keep increasing the weight
and reps in this manner.

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63:
EVERYTHING’S AMAZING AND
NOBODY’S HAPPY
“We don’t think ourselves into a new way of acting, we act ourselves into a
new way of thinking.”
—Larry Bossidy

We live in a technological wonderland that even our recent ancestors


couldn’t have imagined possible, yet anxiety, stress, dissatisfaction, and
depression have been on eighty-year upswings and are at all-time highs
among younger generations in particular.
Are unprecedented levels of ease, luxury, and economic prosperity
contributing to this decline in our collective happiness and well-being?
Without a doubt. Research points in many directions, ranging from the
perversion of values (the growing obsession with fame, money, and image,
for example) to the delaying of marriage and childrearing to the all-too-
familiar overuse of social media and other modern ills.
None of this is likely news to you. Most of us know that we should
ignore the Joneses and spend more time fostering meaningful relationships
and less time scrolling on our phones. (And most of us know that, according
to a seventy-five-year study conducted by Harvard scientists—the longest
study of its kind ever conducted—the biggest predictor of long-term
happiness and fulfillment is the quality of our relationships. Or, as one of
the researchers, George Valliant, put it, “Happiness is love. Full stop.”)
However, there’s another, simpler but significant change that we can
immediately make that many people overlook. It’s gratitude. The more
thankful we are for anything and everything, the better our lives become in
just about every way. We feel less stressed and depressed, our risk of
chronic disease drops, we’re less likely to overeat, and we sleep better, to
name a few.
Gratitude is remarkably easy to do too. Stop reading for a moment, and
reflect on the question, “What happened last week that I’m thankful for?”
Find five things.
Done? Great, because this is all it takes to favorably alter your brain
chemistry, even if you can’t find anything. Sometimes, just searching for
something to be thankful for is enough to lift your mood. But there’s always
something to acknowledge, even if it’s just having clean air to breathe,
someone who loves us, or a comfortable bed to sleep in.
Furthermore, the more often we practice gratitude, the easier it
becomes to find things to appreciate. As neuroscientists say, “neurons that
fire together wire together,” and so the more we stimulate the neural
pathways involved in feeling grateful, the more robust and efficient they
become.
Want to see for yourself? Write down three things in your life today or
yesterday that you’re grateful for, and why you’re grateful for them, and
then do this again every morning for the next five days. Pay attention to
how it impacts your mood, productivity, and outlook.
Want to go deeper? Research shows that writing a letter of gratitude to
someone about something important to you (rather than something trivial)
can significantly improve well-being and happiness even in people who are
already relatively happy.

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64:
SIMPLE LIFE HACKS
“Life is too important to be taken seriously.”
—Oscar Wilde

A simple life hack: Treat your people right, or someone else will. Because
the value of your character is the sum of your habits, and sooner or later,
someone you care about will ask, “What’s yours worth?”
Here’s another silver bullet: Spend as little time as you can with people
who are perpetual disappointments. A few things to remember about the
dead-enders in your life:

1. Even if they’re capable of changing for the better, it’ll probably


take ages.
2. Trying to facilitate that change is probably a waste of your time
and energy.
3. Trying to make them into who you want them to be is definitely a
waste of your time and energy.

Also: Stop associating with people who always try to convince you that
your goals are too ambitious, difficult, complicated, unrealistic, etc.
Especially when they say they’re just trying to help you. They aren’t.
And since we’re disposing of interpersonal deadwood, give the heave-
ho to people who are prone to jealousy. They’re almost always more trouble
than they’re worth—the proverbial crabs in the bucket.
Finally, disregard the opinions of anyone who tries to undermine your
efforts at self-improvement by refusing to recognize that you’re no longer
the “old you” who made them feel better about themselves.

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65:
LIFTING YOURSELF UP
“You never know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice
you have.”
—Bob Marley

Training to gain the strength to better deal with whatever’s weighing


heavily on you isn’t the same as training to run away from it.
While you can’t curl or squat your problems away, you can use
exercise to improve your ability to deal with difficulties and setbacks—to
practice choosing the price of discipline over the pain of regret. And, by
simply refusing to quit on your fitness goals, you can develop what Joe de
Sena, the founder of Spartan Race, calls “obstacle immunity”—a critical
mass of resilience and grit that makes you “immune” to the psychological
friction caused by difficult challenges.
Or, as I like to say, you can lift weights to lift yourself up.

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BRAIN: “YOU SHOULD
SLEEP.”
ME: “THANKS FOR THE
REMINDER.”
BRAIN: “OH YOU LIKE
REMINDERS?”
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66:
SO YOU’VE HIT A WEIGHT
LOSS PLATEAU
“He who has a why to live can bear almost any how.”
—Friedrich Nietzsche

You step on the scale, look down, and your heart sinks. It’s that same
infernal number again. You’ve stopped losing weight.
Before you have a conniption, however, know that weight loss isn’t a
linear process. It’s normal to go several days without losing any weight and
then “suddenly” lose a pound or two overnight, so there might be nothing
wrong after all—you might just have to keep at it.
That said, if you’ve been weighing yourself every day and calculating
your average weight every few days (a good idea) and these averages
haven’t changed in a couple of weeks, the culprit is almost always an
energy imbalance (eating too much or moving too little or both). Here are
four common ways this goes awry:

1. Not planning or tracking food intake accurately. This is usually


why weight loss stalls—people are simply eating more calories
than they realize.
2. Not “cheating” (or “treating,” as I like to say) correctly. The
occasional “treat meal” can help you better stick to your diet (and
thus achieve your goals), but when done too often or recklessly, it
can ruin progress.
3. Not exercising enough. The sweet spot for rapidly improving body
composition is three-to-five one-hour strength training sessions
and three-to-five, 20-to-30-minute, low-to-moderate-intensity
cardio workouts per week.
4. Needing to reduce your calories. If you want to lose a significant
amount of weight (more than five percent of your body weight),
you’ll almost certainly have to reduce your calories over the
course of your cut as your body responds with various measures to
decrease energy expenditure. For example, I’ve started cuts
around 2,700 calories per day and, a couple of months later,
finished around 2,200.

A workable rule of thumb is in the absence of additional physical


activity (that could offset the need to eat less by increasing calorie burning),
plan to reduce your daily calorie intake by 100 calories for every 10 pounds
lost (and if you’re lean and cutting to very lean, you’ll probably have to cut
calories more aggressively than this toward the end of the diet).
Energy balance aside, sometimes fat loss can also be obscured by extra
water retention, which can occur when sodium or carbohydrate intake or
stress (and thus cortisol) levels rise markedly. This is a temporary condition,
though, lasting for a couple of days or a week at most, and it resolves on its
own (as your body normalizes again).

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67:
YOU’RE GETTING GOOD
“Whatever is rightly done, however humble, is noble.”
—Henry Royce

You know you’re getting good at this fitness stuff when the disappointment
of skipping a workout stings more than the struggle to motivate yourself to
do one.
And when you notice that you’re making far fewer excuses about how
you eat and exercise than you used to.
And when at least 50 percent of the reason you train is just the feeling
you get when you finish a workout.
And when you’re no longer waking up on the weekends with a
hangover.
And when you appreciate how much better your body is feeling and
functioning just as much as how much better it’s looking.
And when you haven’t just lost your taste for McDonald’s, but it even
starts to smell gross.
And when you no longer feel compelled to post selfies on social media
to compensate for low self-esteem.
And when it’s harder to take a rest day than to do another workout.
And when you realize you don’t need supplements to build muscle,
lose fat, and get healthy.
And when you stop constantly comparing yourself to others and start
focusing on getting just a little bit better every day.
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68:
THE HEALTHY ENOUGH DIET
“The wise strive for their best. The foolish strive for perfection.”
—Mokokoma Mokhonoana

What’s the optimal human diet? I don’t know. Nobody does. Anyone who
says otherwise is full of beans. What’s a healthy human diet? That’s easier
to answer. Decades of scientific research has produced a winning formula:

1. Eat an appropriate number of calories to maintain a healthy body


weight. If you’re overweight, eat less. If you’re underweight, eat
more. If you’re neither of those things, eat the same amount.
2. Eat plenty of protein, ideally some with every meal. A good rule
of thumb is 1 gram per pound of body weight per day, or if you’re
overweight, 1 gram per centimeter in body height per day, but a
bit less (or more) than this is fine, too. Try not to eat less than 0.5
grams per pound of body weight/centimeter in body height per
day, however.
3. Eat a moderate amount of animal protein like seafood, pork,
poultry, eggs, and red meat. But try to minimize your intake of
highly processed meat products like deli meat, jerky, bacon,
sausage, hot dogs, etc.
4. Eat the amount of carbs and fat that you prefer. If you’re very
active, you’ll probably prefer more carbs, but don’t agonize over
this. It doesn’t matter that much.
5. Eat mostly fresh plant foods like veggies, fruit, whole grains,
legumes, and nuts and seeds and their oils. Three-to-five servings
of veggies, two-to-three servings of fruit, and one serving of
whole grains are good minimum daily targets.
6. So long as it doesn’t upset your stomach, eat at least a few
servings of dairy per week, especially fermented dairy like kefir,
cottage cheese, and yogurt.
7. Indulge lightly in whatever delights you while keeping your “junk
food” intake at or under 20 percent of your total daily calories.

And that’s basically it. Don’t overnoodle it.

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69:
YOU WON’T ALWAYS ENJOY IT
“You can not make yourself feel something that you do not feel, but you can
make yourself do right in spite of your feelings.”
—Pearl S. Buck

Spoiler alert: You won’t enjoy every workout. Nobody does. But you’ll
always enjoy having worked out.
Remember that when it feels like you’re sweating blood. Remember
that some days, you rescue the workout. Other days, the workout rescues
you.

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70:
IS THERE A “FAT BURNING”
ZONE FOR CARDIO?
“Better be unborn than untaught, for ignorance is the root of misfortune.”
—Plato

Cardio machines often show pretty graphs indicating where your heart rate
should be for “fat burning” versus “cardiovascular training”—usually your
age subtracted from 200 and multiplied by 0.6.
As the story goes, by maintaining this heart rate during cardio, you’ll
maximize fat burning. There’s a kernel of truth here. You do burn both fat
and carbs when you exercise, and the proportion varies with the intensity of
exercise. A very low-intensity activity like walking taps mainly into fat
stores, whereas high-intensity sprints pull much more heavily from
carbohydrate reserves.
There’s more to consider, though:

1. Total calories burned while exercising. If you walk off 100


calories, 85 of which come from fat stores, that isn’t as effective
for fat loss as running for the same amount of time and burning
400 calories with 200 coming from fat.
2. Total fat loss over time. The amount of fat you burn during
workouts isn’t a vital factor in long-term fat loss—only a
consistent calorie deficit is.
What kind of cardio is best for burning fat, then? The answer is
twofold:

1. Whatever burns a lot of calories.


2. Whatever you can stick with.

For my part, I do several moderate-intensity sessions on an upright bike


per week for a few reasons:

1. It burns a fair number of calories.


2. It puts minimal strain on my joints, muscles, and nervous system.
3. It may enhance lower-body muscle and strength gain.
4. I can make work and personal calls during this time (that I’ll be
making anyway).
5. I can read on my phone (Kindle app) if I don’t have any calls to
make (which I’ll do anyway).

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IS THERE A MORE GRIM,
INFERNAL, HATEFUL
FITNESS DEVICE THAN THE
AIR BIKE?
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71:
LIFE PERIODIZATION
“It is by logic that we prove, but by intuition that we discover.”
—Henri Poincaré

Push when you can push. Coast when you can’t. Rest when even that’s a
pisser. Nobody can tell you where these boundaries are. You learn them on
your own. You find your rhythm.
That’s good fitness advice, too.

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72:
BEWARE THE CULTS OF
SCIENTISM AND
CREDENTIALISM
“Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them.”
—George Orwell

Many people imagine the scientific community as a monolithic battalion of


unbiased and upright experts selflessly searching for new and better ways to
understand and exploit reality for the betterment of all humankind. If only.
Scientific theories have usually evolved like this: problems with
existing paradigms and contradictory evidence are ignored or rationalized
away until eventually the defects become so numerous and obvious that the
discipline is thrown into crisis and new explanations are then adopted as the
accepted norms.
For instance, in 1912, Alfred Wegener proposed the now-accepted
theory of continental drift that asserts the continents wander across the
oceans. Initially, however, his idea was roundly rejected by professionals on
the grounds that he was a meteorologist and not a geologist and that he
couldn’t explain how such a drift occurred, only that it appeared to be the
case. And so Wegener’s hypothesis languished for nearly forty years until a
new scientific discipline, paleomagnetism, started producing data in support
of it.
Ignaz Semmelweis’ story is similar. He was a nineteenth-century
Hungarian doctor who, after much careful observation, was convinced that
if doctors handling cadavers washed their hands before delivering babies,
fewer mothers would die after giving birth. This prediction was vehemently
rejected by the medical community at large for several reasons, including
the academic deficiencies in Semmelweis’ explanations for why
handwashing would improve mortality as well as the offensive implication
that doctors were inadvertently killing their patients.
Semmelweis went crazy trying to prove his beliefs and was admitted to
a mental institution against his will, where he was beaten, straight-jacketed,
and abused. Two weeks later, he was dead at the age of forty-seven from a
gangrenous wound on his right hand. It took twenty more years for medicos
to realize they were wrong about antiseptics, following Louis Pasteur’s
confirmation of germ theory.
Oxygen’s role in combustion was once a radical idea proposed by an
18th century French chemist named Antoine Lavoisier whose theory
challenged the prevailing doctrine that combustion was a process whereby a
substance called phlogiston was released into the air.
Lavoisier’s oxygen theory was met with widespread skepticism and
criticism from the scientific community, and its detractors included
prominent scientists like Georg Ernst Stahl, Jean-Paul Marat, Johann
Joachim Becher, and Martin Heinrich Klaproth. Ultimately, it took a
preponderance of evidence produced by several decades of persistent and
meticulous experimentation for Lavoisier’s work to achieve general
scientific acceptance and adoption.
In health and fitness, examples abound:

The perpetual daisy chain of offbeat diet trends (fasting, Atkins,


paleo, keto, veganism, carnivore, etc.) that claim to represent the
“scientifically optimal” way for humans to eat.
The numerous fad exercise programs that promise rapid results
from “breakthrough” methods (CrossFit, high-intensity interval
training, various strength training programs, etc.) or equipment
(special machines, bands, bars, etc.).
The overemphasis of the importance and potential benefits of
supplements, which are often negligible even in the case of
popular products supposedly supported by scientific research
(BCAAs, EAAs, hydration/electrolyte supplements, and many
others).
The entire biohacking racket, which is the health equivalent of
alchemy—the futile pursuit of boundless energy, elevated
cognition, and eternal youth through extensive (and expensive)
protocols of superfood smoothies; sleep, fitness, and glucose
trackers; obscure herbs and drugs; EEG headbands; cold plunges;
and suchlike.
The wholesale dismissal of alternative medicine as quackery,
including unconventional interventions that lack solid scientific
evidence but have considerable anecdotal support, like
acupuncture, homeopathy, and meditation.

There are innumerable more examples like these, but the moral is this:
Beware the cults of scientism (excessive belief in the power of scientific
knowledge and techniques) and credentialism (belief in or reliance on
academic or other formal qualifications as the best measure of a person’s
intelligence or ability to do a particular job).
Apostles of these ideologies insist that you swallow favored claims
from the mouths of approved pundits no matter how dubious, and reject
disfavored ones out of hand no matter how compelling. These aren’t smart
people. These are midwits who can’t think for themselves and desperately
rely on authorities to tell them what to believe, and in fact, place more value
on believing what they’re told to believe rather than believing the truth. If
you were to comment that cutting off your head is unhealthy, these people
would demand peer-reviewed studies as proof.
So, to paraphrase Carl Sagan, you have every right to mistrust
arguments from authority and demand that experts prove their contentions
like everybody else, because too many accepted arguments have proved too
agonizingly wrong.
You also have the power to formulate astute questions and come to
sound conclusions through your faculties of observation and reasoning
alone. You don’t have to reject your senses, deductions, and instincts until
they’ve been blessed by a high priest of officialdom.

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73:
TRAIN FIRST
“More is lost by indecision than wrong decision. Indecision is the thief of
opportunity. It will steal you blind.”
—Marcus Tullius Cicero

Fitness advice should be viewed in the same way as suggestions about


where to buy groceries or what type of shoes to wear. Even the best pointers
include a healthy dose of opinion and preference, so don’t forget to weigh
your own inclinations.
Also, don’t get so gripped by the cacophony of conflicting rules and
methods that you spend more time reading, watching, and thinking than
doing. Don’t allow the temptation of a Better Way to eat and exercise
become the fiery, unblinking, paralyzing gaze of Sauron.
Look away. Push it out of your mind. Train first. Then reflect.

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74:
SIMPLE MUSCLE BUILDING
HACKS
“Worry about being better; bigger will take care of itself.”
—Gary Comer

A simple muscle building hack: You don’t need to do a dozen different


exercises per workout, minimize between-set rest periods, or use “fancy”
training techniques like reverse pyramid training, pre-exhaustion, drop sets,
negatives, etc.
A few “straight sets” of a few foundational exercises taken close to
muscular failure (the point where you can’t perform another rep) with a
couple of minutes of rest in between each set is a simple recipe for a highly
effective strength training session.
A few more pointers for you to mull:

1. A workout split (how you arrange your weekly workouts, usually


by body part, body region, or movement pattern) doesn’t drive
muscle growth. Your biceps don’t care if you do an “arms,” “pull,”
or “upper-body” workout. Your muscles will grow when you do
the right number of sets of the right exercises at the right level of
intensity and frequency.
2. Training isn’t a hot dog eating contest. How much you do in the
gym doesn’t matter nearly as much as how well you do it. One
high-quality workout is worth a bunch of low-quality ones.
3. When you work out is far less important than how and how often
you work out. So train at the times that work best for you.
4. Do workouts that you generally look forward to and enjoy. Don’t
force yourself to follow a workout routine that you don’t like, no
matter how “scientifically optimal” it might be. Stale training is
like stale food. Edible but dreary. Find something that makes you
fizz so you’ll a) keep showing up and b) keep working hard.
5. Speaking of working hard, if you’ve never peed or sharted even a
little while squatting or deadlifting, you’re probably not training
hard enough. No stain no gain, bro.

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75:
YOU LOVE TO SEE IT
“It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.”
—Henry David Thoreau

I’ll never get sick of seeing women stop fearing weightlifting and start
loving the feeling of getting strong.

OceanofPDF.com
THEM:
“HOW DO I EAT WHATEVER
I WANT ON THE WEEKENDS
WITHOUT GAINING
WEIGHT?”
ME:
“THE SAME WAY YOU BUY
WHATEVER YOU WANT ON
THE WEEKENDS WITHOUT
GETTING POORER.”
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76:
MORE SIMPLE DIET HACKS
“The most courageous act is still to think for yourself. Aloud.”
—Coco Chanel

Another simple diet hack: Go unfollow anyone who says that skipping
breakfast is the secret to getting ripped and living forever. Oh, and
intermittent fasting won’t boost your metabolism, either. In fact, in the
short-term, research shows that fasting does the exact opposite—it reduces
energy expenditure.
Also, bat away anyone who says that peanut butter is a great source of
protein, fruit has too much sugar, and white rice is bad for you. And don’t
let their credentials short-circuit your critical thinking. Just because
someone has an advanced degree from a prestigious school doesn’t mean
they can’t give quacky or even dangerous diet and exercise advice.
Finally, give the gate to anyone who says eating any individual food or
macronutrient ruins or restores your health or body composition. These
ninnies are just as confused as people who believe strippers are actually into
them and—this happened—people who thought one-third-pound
hamburgers contained less meat than quarter-pounders (maybe someone
should try a fifth-pounder?).

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77:
YOU GET TO DECIDE
“Success is getting what you want. Happiness is wanting what you get.”
—Dale Carnegie

Don’t let others ding you for wanting to improve your body composition.
You get to decide how you want to look and feel.
And you can have high standards while also being healthy and happy—
you can control calories without copping an eating disorder, exercise every
day without developing a dependency, and love your body without losing
perspective.
“But can’t you just love your body as it is and skip the rest?” some ask.
Maybe. But holding yourself to strong standards is a flavor of self-love
because it signals optimism and trust. It’s you saying to yourself,
“Goldarnit, I can freaking do this!” And few things say “I love my body”
like being fit and strong.
What’s more, the preservation of top personal benchmarks also helps
preserve worthy social and cultural ideals. In a depraved, diseased, and
dysfunctional society, being healthy in body, mind, and spirit is a
revolutionary act.

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78:
THE DIMINISHING RETURNS
OF OVERREACHING
“The indiscipline of overwork is the falsest of economies.”
—John Steinbeck

Like most things in life, you get as much from training as you put into it.
Work hard, get hard. Goof off, stay soft.
Unlike many things, though, it’s fairly easy to reach the point of
diminishing returns with exercise, and the penalties of routinely exceeding
this threshold (overreaching) can be particularly punishing.
Energy levels, mood, and performance tumble, sleep suffers, and
soreness soars, and then the twist of the knife—for all your trouble, you
don’t even get marginally better results. Instead, you get progressively
worse outcomes.
A good example of this is a study conducted by University of Sydney
scientists on German Volume Training, which calls for 10 sets of 10 reps of
each exercise—a recipe for serious overreaching for just about anyone. The
researchers found that the subjects doing German Volume Training gained
less muscle and strength than the subjects following a lower-volume routine
of 5 sets of 10 reps per exercise.
Complicating the matter is the fact that training is just one type of
stress that our body must recover from, and other sources of strain—work,
finances, relationships, existential angst, etc.—also limit how much we can
demand of our body in the gym.
So, how can you know when you’re doing too much overreaching and
need to do some “overresting” instead? Here are a few reliable signs:

1. Your once-enjoyable workouts are now a bear. Your training


weights have fallen, your stamina has declined, and your
enthusiasm has wilted.
2. You often feel “tired and wired.” Despite being drained all day,
you’re restless at night and sleep like a baby … on bath salts.
3. You have unusual aches and pains. And they slowly get worse.
And multiply. Until damn near everything seems to hurt all of the
time.
4. You’re training hard every day of the week. I’ve yet to meet
someone who can do this without folding up, including even elite
athletes on powerful cocktails of performance-enhancing drugs.
No matter who you are, “no days off” eventually becomes “no can
do.”
5. You’re experiencing more muscle soreness than usual and for
longer than usual.

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79:
WE’LL SEE
“Love the hand that fate deals you and play it as your own, for what could
be more fitting?”
—Marcus Aurelius

A farmer had a horse, and one day, it ran away.


His neighbors consoled him. “I’m so sorry. This is such bad news. You
must be so upset.”
The man just said, “We’ll see.”
A few days later, his horse returned with twenty wild horses in tow, and
the man and his son corralled them all.
His neighbors celebrated. “Congratulations! This is such good news.
You must be so happy!”
The man just said, “We’ll see.”
A few weeks later, a stallion kicked the man’s son, breaking one of his
legs.
His neighbors reeled. “I’m so sorry. This is such bad news. You must
be so upset.”
The man just said, “We’ll see.”
The following month, the state went to war and drafted legions of able-
bodied young men to fight their enemies. Casualties mounted but didn’t
include the man’s son, since the army had no use for a lame boy.
The neighbors couldn’t believe the family’s luck. “Congratulations!
This is such good news. You must be so happy!”
The man just said, “We’ll see.”
No matter how difficult things get, time will tell whether our
circumstances are a curse or blessing. Will, as Marcus Aurelius once said,
what stands in the way become the way?
We’ll see.

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80:
THE WORST FITNESS ADVICE
“In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities but in the expert’s mind
there are few.”
—Shunryū Suzuki

Just because someone lost a bunch of weight or built a bunch of muscle, it


doesn’t mean they’re qualified to be a trainer or coach. Some of the worst
fitness advice is peddled by some of the fittest people.
For example, many of these dummkopfs say that calorie counting is an
unhealthy and obsessive behavior that makes you neurotic about food. In
reality, they just couldn’t figure out how to count calories without becoming
obsessive and neurotic about food.
Bad training takes abound as well and come in many flavors—
complexity, extremity, eccentricity—you can fill in the rest. What “they”
usually aren’t telling you, however, is that the business end of effective
strength training is basically drudging through the same couple of dozen or
so elementary exercises until you die.
And don’t even get me started on supplements. Many of the ingredients
in these products either haven’t been scientifically proven to do what you’re
paying for (collagen protein, MCT oil, apple cider anything, glutamine,
CBD, hydration drinks) or have been proven outright ineffective
(testosterone boosters, BCAAs, EAAs, garcinia cambogia, CLA, raspberry
ketones).
So, choose your fitness counsel carefully. Just as making one very
uncomfortable decision is often more constructive than one thousand cozy
ones, listening to just one genuine expert is often more productive than
culling ideas from one thousand hinky ones.
And how do you find genuine experts? A few tips:

1. Exercise extreme skepticism. Whenever you first encounter a


health or fitness authority, assume they’re guilty until proven
innocent. This goes against our nature, which is to give others the
benefit of the doubt, but it’s an appropriate line of attack when
faced with so many liars, cheaters, and swindlers.
2. Consider their bona fides. This includes professional
qualifications, credentials, and achievements as well as their
reputation (past and present), particularly among other established
experts. A strong résumé suggests credibility.
3. Consider their claims. Do their assertions make logical sense? Do
they promise miraculous results? Are they supported by robust
forms of evidence (or is it mostly personal experience and other
anecdotes?)? How do they compare to expert consensus?
(Consensus doesn’t equal accuracy, of course, but statistically
speaking, the more unorthodox a position is, the less likely it is to
be true.)
4. Consider their incentives. Are they making money from their
expertise? Are they making a lot of money from it? Maybe in
ways that aren’t immediately obvious (like speaking engagements,
consulting gigs, career advancement, etc.)? Because life’s really
not more complicated than that—most people are mostly
motivated by money.
5. Consider their track record. They may have succeeded with their
own body (and maybe with their recommended methods, maybe
not), but have they consistently produced positive results across a
large and diverse range of individuals? How believable are their
client success stories? Do you have any reason to doubt their
veracity? And conversely, how many people have openly (online)
reported failing with the expert’s methods? Why did they fail?
How does the cumulative evidence of successes and failures
compare both quantitatively and qualitatively?

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THE FACT THAT YOU DON’T
WANT TO GO TO THE GYM
TODAY IS A SIGN THAT YOU
NEED TO MAKE SURE YOU
GO TO THE GYM TODAY.
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81:
COMPLAINING VS. DOING
“When you complain, you make yourself a victim. Leave the situation,
change the situation, or accept it. All else is madness.”
—Eckhart Tolle

There are two types of people in the world: Those who complain and those
who do something about it. And the people complaining the most are
always doing and succeeding the least and always have a wheelbarrow of
deflections and rationalizations.
Why is this though? Do people win more because they complain less or
vice versa? Research suggests causation rather than correlation because
complaining produces three negative reactions that directly impair our
decision making, performance, and progress.
First, complaining sours mood because often, “saying is experiencing,”
and this, in turn, discourages effective action. Complaining can be
contagious too, stirring the agita in those we complain to, who then feel
compelled to not only complain as well, but possibly even one-up our
complaints with more forceful grousing. If we then respond in kind, a
negative feedback loop can develop.
Second, complaining produces feelings of purposelessness and blunts
motivation—formidable emotional barriers to positive assessment, action,
and change.
And third, complaining encourages us to perceive ourselves as victims
of unavoidable and unchangeable circumstances. This mindset orients our
thinking away from solutions and toward dead-end conclusions like
“nothing can be done” and “nothing works.”
So, what should we do when we’re not getting the outcomes we want?
Use these experiences to get better, not bitter. Instead of merely
complaining, often repeatedly to whoever will listen, we should fasten our
attention on figuring out why we’re floundering and what it’ll take to win.
This process begins with asking ourselves three questions:

1. “What did I do to contribute to this situation?”


2. “What could I have done differently to avoid it?”
3. “What can I do now to improve it?”

The crucial realization is this:


Nearly every problem has a solution, including those we’ve failed and
will fail to solve. No matter how difficult or daunting a predicament is,
there’s always a path forward. Whether we find and take it is on us.

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82:
10 TIPS FOR KEEPING THE
WEIGHT OFF
“The best way to predict your future is to create it.”
—Abraham Lincoln

Did you know that research shows that, on average, people who diet regain
more than half of the weight lost within two years of losing it? And that by
five years, they’ve regained more than 80 percent?
This is partly because in some ways, losing weight is easier than
keeping it off. If you can muster enough moxie, you can drop plenty of
pounds, but preventing a relapse requires a different repertoire. Food
restriction and avoidance and sheer willpower aren’t enough.
Instead, you need to focus on developing a healthy relationship with
food because without that, “eating intuitively” will work about as well as
“drinking intuitively” will for an alcoholic. Here are ten ways to get there
faster:

1. Stick to a meal routine. By having consistent meal times and


avoiding snacking, you’ll be less likely to accidentally overeat and
will more or less eliminate food decisions—decisions that can
drain your willpower and induce “decision fatigue” that prompts
progressively poorer choices.
2. Go for “healthy” fats. Most of your dietary fat should come from
relatively unprocessed foods like nuts, avocados, olive oil, etc.,
and not fast food or pre-packaged fare. This helps control calorie
intake and can improve health outcomes.
3. Move more. The more you can goose your energy expenditure, the
easier it is to stay lean, so walk more. Shoot for at least 30-to-90
minutes of walking per day, which will burn 100-to-600 calories.
4. If you’re going to snack, stick with nutritious foods. Keep erratic
snacking to a minimum, but if the need arises or you want to have
regular snacks in between larger meals, think fresh fruit and high-
protein yogurt (Greek and skyr are my favorites) instead of potato
chips and cookies.
5. Control your portions. Using smaller plates and utensils may help
you get fuller on less food, as can drinking water with your meals.
6. Don’t be sedentary for long periods of time. Break up your sitting
time by standing up and walking around, stretching, doing push-
ups or chores, etc. An arbitrary-but-workable formula: After 60
minutes of sitting, go move for 5-to-10 minutes. This raises
energy expenditure and helps mitigate the health risks associated
with sitting too much.
7. Don’t drink calories. Caloric beverages are far tastier than they are
filling, especially when compared to nutritious food. Eat your
calories and drink water.
8. Eat mindfully. When eating, sit down and slow down. Eat
gradually, focus on your food while chewing, not your
smartphone, and tune into your body’s internal cues of fullness.
9. Eat your vegetables. Vegetables are good for more than just
nutrition—they’re also filling foods that keep you satisfied for few
calories. Aim for three-to-five servings of vegetables per day.
10. Get enough sleep. Sleep hygiene directly and indirectly impacts
body composition in many ways, including your appetite. The
more rested you generally are, the less hungry you’ll generally be.
Seven-to-eight hours of high-quality sleep per night is the target.

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83:
NEVER SAY DIE
“They’ve got us surrounded again, the poor bastards.”
—Creighton Abrams

Do you know why bulldogs were such ferocious opponents in nineteenth-


century dog fighting? It’s not because they were the strongest or most agile
or hostile of breeds. It was the extra fat and skin around their necks that
made it harder to rip their throats out. Other dogs had to work overtime to
kill them.
There’s a lesson there, and it’s not about body fat levels. When you’re
indefatigable, when you can absorb a tremendous number of blows, when
you can embrace and even rejoice in adversity, you’ll still strike out from
time to time, but you’ll also bat a lot better than average.
Because in many competitions, you don’t have to be the best to win—
you just have to be the hardest to destroy.
Don’t think you can’t do this. It’s literally in your DNA. Not so long
ago, our forebears had to chase, fight, and kill just to survive. They
expected hardship. They were willing to face the worst. They embraced the
fact that the universe, in all its apparent tranquility, is a carefully balanced
chaos of forces that we barely understand.
The time has come to act like we’ve descended from these hardy men
and women. To redirect anxiety, stress, and fear toward positive outcomes.
To push through the pain of life’s most important lessons. To never say die
no matter how fiercely the shifting sands of fate roil.
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84:
ARE YOU SURE YOU’RE
OVERTRAINING?
“If everything seems under control, you’re not going fast enough.”
—Mario Andretti

Are you overtraining or just not eating enough food to fully recover from
your training? You’re probably not overtraining per se as research shows
that true Overtraining Syndrome is remarkably difficult to develop—it takes
far more than a few tough strength training and cardio workouts per week to
back yourself into that corner.
Interestingly, however, the same research shows that if you don’t eat
enough calories or carbohydrates for long enough, you can come down with
a sub-clinical level of overtraining (overtraining-like symptoms), including
excessive muscle soreness and fatigue, performance plateaus and
downturns, mood disruptions, increased frequency of illness, sleep
disruptions, and other signs of under recovery.
In the extreme, this condition is called Relative Energy Deficiency in
Sport (RED-S), and it’s produced by a combination of high-frequency and
high-intensity training (that burns thousands of calories per week), severe
calorie restriction (in some documented cases, 1,000-calorie daily deficits),
and low-carbohydrate intake (ranging from a ketogenic diet to 1-to-2 grams
of carbs per pound of body weight per day).
Although RED-S requires a severe and prolonged imbalance between
stress and recovery, milder mismatches can manifest in similar ways. With
us “lifestyle athletes,” there are two scenarios where this usually happens:

1. When we’ve been restricting our calories for fat loss for several
months or longer, while following a high-frequency, high-volume
strength training program (five+ days and six-to-seven+ hours per
week) and high-frequency (and sometimes high-intensity) cardio
routine (five+ days and several HIIT sessions per week).
2. When we’ve been maintaining a low body fat percentage (under
10 percent in men and 20 percent in women) for several months or
longer while following particularly intense strength training and
cardio routines. (This can cause overtraining effects because it
forces you to generally err on the side of undereating [calorie
deficit] rather than overeating [calorie surplus].)

So, if you’re going great guns in the gym and feeling ground down,
assess your caloric and carbohydrate intake. If one or both are low (to get or
stay lean, for instance), try eating more calories and carbs, reducing your
training volume and/or intensity, or both, and see how your body responds.

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85:
THE PROBLEM WITH
PROGRESS
“Show me a thoroughly satisfied man and I will show you a failure.”
—Thomas Edison

Once we’ve set our sights on a goal, what do we crave most? Progress, of
course. We want to see positive change and forward movement, which, we
hope, will inspire us to keep going. This can happen—scientists refer to the
phenomenon of increasing motivation as we get closer to achieving a goal
as the goal-gradient effect—but that’s not how it always goes.
Progress can cut both ways because the satisfaction it produces can
breed complacency, a powerful catalyst for weakening willpower. Instead of
reinvigorating us for another charge into the breach, progress can lull us
into following one step forward with two back.
This paradox has been demonstrated in a number of studies. For
example, research conducted by University of Chicago scientists found that
when people were led to believe they were closing in on their weight loss
goals, they were 32 percent more likely to choose a chocolate bar for a
snack over an apple.
How can we guard against the slackening effects of success?
First, research shows that we can intensify our motivation to keep
pursuing a goal after enjoying considerable success by staying focused on
the work we still have to do rather than the work we’ve already done.
And second, when we do consider the progress we’ve made, instead of
flattering ourselves for it, we can view our efforts as evidence of the
importance of our goals and our commitment to them.

OceanofPDF.com
IF BECK CAN GO FROM
BEING HOMELESS IN NEW
YORK CITY TO PLAYING A
FEW SONGS BETWEEN
BANDS AT LOCAL CLUBS
AND COFFEEHOUSES IN LOS
ANGELES TO CREATING
ONE OF ROLLING STONE’S
GREATEST SONGS OF ALL
TIME (“LOSER”), YOU CAN
FOLLOW A MEAL PLAN FOR
A MONTH.
OceanofPDF.com
86:
YOUR NORTH STAR
“If one does not know to which port one is sailing, no wind is favorable.”
—Seneca

You can train any which way and get sweaty and sore, but to get stronger or
fitter, you have to train in very specific ways. That doesn’t necessarily mean
training harder, either. It means training better.
Here’s what that looks like: Doing a moderate amount of compound
weightlifting with heavy-but-manageable loads, good form, and a full range
of motion.
That’s the most efficient way to improve strength, body composition,
and mobility.
That’s your north star.

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87:
EASY, FAST, AND FREE
“You can have almost anything you want, but not everything. Maturity is
the ability to sacrifice good alternatives for better ones.”
—Ray Dalio

If you want a hard life, always go in for the easy, fast, and free, and if you
want an easy life, make a habit of pursuing the hard, slow, and costly.
Why? The most difficult ways to do things almost always turn out to be
the easiest in the end because they’re the only ways that actually work.
So, try to imagine how far you could get if you started doing the hairy
things now and pegged away for a few years. And then realize that you can
probably get way further than that and possibly even further than you’d
currently believe.

OceanofPDF.com
88:
IT’S NOT FAT SHAMING
“You cannot play with the animal in you without becoming wholly animal,
play with falsehood without forfeiting your right to truth, play with cruelty
without losing your sensitivity of mind. He who wants to keep his garden
tidy does not reserve a plot for weeds.”
—Dag Hammarskjold

Obesity is one of the biggest existential threats to our individual and social
health and well-being. It destroys vitality, magnifies mortality, strains
psychology, erodes self-belief, and undermines self-definition.
That’s not “fat shaming”—that’s just the plain truth.
It’s also not fat shaming to tell people they can’t lose weight eating
however, whatever, whenever they want.
Or that healthy living is mostly a matter of priorities, not genetics,
time, or money.
Or that it’s unhealthy to regularly eat too much and move too little.
Or that ultimately our body composition reflects our lifestyle more than
anything else.
Or that obesity imposes staggering costs on society in the form of
healthcare expenses and reduced productivity.
Or that classical standards of beauty are mostly rooted in biology, not
society.
Or that we usually gain weight simply because we get lazy or surrender
self-control and eat and drink too much.
Or that obesity is an epidemic disease with decades of scientific
research clearly proving that it significantly increases all-cause mortality.
Or that “purposeful and joyful movement” isn’t enough if it doesn’t
help produce and maintain a healthy body composition.
Or that it’s easier to build self-esteem by achieving a healthy body
composition than to underplay its importance.

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89:
WHEN YOU DON’T WANT TO
WORK OUT
“You don’t have to be great to get started, but you have to get started to be
great.”
—Les Brown

Them:
“What should I do when I’m not motivated to work out?”
Me:
“What happens when your dog isn’t motivated to go for a walk?”
Them:
“It doesn’t matter—we go for a walk.”
Me:
“That’s good.”
Them:
“Touche.”
Look, sometimes, you don’t want to work out. But then you force
yourself to do it anyway. And then you feel happy. The end.

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90:
DIET ON, DIET OFF
“I do not think that there is any other quality so essential to success of any
kind as the quality of perseverance. It overcomes almost everything, even
nature.”
—John D. Rockefeller

Losing weight is a balancing act. On the one hand, the more weight you
lose, the more excited you are to continue, but on the other hand, the more
weight you lose (and the faster you lose it), the more you run the risk of
muscle loss, hunger, irritability, metabolic slowdown, and other bothers.
One counterintuitive way to better thread this needle is to take periodic
breaks from your diet. In a study conducted by University of Tasmania
scientists, fifty-one men were divided into two groups: one that dieted every
day for sixteen weeks, and another that dieted on a “two week on” (calorie
deficit), “two week off” (maintenance calories) schedule until they also
reached sixteen weeks of caloric restriction (taking a total of thirty-two
weeks).
The researchers provided all of the meals to the subjects throughout the
study, which ensured they were eating the right number of calories, and
everyone also kept a food diary to be doubly sure of how much food they
were eating.
By the end of their weight loss phases, participants in the continuous
dieting group lost about 21 pounds on average, and their counterparts in the
intermittent dieting group lost nearly 32 pounds.
Then, all participants returned to their normal eating patterns, and six
months later, the researchers checked in with everyone to see how much
weight they had regained. The scientists found that the continuous dieters
had regained 13 pounds on average, reducing their total weight loss to just
over 7 pounds, whereas the intermittent dieters had regained just under 8
pounds, pegging their net weight loss at about 24 pounds.
In the final analysis, the intermittent dieters (who took diet breaks)
outperformed the continuous dieters (who didn’t) in all respects—they lost
more weight and kept more of it off.
But there was a catch—it also took them twice as long to complete
their weight loss phase and return to normal eating. And in the real world
(where you’re not working with specialists who are keeping you
accountable), doubling the duration of a diet can drastically decrease your
chances of success.
That doesn’t mean you can’t benefit from diet breaks, however. In fact,
they can be a gamechanger if you’ve struggled with sticking to a diet in the
past, and especially if you’ve struggled to maintain weight loss over the
long haul.
Here’s what works well for most people:

If your body composition goal requires no more than eight-or-so


weeks of dieting, you probably don’t need any breaks. Just stick it
out.
If your goal requires more than eight-to-twelve weeks of dieting,
take a one-to-two week diet break (maintenance calories) every
eight-to-ten weeks.
If you’re lean (25 percent body fat or less for women and 15
percent or less for men) and looking to get really lean, take a one-
week diet break every six-to-eight weeks.
OceanofPDF.com
ONE WEIRD TRICK FOR
AVOIDING HANGOVERS:
DON’T DRINK ALCOHOL.
OceanofPDF.com
91:
LOOK AT YOU
“If one only wished to be happy, this could be easily accomplished; but we
wish to be happier than other people, and this is always difficult, for we
believe others to be happier than they are.”
—Charles de Montesquieu

When was the last time you hugged yourself for how far you’ve come?
For doing all those workouts you didn’t want to do, eating all those
vegetable slops you didn’t want to eat, and drinking all those near beers you
didn’t want to drink?
For how much you’ve shown up, taken on, and learned, accomplished,
and grown?
Well done. You should be proud.
Remember this when you’re faced with new challenges, and you’ll be
less likely to overestimate their difficulty and underestimate your ability to
prevail.

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92:
THE BEST SUPPLEMENTS
“The truth will set you free. But not until it is finished with you.”
—David Foster Wallace

The absolute best supplements THEY don’t want you to know about for …

Losing fat: strength training, walking, protein, sleep, hydration,


consistency, patience, persistence
Building muscle: carbs, calories, progressive overload, getting
strong, enjoying your workouts, deloading, training periodization,
naps, realistic expectations
Boosting cognition: exercising, reading challenging books,
nutritious food, rest, socializing, building your vocabulary,
thinking outside your comfort zone, debating people who disagree
with you

Something to always remember about supplements: You don’t need


them to build muscle, lose fat, and get healthy. Even the best ones (ahem …
my sports nutrition company Legion is king, don’t @ me …) are
supplemental by nature.

OceanofPDF.com
93:
LET THEM
“Any person capable of angering you becomes your master.”
—Epictetus

Two surefire ways to be hated less are to say less and fail more. Because to
some people, speaking up is a vice and succeeding is a sin. People you
should pay no attention to.
So they oppose your perspective? Let them.
So they protest your purpose? Let them.
So they dispute your plan? Let them.
So they doubt your determination? Let them.
So they fuel your fears? Let them.
So they mock your missteps? Let them.
So they celebrate your setbacks? Let them.
So they spurn your progress? Let them.
So they snub your successes? Let them.
So they deny your destiny? Let them.
Let them see you take a stand anyway.
Let them see you pour it on.
Let them see you overcome the odds.
Let them see you gloom.
Let them see you hoot.
Let them see you glow.
Let them.
OceanofPDF.com
94:
MORE SIMPLE EXERCISE
HACKS
“If you want to choose the pleasure of growth, prepare yourself for some
pain.”
—Irvin Yalom

A few more simple exercise nuggets that I wish I had known at the
beginning of my fitness journey:

1. The order in which you do exercises in a workout doesn’t appear


to directly affect muscle growth, but it does impact strength
(which can influence muscle building indirectly). Strength gains
are greatest in the exercises done earliest in a session, so as a rule
of thumb, start your workouts with the exercises you most want to
get stronger at (usually compound movements).
2. Ten-to-15 high-effort sets per workout is far more effective,
economical, and fun than 20+ medium-effort sets. This spotlights
a common resistance training mistake: Way too many sub-
maximal working sets (sets ending many reps from muscular
failure) that essentially function as an extended warm-up and way
too few “hard sets” (sets ending 1-to-3 reps shy of muscular
failure) that actually produce gains.
3. When deadlifting, it can help to imagine you’re pushing the floor
away from you rather than pulling the weights off the ground, and
if you keep your nipples pointed at the wall in front of you, your
back will stay flat.
4. If your reps per set are dropping significantly from one set to the
next, you’re probably not resting long enough in between sets. To
maximize performance, rest 2.5-to-3.5 minutes in between sets of
compound exercises and 2-to-2.5 minutes in between sets of
isolation exercises.
5. Most people don’t need to do a lot of leg exercises or volume to
get great wheels. A squat movement plus a few accessory
exercises like hamstring curls, Bulgarian split squats, leg press,
lunges, etc. for a total of 10-to-12 sets per week usually fits the
bill.

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95:
FUN FITNESS GOALS
“If you want to live a happy life, tie it to a goal, not to people or things.”
—Albert Einstein

Some fun fitness goals to work toward:

1. One set of 5-to-10 (women) or 10-to-20 (men) pullups.


2. One set of 5-to-10 (women) or 10-to-20 (men) pushups or 20
(women) or 40 (men) if you’re already strong.
3. One rep on the bench press with your body weight.
4. One rep on the squat with your body weight if you’re new to
strength training or twice your weight if you’re already strong.
5. One rep on the deadlift with your body weight if you’re new to
strength training or twice your weight if you’re already strong.
6. At least 10,000 steps per day for at least one month.

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IF YOU’RE A GUY WHO
DOESN’T RE-RACK HIS
WEIGHTS, YOU PROBABLY
HAVE LOW TESTOSTERONE.
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96:
IT’S NOT FIT SHAMING
“Care about what other people think and you will always be the prisoner.”
—Lao Tzu

There’s a lot of talk about “fat shaming” nowadays and very little about “fit
shaming,” which is experienced by many people wanting to improve their
body composition and health. Both of these behaviors are unacceptable.
But it’s not fit shaming to tell people that abs aren’t a sign of success if
they have to starve and suffer to keep them.
Or that they shouldn’t claim moral superiority over others because of
how they eat.
Or that forcing themselves to choose the cauliflower pizza means it’s
probably time to get a new diet.
Or that an obsession with weight loss can be just as unhealthy as
excessive weight gain.
Or that fitness professionals who photoshop their pictures are part of
the problem.
Or that sometimes people should put their time and energy into things
other than fat loss.
Or that we should exercise to celebrate what we can do with our body,
not to punish ourselves for eating brownies.
Or that a calorie deficit is supposed to be a weight loss intervention, not
a lifestyle.
Or that food can be just fuel, but it can also be part of enjoying our
family, religion, culture, and community.
Or that thinking we’ll finally love our body when we reach a specific
body weight or composition is like thinking we’ll finally love our life when
we make a certain amount of money.

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97:
THE MAINTAIN GAINS
“Life is 10 percent what you make it and 90 percent how you take it.”
—Irving Berlin

Forget weight loss competitions—I want to see weight maintenance


competitions.
Because the longer you maintain a healthy body composition, the
easier it gets to continue maintaining it.
So simply keeping what you’ve got is a form of progress.

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98:
TARGETED FAT LOSS
“Consistency of effort over the long run is everything.”
—Angela Duckworth

How would you like workouts for flattening your stomach, slimming your
thighs, and shrinking your muffin top?
I wish it were that simple. While research shows that training a muscle
results in increased levels of blood flow and lipolysis (the breakdown of fat
cells into usable energy) in the area, the changes are too small to matter.
Training muscles builds them up and burns calories, which can aid fat
loss, but it doesn’t directly burn the fat on and around the muscles to any
significant degree. This is why no amount of crunches can give you abs. For
that, you merely need to reduce your body fat percentage to 10-to-15
percent if you’re a man or 20-to-25 percent if you’re a woman, because fat
loss occurs in a whole-body fashion.
That is, when you maintain a calorie deficit, your body reduces fat
stores all over, with certain areas shrinking faster than others. Most women
notice that their arms, shoulders, and back are the first to get noticeably
leaner when they diet, not their hips or thighs. And most men also find their
arms, shoulders, and back responding quickly to a cutting phase but not
their stomach.
This is partly a function of the amount of fat in these different regions
—most people don’t store much fat in their upper torso and arms, so it
doesn’t take much fat loss to produce visible changes—but there’s another
factor in play as well.
To lose fat, two things must happen: 1) fat cells must release their fatty
acids, and 2) those fatty acids must be burned (by other cells) for energy.
The first step is accomplished by chemicals called catecholamines that
travel through your blood and attach to receptors on fat cells, triggering the
release of fatty acids; and the degree to which the second step occurs
depends on moment-to-moment energy demands.
Owing to a physiological difference in catecholamine receptors, some
fat cells are more resistant to mobilization (step one) than others. Hence the
“stubborn fat” phenomenon—the areas of your body that take much longer
to lean out than others. In women, it’s usually the hips, thighs, and butt, and
in men, it’s usually the stomach and lower back.
Fortunately, the fat in such regions is merely stubborn, not immovable,
and losing it doesn’t require any special interventions—it eventually yields
to a calorie deficit like its more malleable brethren.
Hence, the “secret” to finally doing away with hard-to-lose fat will
sound familiar: consistency and patience.

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99:
THE GREAT VULNERABILITY
HOAX
“As a cure for worrying, work is better than whiskey.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson

These days, it’s trendy to muse about embracing “vulnerability” like it’s a
cosmic cheat code for awakening your essence and owning your
superpower. Really? That’s it? Openly wallowing in anxieties, insecurities,
and failures is the gateway to the good life? Well, glory be!
Announcing we’re not perfect may feel uncomfortable, but so does
exposing ourselves in front of JCPenney. Point being: while all positive
growth involves discomfort, not all discomfort produces positive growth.
Those of us who aren’t monsters all have doubts and worries. We all
know we all have doubts and worries. Admitting as much isn’t inspiring or
noble, and it changes nothing. The soul of authentic vulnerability, then, is
acting courageously. This can come in many flavors, including taking
ownership of negative circumstances instead of blaming others, asking for
advice instead of pretending we have it all figured out, and doing the right
thing even when it costs us something.
Bogus vulnerability, on the other hand, seeks approval and sympathy. It
elevates fragility and inability over confidence and excellence. It glorifies
who we are over who we can be.
These two types of vulnerability can appear similar in practice, but
they’re actually as different as oxygen and a picture of it. One sustains—
and the other suffocates.

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100:
SAID THE DIET GURU WHO’S
FULL OF SHIT
“Bad men live that they may eat and drink, whereas good men eat and drink
that they may live.”
—Socrates

Ten ways diet gurus tell you they’re full of shit without telling you they’re
full of shit:

1. “Peanut butter is a great source of protein.”


2. “A few ribeyes and sticks of butter per day is great for your heart.”
3. “You don’t need to eat fiber to optimize your health.”
4. “You should eat according to your DNA.”
5. “These supplements will fix your adrenal fatigue.”
6. “Let me tell you about my hormone reset diet.”
7. “You’re not losing weight because you’re not eating enough.”
8. “You probably need to cleanse your thyroid.”
9. “Drinking water with organic Baboon Lemon and Dragon’s Claw
cayenne pepper will help you stay alkaline.”
10. “Conventional fruit and vegetables are loaded with chemicals
that’ll kill you.”

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IMAGINE IF PEOPLE CARED
AS MUCH ABOUT OBESITY
AS THEY USED TO CARE
ABOUT COVID.
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101:
A SIMPLE RULE FOR BETTER
LIVING
“We are always complaining that our days are few but acting as though
there would be no end to them.”
—Seneca

Every day—blow high, blow low—complete at least one important (but not
necessarily urgent) task that moves you closer to at least one important
long-term goal. The task can be big or small, but it must matter and must be
done before you sack out.
And for bonus points, be especially alert to the important things you
don’t want to do because so many of the breakthroughs we’re seeking are
waiting in the work we’re avoiding.

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102:
THE CASE FOR ISOLATION
EXERCISES
“Wanting something is not enough. You must hunger for it.”
—Les Brown

Many fitness experts put compound exercises on a pedestal, as all you need
to fully develop every major muscle group in your body. Isolation exercises,
they say, may be fun, but they’re superfluous if you do enough squatting,
deadlifting, and bench and overhead pressing.
I disagree. While the lion’s share of your physique can come from
compound exercises, by supplementing them with the right isolation
exercises, you can gain even more muscle and strength.
Here’s why:

1. Isolation exercises allow you to continue training specific muscle


groups when it’s no longer practical to do so with compound
exercises. For instance, your chest and shoulders will be bushed
after several sets of bench and dumbbell pressing, but your triceps
will be up to a few sets of pushdowns. ⁣
2. Isolation exercises allow you to train a muscle group in different
positions and through different ranges of motions, which likely
improves muscle growth. For example, the pullup and barbell row
train your biceps in a very different way than the hammer and
preacher curl.
3. Doing the same three or four exercises every week for months on
end gets boring, and boring workouts tend to be less productive
than engaging ones. ⁣
4. Repeating the same exercises in the same way for long periods of
time probably increases the risk of repetitive stress injuries,
especially with heavier weights.
5. Isolation exercises are excellent for addressing muscle imbalances
and weak points in your physique. For example, if one arm or leg
is stronger than the other, you may not even realize it until you
start doing the right isolation exercises (like the leg extension or
curl or alternating dumbbell curl or single-arm overhead triceps
extension).

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103:
FUN FITNESS WINS
“Happiness spreads. When we choose happiness, it actually makes it easier
for other people to choose happiness.”
—Shawn Achor

Who else can vividly remember the satisfaction of the moment when you
realized that your warm-up sets used to be your working sets?
And that workouts that used to wear you out aren’t even challenging
anymore?
And that nobody cares what you do in the gym and how you look while
you do it?
And that fat loss really only requires a calorie deficit?
And that you finally look like you lift?
And that someone asked for your help with something “because you’re
strong”?
And that it’s time for a new wardrobe because none of your old clothes
fit you anymore?
And that you don’t have to choose between looks and health and can
just train for both?
And that investing time and effort into your health and body
composition produces profits in every area of your life?
And that your lifestyle can keep you healthy and fit for the rest of your
days?
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104:
MORE SIMPLE HEALTH
HACKS
“Physical fitness is the first requisite of happiness.”
—Joseph Pilates

A few more simple health hacks:

1. When you’re sick or on the brink, skip your workout and take a
nap instead. This alone can make the difference between a rapid
recovery and prolonged illness.
2. Listen to classical music. Studies show that it can relax your mind
and body, reduce feelings of stress, and improve cognition and
sleep. For what it’s worth, my go-tos are Beethoven’s symphonies,
Debussy’s piano solos, Bach’s sonatas and concertos, and for
more modern work, anything by Ludovico Einaudi, Max Richter,
or Jeremy Soule.
3. Go to bed earlier rather than later. Research shows this can reduce
the risk of heart and metabolic disease, depression and other
psychiatric disorders, cognitive decline, and obesity.
4. Stop eating after dinner. Studies show that night eating increases
the risk of overeating, including binge eating and emotional
eating.
5. Try to go to bed around the same time every night, including the
weekends. Research suggests this can improve food choices and
reduce hunger, cravings, and calorie intake.

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105:
TOUGH LOVE AND GENTLE
COMPASSION
“It’s nice to be important, but it’s more important to be nice.”
—John Templeton

Chronic overconsumption of calories is the “cause-in-fact” of obesity, but


genetic, environmental, educational, socioeconomic, and other factors
prepare the ground for disordered eating. Often, resolving obesity requires
addressing one or more of these “proximate causes.”
“Bullpucky!” you may be thinking. “No matter their circumstances,
people choose to live the way they live. Nobody is being forced into drive-
thrus. They go willingly. Nobody is being banned from exercise. They
refuse willfully.”
You’re not wrong—ultimately only we can live our lives—but you’re
also missing just how powerfully external circumstances can incline us
toward behaviors, how quickly those behaviors can become habits, and how
easily those habits can become shackles.
For example, a study published in The New England Journal of
Medicine found that when someone gains weight, their friends, spouses, and
siblings are more likely to gain weight as well. Specifically, when someone
becomes obese, the likelihood of a friend doing the same rises by 57
percent, a spouse by 37 percent, and a sibling by 40 percent.
In same-sex friendships in particular, the social contagion effect (the
phenomenon of people adopting behaviors and habits of those around them)
is even stronger—people experienced a 71 percent increased risk of obesity
if a same-sex friend became obese.
“I’ll give you that,” you may reply, “but it doesn’t change the fact that
every day people are rising above and out of downright wretched
conditions. It has been done, therefore it can be done.”
Quite. Julius Caesar once said that if fortune doesn’t go your way,
sometimes you have to bend it to your will. But he was Julius Caesar. And
even he lost the plot. So let’s temper our tough love for others with gentle
compassion.

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TWO WAYS TO LOOK AT
LIFE:
1. NOBODY GIVES A SHIT. :(
2. NOBODY GIVES A SHIT! :D
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106:
WEEKEND WEIGHT GAIN
“It’s not that some people have willpower and some don’t. It’s that some
people are ready to change and others are not.”
—James Gordon

Research shows that most people maintain a steady weight throughout the
week and gain weight on the weekends.
They accomplish this by eating an extra 100-to-400 calories per day on
Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays (compared to weekdays) and by burning
several hundred fewer calories on Sundays (the least-active day of the
week).
Here are several ways to avoid this pattern:

1. Do fun activities (emphasis on activities) that you don’t have time


for during the week, like biking, hiking, yoga, museum browsing,
gardening, dancing, etc. And for bonus points, invite some friends
(rather than meeting them for brunch)!
2. Don’t drink too much alcohol. And when you do drink, try to eat
something first and choose lower-calorie drinks like wine, light
beer, and hard liquor with calorie-free mixers.
3. Take some time to relax. Acute stress typically reduces appetite,
but chronic stress does the opposite, which is why studies link the
latter with weight gain and obesity. So instead of filling your
weekends with more work and other obligations, block out some
free time to read a book, watch a TV show, play some golf or
pickleball, whatever recharges your batteries.
4. Skip breakfast … or eat it. Research shows that some people are
less hungry throughout the day and tend to eat fewer total calories
when they skip breakfast while others tend to generally feel fuller
and eat less when they eat breakfast. Find which approach works
best for you.
5. Eat moderately when eating out. To make this easier, before you
go to a restaurant, you can a) eat a small, high-protein snack, b)
review the menu online and decide what you’ll eat, c) personalize
your meal if the stock options don’t work, d) skip the bread
basket, e) share your food with others, especially dessert, and f)
minimize or leave out the alcohol.

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107:
THE BEST ANTIDOTE TO
WEAKNESS
“If you’re going through hell, keep going.”
—Winston Churchill

It’s okay to be weak. It’s not okay to stay weak.


So if you want more self-security, get strong—the best antidote to
weakness. Strong bodies breed strong minds that think strong thoughts.
Thoughts like whatever’s happening or hurting today will always seem
like a much bigger deal than it will in the future. In fact, eventually, it’ll be
completely forgotten.
And thoughts like rejection and shame can be a bummer, but they can
also be a motivator. Sometimes, nothing quite warms the cockles like
chewing up those rusty nails and spitting out molten shrapnel at naysayers
and cynics.
And thoughts like choosing not to blame others or bemoan our
circumstances when we fail, but to assume that we should’ve and could’ve
done better—that there’s a lesson to be learned that’ll increase our chances
of winning next time.
Because so often, the difference between habitual success and failure
simply comes down to the attitude we adopt toward setbacks,
disappointments, and black eyes. Fearing letdowns creates the conditions
for more letdowns. Stewing over failures leads to more failures. But
understanding and appreciating the lessons of losing transforms the
adversity of stumbling blocks into the advantage of stepping stones.
Remember: if you’re growing, you’re likely failing, and if you’re not
failing, you’re likely not growing.

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108:
DOES PROTEIN TIMING
MATTER?
“I believe that the greatest gift you can give your family and the world is a
healthy you.”
—Joyce Meyer

For decades now, many bodybuilders have said that eating a serving of
protein every few hours (four-to-six times per day) is vital for gaining and
even retaining muscle. It’s not.
Research on the intermittent fasting style of dieting is an obvious
counterpoint. For example, one study found that eating the entire day’s
worth of protein in a four-hour window (followed by 20 hours of fasting)
didn’t result in muscle loss. Other fasting studies have shown that people
doing regular strength training workouts can gain plenty of muscle and
strength by eating one-to-three servings of protein per day in six-to-eight-
hour feeding windows.
By and large, the weight of the evidence is clear: Your muscle doesn’t
wither if you miss a meal or two. Total daily protein intake is what matters
most.
That said, there’s evidence that eating protein just one-to-three times
per day isn’t optimal for building muscle.
For instance, in a study conducted by RMIT University researchers,
four servings of 20 grams of protein per day with three hours in between
each produced significantly higher muscle protein synthesis rates than two
servings of 40 grams separated by six hours. Similar effects have been seen
in athletes in a calorie deficit as well.
These findings aren’t surprising when you consider some of what we
know about protein absorption and metabolism. Namely …

1. The body can process about 7 grams of protein per hour for
muscle protein synthesis.
2. Thirty-ish grams of protein maximally stimulates muscle protein
synthesis rates.
3. Muscle protein synthesis lasts for up to three hours.

Therefore, by eating a moderate amount of protein every few hours,


you can keep protein synthesis rates elevated for most of your waking
hours, and your body can use most of the amino acids provided for protein
synthesis.
So, if you want to maximize muscle growth, especially if you’re an
experienced weightlifter (whose body is less responsive to training and
protein than it once was), pay attention to your protein timing.

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109:
YOU HAVE TO CHASE IT
“It has been my observation that most people get ahead during the time that
others waste.”
—Henry Ford

Them:
“How do I find the time to work out?”
Me:
“You look for it. Because your fitness will never chase you—you have
to chase it. So if you want it, pursue it.”

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110:
SAID THE EXERCISE GURU
WHO’S FULL OF SHIT
“Wise men talk because they have something to say. Fools because they
have to say something.”
—Plato

Ten ways exercise gurus tell you they’re full of shit without telling you
they’re full of shit:

1. “Ectomorphs, endomorphs, and mesomorphs should train very


differently.”
2. “Cardio is great at burning muscle, not fat.”
3. “The deadlift is a horrible exercise for people who aren’t strength
athletes.”
4. “Training more than two-to-three times per week will fry your
nervous system.”
5. “You have to do a lot of core exercises to get a great core.”
6. “Eight-to-12 reps per set is far better for gaining muscle than four-
to-six.”
7. “Some people just can’t grow with deadlifts, squats, bench and
overhead presses, and chin-ups and pull-ups.”
8. “If you’re not doing high-intensity interval training, you’re not
trying.”
9. “If you’re not training six or seven days per week, you’re also not
trying.”
10. “Your workouts could use more supersets, drop sets, giant sets,
and negatives.”

OceanofPDF.com
DOING AN EXERCISE RIGHT
IN FRONT OF THE
DUMBBELL RACK IS LIKE
STOPPING IN THE MIDDLE
OF THE SIDEWALK TO
ANSWER A TEXT.
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111:
THE WORST FORM OF STRESS
“The greatest views emerge from the toughest climbs.”
—Unknown

In the historical fiction novel The Virtues of War, Alexander the Great came
upon a yogi.
“This man has conquered the world! What have you accomplished?”
Alexander’s lieutenant asked the man.
“I have conquered the need to conquer the world,” he calmly replied.
That’s one philosophy. A fashionable one. Even an enchanting one. But
another belief holds that the worst form of stress is an absence of stress,
which breeds angst, emptiness, and despair. It also holds that comforts can
distract and amuse but never inspire and improve. That the aim of life isn’t
to avoid strain or worry but to stretch ourselves toward worthy ends—to
have a life before death.

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112:
STOP WATCHING PORN
“Men are not punished for their sins, but by them.”
—Kin Hubbard

A few reasons porn is for suckers and simps:

1. It can waste appalling amounts of time.


2. It can lead to behaviors that closely mirror addiction.
3. It serves as an artificial substitute for real human connection.
4. It reduces motivation to find a partner (who could improve your
life in myriad ways).
5. It increases time preference by training your brain to seek small,
short-term satisfactions rather than larger, long-term rewards.
6. It increases the likelihood of a romantic breakup.
7. It can blunt the pleasure felt during real-life sex and strengthen the
desire for more extreme forms of porn.
8. It can produce unrealistic sexual expectations and reduce intimacy.
9. It can contribute to erectile dysfunction.
10. It can create an appetite for high-risk sexual behaviors.

And if you don’t agree with any of that, you have to at least concede
that porn produces horribly misleading expectations about how quickly a
plumber can get to your house.

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113:
THREE REASONS TO TRAIN
TODAY
“Don’t measure yourself by what you have accomplished, but by what you
should have accomplished with your ability.”
—John Wooden

Need a reason to train today? Just think of all the people—pols, moguls,
experts, authorities, journos, and the rest—who want to see you fat, sick,
weak, lazy, ignorant, depressed, and reliant on the crumbs they wipe from
their plates.
Want another one? A workout is so much more than a time to strain and
sweat. It’s an opportunity to forget our worries, unload our baggage, purge
our frustrations, discipline our emotions, temper our mind, and transcend
our limits.
One more? Sometimes, the best workouts are the ones you least want
to do.
And if all that wasn’t enough to get the stumps stirring today, make a
deal with yourself: You can’t skip a workout without showing up at the gym
first. If you show up and still don’t want to train, you can go home.
And if you train at home, you have to do one working set of your first
exercise before you can throw in the sponge.
Watch how many workouts get done this way.

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114:
LEANING INTO A LEAN BULK
“If you think lifting weights is dangerous, try being weak. Being weak is
dangerous.”
—Bret Contreras

So, you’ve finally finished cutting, and you’re straining at the leash to start
gaining some serious muscle and strength.
Can you just go straight into a slight calorie surplus, or will that lead to
excessive fat gain? Should you slowly increase your calories over the
course of weeks or even months (“reverse diet”) to allow your metabolism
to “normalize,” or is that unnecessary? Or should you do something else
altogether?
An odds-on approach for long-term success is to increase your calories
to a maintenance level for at least a few weeks before increasing them into
a surplus, but this isn’t for the reason most people think: to fix “metabolic
damage” caused by dieting.
Fortunately, dieting doesn’t harm your metabolism. While your
metabolism can sag while dieting, this is a normal and temporary response
that quickly reverses once you start eating more food.
The real reason to include a transitional period of maintenance between
cutting and lean bulking phases is because it will help ensure you don’t
accidentally eat far more than you intend to (resulting in far more fat gain
than you’d like).
After restricting your calories for some time and losing a significant
amount of body fat, hunger and cravings can soar, especially if you’re very
lean. And when you combine that with a sharp increase in food intake and
permissiveness (“I’ll just have the whole bag—I’m bulking now.”), what
begins as a tactical retreat can spiral into a crippling rout.
If you take the middle path, though, and go from cutting to
maintenance for a few weeks before lean gaining, you can better tame your
appetite and thus preserve your newly minted body composition, setting
you up for a highly successful muscle building phase.

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115:
BE WORTHY
“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true, the
other is to refuse to accept what is true.”
—Soren Kierkegaard

If you want a fit, healthy, and strong body, be worthy of one. Practice
application, moderation, and determination. Slug it out one inch at a time,
day by day.
Deserve what you want. Because eventually—if we live long enough—
most of us will mostly get what we deserve.

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AT THIS POINT, I DON’T
WANT BIGGER MUSCLES TO
LOOK BETTER. I JUST WANT
MORE PLACES TO PUT
CARBS.
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116:
IS 1,200 CALORIES PER DAY
DANGEROUS?
“Those obsessed with health are not healthy; the first requisite of good
health is a certain calculated carelessness about oneself.”
—Sydney J. Harris

Have you ever heard that you should never eat fewer than so many calories
each day, like 1,200, 1,500 or 1,800? If you do eat less than this occulted
number, legend goes, many misfortunes will befall you, including …

Metabolic damage
Extreme hunger
Malnutrition
Hormonal disruptions
Muscle loss
Mood disturbances
Menstrual irregularities

I often hear from people concerned because an evidence-based


formula, or a calculator of mine, is telling them to eat what has been
deemed by others as a “dangerously low” amount of food.
Fortunately, a true universal caloric minimum would probably be much
lower than 1,800, 1,500, or even 1,200 because many people don’t burn as
many calories as they think they do, and even when someone is indeed
eating too little (as with starvation dieting), the purported consequences are
often overblown.
For example, a 5’5”, 130-pound woman who exercises 1-to-3 hours per
week burns about 1,700 calories per day, and if she wanted to lose about 1
pound of fat per week, she’d need to eat about 1,200 calories per day.
If we make her 5’10” and 160 pounds, though, her total daily energy
expenditure rises to nearly 2,000 calories per day, and if we increase her
exercise to 4-to-6 hours per week, it reaches 2,300 calories per day. Then, if
we calculate her daily caloric target for 1 pound of fat loss per week, we get
1,800 calories—virtually lean bulking for her smaller and less active
counterpart.
It works the same in men. A 5’7”, 160-pound guy exercising 1-to-3
hours per week burns about 2,100 calories per day, whereas a 6’3”, 200-
pound man exercising 4-to-6 hours per week burns almost 3,000 per day.
So, saying that nobody should ever eat less than some arbitrary number
of calories per day is like saying they should never drive slower than 55
miles per hour on the highway. What if they have engine trouble? What if
there’s traffic? What if it’s raining pitchforks? Such advice is too simplistic.
Just how low should you go when cutting, though? There is a caloric
threshold you shouldn’t cross, isn’t there? Yes, because if you restrict your
calories too heavily, studies show you won’t wreck your metabolism,
disintegrate your muscle, or otherwise derange your physiology, but
negative side effects often associated with dieting like hunger, lethargy, and
mood disruption can become more pronounced.
To avoid these and other related issues, when cutting, I recommend no
fewer than 8-to-10 calories per pound of body weight per day regardless of
activity level (and 10-to-12 per pound per day works well for most people
who are doing at least a couple hours of exercise per week).
You know you have your calories right when you’re losing 0.5-to-1
percent of your body weight per week, because if you try to lose weight
faster than this, you’re more likely to run into problems.

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117:
IF THIS ISN’T NICE …
“It is difficult to find happiness within oneself, but it is impossible to find it
anywhere else.”
—Arthur Schopenhauer

If we can’t find joy in small things—a stimulating conversation, an evening


with the right person, a challenging workout—we’ll probably struggle to
find it in “bigger” things too.
So, as Vonnegut said, when things are going sweetly and peacefully,
pause a moment and say, “If this isn’t nice, what is?”

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118:
THE MANDATORY EXERCISE
MYTH
“Self-care is not selfish. You cannot serve from an empty vessel.”
—Eleanor Brown

No specific exercises are mandatory for gaining muscle and strength. All
exercises have pros and cons, indications and contraindications, so if you
can’t or don’t want to do one, there’s always another that’ll do the trick.
For example, the barbell deadlift is a first-rate exercise for training just
about everything on the backside of your body, but if you can’t or don’t
want to do it for whatever reason, you can do a deadlift variation like the
trap-bar deadlift, Romanian deadlift, or rack pull, or other exercises
altogether that train the same major muscle groups like the hamstring curl,
hip thrust, Bulgarian split squat, hyperextension, and dumbbell row.
The same applies to the barbell back squat and bench press. Cracking
good exercises … if you can do them properly without pain or other
problems. If you can’t, however, many others can make the grade, including
the barbell or dumbbell front squat, safety bar squat, goblet squat, leg press,
dumbbell lunge, dumbbell bench press, dumbbell floor press, machine
press, and feet-elevated push-up.
Here’s my point: just because you can’t or don’t do some of the most
effective and efficient exercises for gaining muscle and strength doesn’t
mean you can’t effectively and efficiently gain muscle and strength.
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119:
DO YOU BELIEVE?
“You don’t attract what you want. You attract what you are.”
—Wayne W. Dyer

Never underestimate the power of simply believing in yourself. Always


look for reasons to bet on your hand, even when the odds look slim. As
David Schwartz said in his book The Magic of Thinking Big:

The “Okay-I’ll-give-it-a-try-but-I-don’t-think-it-will-work”
attitude produces failures. Disbelief is negative power. When the
mind disbelieves or doubts, the mind attracts “reasons” to support
the disbelief. Doubt, disbelief, the subconscious will to fail, the not
really wanting to succeed, is responsible for most failures.

Schwartz’s observation relates to a phenomenon that scientists refer to


as the nocebo effect, which is the production of negative outcomes or side
effects by negative expectations, and which has been validated in numerous
scientific experiments.
For example, in one study, forty participants with asthma, emphysema,
or restrictive lung disease were given an inhaler that contained nebulized
salt water. They were told it contained irritants or allergens, however, and
after using it, nineteen of the people experienced restriction of their
airways, twelve had full-blown asthma attacks, and one person who
believed she might have inhaled pollen also developed hay fever.
Next, the participants were given another inhaler, also filled with
nebulized salt water and told it contained medicine to relieve their
symptoms, and it promptly did (thanks to the more commonly discussed
placebo effect).
The moral? Don’t discount how much power your ideas of what
“should” or “probably will” or “shouldn’t” or “probably won’t” happen in
your life can have over what does happen. Instead, consciously work to
harness this psychological mechanism by challenging and downgrading
negative presumptions and generating and affirming positive and plausible
alternatives.

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120:
MORE SIMPLE LIFE HACKS
“We buy things we don’t need with money we don’t have to impress people
we don’t like.”
—”Tyler Durden,” Fight Club
A few more simple life hacks:

1. Surround yourself with people who cheer you on when you


deserve it. Who needs enemies when you have fair-weather and
left-handed friends?
2. If something needs to get done and it takes less than five minutes,
do it right away. Leaving these trivial tasks undone costs more
energy and attention than you may realize.
3. Stop associating with people who are usually angry, sneaky, or
afraid. So much of your emotional and psychological stress will
just disappear.
4. Don’t make important decisions when you’re upset, depressed,
fearful, etc. This is like pulling into a drive-through when you’re
hungry. Instead, have some fun first because nothing supports
sound thinking like joy and enthusiasm.
5. Snub people who are always finding ways to be offended by
things that could be interpreted otherwise. They’re addicted to
self-sabotage and want to scuttle your happiness, too.

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STARTING YOUR DAY WITH
AN HOUR OF SCROLLING ON
SOCIAL MEDIA IS LIKE
STARTING YOUR WORKOUT
WITH A PILE OF CANDY
CORN.
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121:
NOBODY OWES US
“The world owes you nothing. It was here first.”
—Mark Twain

Nobody owes us anything. Not their property, time, feelings, respect,


thoughts, support, love, or anything else.
We must earn these gifts through service, kindness, and generosity,
because ultimately, the best way to get what we want is to give others what
they need.

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122:
DIAL 5-2 FOR FAT LOSS
“Our bodies are our gardens; our wills are our gardeners.”
—William Shakespeare

A simple way to lose fat slowly and steadily is to eat as you normally do
five days per week and then eat basically nothing but 150ish grams of
protein and maybe a serving or two of fruit or vegetables two
nonconsecutive days per week.
Just make sure you don’t accidentally eat more than usual in the five
regular-calorie days to compensate for the two low-calorie days.
Technically, this approach is known as intermittent calorie restriction
(ICR), and studies show that when the size of the weekly calorie deficit is
matched, ICR can work just as well as a small daily deficit, or continuous
calorie restriction (CCR), for losing weight. In some people, ICR can work
even better because they find it easier to heavily restrict their food intake
two days per week rather than moderately restrict it seven days per week,
resulting in a larger average weekly calorie deficit (and thus fat loss).
Another variation of ICR with scientific support is a period, usually
two or three weeks, of aggressive CCR (60-to-70 percent of total daily
energy expenditure) followed by a period, usually the same, of maintenance
calories (“diet breaks”—see chapter 89).

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123:
A TRAINING PERIODIZATION
PLAN
“There are many who find a good alibi far more attractive than an
achievement.”
—Eric Hoffer

Here’s the only training periodization plan most people need: train hard
when you’re feeling really good, ease up or rest when you’re exhausted or
sick, and at least do enough to maintain your body composition when
you’re busy or unmotivated.
So, it’s okay to train poorly today. Some days, it’s just about showing
up and sweating. The excellence can come later. You have time. The sweat
is good.

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124:
SICK OF TRACKING YOUR
CALORIES?
“That which you most need will be found where you least want to look.”
—Carl Jung

A few tips for weight loss and maintenance without tracking calories:

1. Eat a lot of lean protein (~1 gram per pound of body weight per
day, or if you’re overweight, ~1 gram per centimeter in body
height per day) and a lot of vegetables (four-to-six fist-sized
servings per day). Find a few of these foods that you can eat every
day, and you’ll find it much easier to improve and maintain your
body composition.
2. Move every day, even if it’s just walking. This burns calories, of
course, but research shows that regular exercise also reduces
appetite, making it easier to effectively manage energy balance.
3. Switch to diet soda. The average American drinks about 40
gallons of soda per year. That’s over 57,000 calories, which is the
approximate amount of energy in 16 pounds of fat—16 pounds of
fat that Joe Six Pack could lose in a year by simply cutting out the
sugar-sweetened soda.
4. Eat more nutritious carbs. Dietary fat isn’t very filling by itself,
but when you add it to a meal containing protein and carbs, satiety
increases. So if you’re eating a low-carb diet and are struggling
with hunger and cravings, try swapping some fat for carbs and see
if it helps. And by the same token, if you’re eating a low-fat diet
and it’s tough sledding, you may benefit from more dietary fat in
your meals.
5. Limit your use of added fats (oil, butter, etc.) and added sugar.
Gastronomes gasp at this one, but unfortunately, the ingredients
that add the most flavor to meals also add the most calories.

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125:
YES, YOU CAN
“You should be humble enough to understand that if you can’t order your
own life, you shouldn’t be trying to order anything more complicated than
that.”
—Dr. Jordan B. Peterson

A simple prescription for flourishing:

1. Eat for health. “Life’s too short to care about calories and say no
to pizza and beer,” said the person whose life will probably be
short.
2. Exercise for energy. “I really didn’t want to work out today for no
good reason at all and now really wished I hadn’t worked out,”
said nobody ever.
3. Sleep for survival. “I want to see what I’m truly capable of,” said
someone who started getting seven-to-eight hours of good sleep
every night.

And remember: You can snarf a whole pint of ice cream and still be
someone who eats well. You can do zero workouts while on vacation and
still be someone who takes their training seriously. You can doggedly
defend your “me time” and still be someone who fulfills their obligations.
It’s not all or nothing.

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WANT BIGGER BICEPS? DO
CURLS. WANT BIGGER
BALLS? DO SQUATS AND
DEADLIFTS.
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126:
SHOULD YOU FINISH WITH
“FINISHERS”?
“Get the fundamentals down and the level of everything you do will rise.”
—Michael Jordan

Many weightlifting programs include what are often called “finisher sets”—
final sets of a muscle group or workout that call for 20, 25, or even 30+ reps
per set, often taken to muscular failure.
I generally don’t include finisher sets in my workouts for several
reasons:

1. There’s no evidence that very high-rep sets are superior for muscle
building than other rep ranges.
2. Very high-rep sets are less effective for getting stronger than
heavier loads, and gaining strength is the best way to keep gaining
muscle.
3. Finisher sets can add a lot of time to your workouts (a bunch of
sets of 20-to-30 reps takes longer than sets of 2-to-12 reps).
4. They’re impractical with many important exercises like the squat,
deadlift, bench press, overhead press, etc.
5. They heavily engage the cardiovascular system, which can make it
hard to know whether you’re close to muscular failure or just
running out of breath.
6. They’re extremely uncomfortable, which often results in sub-par
effort (ending sets too soon) and reduced compliance (skipping
sets or exercises).
7. You can also probably squeeze all of the anabolic juice out of the
lighter-load fruit with 10-to-12 reps per set.

BUT …
If finisher sets baste your turkey, don’t let me stop you—pump away,
partner. A couple of tips, though:

1. Do finisher sets later in your workouts, after your heavier training.


2. Do finisher sets with isolation exercises, not compound ones.
3. Limit finisher sets to no more than 20-to-30 percent of your total
sets for a muscle group (if you’re doing 15 sets per week for your
chest, for instance, don’t do more than 3-to-5 finisher sets).

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127:
SO YOU’RE HAPPY WITH
YOUR BODY
“We can’t help everyone, but everyone can help someone.”
—Ronald Reagan

If you’re happy with your body, that’s fantastic, but don’t pick at people
who are working to change theirs. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to
lose weight, track food, or exercise every day.
And if you just can’t help it because you’re the type of person who
preens themselves on their social media snark, whenever the urge to
degrade another wells up inside you, do a set of push-ups or air squats
instead. Right there, in your mom’s basement. Everyone wins.

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128:
SAID THE HEALTH GURU
WHO’S FULL OF SHIT
“Man is not what he thinks he is, he is what he hides.”
—André Malraux

Ten ways health gurus tell you they’re full of shit without telling you
they’re full of shit:

1. “Saturated fat is the ultimate superfood.”


2. “You’re just one parasite cleanse away from your ideal weight.”
3. “The sun is a healing life force that can only give you vitamin D,
not skin cancer.”
4. “There’s no good evidence for the relationship between LDL
levels and cardiovascular disease.”
5. “Tanning your stinkstar will change your life.”
6. “You probably need to detox your liver.”
7. “Do you even sungaze, bro?”
8. “Why would you eat plants when they’re literally trying to kill
you?”
9. “Don’t plan or track your diet or training—just listen to your
body.”
10. “If you eat the right foods, you don’t need to brush your teeth and
floss.”
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129:
THE PARADOX OF SELF-
CONFIDENCE
“The only true test of intelligence is if you get what you want out of life.”
—Naval Ravikant

Them:
“Believe in yourself!”
Me:
“Believe in myself? The same person who got me into this mess?”
The paradox of self-confidence. Confidence is important, but if it’s not
based on a realistic appraisal of who we are and what we can do, it’s
counterproductive wishcasting at best and smug delusion at worst. There’s a
big difference between growing and swelling.
The root of this problem isn’t with us, however, but the phrase and
frame of “self-belief,” which implies feeling, opinion, and uncertainty. We
don’t “believe” we had oatmeal for breakfast or got an A on a test—we
know we did.
And how can we move from self-belief to self-knowledge?
We can’t merely think the right thoughts or say the right words. We
must gather evidence by continually working at hard things we’re no good
at until we are. And that takes courage—looking in the mirror, deciding
what we really should be doing, and then doing it.

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130:
THE BEST EXERCISES AND
FOODS FOR LOSING FAT
“The attempt to develop a sense of humor and to see things in a humorous
light is some kind of trick learned while mastering the art of living.”
—Viktor Frankl

The ten best exercises for beating belly fat:

1. Fork put-down
2. Portion step-down
3. Spoon toss
4. Dessert decline
5. Plate push-away
6. Soda skip
7. Mouth clamshell
8. Hunger hold
9. Pizza pass-over
10. Buffet bypass

Master these techniques, and you can master your body composition.
Especially when you eat more of the eleven best foods for rapid fat loss:

1. Eat
2. What
3. You
4. Like
5. But
6. Control
7. Your
8. Calories
9. And
10. Be
11. Patient

Just a serving of each every day will blast away that stubborn fat by the
handful.

OceanofPDF.com
ME:
“THE ONLY WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT
IS A CALORIE DEFICIT.”
THEM:
“SO YOU’RE SAYING 2,000
CALORIES OF DOUBLE-BACON-
WRAPPED-DEEP-FRIED
CHEESECAKE ROLLS AFFECTS
THE BODY IN EXACTLY THE SAME
WAY AS 2,000 CALORIES OF RAW
KALE? YIKES.”
ME:
“YOU’RE AN IMBECILE.”
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131:
TAKE YOUR TIME
“Art is never finished, only abandoned.”
—Leonardo Da Vinci

Many more people fail in fitness from a lack of patience rather than a lack
of effort. Because it takes years, not months, to get really strong, and it took
more than 30 days to gain those 30 pounds of fat, so it’s also going to take
more than 30 days to get rid of them.
That’s a bit of a ball-breaker, but there’s also this: If you expect the
process to be hard and keep showing up anyway, it’ll probably feel easy.
Expect it to be easy, though, and it’ll probably feel hard. “The mind drives
the mass,” as Virgil said.

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132:
HOW FAST CAN YOU LOSE FAT
AND NOT MUSCLE?
“Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet.”
—Jean-Jacques Rousseau

There’s a limit to how much fat your body can burn every day before it
starts breaking down muscle tissue for energy, and as the goal is always to
lose fat and not muscle, it’s wise to operate within that boundary.
Specifically, research suggests that in most people, the maximum
amount of energy that can be obtained from body fat is around 30 calories
per pound of body fat per day. As energy demands exceed this threshold,
muscle loss is more likely to occur.
Let’s use this formula to estimate how quickly we can lose fat before
we start losing muscle. Here’s how:

1. Determine your approximate body fat percentage.


2. Multiply your body weight (in pounds) by your body fat
percentage to determine your approximate total fat mass.
3. Multiply your total fat mass by 30 to determine your maximum
daily calorie deficit.

For example, I’m 200 pounds and around 10 percent body fat,
therefore, to get leaner, I’d want to eat no less than about 600 fewer calories
than I burn every day (~20 pounds of body fat x 30), which would produce
just over a pound or so of fat loss per week.
But if I were, say, 20 percent body fat, I could theoretically double the
size of my calorie deficit (and rate of fat loss) without sacrificing muscle (at
least until I had lost a significant amount of fat, which would necessitate a
lower ceiling for my calorie deficit).

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133:
THE RULES DON’T RULE YOU
“What people have the capacity to choose, they have the ability to change.”
—Madeleine Albright

You can randomly change up your workouts just because it’s more fun. You
can go for walks instead of runs just because it’s nicer. You can skip squats
and deadlifts just because you prefer other exercises.
You can stick with a restrictive form of “clean eating” over flexible
dieting just because it requires less thought. You can follow a mediocre
meal plan rather than a great one just because it works better for you. You
can even eat like an asshole now and then just because you enjoy it.
Learn the “rules,” but don’t be afraid to break them when it feels right.
They won’t mind. They’ll take you back when you need them again.

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134:
THE POWER OF DOUBLE
PROGRESSION
“Either don’t attempt it, or carry it through to the end.”
—Ovid

Double progression is one of the simplest and most effective methods of


regulating the intensity of your strength training workouts and achieving
progressive overload. In fact, if you’re like most people, it’s the only
method you’ll need to get the body you want.
With it, you work in a certain rep range (6-to-8, for example), and once
you hit the top of that rep range for a certain number of sets (one, two, or
three, usually), you increase the weight (normally by 5 or 10 pounds).
Then, if you can at least hit the bottom of your rep range with the new,
heavier weight, you work with it until you reach the progression rep and set
targets again, increase the weight again, and so forth.
In other words, you strive to first increase reps and then “cash in” that
progress to increase weight. Hence, “double progression.”
For example, let’s say you’re following my Bigger Leaner Stronger
program for men and are bench pressing in the 4-to-6-rep range for three
sets. On your first set, you get 6 reps with 135 pounds, and as the program
calls for one “top-rep set” to progress, it’s time to increase the weight.
You add 10 pounds to the bar (145 pounds), rest a few minutes, and get
4 reps on your next two sets of the exercise in that workout. Because you’re
still within your target rep range (4-to-6 reps) with 145 pounds, you’d keep
working with it until you get 6 reps for one set, and then you’d increase the
weight to 155 pounds.
(And if you couldn’t get at least 4 reps with the new, heavier weight,
you’d remove 5 pounds from the bar and work with that weight until you
get 6 reps for one set, and then increase the weight back to 145 pounds.)
Here’s how this could look over the course of four weeks:
You could then continue in the same way with this and every other
exercise you do until you’ve gained most if not all of your genetic potential
for muscle and strength—no other progression tools or techniques are
usually needed (and I explain when they are and why in my book for
advanced weightlifters, Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger).

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135:
THE CASE AGAINST AMBITION
“Happiness does not come from a job. It comes from knowing what you
truly value and behaving in a way that’s consistent with those beliefs.”
—Mike Rowe

Many people think achieving goals mostly brings pleasure and not
achieving goals mostly brings pain. Not quite. There can be plenty of pain
involved in achieving goals and plenty of pleasure in not achieving goals.
Think about it. The cost of ambition is a snootful of stress, setback, and
sorrow, and the payoff is fleeting. For a moment, we’re victorious. And
then, we were victorious. Contentment has costs, too, but isn’t there
happiness to be found in the desires we reject? And success in the failures
we avoid? And peace of mind in the struggles we sidestep?
Before trying to achieve a difficult goal, then, make sure you’ve
considered the many pleasant things you could do with your time instead.
And don’t begin until you can firmly say, “I could do those many other
things, but I choose to give them up and do this.”

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DO I WANT TO SQUAT
TODAY? NO. IS THAT A
REASON NOT TO SQUAT
TODAY? NO.
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136:
BELIEVED VS. CHECKED
FACTS
“Every man I meet is my master in some point, and in that, I learn from
him.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson

Consider for a moment how many things you know because of secondhand
instruction rather than firsthand verification. The truth is, many or even
most of our assumptions about, well, just about everything, are believed
facts, not checked ones. How do you know that the Earth is round, that
water freezes at 32 degrees fahrenheit, and that the sky is blue because of
light scattering?
There’s nothing wrong with this, of course—we only have time to
check so many facts. “The art of life,” Justice Holmes once said, “consists
in making correct decisions on insufficient evidence.”
However, serious problems arise when we can’t distinguish between
believed and checked facts. When too many believed facts are misfiled as
checked ones, when we refuse to revise them no matter what we see or
experience, and worse, when we filter our experiences to preserve our
cognitive status quo through mechanisms like confirmation bias,
disconfirmation bias, the backfire effect, and others, we can lose our ability
to successfully navigate reality.
Take climate change, for example. Many alarmists and skeptics alike
cite “things they’ve heard” from experts (or worse, from non-experts) but
haven’t personally reviewed any of the research or data or studied any of
the counterarguments to their conclusions, much less the most compelling
ones. Believed facts, not checked ones.
There are various reasons we’re all prone to this thinking trap, but the
desire to avoid uncertainty is likely a big one. “Yes” and “no” provide
security and comfort whereas “maybe” and “probably” are slippery and
treacherous. But they’re also a more accurate reflection of reality.
This cast of mind can be uncomfortable because it often entails
accepting that we don’t know nearly as much as we’d like to think. But it
also invites opportunity. There’s a word for the process of rethinking
assumptions and reworking opinions: learning.

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137:
YOUR WEIGHT ISN’T YOUR
WORTH
“When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at
change.”
—Anonymous

Weighing yourself isn’t unhealthy, but remember you’re merely measuring


your body, not your being. Your worth isn’t determined by your weight.
And so I’ll never get sick of seeing people caring less about how much
they weigh and more about how strong they are, how confident they feel,
and how much they enjoy their training.
They come for the frosting but stay for the cake.

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138:
WILL FASTED CARDIO HELP
YOU LOSE FAT FASTER?
“A shortcut is the longest distance between two points.”
—Charles Issawi

In the 90s, bodybuilder and author Bill Phillips recommended exercising


before breakfast as a way to burn fat more efficiently. He claimed that
working out on an empty stomach forces your body to burn its fat stores for
energy instead of food.
Since then, the language has changed—now this is referred to as
“fasted cardio”—but the technique has been touted by many as a simple
way to turbocharge your fat loss. Is this true? Not quite. As it turns out,
fasted cardio can enhance fat burning, but not fat loss. And how does that
work?
Fasted cardio is any endurance exercise done while in a “fasted” state,
which is a physiological condition where your body has finished processing
the food you last ate and the amount of the hormone insulin in your blood is
at a low, baseline level.
How long it takes for insulin levels to bottom out depends on the size
and composition of your last meal. Larger meals that include a mix of
protein, carbs, fat, and fiber digest slowly—normally over the course of five
or more hours—and keep insulin levels elevated for quite some time.
Smaller, simpler meals, however, like a piece of fruit or scoop of whey
protein, digest quickly and only elevate insulin levels for a couple of hours.
Exercising when insulin levels are low impacts fat burning because
insulin does more than just shuttle nutrients into cells—it also impairs the
breakdown of fatty acids. That is, the more insulin you have in your blood,
the less body fat you’ll break down for energy.
Thus, when we eat food, our body shuts down its body-fat-burning
mechanisms and uses the energy provided by the meal instead. This makes
sense physiologically. Why would our body burn its precious fat stores
when there’s a surplus of energy readily available via the food we just ate?
However, as our body processes and absorbs the food we ate and
insulin levels decline, we must start burning body fat for energy until we eat
again. Because of this, a workout done while in a fasted state does burn
more fat than one done in a “fed” state, but here’s the kicker: studies show
that our body compensates for this effect by burning less fat throughout the
rest of the day (resulting in about the same amount of total fat burned over a
24-hour period).
Put differently, just because you’re burning a lot of fat in your
workouts (as fuel) doesn’t mean you’re consistently losing body fat (getting
leaner).
So, if you enjoy exercising on an empty stomach before breakfast,
there’s no reason not to continue doing so. Just remember to eat some
protein within an hour or so of finishing your workouts to prevent the spike
in muscle breakdown rates that’ll occur. But if you’d rather work out later,
after eating food, there’s no reason not to do it that way, either.

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139:
PROGRESS ISN’T ONE-
DIMENSIONAL
“Do not regret growing older. It is a privilege denied to many.”
—Mark Twain

“I’m not making any progress!”


Are you sure? You may not feel or look any fitter than you were a few
months ago, but has your form improved on key exercises? Do your joints
feel better? Are you having more fun in your workouts?
Those are wins too. Progress isn’t one-dimensional.
Sometimes, progress is dragging your draggy body into the gym when
you’d rather tie Hunter Biden’s shoes in a dark alley. And other times,
progress is dragging your droopy body to the couch to rest when you’re
hornier for a workout than a triple-peckered billy goat.
Sometimes, progress is saying no to something you’d normally say yes
to, like the office donuts or pizza, the extra serving of chips or ice cream, or
the second soda or glass of wine. Other times, it’s saying yes without
feeling guilty or upset.
And sometimes, progress is even quitting a diet or workout program
that isn’t working for you so you can try something else. Stick with what
you can, but sometimes, it makes more sense to start over, even if you
eventually find your way back to where you began. This isn’t said enough.

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140:
ARE SEED AND VEGETABLE
OILS UNHEALTHY?
“Keeping your body healthy is an expression of gratitude to the whole
cosmos.”
—Thich Nhat Hanh

Over the past century, refined oils from vegetables, nuts, and seeds like soy,
canola, and peanuts have become a larger and larger part of the Western
diet. During the same period, we’ve also seen an explosion in diseases like
cancer, diabetes, and obesity.
Is there a connection here? Yes, but it’s not what many “ancestral
eaters” would have you believe. Namely, the bulk of the scientific evidence
shows that in most cases, refined oils aren’t unhealthy per se, but a diet rich
in them can lead to health problems.
For example, refined oils are replete with omega-6 fatty acids, and this
is sometimes fingered as the primary source of the problems. For most of
history, humans consumed roughly equal amounts of omega-6 fatty acids
and another type known as an omega-3 fatty acid. Since the advent of
refined oils, however, that ratio is now as high as 20:1 in favor of omega-6,
and some experts believe this imbalance plays havoc with our health.
The current weight of the scientific evidence doesn’t support this
theory, though, with several systematic reviews finding no link between the
ratio of omega-6 and omega-3 consumption and increased systemic
inflammation (a powerful driver of disease).
That said, although the omega-6 fatty acids provided by a diet
brimming with refined oils appear to be benign, the foods themselves aren’t
when overeaten—crackers, cookies, chips, baked goods, granola bars, fried
foods, salad dressing, mayonnaise, and others.
Therefore, in almost all cases, a “high refined oil diet” is actually just a
“junk food diet”—also known as the Standard American Diet (a fitting
acronym if ever there was one)—that starves the body of nutrition and
promotes weight gain.
On the other hand, a “low refined oil diet” is actually just a “healthy
diet” composed mostly of relatively unprocessed and nutritious foods that
nourish the body and support weight maintenance.
Ultimately, then, so long as you eat a balanced and wholesome diet,
you don’t need to go out of your way to avoid seed and vegetable oils.
One notable exception, however, are partially hydrogenated oils (also
referred to as mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids), which you should
generally forgo. These are oils that have been processed to stay solid at
room temperature and that contain a form of fat known as trans fat that can
increase the risk of multiple chronic diseases, including heart disease,
obesity, cancer, and diabetes.
Thankfully, however, partially hydrogenated oils are usually found in
foods that are easy to skip (or keep to a minimum), including:

Commercial baked goods, such as cakes, cookies, and pies


Shortening
Microwave popcorn
Frozen pizza
Refrigerated dough, such as biscuits and rolls
Fried foods, including french fries, doughnuts, and fried chicken
Nondairy coffee creamer
Stick margarine

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CUTTING OUT COFFEE IS A
GREAT WAY TO SLASH YOUR
CAFFEINE INTAKE—AND
YOUR WILL TO LIVE.
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141:
COMPASSION > SHAME
“He who is devoid of the power to forgive is devoid of the power to love.”
—Martin Luther King Jr.

Shame is a spur that can get you off the mark, but it can’t take you across
the line. You can’t flog yourself into fitness anymore than you can drain a
pool with a soda straw. Self-compassion is the key.
So you’re dreading today’s workout. This is nothing special. Everyone
gets a case of the jim-jams now and then: parents, trainers, students,
influencers, athletes, CEOs, you name it. Train anyway. Solve it by
dissolving it.
So you haven’t lost as much fat or gained as much muscle as you’d
hoped for. It’s rare that a diet phase or training block will match the purity
of the process that you envision when you begin. But an imperfectly
executed program is always better than one that was never done at all.
So it’s 7 p.m. and you want to change everything about yourself.
Welcome to the party. We’re all mad here. But remember: Sometimes, you
aren’t the problem. Sometimes, the problem is the problem.

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142:
THE THREE-TO-FIVE
FORMULA FOR STRENGTH
“If you are going to doubt something, doubt your limits.”
—Don Ward

If you want to get really strong, the “3-to-5” approach works well:

3-to-5 reps per set (with 80-to-90 percent of one-rep max)


3-to-5 sets per exercise
3-to-5 minutes of rest in between sets
3-to-5 exercises per workout
3-to-5 workouts per week

A few more brain droppings for would-be strongmen and women:

1. Before and after every set, tell yourself that it will be and was
light and easy. Think strong, lift strong.
2. If you’re not a competitive strength athlete, don’t squat or deadlift
to failure. The risks far outweigh the rewards.
3. For an easy strength boost in any exercise, grip the barbell,
dumbbell, or machine handles as hard as you can, clench your jaw
muscles, and push your tongue into the roof of your mouth.
4. Having a spotter on the bench press can increase the number of
reps you can perform and make you feel more confident in your
ability to successfully complete each set.
5. Don’t bother about how many calories you burn in a strength
training workout. Energy expenditure has no connection to the
effectiveness of the training, and in some ways, optimal
programming burns fewer calories, not more (longer between-set
rest periods, for example).

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143:
WINNING = PRIORITIES
PRIORITY
“Lots of people want to be the noun without doing the verb.”
—Austin Kleon

Your daily actions mostly determine the trajectory of your life. Just 45
minutes of daily exercise can banish disease. Just 30 minutes of daily
reading can turn you into an expert. Just a few hours of daily deep work can
create a legacy.
Success, then, isn’t the result of a single choice—it’s the result of a
long and winding chain of choices that can only be forged, link by link,
through routine.
This means that establishing a routine is far more important than
having a lot of time, because with the right structure, small stretches of time
can produce outsized achievements, but without discipline, vast expanses
generate nothing but aimless mishmash.
And the root of a winning routine isn’t priorities but priority. Singular.
One thing that, if done every day, will add up to make everything else easier
or even unnecessary. Because too often “priorities” turn into exhaustive lists
that scatter rather than gather our efforts.
What’s more, the essential actions of successful routines are usually
what others plan to do later or never—the hard things, the uncomfortable
things, the complicated things, the unexciting things, and the exhausting
things.
It’s the difference between waking up every day and asking “what
should I do?” instead of “what shall I do?” It’s the difference between
trying to do the right things rather than trying to just do things right. You
don’t have to like doing these things, either—most successful people don’t.
You just have to muster the willpower and energy to do them anyway.

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144:
HOW MUCH CHANGE IS
ENOUGH?
“You know you’ve achieved perfection in design, not when you have
nothing more to add, but when you have nothing more to take away.”
—Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

If you’re primarily trying to gain muscle or strength and you’re making


major changes to your workouts every couple of weeks (different exercises,
splits, rest times, etc.), you’re doing it wrong.
A little of the right variability is productive, but more than that is
obstructive. It often takes a couple of weeks to groove in your form on a
new exercise, and during this time, your ability to skillfully handle heavy
loads and maximally stimulate your muscles is limited.
It’s also true, however, that doing the exact same workouts (same
exercises, weights, reps, etc.) for long periods of time will lead to a slump,
because it neglects the primary mechanical method of muscle building
mentioned in several other chapters: progressive overload.
This term refers to increasing the amount of tension your muscles
produce over time, and while there are several ways to accomplish this, the
most effective one is to progressively increase the amount of resistance
your muscles have to work against. In other words, in the long run, the best
way to keep gaining muscle is to keep gaining strength.
That said, it’s wise to occasionally change up your exercises to keep
your training interesting, avoid overuse injuries, and train your muscles in
different ways. Here’s how to do it:

With compound exercises, stick with the same movements for at


least 6-to-8 weeks before making a change, and ideally, 12-to-16
weeks. These exercises are the most difficult to settle into and
progress on, so they should be changed infrequently.
With isolation exercises, stick with the same movements for at
least 4-to-6 weeks before making a change, and ideally, 8-to-12
weeks. These exercises are easier to acclimate to, but they also
tend to plateau faster than compound exercises, making more
frequent substitutions productive.

Some people think a regimented routine like this sounds less enjoyable
than a more variable one, but that’s only until they see how effective it is.
By not making too many changes, you can get attuned to your workouts,
hone your technique, and assess your progress, and that’s a recipe for
remarkable results (which is a lot more fun than mere variation for its own
sake).

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145:
IS IT THIS OR THAT?
“Avoidance is the best short-term strategy to escape conflict, but the best
long-term strategy to ensure suffering.”
—Brendon Burchard

Is your metabolism too slow, or do you just eat and drink too much,
particularly on the weekends?
Did you get fooled into following a fad diet, or did you just want to
believe foolish ideas?
Is your knee refusing to knee or are you just unwilling to stop doing
things that continually aggravate it?
Do you hate counting calories, or do you just hate that every frakkin
calorie that goes into your mouth “counts”?
Are you unable to lose weight, or are you just unable to accept that you
can’t simply “do some cardio” to get leaner?
Sometimes, we can save ourselves a lot of trouble by accepting that
there just isn’t an easier way to get what we want. Sometimes, we just have
to struggle. Sometimes, it just takes what it takes.

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AN HOUR OF STRENGTH
TRAINING IS BETTER THAN
A WEEK OF WHATEVER
YOU’RE DOING RIGHT NOW.
UNLESS YOU’RE DOING
STRENGTH TRAINING.
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146:
WHAT REALLY MAKES
PEOPLE FAT?
“The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in
having new eyes.”
—Marcel Proust

Quacks be like:
“Grains make you fat. Fruit makes you fat. Eating too little makes you
fat. Vegetables make you fat. Sugar makes you fat.”
So to get lean:
No grains, fruit, vegetables, or sugar, and lots of butter, red meat, and
calories. Seems legit.
Look, eating GMO food doesn’t make people fat. Eating too much
OMG food makes people fat.
Eating fructose doesn’t make people fat. Eating too much fructose (and
thus calories) makes people fat.
Stress doesn’t make people fat. Eating too much food when stressed
makes people fat.
Bad gut bacteria don’t make people fat. Feeding gut bacteria too much
food makes people fat.
Eating from large plates and bowls doesn’t make people fat. Eating too
much from large plates and bowls makes people fat.
Hormones don’t make people fat. Eating too much food when
hormones are pumping up appetite makes people fat.
Eating at the wrong times of the day doesn’t make people fat. Spending
too much time in the day eating makes people fat.
Genetics don’t make people fat. Eating too much food with genes that
encourage overeating makes people fat.
Slow metabolisms don’t make people fat. Eating more food than their
metabolism burns makes people fat.
Drinking alcohol doesn’t make people fat. Drinking and eating too
many calories makes people fat.
And if you disagree with this chapter because you believe people aren’t
responsible for how much food they put in their mouths due to their DNA,
upbringing, socioeconomic circumstances, etc., you necessarily must also
believe they’re not responsible for anything else they do—an untenable
position, to put it delicately.

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147:
YOU’RE ALLOWED TO ENJOY
YOUR FITNESS
“Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in
harmony.”
—Mahatma Gandhi

The best evidence-based fitness practitioners care more about your ability
to follow and enjoy a diet and exercise program that works than your ability
to follow one of their favorite schemes for eating and training.
So don’t cut yourself up because you don’t want to measure your food
or agonize over your macros. The amount of energy and joy you have to
sacrifice to go from 80 percent dietary compliance to 100 percent isn’t
worth it. “Good enough most of the time” is good enough for most of us.
And don’t force yourself to do specific types of exercise that you don’t
like for the sake of weight loss. That’s what a calorie deficit is for. Do the
types of exercise that you enjoy. Allowing yourself to have some fun with
your fitness makes the whole process so much easier.
And don’t let anyone make you feel ashamed of your commitment to
your health and fitness. It isn’t just something you do—it’s part and parcel
of who you are. You’re allowed to train with your back to the world.

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148:
THE ANCESTRAL EATER
“Being ignorant is not so much a shame as being unwilling to learn.”
—Benjamin Franklin

Is eating like our ancient ancestors the key to unlocking maximum health,
happiness, and vitality?
On the credit side of the ledger, the “ancestral eating” movement
encourages eating a lot of nutritious foods like meat, fish, eggs, fruits,
vegetables, nuts, and seeds, and it discourages the consumption of highly
processed fare and harmful and potentially harmful chemicals.
A hop on the good foot. But then there’s the bad thing.
All formulas of “evolutionary eating” involve purportedly-principled-
but-actually-arbitrary restrictions that make your diet more cumbersome
and less enjoyable (“only eat fruits and vegetables that are in season,”
“don’t eat grains, legumes, or dairy,” “never eat vegetable oil,” etc.).
In other words, while the lists of what you’re supposed to eat are
mostly reasonable, there’s little scientific evidence to support the exclusion
of what you’re not supposed to eat.
For example, dairy products are a good source of calcium, protein,
vitamin D, potassium, magnesium, zinc, and several other vitamins, and
research shows that dairy can improve bone health, muscle mass, strength,
and weight management. Whole grains have been shown to reduce
inflammation in the body and decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease,
type 2 diabetes, and cancer, and even reduce mortality. Non-soy legumes
decrease total and LDL (“bad”) cholesterol levels and are a good source of
protein, carbohydrate, and fiber. Vegetable oil isn’t unhealthy per se (the
details matter—see chapter 139).
Moreover, all of the popular “caveman diets’’ don’t even represent
what early humans actually ate (and even if they did, that alone isn’t a
sound rationale for adopting them). Specifically, ancestral advocates often
claim that our primitive predecessors were primarily hunter-gatherers, with
an emphasis on hunting, but a plethora of research says otherwise.
For instance …

A study conducted by the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary


Anthropology reported that the diet of our early human ancestors,
dating from about 2 million years ago, consisted almost
exclusively of leaves, fruit, wood, and bark—similar to
chimpanzees today.
A study conducted by the University of Calgary found that the diet
of ancient Africans (going back as far as 105,000 years) may have
been based on the cereal grass sorghum.
Research conducted by the Center for Advanced Study of
Hominid Paleobiology shows that the European Neanderthals ate
starchy grains, nearly 44,000 years ago.
Scientists from the Italian Institute of Prehistory and Early History
also found that grains were regularly eaten by our Paleolithic
ancestors. Their findings suggest that processing vegetables and
starches, and possibly even grinding them into flour, goes back as
far as 30,000 years in Europe.
Researchers at Oxford University identified tuber in the enamel of
a 3-million-year-old Australopithecus tooth, suggesting that even
pre-humans may have eaten potato-like vegetables.
For more insight, we can also look to present-day hunter-gatherer tribes
whose customs and lifestyles have remained unchanged for centuries.
The most extensively studied tribe is the Hadza tribe from central
Tanzania. Since they reside in the tropical forest, their diet mainly consists
of tubers, berries, meat, baobab (a type of fruit), and honey (with this being
the most important).
The Maasai tribe is another relevant example, and studies show that
their diet is still based around milk and blood from cows and soups derived
from herbs and also contains berries and other wild fruits and honey.
Yet another hole in the “prehistoric preeminence paradigm” is that
early humans probably weren’t as healthy as many people think.
In research conducted by the Georgia Institute of Technology, scientists
studying ancient human genomes found that hereditary disease risks were
similar for ancient and modern-day humans. There was also evidence that
ancient pastoralists (farmers whose diet mainly comprised vegetables and
dairy) may have had healthier genomes than hunter-gatherers and that
genomes from the recent past are likely healthier than genomes from the
distant past.
For instance, the overall genomic health of the Altai Neanderthal (an
early human from a region of Siberia) is worse than 97 percent of present-
day humans, and Ötzi, the “Tyrolean Iceman,” had a genetic predisposition
for gastrointestinal and cardiovascular disease.
To summarize, then, atavistic eating gets a lot right for the wrong
reasons (pseudoscience and pseudohistory) and a lot wrong for the wrong
reasons (greed and self-aggrandizement).

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149:
THE WORKOUTS THAT
MATTER THE MOST
“It’s hard to beat a person who never gives up.”
—Babe Ruth

So many things can start to change the moment you decide to become the
type of person who keeps the promises you make to yourself. Like going to
the gym when you’d rather go to dinner with Jeffrey Dahmer.
In this way, the workouts you do when you really don’t want to do
them are the ones that matter the most. If you can do one of those workouts,
you can do another. And if you can do another, you can do more. And if you
can do more, one day, you’re going to look back and think, “Wow, all of
those little improvements really did add up.”

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150:
WHEN YOU CAN’T GET INTO
THE GYM
“A pessimist is somebody who complains about the noise when opportunity
knocks.”
—Oscar Wilde

Can’t get into the gym for a bit? Fortunately, it’s far easier to maintain your
health and fitness than you may think—just a few hours of huffing and
hoofing per week is enough.
Here are some PRs you can work toward basically anywhere that’ll
hold you over until you can get back to the iron:

1. Daily steps. Can you average at least 8,000-to-10,000 steps per


day? Refer back to chapter 38 for why this can help more than you
may think.
2. Push-ups and pull-ups. Strapping males can do at least 30-to-40
push-ups and 15-to-20 pull-ups per set, and female strong’uns can
do about half those amounts. Remember, too, that you can begin
with a regression (an easier variation of an exercise) like the
negative pull-up or knee push-up if needed.
3. Sprints. Can you reach the “10 X 1” standard? Here’s how it
works: ten 1-minute sprints at 90 percent of max effort followed
by 1 minute of active recovery for a total of 20 minutes of
exercise. Too easy for you? Your next challenge: The “4 X 4”
standard: four 4-minute sprints at 90 percent of max effort
followed by 3 minutes of active recovery for a total of 28 minutes
of exercise. Also, bike, row, or swim for no impact or run up a
grassy hill for lower impact.
4. Handstand push-ups. You’re strong if you can do at least 10
(men)/5 (women) reps per set; likely the strongest person in your
social circle if you can do 20-to-30/10-to-15 reps; and likely the
strongest person in your gym if you can do 40/20+ reps. Start with
a regression like the incline pike push-up, pike push-up, or decline
pike push-up, if necessary.
5. Pistol squats. One set of 10 (men)/5 (women) reps (each leg) is
respectable, 11-to-20/6-to-10 reps is strong, and 30+/15+ is tops.
If you can’t do at least one rep, use a regression like the Bulgarian
split squat, shrimp squat, or assisted pistol squat to get there.
6. Mile time. Beginners can run a mile in about 10 minutes and well-
trained runners in about 6-to-7 minutes. How do you measure up?
Want a simple program for improving? Go to
www.mikematthews.fitness/running.
7. Rope jumps. The first milestone is one set of 100 basic jumps, and
then, as you increase the duration of your sessions (to further
improve your fitness), you can also learn to incorporate other
techniques like the boxer skip, crossover, and double under.
8. Plank time. Average college-aged athletes can hold a plank for
about two minutes. Can you do better?
9. Flexibility. Can you achieve excellent results on the sit-and-reach
and Apley scratch tests? Can you get to a front or side split (or
both)?
10. Rucking. When walking is pleasant but not challenging, throw
something heavy in a backpack, and wear it when you go for
walks. Start with just 5 percent of your body weight and work
your way up to 20 percent. If you can ruck with 20 percent for at
least an hour, you’re in fine fettle.

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IF YOU’RE WORRIED ABOUT
WHAT PEOPLE THINK
ABOUT YOU, YOU
PROBABLY NEED TO WORK
ON YOUR DEADLIFT.
OceanofPDF.com
151:
A WARM WELCOME
“Only by giving are you able to receive more than you already have.”
—Jim Rohn

When beginners show up in your gym, try to make them feel welcome. You
had to start somewhere, too—remember the uncertainty, insecurity, and
worry?—and by giving even a little encouragement, you can be the reason
someone doesn’t quit.

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152:
CAN YOU REALLY DO YOUR
OWN RESEARCH?
“The first thing which gods bestow on one they would annihilate is pride.”
—Theognis

There’s a popular meme in the evidence-based fitness and medicine spaces


that goes like this:
If you’re “searching for things on the Internet” or “watching YouTube
videos” or “reading articles,” you’re not “doing your own research” but
merely “consuming content”—an activity that’s about as enlightening as
fondling yourself while arguing with Chinese bots on TikTok.
This sentiment plays well with the peanut gallery because, as Aldous
Huxley noted, the opportunity to maltreat others with good conscience, to
misbehave as a form of “righteous indignation,” is the height of
psychological luxury, the most delicious of moral treats. So there’s much
hooting and honking about the benighted searchers of things on the Internet,
watchers of YouTube videos, and readers of articles.
This begs a question, then: what is “research”? Dumb dumb dummies
will say something like “research is skillfully reviewing every study you
can find on the matter and then determining the balance of the evidence
blah blah blah.”
Basically, unless you’re a trained scientist with more time on your
hands than an unvaxxed Aussie in a Covid camp (remember that?), you’re
simply incapable of doing research and coming to good conclusions—only
“consuming content” and continuing to be clueless. Sorry, sweetie.
In reality, reviewing scientific studies is one method of research, and
ironically, if we take this offending line of thinking to its logical extreme,
scientists reading scientific research they didn’t conduct themselves is
dubious, because what if flaws in design, execution, or analysis produced
false findings? What if data was dredged or altered? What if null findings
on the topic were never published? Many times, there’s no way to know
whether someone else’s research is genuine and accurate, so scrupulous
study of scientific research can lead even the most endowed experts astray.
Now, you could say that despite its shortcomings, skilled scientific
scrutiny is more likely to produce better outcomes than other haphazard
methods of research, but then you’d only be making my next point for me,
which begins with a proper definition of “research.”
The Oxford Dictionary says it’s “the systematic investigation into and
study of materials and sources in order to establish facts and reach new
conclusions.” Webster’s says it’s “studious inquiry or examination” (with
“studious” meaning “marked by or suggesting purposefulness or diligence”)
and even “the collecting of information about a particular subject.”
Right away, we’ve learned that ferreting around on the Internet to find
things to watch, read, and listen to is in fact “doing research.” The crux is
how you go about watching, reading, and listening, however. Are you doing
good research?
That requires more than just scientific literacy (which anyone can learn
—start with my book Fitness Science Explained). You also have to
understand the grammar of logic and rhetoric. You have to seek and
consider the strongest counterpoints to your preferred theories and beliefs.
It helps to be conversant in assorted mental models, philosophical razors,
and cognitive forcing strategies.
There are many ways, then, for science-minded folk and laypeople
alike to do horrendously bad research—selection, confirmation,
disconfirmation, conformity, and availability biases as well as selective
skepticism, faulty generalizations, the list yammers on. To suggest,
however, that only formally educated specialists are capable of “doing good
research” is like suggesting that only porn stars are capable of a good
tumble.
So, if we were to recast this meme to make it more truthful, it would
declare that many people aren’t good at doing research and could benefit
from some metacognitive refinement, but where’s the fun in that? No
righteous indignation. No psychological luxury. No moral treat.

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153:
A PRETTY GOOD DAY
“What’s money? A man is a success if he gets up in the morning and goes to
bed at night and in between does what he wants to do.”
—Bob Dylan

A pretty good day in ten steps:

1. Get out of bed by 7 a.m.


2. Drink some water, go outside and see some sun, and eat some
protein by 9 a.m.
3. Get at least an important task or two done by 10 a.m.
4. Eat a big salad by 1 p.m.
5. Get at least another important task or two done by 3 p.m.
6. Do a strength training workout by 5 p.m. (or not if it’s a rest day)
7. Eat dinner with someone you like by 7 p.m.
8. Walk at least 8,000 steps by 8 p.m.
9. Do something fun by 10 p.m.
10. Do something relaxing, and go to bed by 11 p.m.

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154:
THE LEAN VACATION
“It is the obvious which is so difficult to see most of the time.”
—Isaac Asimov

The easiest way to stay lean while enjoying your vacation:

1. Eat freely to the point of satisfaction once or twice per day, and
otherwise, alternate between protein shakes, extra-filling fruit like
apples and oranges, and low-calorie and high-protein snacks like
Greek yogurt or skyr, low-fat cottage cheese, turkey jerky, etc.
And don’t interpret this as merely another form of “dieting.”
Vacation is for fun, not fat loss, so let yourself enjoy it.
2. Include regular physical activity in your itinerary. Formal
workouts are fine, but so are leisurely walks, hikes, bike rides, etc.

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155:
SKIP THE SOCIAL SIZZLE
“If you don’t design your own life plan, chances are you’ll fall into
someone else’s plan. And guess what they have planned for you? Not
much.”
—Jim Rohn

Honest fitness influencers be like:


“Here’s my simple-but-effective workout that just about anyone can
win with.”
If dishonest fitness influencers told the truth:
“Here’s some razzle-dazzle that gets likes, and after I’m done
recording, I’ll do the simple-but-effective stuff that just about anyone can
win with.”
The moral? Social media algorithms select for whatever is splashy,
surprising, and strange, and the more you let this dictate how you eat and
exercise, the more you’ll lose your way in your fitness journey.
So ignore the showy sandwich boards that people wear online to
seduce scrollers into stopping and staying awhile. Skip the sizzle. Stick with
the steak.

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IF YOUR DIET DOESN’T
ALLOW YOU TO HAVE CHIPS
OR CEREAL, IT’S TIME FOR
A NEW DIET.
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156:
THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON
CARBS
“The greatest kindness one can render to any man consists of leading him
from error to truth.”
—Thomas Aquinas

Proponents of low-carb dieting will often claim that one of the many
reasons to eat less carbohydrates is better brain health and function and thus
more mental clarity, faster thinking, and sharper memory.
The physiological mechanisms supposedly responsible for these
benefits revolve around the effects of the hormone insulin, which is released
in plenty when a substantial amount of carbohydrate is eaten to help shuttle
nutrients into cells (protein does this as well, mind you—a fact
conveniently ignored by many low-carbers, but I digress).
By restricting your carbs, the story goes, you’ll avoid insulin spikes
that cause blood sugar levels to soar and then slump into a state known as
reactive hypoglycemia, which makes you feel sluggish and fuzzy-headed.
This theory is mostly bunk, however, because unless you’re diabetic or
overweight and sedentary (the bulk of people who feel better on a low-carb
diet), you should rarely if ever experience reactive hypoglycemia unless
you just had a pasta eating contest with a Burmese python. Instead, your
body will be highly sensitive to insulin (a good thing) and able to efficiently
process a large amount of carbohydrate.
What’s more, whenever we’re talking about the advantages or
disadvantages of eating carbs, we have to remember that not all carbs are
equal.
If you eat piles of highly processed foods laden with sucrose and high-
fructose corn syrup, you may experience swings in energy and alertness, but
if most of your carbs are from fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, and
the like, you’ll probably experience the opposite—high and stable levels of
physical energy and mental acuity.

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157:
TO STRIVE OR SAVOR?
“Life has many good things. The problem is that most of these good things
can be gotten only by sacrificing other good things.”
—Thomas Sowell

Life is a game of tradeoffs between purpose, intensity, and achievement and


latitude, relaxation, and enjoyment.
Neither path is inherently better than the other, but you have to choose
one. You can either strive or savor, and you can always change your course,
but you can’t pursue both simultaneously.
For example, if you want to have a vibrant and fulfilling career and
marriage, you won’t have much time or energy left to give to your health
and social life. If you want to be a model parent with exceptional fitness,
it’ll be hard if not impossible to excel in your work and friendships. And if
you want to divide your efforts equally among these four elements, you can
achieve “balance” at the expense of peak experiences and self-actualization.
So, which compromises will you embrace and why? Until you can
answer those questions with clarity and certainty, you’ll always be painfully
aware of what’s “missing” from your life without the consolation of what’s
not.

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158:
FIVE OF MY FAVORITE HIIT
WORKOUTS
“Excellence is born of preparation, dedication, focus, and tenacity;
compromise on any of these and you become average.”
—John Chatterton

High-intensity interval training (HIIT) isn’t mandatory for fat loss and isn’t
the metabolic marvel many claim it to be. For instance, research shows that
when matched for time, most HIIT protocols don’t burn more calories or fat
than moderate-intensity cardio (and more specifically, than steady exercise
at about 80 percent of maximum heart rate).
HIIT does have two advantages, however:

1. Studies show that a routine of HIIT and moderate-intensity cardio


improves endurance more than moderate-intensity cardio alone.
2. Some people have more fun doing both low- or moderate-intensity
cardio and HIIT rather than just the former.

HIIT is simple to do, too. In essence, you alternate between periods of


(almost) all-out intensity and low-intensity recovery. During your high-
intensity bouts (hard intervals), you’re pushing yourself almost to the limit,
and during your low-intensity periods (active recovery intervals), you’re
slowing down to catch your breath in preparation for the next sprint.
To get the full benefits of HIIT, though, you need to structure your
workouts properly. Here are five of my favorite protocols from the least to
the most difficult:

1. The Timmons Method. Do a 20-second sprint at about 90 percent


of your max effort followed by 2 minutes of active recovery.
Repeat 4 times for a total of 9 minutes and 20 seconds of exercise.
This is a good introduction to HIIT, since it provides short sprints
and long rest intervals.
2. The 4 x 30 Method. Do a 30-second sprint at about 90 percent of
your max effort followed by 1 minute of active recovery. Repeat 4
times for a total of 6 minutes of exercise. If this feels too short for
you, turn it into a 6 x 30 with 2 minutes of active recovery after
each sprint for a total of 15 minutes of exercise.
3. The 4 x 4 Method. Do a 4-minute sprint at about 90 percent of
your max effort followed by 3 minutes of active recovery. Repeat
4 times for a total of 28 minutes of exercise. This workout is great
for boosting your aerobic endurance and burns more calories than
most other protocols (due to the longer intervals).
4. The Pyramid Method. Do a 30-second sprint followed by 60
seconds of active recovery; a 60-second sprint followed by 2
minutes of active recovery; a 90-second sprint followed by 3
minutes of active recovery; a 60-second sprint followed by 2
minutes of active recovery; and a 30-second sprint followed by
60-seconds of active recovery. There’s nothing inherently special
about this protocol, but it’s a fun way to inject a bit of variety into
your cardio routine.
5. The 10 x 1 Method. Do a 1-minute sprint at about 90 percent of
your max effort followed by 1 minute of active recovery. Repeat
10 times for a total of 20 minutes of exercise. This workout
accumulates a lot of high-intensity time (burning a lot of calories)
without dragging out the length of the intervals (significantly
more difficult).

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159:
YOU ARE WHAT YOU FOCUS
ON
“Our past may explain why we’re suffering but we must not use it as an
excuse to stay in bondage.”
—Joyce Meyer

Decades of psychological research have demonstrated that we construct our


worldview based on what we pay attention to, not what is. Who we are,
what we think, feel, do, and love is the sum of what we focus on.
Want to see for yourself? For the next several minutes, look around and
ask yourself a few questions, paying attention to how it impacts your mood:
What’s right about this environment? What am I okay with? What can I
enjoy, admire, and even celebrate? It doesn’t take much of this before your
heart begins to warm.
Bask in the good vibes you’ve created for a minute, and then, let’s turn
them off by doing the opposite. This time, look around and find what’s
wrong with your current environment, what bothers you, and what should
be improved (and if you want to spoil the fun even faster, consider who’s
likely to blame for all of it). Notice how quickly the glow fades?
Objectively speaking, nothing has changed between these exercises.
You’re still occupying the same space and surveying the same environment,
which still contains things that are both wonderful and woeful. How you
feel about these realities, though, is determined by your frame of mind.
Choose to see the good, and you’ll feel good; choose to see the bad,
and you’ll feel bad.

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160:
RESTING IS INVESTING
“Rest but never quit. Even the sun has a sinking spell each evening. But it
always rises the next morning. At sunrise, every soul is born again.”
—Muhammed Ali

Too many fitness fanatics are willing to try just about anything to enhance
recovery except the most important thing: adequate rest. So don’t view
deloads, rest days, and relaxation as a waste of time or sign of laziness.
They’re an investment in your health and recovery, and a source of energy
and well-being.
How much you rest isn’t all that matters, either—how well you can
renew yourself is important too. The more rapidly and deeply you can calm
your mind and body, the more restored you can feel in less time.
What you do to relax is a big part of this. According to a study of over
18,000 people from 134 countries, the most restful activities are as follows:

Reading
Exercising
Being in a natural environment
Being alone
Taking a nap
Listening to music
Socializing with friends and family
Doing nothing in particular
Conspicuously absent from the list are many people’s go-tos of
television, which may have limited restorative power in moderation, but can
also produce feelings of guilt and inadequacy; and social media, which for
many causes feelings of isolation, unhappiness, and jealousy.
If you want to get just as good at relaxing as you are at working,
experiment with different activities and routines and record how restored
you feel after each to hone in on what works best for you.
One way you can do this is with a simple Likert scale whereby you rate
your feelings on a scale from 1 (“strongly disagree”) to 5 (“strongly
agree”). Specifically, after 30-to-60 minutes of an activity or series of
activities, assess your level of agreement with the following statements:

1. I feel more energetic and ready to take on other activities.


2. My body feels comfortable and relaxed and free from tension and
symptoms of stress (like headaches or digestive issues).
3. I feel less anxious and calmer.
4. My mind feels clearer, and I have less mental and emotional
fatigue.
5. I can sleep better.

Then, add up your ratings for each statement for the total score for the
activity or activities, and next, try and score other activities and routines,
comparing totals until you find a setup that works particularly well for you.

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IF YOUR DOCTOR CAN’T DO
AT LEAST A FEW PULLUPS,
IT’S TIME TO GET A NEW
DOCTOR.
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161:
WIN YOUR SPURS
“One who makes himself a worm cannot complain afterwards if people step
on him.”
—Immanuel Kant

So many things can start to change for the better the moment you accept
that you and only you are responsible for your success and happiness.
When something important goes sideways, then, ask yourself a few
questions:

1. “What part of this did I help create?”


2. “What could I have done differently to achieve a better outcome?”
3. “What can I learn to do better next time?”

Gritty, grim, grotesque even, but also gutty. Wade into it. Work it out.
Win your spurs.

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162:
DOES ENERGY FLUX MATTER?
“Inspiration exists, but it has to find us working.”
—Pablo Picasso

Julia, Jill, and Jane have the same body composition and want to lose fat.
Julia isn’t very active, burns about 1,500 calories per day, and will eat about
1,200 calories per day. Jill is fairly active, burns about 1,800 calories per
day, and will eat about 1,500 calories per day. Jane is very active, burns
about 2,000 calories per day, and will eat about 1,700 calories per day.
Despite each of the women aiming to eat 300 fewer calories than they
burn every day, who do you think will likely lose the most fat? And then
who will most likely maintain her new body composition afterward?
If your gut says Jane, you’re correct, but do you know why?
The answer has to do with something scientists call energy flux, which
refers to the amount of energy moving through our metabolic system (the
relationship between energy intake, expenditure, and storage).
Put simply, in a state of low energy flux, energy intake and expenditure
are low and storage of excess energy is high, and in a state of high energy
flux, energy intake and expenditure are high and storage of excess energy is
low.
In our example above, Jane’s calorie deficit is the same as Julia’s and
Jill’s, but her higher energy flux will give her several distinct metabolic
advantages that aid in fat loss, including better appetite control, insulin
sensitivity, and a greater thermic effect of food (the amount of calories you
burn digesting food).
Energy flux works the same in you and me, and thus, the more
physically active we are, the easier it is to get and stay fit. Here’s how it
works for most people:

To maintain a basic level of fitness (looks and performance), do 1-


to-3 hours of strength training per week and 1-to-2 hours of
walking per day.
To maintain an intermediate level of fitness, do 2-to-4 hours of
strength training and 1-to-2 hours of moderate-intensity endurance
exercise per week.
To maintain an elite level of fitness, do 4-to-6 hours of strength
training and 2-to-3 hours of moderate-intensity endurance exercise
per week.

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163:
SO YOU SAY
“I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do
something; and because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do
something that I can do.”
—Helen Keller

You can say you “don’t have time” to exercise, but if you have an hour to
puddle around on social media or Netflix, you also have the time to do a
home workout or even just go for a walk, which, we recall, burns a couple
hundred calories per hour, is easy on the body, minimally impacts muscle
building, and preferentially burns body fat. (GO FOR MORE WALKS!)
You can say you wish you could be the person you believed you could
be when you bought all that produce, but if you can track the food you eat
every day for a week, you can learn a lot about your eating habits and find
easy ways to better align your diet to your goals and preferences.
You can say you’re looking for that game-changing supplement, but if
you aren’t getting enough sleep or eating enough nutritious food, then the
perfect supplement for you is a flugelhorn to the face.
The moral? First, we get excited to start. Then, we get stuck and want
to quit. Then, we keep bashing away. Then, we make it a habit. Then, we
win.

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164:
IS IT ACTUALLY HUNGER?
“We cry to God almighty, how can we escape this agony? Fool. Don’t you
have hands? Or could it be God forgot to give you a pair?”
—Epictetus

Are you hungry, or are you just tired? Or bored? Or stressed? Or emotional?
It’s important to know the difference. And how can you tell the difference?
An easy way to know if you’re actually hungry or just in the mood to
eat is to imagine a bowl of boiled beans or potatoes were in front of you.
Would you eat them? If you would, it’s probably physical hunger. If you
wouldn’t, it’s probably psychological or emotional desire.
And when it’s the latter, here are a few ways to squash the urge to nosh:

1. Go for a walk.
2. Drink some water (maybe you’re just thirsty).
3. Drink some tea or coffee (maybe you just want something tasty).
4. Do a breathing exercise (like box breathing).
5. Listen to a podcast (mine is called Muscle for Life).
6. Call a friend.
7. Clean your home (great for getting in steps too!).
8. Read, watch, or listen to something interesting.
9. Do a sudoku, crossword, wordle, etc.
10. Chew some gum.
11. Write in your journal.
12. Brush your teeth (especially if it’s after dinner).
13. Do a hobby.
14. Take a nap (which, by the way, is as effective as it’s impractical
for improving workout performance).
15. Declutter or organize a space in your home.

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165:
I WANT YOU TO BE A
PESSIMIST (ABOUT
PESSIMISM)
“A man who wants to lead the orchestra must turn his back on the crowd.”
—James Crook

The pessimism industry has grown exponentially in modern times. It found


its stride in the early 1800s, after Thomas Robert Malthus published An
Essay on the Principle of Population. In it, he claimed that humankind was
doomed because, sometime in the next one-hundred years, the population
would inevitably outrun food supply. Subsequently, many “Malthusians”
welcomed famines and epidemics as mechanisms for the population to
“correct itself.”
To this day, Malthus’s mindset is the foundation and inspiration for
many of the contemporary purveyors of pessimism.
For instance, Paul Ehrlich, Stanford professor and author of The
Population Bomb, predicted in 1968 that hundreds of millions would die of
starvation in the 1970s and that life expectancy would plummet in the
1980s. Neither things happened. The infamous Club of Rome report,
published in 1972, said we’d run out of raw materials by the 1990s. Wrong.
In 1989, a UN official declared that entire nations could be underwater by
the year 2000 if the global warming trend—which, we’re told by experts, is
primarily caused by the existence of too many people doing too many
things—wasn’t reversed; similarly, in 2006, Al Gore prophesied a twenty-
foot surge in sea levels in the near future; and in 2008, the Western media
apparatus was blazoning forecasts of an ice-free Arctic by 2013. None of
these prognostications came to pass.
The same pattern can be observed in just about every area of human
activity in just about every period of history.
In 1881, doomers at The New York Times decried telegraphy as
dangerous, citing research from a “prominent academic journal” that
claimed that wrapping the earth in telegraphic wire could disrupt our
planet’s axis and in turn “upset the whole time table of the solar system, and
bring about a series of frightful collisions.” Somehow, the cosmos scraped
through.
In the 1950s, a geologist named M. King Hubbert developed an
influential theory that global oil production would soon peak and then
decline, leading to economic instability, social unrest, and even war.
Instead, oil production boomed in the decades that followed, contributing to
explosive growth in global prosperity. Fittingly, portentous “peak oil”
prognoses have continued to persist, simply with new timelines.
In the 1970s and 1980s, scientists observed bacteria developing a
resistance to antibiotics, and some authorities were convinced that this trend
would continue inexorably until routine surgeries became perilous and
infections like pneumonia, tuberculosis, and sepsis untreatable. Again,
however, the optimists prevailed—new drugs and alternative therapies were
developed, medical procedures were improved, and public health strategies
were upgraded.
In his 2007 memoir, former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan warned that
interest rates would soon soar to disastrously high levels. One year later,
however, the Fed Funds rate fell to near zero and remained at historically
low levels for over a decade.
Even as far back as 250 B.C., the Roman poet Plautus satirized the
technophobic hand-wringing of his time by lamenting the proliferation of
sundials:

The gods confound the man who first found


out how to distinguish hours! Confound him too
Who in this place set up a sundial
To cut and hack my days so wretchedly
Into small portions! When I was a boy,
My belly was my sundial: one more sure, Truer, and more exact
than any of them.
This dial told me when it was time
To go to dinner, when I had anything to eat;
But nowadays, why even when I have, I can’t fall-to unless the sun
gives leave.
The town’s so full of these confounded dials,
The greatest part of its inhabitants,
Shrunk up with hunger, creep along the streets.

To be sure, none of this is to say humanity isn’t faced with serious


problems or that seriously bad things can’t or don’t happen—only that
extreme worst-case scenarios are almost always extremely unlikely to
occur. Even the proverbial collapse of the Roman Empire took hundreds of
years longer than many pundits expected, and then, it didn’t shatter so much
as splinter. The eastern offcut, the Byzantine Empire, endured, and at times,
thrived, for another 1,000 years.
Further, if someone chooses to believe the scaremongers (and it is a
choice and belief—see chapter 135) yet doesn’t take any constructive action
as a result, what are they accomplishing, exactly? If a tidal wave is in fact
sweeping toward someone’s town, what good is them knowing if they can’t
be bothered to even get off the couch?
Maybe, then, we should weary of all the catastrophizing and stop
taking the bait. Maybe it’s time to turn off the news, stop the doom
scrolling, and shun the Current Thing. Maybe it’s time to get aggressively
pessimistic about pessimism.

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IT’S IRONIC TO WATCH
OVERMUSCLED PEOPLE
WHO ABUSE ANABOLIC
STEROIDS TO GET BIGGER
BICEPS LECTURE FAT
PEOPLE ABOUT THE
DANGERS OF OBESITY.
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166:
THE BEST REP RANGES
“Pleasure in the job puts perfection in the work.”
—Aristotle

You can gain muscle doing anywhere from ~4-to-20 reps per set, so the
“best” rep ranges for you are largely the ones you enjoy the most. And if
you’re like most people, you’ll probably do best with 4-to-12 reps per set
(with each set taken close to muscular failure).
More specifically, if you’re relatively new to strength training (one year
or less of proper training), do this:

Men: Do your compound exercises (which train multiple major


muscle groups, like the squat, deadlift, bench press, and overhead
press) in the 4-to-6 rep range and your isolation exercises (which
train one major muscle group, like the biceps curl, side raise, leg
extension, and pec fly) in the 6-to-8 or 8-to-10 rep range. (See my
Bigger Leaner Stronger program for more.)
Women: Do your compound exercises in the 4-to-8 rep range and
your isolation exercises in the 8-to-10 rep range. (See my Thinner
Leaner Stronger program for more.)

And if you’re an experienced trainee (two years or more of proper


training), whether male or female, do ~80 percent of your sets in the 4-to-10
rep range and ~10 percent slightly above that (10-to-12 or 12-to-15) and
~10 percent slightly below that (2-to-3). (See my Beyond Bigger Leaner
Stronger program.)

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167:
NO, YOU DON’T
“The only people who see the whole picture are the ones who step outside
the frame.”
—Salman Rushdie

You don’t have to always be cutting or lean bulking. Sometimes, it’s more
fun to just see what happens when you stop tracking calories and macros
and try new things in your training.
You also don’t have to work out every day. You can if you want to, but
there’s no holy writ that commands it, and that extra hour or two every
week won’t make much of a difference. But! You do have to move every
day, whether it’s sports, dancing, yoga, swimming, gardening, walking
around the neighborhood, housecleaning … hell … tai chi—pick your
pleasure.
You don’t have to get shredded, either, but if you want to anyway,
know this: Once you’ve been diced, anything else will feel too fat. You’ve
been warned … but still will insist on finding out for yourself.
You don’t have to stop eating sugar, but if you eat way less of it, fruit
and even vegetables will get way more delicious.
And you don’t have to neglect your self-care to show you’re tough,
committed, or successful. That’s like texting while driving to show how
good you are at it.

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168:
THE CATCH WITH HIGH-TECH
TRACKING
“He who has health has hope, and he who has hope has everything.”
—Thomas Carlyle

One of the main draws of activity trackers is the claim that they can
accurately measure the calories you burn throughout the day—and during
exercise in particular.
How true is this? Scientists at the University of Quebec in Montreal
investigated by testing the accuracy of three popular wearables: the Apple
Watch 6, the Polar Vantage V, and the Fitbit Sense.
The researchers had thirty men and thirty women sit, walk, run, lift
weights, and cycle while wearing each of these devices along with a special
medical device known to accurately measure heart rate and energy
expenditure.
The result? Aside from the Apple Watch’s heart rate tracking (fairly
good), the data was all over the place—sometimes majorly wrong,
sometimes minorly wrong, sometimes too high, sometimes too low, etc.
In other words, the data from the devices were not only inaccurate but
were also inconsistent and unreliable, making a nonsense of it all. If the
data were at least consistently inaccurate, it could be useful, but without any
discernible regularity, it’s about as handy as a crocheted condom.
A much better method for managing your energy balance is as follows:
1. Use an evidence-based mathematical formula for establishing
your approximate total daily energy expenditure (like you can find
at www.mikematthews.fitness/tdee).
2. Determine your daily calorie target based on that calculation.
3. Adjust your calorie intake up or down as needed based on how
your body responds.

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169:
ONE DAY
“You see things; and you say, ‘Why?’ But I dream things that never were;
and I say, ‘Why not?’”
—George Bernard Shaw

One day, I’m going to open a gym with an alarm that blares when someone
doesn’t re-rack their weights.
And when someone doesn’t wipe their sweat off of the equipment.
And when someone does a dumbbell exercise right in front of the rack.
And in my gym, trumpets will sound when someone finally squats,
deadlifts, or benches their body weight for reps.
And when someone lets another work in with them.
And when someone finishes their first workout of the year.
One day, I’m going to open a gym and blazon this on the wall:
You may not know it yet, but strength training is the miracle pill you’ve
been desperately seeking for a better body and life.

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FREE BONUS MATERIAL
(WORKOUTS, MEAL PLANS,
AND MORE!)
Thank you for reading Stronger Than Yesterday. I hope you’ve found it
insightful, inspiring, and practical, and I hope it helps you reach your goals
(fitness and otherwise) faster.
I want to make sure you receive as much value from this book as
possible, so I’ve put together free resources to help you, including:

3 bonus chapters that answer three common questions: “Am I too


fat to bulk?”, “How long should I cut?”, and “How much weight
can I gain in one day of overeating?”
20 flexible dieting meal plans for losing fat and gaining muscle
An entire year’s worth of my Bigger Leaner Stronger (men) and
Thinner Leaner Stronger (women) strength training workouts
neatly laid out and provided in several formats, including PDF,
Excel, and Google Sheets
Form demonstration videos of my favorite strength training
exercises
Product recommendations for workout equipment, gear, and
gadgets

To get instant access to those free bonuses (plus a few additional


surprise gifts), go here now:

➥ www.mikematthews.fitness/strongerbonus
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WOULD YOU DO ME A FAVOR?
I have a small favor to ask.
Would you mind taking a minute to write a blurb on Amazon about this
book? I check all my reviews and love to get honest feedback because that’s
the real pay for my work—knowing that I’m helping people.
To leave me a review …

Go to www.mikematthews.fitness/strongerreview, and leave your


rating and review.
Or go to Amazon in your web browser (or open the app), search
for “Stronger Than Yesterday,” click on the book, scroll down and
click on the “Write a customer review” button, and leave your
rating and review.

Thanks in advance, and I look forward to reading your review.

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ALSO BY MICHAEL
MATTHEWS
Bigger Leaner Stronger
If you’re a man under 40 and you’re trying to gain your first 25 pounds of
muscle or get to 10-to-15 percent body fat, Bigger Leaner Stronger will
give you the blueprint.

The Year One Challenge for Men


If you want a workout journal with an entire year’s worth of Bigger Leaner
Stronger training, The Year One Challenge for Men is the ticket.

Thinner Leaner Stronger


If you’re a woman under 40 and you’re trying to gain your first 15 pounds
of muscle and/or lose your first 15-to-25 pounds of fat, Thinner Leaner
Stronger will show you how.

The Year One Challenge for Women


If you want a workout journal with an entire year’s worth of Thinner
Leaner Stronger training, you want The Year One Challenge for Women.

Muscle for Life


If you’re a man or woman over the age of 40 and new to strength training
and flexible dieting, Muscle for Life is the book and program for you.

The Shredded Chef


If you want to eat delicious, home-cooked, “fitness friendly” meals without
spending excessive time in the kitchen or struggling with expensive and
hard-to-prepare recipes, The Shredded Chef will become your new favorite
cookbook.

The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation


If you want to learn evidence-based insights on how top performers shift
their negative thinking and behaviors into peak performance and lasting
success, read The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation.

Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger


If you’re an advanced weightlifter trying to reach your genetic potential for
muscle and strength, put Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger at the top of your
TBR pile.

The Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger Challenge


If you want a workout journal with an entire year’s worth of Beyond Bigger
Leaner Stronger training, get a copy of The Beyond Bigger Leaner Stronger
Challenge.

Fitness Science Explained


If you want to know how to read, understand, and apply scientific research
to optimize your health, fitness, and happiness, Fitness Science Explained is
the shortcut.

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ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
If you enjoyed this book and are interested in more of my evidence-based
teachings on losing fat, building muscle, and getting healthy, you’ll also
enjoy at least some of the hundreds of free articles I’ve published over at
my sports nutrition company Legion’s blog (www.legion.fitness/blog) as
well as at least a few of the 1,500+ episodes I’ve recorded for my Muscle
for Life podcast (www.mfl.show).

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REFERENCES
1
STOP TRYING TO HAVE GREAT WORKOUTS
1. According to research conducted by Stanford University scientists:
Gardner CD, Trepanowski JF, Del Gobbo LC, et al. Effect of
Low-Fat vs Low-Carbohydrate Diet on 12-Month Weight Loss in
Overweight Adults and the Association With Genotype Pattern or
Insulin Secretion: The DIETFITS Randomized Clinical Trial
[published correction appears in JAMA. 2018 Apr
3;319(13):1386] [published correction appears in JAMA. 2018
Apr 24;319(16):1728]. JAMA. 2018;319(7):667-679.

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THE IMPERATIVES OF HEALTHY &
SUSTAINABLE FAT LOSS
1. produces the most fat loss: Brellenthin AG, Lee DC, Bennie JA, et
al. Resistance exercise, alone and in combination with aerobic
exercise, and obesity in Dallas, Texas, US: A prospective cohort
study. PLoS Med. 2021;18(6):e1003687.; Ho SS, Dhaliwal SS,
Hills AP, et al. The effect of 12 weeks of aerobic, resistance or
combination exercise training on cardiovascular risk factors in the
overweight and obese in a randomized trial. BMC Public Health.
2012;12:704.

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SIMPLE DIET HACKS
1. can help with weight loss: Laviada-Molina H, Molina-Segui F,
Pérez-Gaxiola G, et al. Effects of nonnutritive sweeteners on body
weight and BMI in diverse clinical contexts: Systematic review
and meta-analysis. Obes Rev. 2020;21(7):e13020.

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IS DEADLIFTING WORTH THE RISK?
1. it’s also a nonentity for us recreational weightlifters: Barnes MJ,
Miller A, Reeve D, et al. Acute Neuromuscular and Endocrine
Responses to Two Different Compound Exercises: Squat vs.
Deadlift. J Strength Cond Res. 2019;33(9):2381-2387.

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THE BODY RECOMP
1. a study conducted by scientists at Brigham and Women’s Hospital:
Demling RH, DeSanti L. Effect of a hypocaloric diet, increased
protein intake and resistance training on lean mass gains and fat
mass loss in overweight police officers. Ann Nutr Metab.
2000;44(1):21-29.

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SHOULD THE FUTURE BE MEATLESS?
1. a strong indicator of the quality of the source of protein: Yang Y,
Churchward-Venne TA, Burd NA, et al. Myofibrillar protein
synthesis following ingestion of soy protein isolate at rest and
after resistance exercise in elderly men. Nutr Metab (Lond).
2012;9(1):57.; Phillips SM. Nutrient-rich meat proteins in
offsetting age-related muscle loss. Meat Sci. 2012;92(3):174-178.;
Gorissen SH, Horstman AM, Franssen R, et al. Ingestion of Wheat
Protein Increases In Vivo Muscle Protein Synthesis Rates in
Healthy Older Men in a Randomized Trial. J Nutr.
2016;146(9):1651-1659.
2. constitutive components of muscle that must be obtained from
food: van Vliet S, Burd NA, van Loon LJ. The Skeletal Muscle
Anabolic Response to Plant- versus Animal-Based Protein
Consumption. J Nutr. 2015;145(9):1981-1991.
3. the participants who ate the whey protein: Brennan JL, Keerati-U-
Rai M, Yin H, et al. Differential Responses of Blood Essential
Amino Acid Levels Following Ingestion of High-Quality Plant-
Based Protein Blends Compared to Whey Protein-A Double-Blind
Randomized, Cross-Over, Clinical Trial. Nutrients. 2019 Dec
6;11(12):2987.
4. from whole foods that naturally contain them: Hunt JR, Gallagher
SK, Johnson LK, et al. High- versus low-meat diets: effects on
zinc absorption, iron status, and calcium, copper, iron,
magnesium, manganese, nitrogen, phosphorus, and zinc balance in
postmenopausal women. Am J Clin Nutr. 1995;62(3):621-632.;
Bjelakovic G, Nikolova D, Gluud LL, et al. Antioxidant
supplements for prevention of mortality in healthy participants
and patients with various diseases. Cochrane Database Syst Rev.
2012;2012(3):CD007176.; van Poppel G, Goldbohm RA.
Epidemiologic evidence for beta-carotene and cancer prevention.
Am J Clin Nutr. 1995;62(6 Suppl):1393S-1402S.; Lichtenstein
AH, Russell RM. Essential nutrients: food or supplements? Where
should the emphasis be?. JAMA. 2005;294(3):351-358.; Jacobs
DR Jr, Tapsell LC. Food, not nutrients, is the fundamental unit in
nutrition. Nutr Rev. 2007;65(10):439-450.
5. the most potential in the United States and Brazil: Poore J,
Nemecek T. Reducing food’s environmental impacts through
producers and consumers [published correction appears in
Science. 2019 Feb 22;363(6429):]. Science. 2018;360(6392):987-
992.; Cusack DF, Kazanski CE, Hedgpeth A, et al. Reducing
climate impacts of beef production: A synthesis of life cycle
assessments across management systems and global regions. Glob
Chang Biol. 2021;27(9):1721-1736.
6. a 2019 study in Agricultural Systems: White RR, Hall MB.
Nutritional and greenhouse gas impacts of removing animals from
US agriculture. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017;114(48):E10301-
E10308.; Alan Rotz C, Asem-Hiablie S, Place S, et al.
Environmental footprints of beef cattle production in the United
States. Agricultural Systems. 2019;169:1-13
7. (especially when considered on the basis of carbon-per-calorie):
Tom MS, Fischbeck PS, Hendrickson CT. Energy use, blue water
footprint, and greenhouse gas emissions for current food
consumption patterns and dietary recommendations in the US.
Environ Syst Decis. 2015;36:92-103.
8. eliminate the need for additional beef-related agricultural
expansion and associated deforestation: Waite R, Searchinger T,
Ranganathan J. 6 Pressing Questions About Beef and Climate
Change, Answered. World Resources Institute website. Published
March 7, 2022. Accessed January 2, 2024.
https://www.wri.org/insights/6-pressing-questions-about-beef-and-
climate-change-answered.

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SIMPLE EXERCISE HACKS
1. before doing another round of 3 sets of squats to failure: Gantois
P, Lima-Júnior D, Fortes LS, et al. Mental Fatigue From
Smartphone Use Reduces Volume-Load in Resistance Training: A
Randomized, Single-Blinded Cross-Over Study. Percept Mot
Skills. 2021;128(4):1640-1659.
2. impair athletic performance: Queiros VS, Dantas M, Fortes LS, et
al. Mental Fatigue Reduces Training Volume in Resistance
Exercise: A Cross-Over and Randomized Study. Percept Mot
Skills. 2021;128(1):409-423.; Gantois P, Caputo Ferreira ME,
Lima-Junior D, et al. Effects of mental fatigue on passing
decision-making performance in professional soccer athletes. Eur
J Sport Sci. 2020;20(4):534-543.; Fortes LS, Lima-Júnior D,
Gantois P, et al. Smartphone Use Among High Level Swimmers Is
Associated With Mental Fatigue and Slower 100- and 200- but
Not 50-Meter Freestyle Racing. Percept Mot Skills.
2021;128(1):390-408.; Pageaux B, Lepers R. The effects of
mental fatigue on sport-related performance. Prog Brain Res.
2018;240:291-315.; Fortes LS, De Lima-Junior D, Fiorese L, et al.
The effect of smartphones and playing video games on decision-
making in soccer players: A crossover and randomised study. J
Sports Sci. 2020;38(5):552-558.; De Sousa Fortes L, De Lima-
Junior D, Nascimento-Junior JRA, et al. Effect of exposure time to
smartphone apps on passing decision-making in male soccer
athletes. Psychology of Sport and Exercise. 2019;44:35-41.
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THE MOST COMMON FITNESS REGRET
1. you’re at the top of the pile: Althoff T, Sosič R, Hicks JL, et al.
Large-scale physical activity data reveal worldwide activity
inequality. Nature. 2017;547(7663):336-339.
2. a habit of the top 22 percent?: Lee SH, Moore LV, Park S, et al.
Adults Meeting Fruit and Vegetable Intake Recommendations -
United States, 2019. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2022;71(1):1-9.; United States Department of Agriculture. What
We Eat in America, NHANES 2017-2018. Accessed January 2,
2024.
https://www.ars.usda.gov/ARSUserFiles/80400530/pdf/FPED/tabl
es_1-4_FPED_1718.pdf.; Lee SH, Moore LV, Park S, et al. Adults
Meeting Fruit and Vegetable Intake Recommendations - United
States, 2019. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2022;71(1):1-9.

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DO YOU GAIN MUSCLE FASTER WHEN
YOU’RE LEANER?
1. it’s mostly muscle: Dugdale AE, Payne PR. Pattern of lean and fat
deposition in adults. Nature. 1977;266(5600):349-351.; Payne PR,
Dugdale AE. A model for the prediction of energy balance and
body weight. Ann Hum Biol. 1977;4(6):525-535.; Payne PR,
Dugdale AE. Mechanisms for the control of body-weight. Lancet.
1977;1(8011):583-586.; Forbes GB. Lean body mass-body fat
interrelationships in humans. Nutr Rev. 1987;45(8):225-231.
2. evidence of a relationship between body composition and the
composition of weight gain: Hall KD. Body fat and fat-free mass
inter-relationships: Forbes’s theory revisited. Br J Nutr.
2007;97(6):1059-1063.

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IF THEY CAN DO IT …
1. when they see others doing the same: Suher J, Raghunathan R,
Hoyer WD. Eating Healthy or Feeling Empty? How the “Healthy
= Less Filling” Intuition Influences Satiety. JACR. 2016;1(1):26-
40.; Stück D, Hallgrímsson HT, Ver Steeg G. The Spread of
Physical Activity Through Social Networks. WWW ‘17:
Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on World Wide
Web. 2017:519–528.; Christakis NA, Fowler JH. The collective
dynamics of smoking in a large social network. N Engl J Med.
2008;358(21):2249-2258.; Lau-Barraco C, Braitman AL, Leonard
KE, et al. Drinking buddies and their prospective influence on
alcohol outcomes: alcohol expectancies as a mediator. Psychol
Addict Behav. 2012;26(4):747-758.; Fowler JH, Christakis NA.
Dynamic spread of happiness in a large social network:
longitudinal analysis over 20 years in the Framingham Heart
Study. BMJ. 2008;337:a2338.

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MAYBE THEY’RE BORN WITH IT … OR
MAYBE IT’S … SOMETHING ELSE
1. trained three times per week: Bhasin S, Storer TW, Berman N, et
al. The effects of supraphysiologic doses of testosterone on muscle
size and strength in normal men. N Engl J Med. 1996;335(1):1-7.

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EARLY BIRDS GET THE GAINS TOO
1. the benefits of evening training to become apparent: Küüsmaa M,
Schumann M, Sedliak M, et al. Effects of morning versus evening
combined strength and endurance training on physical
performance, muscle hypertrophy, and serum hormone
concentrations. Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2016;41(12):1285-1294.
2. gain muscle and strength with early workouts: Küüsmaa-Schildt
M, Eklund D, Avela J, et al. Neuromuscular Adaptations to
Combined Strength and Endurance Training: Order and Time-of-
Day. Int J Sports Med. 2017;38(9):707-716.; Sedliak M, Finni T,
Cheng S, et al. Effect of time-of-day-specific strength training on
muscular hypertrophy in men. J Strength Cond Res.
2009;23(9):2451-2457.; Guette M, Gondin J, Martin A. Time-of-
day effect on the torque and neuromuscular properties of dominant
and non-dominant quadriceps femoris. Chronobiol Int.
2005;22(3):541-558.
3. return to normal after about a month or so: Sedliak M, Zeman M,
Buzgó G, et al. Morphological, molecular and hormonal
adaptations to early morning versus afternoon resistance training.
Chronobiol Int. 2018;35(4):450-464.; Jancoková L, Alabed H,
Waterhouse J, et al. Chronobiology from theory to sports practice.
Towarzystwo Slowaków w Polsce; 2013.
4. (the workouts felt easier): Blazer HJ, Jordan CL, Pederson JA, et
al. Effects of Time-of-Day Training Preference on Resistance-
Exercise Performance. Res Q Exerc Sport. 2021;92(3):492-499.
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SIMPLE MENTAL HEALTH HACKS
1. Eating lots of nutritious food: Grajek M, Krupa-Kotara K, Białek-
Dratwa A, et al. Nutrition and mental health: A review of current
knowledge about the impact of diet on mental health. Front Nutr.
2022;9:943998.
2. Getting enough sleep: Scott AJ, Webb TL, Martyn-St James M, et
al. Improving sleep quality leads to better mental health: A meta-
analysis of randomised controlled trials. Sleep Med Rev.
2021;60:101556.
3. Quitting porn, alcohol, and recreational drugs: Privara M, Bob P.
Pornography Consumption and Cognitive-Affective Distress. J
Nerv Ment Dis. 2023;211(8):641-646.; Puddephatt JA, Irizar P,
Jones A, et al. Associations of common mental disorder with
alcohol use in the adult general population: a systematic review
and meta-analysis. Addiction. 2022;117(6):1543-1572.; Kim YJ,
Qian L, Aslam MS. The impact of substance use disorder on the
mental health among COVID-19 patients: A protocol for
systematic review and meta-analysis. Medicine (Baltimore).
2020;99(46):e23203.
4. Reading good books: Monroy-Fraustro D, Maldonado-Castellanos
I, Aboites-Molina M, et al. Bibliotherapy as a Non-pharmaceutical
Intervention to Enhance Mental Health in Response to the
COVID-19 Pandemic: A Mixed-Methods Systematic Review and
Bioethical Meta-Analysis. Front Public Health. 2021;9:629872.
5. Exercising: Rebar AL, Stanton R, Geard D, et al. A meta-meta-
analysis of the effect of physical activity on depression and
anxiety in non-clinical adult populations. Health Psychol Rev.
2015;9(3):366-378.; Mahindru A, Patil P, Agrawal V. Role of
Physical Activity on Mental Health and Well-Being: A Review.
Cureus. 2023;15(1):e33475.
6. Helping others without any expectations: Post SG. Altuism,
happiness, and health: it’s good to be good. Int J Behav Med.
2005;12(2):66-77.
7. Smiling more: Marmolejo-Ramos F, Murata A, Sasaki K, et al.
Your Face and Moves Seem Happier When I Smile. Exp Psychol.
2020;67(1):14-22.
8. Having difficult conversations: Askari M, Noah S, Hassan S, et al.
Comparison of the Effects of Communication and Conflict
Resolution Skills Training on Mental Health. International Journal
of Psychological Studies. 2013;5(1):1-91
9. Deleting social media apps: Beyari H. The Relationship between
Social Media and the Increase in Mental Health Problems. Int J
Environ Res Public Health. 2023;20(3):2383.; Brown L, Kuss DJ.
Fear of Missing Out, Mental Wellbeing, and Social
Connectedness: A Seven-Day Social Media Abstinence Trial. Int J
Environ Res Public Health. 2020;17(12):4566.
10. Going outside: Jimenez MP, DeVille NV, Elliott EG, et al.
Associations between Nature Exposure and Health: A Review of
the Evidence. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021;18(9):4790.
11. Giving compliments: Boothby EJ, Bohns VK. Why a Simple Act
of Kindness Is Not as Simple as It Seems: Underestimating the
Positive Impact of Our Compliments on Others. Pers Soc Psychol
Bull. 2021;47(5):826-840.
12. Turning off notifications on your phone: Ohly S, Bastin L. Effects
of task interruptions caused by notifications from communication
applications on strain and performance. J Occup Health.
2023;65(1):e12408.; Elhai JD, Rozgonjuk D, Alghraibeh AM, et
al. Disrupted Daily Activities From Interruptive Smartphone
Notifications: Relations With Depression and Anxiety Severity
and the Mediating Role of Boredom Proneness. Social Science
Computer Review. 2021;39(1):20-37.
13. Watching less TV: Alimoradi Z, Jafari E, Potenza MN, et al.
Binge-Watching and Mental Health Problems: A Systematic
Review and Meta-Analysis. Int J Environ Res Public Health.
2022;19(15):9707.; Raza SH, Yousaf M, Sohail F, et al.
Investigating Binge-Watching Adverse Mental Health Outcomes
During Covid-19 Pandemic: Moderating Role of Screen Time for
Web Series Using Online Streaming. Psychol Res Behav Manag.
2021;14:1615-1629.
14. Eliminating “maybes” by making decisions: Ferrari JR, Dovidio
JF. Behavioral information search by indecisives. Personality and
Individual Differences. 2001;30(7):1113-1123.
doi:10.1016/S0191-8869(00)00094-5.
15. Embracing personal responsibility: Arslan G, Wong P. Measuring
Personal and Social Responsibility: An Existential Positive
Psychology Approach. Journal of Happiness and Health.
2022;2(1):1-11.

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IS EXERCISE USELESS FOR WEIGHT LOSS?
1. (where calories eaten match calories burned and weight is
maintained): Stensel D. Exercise, appetite and appetite-regulating
hormones: implications for food intake and weight control. Ann
Nutr Metab. 2010;57 Suppl 2:36-42.
2. according to actual energy requirements: Granados K, Stephens
BR, Malin SK, et al. Appetite regulation in response to sitting and
energy imbalance. Appl Physiol Nutr Metab. 2012;37(2):323-333.;
Stephens BR, Granados K, Zderic TW, et al.. Effects of 1 day of
inactivity on insulin action in healthy men and women: interaction
with energy intake. Metabolism. 2011;60(7):941-949.
3. extra calories burned through exercise: Pontzer H, Durazo-Arvizu
R, Dugas LR, et al. Constrained Total Energy Expenditure and
Metabolic Adaptation to Physical Activity in Adult Humans. Curr
Biol. 2016;26(3):410-417.

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GO FOR A WALK
1. dropped by about 12 percent for every 1,000 steps people took
every day: Jayedi A, Gohari A, Shab-Bidar S. Daily Step Count
and All-Cause Mortality: A Dose-Response Meta-analysis of
Prospective Cohort Studies. Sports Med. 2022;52(1):89-99.
2. burn a significant number of calories (300-to-400 for most
people): Tudor-Locke C, Craig CL, Brown WJ, et al. How many
steps/day are enough? For adults. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act.
2011;8:79.
3. reducing feelings of fatigue and stress: Marselle RM, Irvine KN,
Warber SL. Examining Group Walks in Nature and Multiple
Aspects of Well-Being: A Large-Scale Study. Ecopsychology.
2014;6(3):134-147.; Kaplan S. The restorative benefits of nature:
Toward an integrative framework. Journal of Environmental
Psychology. 1995;15(3):169-182.; imenez MP, DeVille NV, Elliott
EG, et al. Associations between Nature Exposure and Health: A
Review of the Evidence. Int J Environ Res Public Health.
2021;18(9):4790.; Ewert A, Chang Y. Levels of Nature and Stress
Response. Behav Sci (Basel). 2018;8(5):49.

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HOW FAST CAN YOU LOSE FAT WITHOUT
LOSING MUSCLE?
1. increasing the speed of their metabolism: Bryner RW, Ullrich IH,
Sauers J, et al. Effects of resistance vs. aerobic training combined
with an 800 calorie liquid diet on lean body mass and resting
metabolic rate. J Am Coll Nutr. 1999;18(2):115-121.

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THE SCIENCE OF PRODUCTIVE
DAYDREAMING
1. an episodic recent thinking (ERT) protocol: O’Neill J, Daniel TO,
Epstein LH. Episodic future thinking reduces eating in a food
court. Eat Behav. 2016;20:9-13.

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IS STRENGTH TRAINING GOOD FOR
WEIGHT LOSS?
1. the more calories you burn: Reis VM, Garrido ND, Vianna J, et al.
Energy cost of isolated resistance exercises across low- to high-
intensities. PLoS One. 2017;12(7):e0181311.
2. to move a heavier (more muscular) body than a lighter one:
Willoughby D, Hewlings S, Kalman D. Body Composition
Changes in Weight Loss: Strategies and Supplementation for
Maintaining Lean Body Mass, a Brief Review. Nutrients.
2018;10(12):1876.
3. making your body better at both building muscle and burning fat:
Rome S, Forterre A, Mizgier ML, et al. Skeletal Muscle-Released
Extracellular Vesicles: State of the Art. Front Physiol.
2019;10:929.; Vechetti IJ Jr, Peck BD, Wen Y, et al. Mechanical
overload-induced muscle-derived extracellular vesicles promote
adipose tissue lipolysis. FASEB J. 2021;35(6):e21644.; Chen JF,
Mandel EM, Thomson JM, et al. The role of microRNA-1 and
microRNA-133 in skeletal muscle proliferation and
differentiation. Nat Genet. 2006;38(2):228-233.
4. choose the barbell over the treadmill: Ho SS, Dhaliwal SS, Hills
AP, et al. The effect of 12 weeks of aerobic, resistance or
combination exercise training on cardiovascular risk factors in the
overweight and obese in a randomized trial. BMC Public Health.
2012;12:704.; Brellenthin AG, Lee DC, Bennie JA, et al.
Resistance exercise, alone and in combination with aerobic
exercise, and obesity in Dallas, Texas, US: A prospective cohort
study. PLoS Med. 2021;18(6):e1003687.

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DO YOU EVEN KETO FAST BRO?
1. is better for muscle building than one-to-two: Iraki J, Fitschen P,
Espinar S, et al. Nutrition Recommendations for Bodybuilders in
the Off-Season: A Narrative Review. Sports (Basel).
2019;7(7):154.
2. the more compliance suffers, the worse the results are: Gibson
AA, Sainsbury A. Strategies to Improve Adherence to Dietary
Weight Loss Interventions in Research and Real-World Settings.
Behav Sci (Basel). 2017;7(3):44.
3. this can cause you to eat more than you would otherwise: Epstein
LH, Truesdale R, Wojcik A, et al. Effects of deprivation on
hedonics and reinforcing value of food. Physiol Behav.
2003;78(2):221-227.
4. they help the body produce serotonin: Cowen PJ, Clifford EM,
Walsh AE, et al. Moderate dieting causes 5-HT2C receptor
supersensitivity. Psychol Med. 1996;26(6):1155-1159.
5. increase the risk of adopting dysfunctional eating habits: Stice E,
Davis K, Miller NP, et al. Fasting increases risk for onset of binge
eating and bulimic pathology: a 5-year prospective study. J
Abnorm Psychol. 2008;117(4):941-946.
6. (especially in physically active people with a healthy body
composition): Kysel P, Haluzíková D, Doležalová RP, et al. The
Influence of Cyclical Ketogenic Reduction Diet vs. Nutritionally
Balanced Reduction Diet on Body Composition, Strength, and
Endurance Performance in Healthy Young Males: A Randomized
Controlled Trial. Nutrients. 2020;12(9):2832.;Gardner CD,
Trepanowski JF, Del Gobbo LC, et al. Effect of Low-Fat vs Low-
Carbohydrate Diet on 12-Month Weight Loss in Overweight
Adults and the Association With Genotype Pattern or Insulin
Secretion: The DIETFITS Randomized Clinical Trial [published
correction appears in JAMA. 2018 Apr 3;319(13):1386]
[published correction appears in JAMA. 2018 Apr
24;319(16):1728]. JAMA. 2018;319(7):667-679.; McSwiney FT,
Doyle L, Plews DJ, et al. Impact Of Ketogenic Diet On Athletes:
Current Insights. Open Access J Sports Med. 2019;10:171-183.;
Johnston CS, Tjonn SL, Swan PD, et al. Ketogenic low-
carbohydrate diets have no metabolic advantage over
nonketogenic low-carbohydrate diets. Am J Clin Nutr.
2006;83(5):1055-1061.; Joo M, Moon S, Lee YS, et al. Effects of
very low-carbohydrate ketogenic diets on lipid profiles in normal-
weight (body mass index < 25 kg/m2) adults: a meta-analysis.
Nutr Rev. 2023;81(11):1393-1401.

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10 TOP-FLIGHT TRAINING TIPS
1. they’re no more effective than front pulldowns: Sperandei S,
Barros MA, Silveira-Júnior PC, et al. Electromyographic analysis
of three different types of lat pull-down. J Strength Cond Res.
2009;23(7):2033-2038.
2. This can help you maintain a more upright posture: Comfort P,
Kasim P. Optimizing Squat Technique. Strength and Conditioning
Journal. 2007;29(6):10-13.
3. research shows they’re better than bilateral exercises: Liao KF,
Nassis GP, Bishop C, et al. Effects of unilateral vs. bilateral
resistance training interventions on measures of strength, jump,
linear and change of direction speed: a systematic review and
meta-analysis. Biol Sport. 2022;39(3):485-497.
4. places more strain on your shoulders: Saeterbakken AH, Stien N,
Pedersen H, et al. The Effect of Grip Width on Muscle Strength
and Electromyographic Activity in Bench Press among Novice-
and Resistance-Trained Men. Int J Environ Res Public Health.
2021;18(12):6444.
5. they’re weakest in corresponding full-range-of-motion exercises:
Gillingham B, DeBeliso M. The Efficacy of Partial Range of
Motion Deadlift Training: A Pilot Study. International Journal of
Sport Science. 2022;12(1):14-22.

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SIMPLE HEALTH HACKS
1. can improve mood and metabolic health: Figueiro MG, Steverson
B, Heerwagen J, et al. The impact of daytime light exposures on
sleep and mood in office workers. Sleep Health. 2017;3(3):204-
215.; Mead MN. Benefits of sunlight: a bright spot for human
health [published correction appears in Environ Health Perspect.
2008 May;116(5):A197]. Environ Health Perspect.
2008;116(4):A160-A167.; Farhud D, Aryan Z. Circadian Rhythm,
Lifestyle and Health: A Narrative Review. Iran J Public Health.
2018;47(8):1068-1076.
2. which is a prerequisite for high-quality living: Hayes JF,
Balantekin KN, Altman M, et al. Sleep Patterns and Quality Are
Associated with Severity of Obesity and Weight-Related
Behaviors in Adolescents with Overweight and Obesity. Child
Obes. 2018;14(1):11-17.; Patel SR, Hayes AL, Blackwell T, et al.
The association between sleep patterns and obesity in older adults.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2014;38(9):1159-1164.

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DOES CARDIO BURN MUSCLE?
1. observe the following evidence-based guidelines: Schumann M,
Rønnestad BR. Concurrent Aerobic and Strength Training:
Scientific Basics and Practical Applications. Sprinter International
Publishing; 2019.

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A CALORIE CALCULATOR CAUTION
1. a calorie calculator won’t account for this: Ravussin E, Lillioja S,
Anderson TE, et al. Determinants of 24-hour energy expenditure
in man. Methods and results using a respiratory chamber. J Clin
Invest. 1986;78(6):1568-1578.
2. (unprocessed foods cost more energy to digest than highly
processed ones): Westerterp KR. Diet induced thermogenesis.
Nutr Metab (Lond). 2004;1(1):5.

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EVERYTHING’S AMAZING AND NOBODY’S
HAPPY
1. overuse of social media and other modern ills: Twenge JM,
Campbell WK, Freeman EC. Generational differences in young
adults’ life goals, concern for others, and civic orientation, 1966-
2009. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2012;102(5):1045-1062.; Shakya HB,
Christakis NA. Association of Facebook Use With Compromised
Well-Being: A Longitudinal Study. Am J Epidemiol.
2017;185(3):203-211.
2. “Happiness is love. Full stop.: Harvard Medical School. Study of
Adult Development. Harvard Second Generation Study website.
Accessed 9 January, 2024.
https://www.adultdevelopmentstudy.org/grantandglueckstudy.
3. improve wellbeing and happiness even in people who are already
relatively happy: Toepfer SM, Cichy K, Peters P. Letters of
Gratitude: Further Evidence for Author Benefits. Journal of
Happiness Studies. 2012;13;187-201.

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MORE SIMPLE DIET HACKS
1. reduces energy expenditure: Ağagündüz D, Acar-Tek N, Bozkurt
O. Effect of Intermittent Fasting (18/6) on Energy Expenditure,
Nutritional Status, and Body Composition in Healthy Adults. Evid
Based Complement Alternat Med. 2021;2021:7809611.

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THE DIMINISHING RETURNS OF
OVERREACHING
1. a recipe for serious overreaching for just about anyone:
Amirthalingam T, Mavros Y, Wilson GC, et al. Effects of a
Modified German Volume Training Program on Muscular
Hypertrophy and Strength. J Strength Cond Res.
2017;31(11):3109-3119.

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COMPLAINING VS. DOING
1. this, in turn, discourages effective action: Wojciszke B, Baryla W,
Szymkow A, et al. Saying is experiencing: Affective consequences
of complaining and affirmation Saying is Experiencing: Affective
Consequences of Complaining and Affirmation. Polish
Psychological Bulletin. 2009;40:74-84.
2. a negative feedback loop can develop: Kowalski RM. Complaints
and complaining: functions, antecedents, and consequences.
Psychol Bull. 1996;119(2):179-196.
3. formidable emotional barriers to positive assessment, action, and
change: Aubé C, Rousseau, V. Yes, we complain … so what?
Journal of Managerial Psychology. 2016;31(7): 1137-1151.
4. “nothing can be done” and “nothing works.”: Lehmann-
Willenbrock N, Kauffeld S. The downside of communication:
Complaining circles in group discussions. In: Schuman S, ed. The
handbook for working with difficult groups: How they are
difficult, why they are difficult, what you can do. Jossey-
Bass/Wiley; 2010:33-54.

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10 TIPS FOR KEEPING THE WEIGHT OFF
1. regain more than half of the weight lost within two years of losing
it: Hall KD, Kahan S. Maintenance of lost weight and long-term
management of obesity. Med Clin North Am. 2018;102(1):183-
197. doi:10.1016/j.mcna.2017.08.012.
2. the less hungry you’ll generally be: Liu S, Wang X, Zheng Q, et
al. Sleep Deprivation and Central Appetite Regulation. Nutrients.
2022;14(24):5196.. Greer SM, Goldstein AN, Walker MP. The
impact of sleep deprivation on food desire in the human brain. Nat
Commun. 2013;4:2259.

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ARE YOU SURE YOU’RE OVERTRAINING?
1. to back yourself into that corner: Stellingwerff T, Heikura IA,
Meeusen R, et al. Overtraining Syndrome (OTS) and Relative
Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S): Shared Pathways,
Symptoms and Complexities. Sports Med. 2021;51(11):2251-
2280.; Grandou C, Wallace L, Impellizzeri FM, et al. Overtraining
in Resistance Exercise: An Exploratory Systematic Review and
Methodological Appraisal of the Literature. Sports Med.
2020;50(4):815-828.

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THE PROBLEM WITH PROGRESS
1. choose a chocolate bar for a snack over an apple: Fishbach A,
Dhar R. Goals as Excuses or Guides: The Liberating Effect of
Perceived Goal Progress on Choice. Journal of Consumer
Research. 2005;32:370-377.
2. the work we still have to do rather than the work we’ve already
done: Fishbach A, Dhar R, Zhang Y. Subgoals as substitutes or
complements: The role of goal accessibility. J Pers Soc Psychol.
2006;91(2):232-242.

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DIET ON, DIET OFF
1. (taking a total of thirty-two weeks): Byrne NM, Sainsbury A, King
NA, et al. Intermittent energy restriction improves weight loss
efficiency in obese men: the MATADOR study. Int J Obes (Lond).
2018;42(2):129-138.

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MORE SIMPLE EXERCISE HACKS
1. (which can influence muscle building indirectly): Nunes JP, Grgic
J, Cunha PM, et al. What influence does resistance exercise order
have on muscular strength gains and muscle hypertrophy? A
systematic review and meta-analysis. Eur J Sport Sci.
2021;21(2):149-157.

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TARGETED FAT LOSS
1. the changes are too small to matter: Stallknecht B, Dela F, Helge
JW. Are blood flow and lipolysis in subcutaneous adipose tissue
influenced by contractions in adjacent muscles in humans?. Am J
Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2007;292(2):E394-E399.

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MORE SIMPLE HEALTH HACKS
1. improve cognition and sleep: Darki C, Riley J, Dadabhoy DP, et
al. The Effect of Classical Music on Heart Rate, Blood Pressure,
and Mood. Cureus. 2022;14(7):e27348.; Jenkins JS. The Mozart
effect. J R Soc Med. 2001;94(4):170-172; Jensen KL. The effects
of selected classical music on self-disclosure. J Music Ther.
2001;38(1):2-27; Chafin S, Roy M, Gerin W, et al. Music can
facilitate blood pressure recovery from stress. Br J Health
Psychol. 2004;9(3):393-403.; Siedliecki SL, Good M. Effect of
music on power, pain, depression and disability. J Adv Nurs.
2006;54(5):553-562.; Hanser SB, Thompson LW. Effects of a
music therapy strategy on depressed older adults. J Gerontol.
1994;49(6):P265-9; Scheufele PM. Effects of Progressive
Relaxation and Classical Music on Measurements of Attention,
Relaxation, and Stress Responses. J Behav Med. 2000;23(2):207-
228.
2. psychiatric disorders, cognitive decline, and obesity: Chaput JP,
Dutil C, Featherstone R, et al. Sleep timing, sleep consistency, and
health in adults: a systematic review. Appl Physiol Nutr Metab.
2020;45(10 (Suppl. 2)):S232-S247.; Knutson KL, von Schantz M.
Associations between chronotype, morbidity and mortality in the
UK Biobank cohort. Chronobiol Int. 2018;35(8):1045-1053.;
Teixeira GP, Guimarães KC, Soares AGNS, et al. Role of
chronotype in dietary intake, meal timing, and obesity: a
systematic review. Nutr Rev. 2022;81(1):75-90.; Zou H, Zhou H,
Yan R, et al. Chronotype, circadian rhythm, and psychiatric
disorders: Recent evidence and potential mechanisms. Front
Neurosci. 2022;16:811771.
3. including binge eating and emotional eating: Kinsey AW,
Ormsbee MJ. The health impact of nighttime eating: old and new
perspectives. Nutrients. 2015;7(4):2648-2662.; Kaur J, Dang AB,
Gan J, et al. Night Eating Syndrome in Patients With Obesity and
Binge Eating Disorder: A Systematic Review. Front Psychol.
2022;12:766827.
4. reduce hunger, cravings, and calorie intake: Rusu A, Ciobanu
DM, Inceu G, et al. Variability in Sleep Timing and Dietary
Intake: A Scoping Review of the Literature. Nutrients.
2022;14(24):5248.

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TOUGH LOVE AND GENTLE COMPASSION
1. siblings are more likely to gain weight as well: Christakis NA,
Fowler JH. The spread of obesity in a large social network over 32
years. N Engl J Med. 2007;357(4):370-379.

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WEEKEND WEIGHT GAIN
1. gain weight on the weekends: Racette SB, Weiss EP, Schechtman
KB, et al. Influence of weekend lifestyle patterns on body weight.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2008;16(8):1826-1830.
2. studies link the latter with weight gain and obesity: Chao AM,
Jastreboff AM, White MA, et al. Stress, cortisol, and other
appetite-related hormones: Prospective prediction of 6-month
changes in food cravings and weight. Obesity (Silver Spring).
2017;25(4):713-720.
3. Find which approach works best for you: Varady KA, Cienfuegos
S, Ezpeleta M, et al. Cardiometabolic Benefits of Intermittent
Fasting. Annu Rev Nutr. 2021;41:333-361.; Welton S, Minty R,
O’Driscoll T, et al. Intermittent fasting and weight loss:
Systematic review. Can Fam Physician. 2020;66(2):117-125.;
Elsworth RL, Monge A, Perry R, et al. The Effect of Intermittent
Fasting on Appetite: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
Nutrients. 2023;15(11):2604.

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DOES PROTEIN TIMING MATTER?
1. didn’t result in muscle loss: Tinsley GM, Forsse JS, Butler NK, et
al. Time-restricted feeding in young men performing resistance
training: A randomized controlled trial. Eur J Sport Sci.
2017;17(2):200-207.
2. eating one-to-three servings of protein per day in six-to-eight-hour
feeding windows: Soeters MR, Lammers NM, Dubbelhuis PF, et
al. Intermittent fasting does not affect whole-body glucose, lipid,
or protein metabolism. Am J Clin Nutr. 2009;90(5):1244-1251.
3. Similar effects have been seen in athletes in a calorie deficit as
well: Areta JL, Burke LM, Ross ML, et al. Timing and distribution
of protein ingestion during prolonged recovery from resistance
exercise alters myofibrillar protein synthesis. J Physiol.
2013;591(9):2319-2331.; Phillips SM, Van Loon LJ. Dietary
protein for athletes: from requirements to optimum adaptation. J
Sports Sci. 2011;29 Suppl 1:S29-S38.
4. process about 7 grams of protein per hour for muscle protein
synthesis: Bilsborough S, Mann N. A review of issues of dietary
protein intake in humans. Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab.
2006;16(2):129-152.
5. stimulates muscle protein synthesis rates: Atherton PJ, Etheridge
T, Watt PW, et al. Muscle full effect after oral protein: time-
dependent concordance and discordance between human muscle
protein synthesis and mTORC1 signaling. Am J Clin Nutr.
2010;92(5):1080-1088.
6. lasts for up to three hours: Noton L, Wilson G. Optimal protein
intake to maximize muscle protein synthesis Examinations of
optimal meal protein intake and frequency for athletes. Agro Food
Industry Hi-Tech. 2009;20(2):54-57.

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STOP WATCHING PORN
1. It can lead to behaviors that closely mirror addiction: Love T,
Laier C, Brand M, et al. Neuroscience of Internet Pornography
Addiction: A Review and Update. Behav Sci (Basel).
2015;5(3):388-433.
2. rather than larger, long-term rewards: Negash S, Sheppard NV,
Lambert NM, et al. Trading Later Rewards for Current Pleasure:
Pornography Consumption and Delay Discounting. J Sex Res.
2016;53(6):689-700.
3. It increases the likelihood of a romantic breakup: Perry SL, Davis
JT. Are Pornography Users More Likely to Experience a Romantic
Breakup? Evidence from Longitudinal Data. Sexuality & Culture.
2017;21(4):1157-1176.
4. desire for more extreme forms of porn: Dwulit AD, Rzymski P.
Prevalence, Patterns and Self-Perceived Effects of Pornography
Consumption in Polish University Students: A Cross-Sectional
Study. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019;16(10):1861.
5. It can contribute to erectile dysfunction: Jacobs T, Geysemans B,
Van Hal G, et al. Associations Between Online Pornography
Consumption and Sexual Dysfunction in Young Men: Multivariate
Analysis Based on an International Web-Based Survey. JMIR
Public Health Surveill. 2021;7(10):e32542.
6. It can create an appetite for high-risk sexual behaviors: Wright P,
Randall A. Internet pornography exposure and risky sexual
behavior among adult males in the United States. Computers in
Human Behavior. 2012;28(4):1410-1416.
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IS 1,200 CALORIES PER DAY DANGEROUS?
1. mood disruption can become more pronounced: Müller MJ,
Enderle J, Pourhassan M, et al. Metabolic adaptation to caloric
restriction and subsequent refeeding: the Minnesota Starvation
Experiment revisited. Am J Clin Nutr. 2015;102(4):807-819.

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DO YOU BELIEVE?
1. an inhaler that contained nebulized salt water: Luparello T, Lyons
HA, Bleecker ER, et al. Influences of suggestion on airway
reactivity in asthmatic subjects. Psychosom Med. 1968;30(6):819-
825.

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DIAL 5-2 FOR FAT LOSS
1. continuous calorie restriction (CCR), for losing weight: Seimon
RV, Roekenes JA, Zibellini J, et al. Do intermittent diets provide
physiological benefits over continuous diets for weight loss? A
systematic review of clinical trials. Mol Cell Endocrinol.
2015;418 Pt 2:153-172.
followed by a period, usually the same, of maintenance
calories: Byrne NM, Sainsbury A, King NA, et al.
Intermittent energy restriction improves weight loss
efficiency in obese men: the MATADOR study. Int J Obes
(Lond). 2018;42(2):129-138.

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SICK OF TRACKING YOUR CALORIES?
1. making it easier to effectively manage energy balance: Dorling J,
Broom DR, Burns SF, et al. Acute and Chronic Effects of Exercise
on Appetite, Energy Intake, and Appetite-Related Hormones: The
Modulating Effect of Adiposity, Sex, and Habitual Physical
Activity. Nutrients. 2018;10(9):1140.

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HOW FAST CAN YOU LOSE FAT AND NOT
MUSCLE?
1. is around 30 calories per pound of body fat per day: Alpert SS. A
limit on the energy transfer rate from the human fat store in
hypophagia. J Theor Biol. 2005;233(1):1-13.

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WILL FASTED CARDIO HELP YOU LOSE FAT
FASTER?
1. the less body fat you’ll break down for energy: Choi SM, Tucker
DF, Gross DN, et al. Insulin regulates adipocyte lipolysis via an
Akt-independent signaling pathway. Mol Cell Biol.
2010;30(21):5009-5020.
2. (resulting in about the same amount of total fat burned over a 24-
hour period): Vieira AF, Costa RR, Macedo RC, et al. Effects of
aerobic exercise performed in fasted v. fed state on fat and
carbohydrate metabolism in adults: a systematic review and meta-
analysis. Br J Nutr. 2016;116(7):1153-1164.; Aird TP, Davies RW,
Carson BP. Effects of fasted vs fed-state exercise on performance
and post-exercise metabolism: A systematic review and meta-
analysis. Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2018;28(5):1476-1493.; Paoli
A, Marcolin G, Zonin F, et al. Exercising fasting or fed to enhance
fat loss? Influence of food intake on respiratory ratio and excess
postexercise oxygen consumption after a bout of endurance
training. Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2011;21(1):48-54.;
Schoenfeld BJ, Aragon AA, Wilborn CD, et al. Body composition
changes associated with fasted versus non-fasted aerobic exercise.
JISSN. 2014;11(54).

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ARE SEED AND VEGETABLE OILS
UNHEALTHY?
1. another type known as an omega-3 fatty acid: Simopoulos AP. An
Increase in the Omega-6/Omega-3 Fatty Acid Ratio Increases the
Risk for Obesity. Nutrients. 2016;8(3):128.
2. increased systemic inflammation (a powerful driver of disease):
Johnson GH, Fritsche K. Effect of dietary linoleic acid on markers
of inflammation in healthy persons: a systematic review of
randomized controlled trials. J Acad Nutr Diet. 2012;112(7):1029-
1041.e10415.; Harris WS. The omega-6/omega-3 ratio and
cardiovascular disease risk: uses and abuses. Curr Atheroscler
Rep. 2006;8(6):453-459.; Su H, Liu R, Chang M, et al. Dietary
linoleic acid intake and blood inflammatory markers: a systematic
review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Food
Funct. 2017;8(9):3091-3103.; Pahwa R, Goyal A, Jialal I. Chronic
Inflammation. StatPearls website. Updated August 7, 2023.
Accessed January 16, 2024.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK493173/.
3. including heart disease, obesity, cancer, and diabetes: Ascherio A,
Willett WC. Health effects of trans fatty acids. Am J Clin Nutr.
1997;66(4 Suppl):1006S-1010S.

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THE THREE-TO-FIVE FORMULA FOR
STRENGTH
1. Think strong, lift strong: Slimani M, Taylor L, Baker JS, et al.
Effects of mental training on muscular force, hormonal and
physiological changes in kickboxers. J Sports Med Phys Fitness.
2017;57(7-8):1069-1079.
2. push your tongue into the roof of your mouth: Ebben WP,
Petushek EJ, Fauth ML, et al. EMG analysis of concurrent
activation potentiation. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2010;42(3):556-
562.
3. feel more confident in your ability to successfully complete each
set: Sheridan A, Marchant DC, Williams EL, et al. Presence of
Spotters Improves Bench Press Performance: A Deception Study.
J Strength Cond Res. 2019;33(7):1755-1761.

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THE ANCESTRAL EATER
1. improve bone health, muscle mass, strength, and weight
management: Heaney RP. Dairy and bone health. J Am Coll Nutr.
2009;28 Suppl 1:82S-90S.; Josse AR, Tang JE, Tarnopolsky MA,
et al. Body composition and strength changes in women with milk
and resistance exercise. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2010;42(6):1122-
1130.; Van Loan M. The role of dairy foods and dietary calcium in
weight management. J Am Coll Nutr. 2009;28 Suppl 1:120S-9S.
2. and even reduce mortality: Masters RC, Liese AD, Haffner SM,
Wagenknecht LE, Hanley AJ. Whole and refined grain intakes are
related to inflammatory protein concentrations in human plasma. J
Nutr. 2010;140(3):587-594.; Katcher HI, Legro RS, Kunselman
AR, et al. The effects of a whole grain-enriched hypocaloric diet
on cardiovascular disease risk factors in men and women with
metabolic syndrome. Am J Clin Nutr. 2008;87(1):79-90.; de
Munter JS, Hu FB, Spiegelman D, et al. Whole grain, bran, and
germ intake and risk of type 2 diabetes: a prospective cohort study
and systematic review. PLoS Med. 2007;4(8):e261.; Jacobs DR Jr,
Marquart L, Slavin J, et al. Whole-grain intake and cancer: an
expanded review and meta-analysis. Nutr Cancer. 1998;30(2):85-
96.; Jacobs DR Jr, Andersen LF, Blomhoff R. Whole-grain
consumption is associated with a reduced risk of
noncardiovascular, noncancer death attributed to inflammatory
diseases in the Iowa Women’s Health Study. Am J Clin Nutr.
2007;85(6):1606-1614.
3. Vegetable oil isn’t unhealthy per se: Bazzano LA, Thompson AM,
Tees MT, et al. Non-soy legume consumption lowers cholesterol
levels: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Nutr
Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2011;21(2):94-103.
4. similar to chimpanzees today: Henry AG, Ungar PS, Passey BH,
et al. The diet of Australopithecus sediba. Nature.
2012;487(7405):90-93.
5. may have been based on the cereal grass sorghum: Mercader J.
Mozambican grass seed consumption during the Middle Stone
Age. Science. 2009;326(5960):1680-1683.
6. ate starchy grains, nearly 44,000 years ago: Henry AG, Brooks
AS, Piperno DR. Microfossils in calculus demonstrate
consumption of plants and cooked foods in Neanderthal diets
(Shanidar III, Iraq; Spy I and II, Belgium). Proc Natl Acad Sci U S
A. 2011;108(2):486-491.
7. goes back as far as 30,000 years in Europe: Revedin A,
Aranguren B, Becattini R, et al. Thirty thousand-year-old evidence
of plant food processing. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
2010;107(44):18815-18819.
8. may have eaten potato-like vegetables: Hardy K, Brand-Miller J,
Brown KD, et al. THE IMPORTANCE OF DIETARY
CARBOHYDRATE IN HUMAN EVOLUTION. Q Rev Biol.
2015;90(3):251-268.
9. and honey (with this being the most important): Challa HJ,
Bandlamudi M, Uppaluri KR. Paleolithic Diet. StatPearls website.
Updated July 4, 2023. Accessed January 16, 2024.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK482457/.; Marlowe FW,
Berbesque JC. Tubers as fallback foods and their impact on Hadza
hunter-gatherers. Am J Phys Anthropol. 2009;140(4):751-758.
10. contains berries and other wild fruits and honey: Kimondo J,
Miaron J, Mutai P, et al. Ethnobotanical survey of food and
medicinal plants of the Ilkisonko Maasai community in Kenya. J
Ethnopharmacol. 2015;175:463-469.
11. were similar for ancient and modern-day humans: Berens AJ,
Cooper TL, Lachance J. The Genomic Health of Ancient
Hominins. Hum Biol. 2017;89(1):7-19.
12. are likely healthier than genomes from the distant past: Knipper
C, Reinhold S, Gresky J, et al. Diet and subsistence in Bronze Age
pastoral communities from the southern Russian steppes and the
North Caucasus. PLoS One. 2020;15(10):e0239861.

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CAN YOU REALLY DO YOUR OWN
RESEARCH?
1. can lead even the most endowed experts astray: Vallabh Minikel
E. John Ioannidis: the state of research on research. CureFFI
website. Published March 17, 2016. Accessed January 16, 2024.
https://www.cureffi.org/2016/03/17/john-ioannidis-the-state-of-
research-on-research/.

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FIVE OF MY FAVORITE HIIT WORKOUTS
1. (and more specifically, than steady exercise at about 80 percent of
maximum heart rate): Tucker WJ, Angadi SS, Gaesser GA.
Excess Postexercise Oxygen Consumption After High-Intensity
and Sprint Interval Exercise, and Continuous Steady-State
Exercise. J Strength Cond Res. 2016;30(11):3090-3097.
2. improves endurance more than moderate-intensity cardio alone.:
Stöggl T, Sperlich B. Polarized training has greater impact on key
endurance variables than threshold, high intensity, or high volume
training. Front Physiol. 2014;5:33.

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RESTING IS INVESTING
1. the most restful activities are as follows: Hammond C, Lewis G.
The Rest Test: Preliminary Findings from a Large-Scale
International Survey on Rest. In: Callard F, Staines K, Wilkes J,
eds. The Restless Compendium: Interdisciplinary Investigations of
Rest and Its Opposites. Palgrave Macmillan; 2016: Chapter 8.
2. causes feelings of isolation, unhappiness, and jealousy: Robinson
JP, Martin S. What do happy people do? Social Indicators
Research. 2008;89:565-571.; Reinecke L, Hartmann T, Eden, A.
The guilty couch potato: The role of ego depletion in reducing
recovery through media use. Journal of Communication.
2014;64(4):569-589; Kaspersky Lab. Kaspersky Lab Study Shows
How Social Media Threatens Real-life Communication.
Kaspersky website. Published January 19, 2017. Accessed January
16, 2024. https://usa.kaspersky.com/about/press-
releases/2017_kaspersky-lab-study-shows-how-social-media-
threatens-real-life-communication.

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DOES ENERGY FLUX MATTER?
1. (the amount of calories you burn digesting food): Melby CL, Paris
HL, Sayer RD, et al. Increasing Energy Flux to Maintain Diet-
Induced Weight Loss. Nutrients. 2019;11(10):2533.

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I WANT YOU TO BE A PESSIMIST (ABOUT
PESSIMISM)
1. bring about a series of frightful collisions: Telegraphic Cataclysm,
A.” The New York Times. 1881; February 19. Available at:
https://www.nytimes.com/1881/02/19/archives/a-telegraphic-
cataclysm.html

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THE CATCH WITH HIGH-TECH TRACKING
1. the Apple Watch 6, the Polar Vantage V, and the Fitbit Sense:
Hajj-Boutros G, Landry-Duval MA, Comtois AS, et al. Wrist-
worn devices for the measurement of heart rate and energy
expenditure: A validation study for the Apple Watch 6, Polar
Vantage V and Fitbit Sense. Eur J Sport Sci. 2023;23(2):165-177.

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