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Episode 075: Vince Del Monte on Building Muscle & Getting Lean

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075-vince-image1-300x300In this episode, Greg talks to Vince Del Monte, fitness model and online fitness entrepreneur.

You’ll learn about Vince’s systematic approach to building muscle and why it’s important to start with a basic strategy before graduating to a more advanced split and exercises. Specifically, Vince will lay out his full body split to make rapid gains.

After that, you can move into a more routine, but if you’re looking for the place to start building a solid foundation – this is it.

To download the 3-Day Full Body Strength & Muscle Building Routine (PDF), click here.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

  • Why beginners should do full body workouts to maximize gains
  • Why learning to cook great meals will make dieting easier than ever before
  • How to get ready for a show or competition
  • When to progress to more advanced split routines
  • How to build the hard-to-grow muscle groups like shoulders, upper chest and arms
Show The Transcript +

Greg: Hey, what’s going on guys? You’re listening to the Road to Ripped podcast. And, today, I have a very special guest. We have on Vince del Monte. I’ve actually been queuing tabs on a stuff, you know, for a long time back in, you know, I wanna say 2009-2010. He’s just been exploding on the fitness scene, really helps guys build their muscle. What’s going on Vince?

 

Vince: Hey, great. Thanks for having me, man.

 

Greg: Dude, it’s, it’s my pleasure. So, we’re gonna get some really cool stuff today. You know, one thing I, I really, you know, like to appreciate about you is that there’s not so many fitness, fitness people that are actually in like really incredible shape. And, you’re taking your physique to amazing condition. You even won a very prestigious fitness model competition. And…

 

Vince: That’s right.

 

Greg: And, so it, it’s, it’s rare to have guys that, you know, that talked about fitness that also look like fitness models. It sort of like, a, you know, it’s sort of the double, the double threat.

 

Vince: Right. Right. Well, that’s cool. It’s just been my story grade. I mean, you know, a lot of people know me as a guy who’s got a lot of products on the internet and does… You know, I don’t really… I think one of the things I tried to figure out when I came online was like, you know, “What’s my position? Where am I coming at this all from? And, for me, I’m just a guy that is like you. I, you know, started off with horrible genetics. I was a long distance runner in high school, all three university. I took that really far, but if anyone who got in to body building with bad genetics, it was me. I mean, I was right away. I was running literally up to 100 miles a week and, you know, I wasn’t any well and all that. I had no knowledge as how to build muscle in the gym, so I was really starting off fresh and I was just very, very fortunate at a young age. When I was out in the university at 22, I was able to meet somebody at my church, of all places, a very, very smart provincial level body builder and this guy was a 100% drug free. And, he essentially took me under his wings. And, he kinda took all the size that I learn, all the concepts and things that I learn in the university from exercise Science degree, and he basically turned them in to actionable steps. He told me to do this and do that and don’t do this and don’t do that.And, I just did what he told me to do and I had a very dramatic transformation in the first six months of my lifting career. I experienced obviously some significant new beginnings but I also contribute my progress to a, a fairly intelligent way of training. One that was very different that I was hearing guys saying about, you know, the magazines and stuff. And, you know, I got a lot of people at my gym when I was a trainer ask me, “Hey.” You know, I used to be known as a guy, I used to be known as “Skinny Vinny.” And, you know, I made the transformations. All my friends were like, “Oh, man. How did you do it? How did you do it?” So, I really had no interest in creating a program or a book or selling anything. People just kept asking me, kept asking. So, I finally said, “Well, why don’t I just put my program in to an e-book?” and I put that all a long time ago. And, that program was essentially how I did my first transformation. And, then everything I have put out ever since then is essentially been what I have learned along the way to transform my own body. So, you know, I’ve just kind of evolved over the years. As you know, if you’re not growing you’re dying. And, people follow me, I think, because they know I’m on this journey and I’m learning and I have accessed, you know, very smart people that I can learn from to bridge the gap and I basically share what’s working for myself and with the people that follow me.

 

Greg: Okay. Yeah, that makes, that makes a lot of sense. And, and I think that’s the best way to get educated. When you work on your physique, you just get such a better understanding of what’s happening and then you can take that and then, you know, apply that to clients and then start running programs. And, it just seems like the most effective way to get a full understanding of what it takes to build muscle. So, that your first forum you created, which one was that?

 

Vince: No Nonsense Muscle Building.

 

Greg: Right. No Nonsense Muscle Building. So, that’s sounds very familiar. I’m recalling about that one back, way back in the day. And, you had some great YouTube videos, kind of explaining the importance of compounds movements. And, you know, while we’re on this thread, let’s talk about the difference between building muscle as a beginner. So, I know when you first started out, you’re that skinny long distance runner probably like about 45 and 6 feet or something.

 

Vince: Yeah.

 

Greg: What was that?

 

Vince: Yeah, you’re right. 149, I couldn’t budge.

 

Greg: 149. So, let’s talk about, you know, building muscles as a beginner. And, then, you know, right now, you’ve, you know, recently that you got this amazing transformation, when you really thickened out and built a lot of this stubborn muscle groups like the upper chest, the shoulders, and arms. And, let’s talk about what it took to, to achieve that, what, you know. First, you know, a lot of people listen to this, they probably are still needing to build their first significant amount of muscles. So, let’s kind of hit on that angle first.

 

Vince: So, what I did back then is very different than what I do today. I took a very qualitative approach to training. I would have been in the more low volume, high intensity check back when I started, so training only a few times a week. I’ll share a couple of the key principles. You know, one of the main things was full body workouts and most people kinda block it those also for beginners. And, you’re exactly right. I was a beginner. And, the whole thing for me was to avoid junk sets. And, when I… You know, one of my mentors taught me right off the bat is that a lot of these programs guys are really about in the magazines or are trying to follow from guys on YouTube, you know, a lot of people come in fake not this, or whatever. They’re drug programs and they’re essentially designed for guys who have great genetics or taken helpers to help them recover from it. But, for normal guys like us, those workouts just end up cause me to pace yourself. They’re like marathon kind of workouts, you know what I’m talking about, 20 to 24 sets per body part. And, that you can do 20 to 24 sets. That’s easy, but they’re all gonna be at about 60% effort.

 

Greg: Right.

 

Vince: You have to understand that intensity is inversely related with volume. So, the whole, my whole… My coach is essentially, essentially like, you know, it’s, it’s, you know, what today Tim Ferriss calls the minimum effective dose. If you can create a stimuli on your muscles that they’ve never experienced before with one set, why would you bother doing two sets? Then all goes back, you know, getting a sun tan instead of a sunburn. You know, if you only need 15 minutes in the sun, why would you go out in the sun for 20 minutes. So, you have to understand that things are effective to a certain point and that he is not to do any more than necessary which was very counterintuitive because most people think, “I gotta go to the gym for an hour, two hours. How could I possibly get results from 15, 20-minute workouts?” So, my approach was full body workouts at the start of my transformation and hitting the muscle twice every five days. And, the exercises stayed the same for the duration of the entire program. So, exercise selection is one variable that needs to be, that doesn’t need to be changed especially when you’re a beginner. The key is to develop those, those neuromuscular patterns and learning how to do the movement, so youcan actually get good at them. And, that’s actually one concept I still follow today. I apply very little exercise selection rotation in my programs today. Usually, and I’ll go up, I’ll go up for as long as 18-week, you know, 18-week cycles on the same exercises, but the variables that are changing are the reps, the sets, the rest periods,the temples. So, I find it, you know, what I found was as a beginner that your body adopts faster the reps, the rep ranges than any other variable. So, I was a big proponent of variable rep training when I first started. So, every workout was like a different rep range, but we were working on the same exercises. So, I’ll give you an example. Exercise one… I’m sorry. Day one maybe, you know, five sets of five and then four sets of 10 and then three sets of 20. So, by the end of the week, we hit all the different fiber types. So, that was the simple premise behind the program design when I first got started, few sets but with a very high effort, effort, intensity, whatever you wanna call it. So, more challenging weights and changing the rep ranges from workout to workout Is that make sense?

 

Greg: Yeah, that makes absolute sense. And, you know, as you’re talking about before, bring up the minimum effective dose, if you can get, if you can promote muscle growth with one set, you know, why do three or four. And, it’s a brilliant point and people don’t really… This is so hard for people to accept and sink in because it’s just to them, right, they feel like it have to do so much to get results, it’d be killing it and how could they make progress on, you know, a low volume approach, but it’s so true. And, then, like I think you brought up or talked about this point, or you know, you talked with the whole cause of big guns, like why bring the bing, the big guns in now, save them for when you need them. So, if you’re able to get results on a more simplistic program, that’s brilliant because then you can milk out as much gains out of that workout as possible before going on to the next step. Maybe try and do an advance one at first, what are you gonna do next?

 

Vince: Where are you gonna go? Yeah, exactly. Where are we gonna go? It’s… I’ll get, I’ll give you an, an analogy. You know, you see a lot of people running marathons these days, and they’re, they’re like, “What’s the point? You know, running a four or five-hour marathon. Come on.” Like, “Let’s run a fast 5K.”

 

Greg: Right.

 

Vince: And, then you get really good at the 5K, then let’s try and sustain that intensity for a 10K. And, then when you get good at the 10K, then let’s look at the 15K. But, these people will jump in to a two, a 26-mile race. Are you crazy? Like, it makes zero sense if people do it because, you know, they’re not concern with quality. They’re concerned with quantity. So, that’s a key, key concept. I think it’s so easy to, you know. You know, everybody, it’s kinda like gas pedal versus break. Everybody wants to hit the gas pedal, gas pedal, gas pedal, but well let’s think about kind of, you know, stir, let’s think about stirring wheel. Let’s think about break. Let’s think about the things that are, you know, gonna keep us on track. Not just, you know what I’m saying? So, it’s a very different mentality. It’s tough because when you see all these people online, and in the magazine, what do you see? You see guys grunting and they’re cracking up these insane workouts. Like, “Oh, that’s that must be what I need to do to look like that.” And, you know, I think one of the reasons I’ve kind of captured created the voice that people, you know, some people wanna listen to is because, you know, I’ve had to take a different route because I wasn’t blessed with those kinds of genetics.

 

Greg: Right. And, you know, going back to, you know, what you’re outlining as far as building strength as beginner, it’s so amazing how fast you can progress. Like if you’re doing a squats and bench some chance the first time, like you can make such fast gains. Doing them three times a week is amazing because then…

 

Vince: Right.

 

Greg: …you’re gonna progress three times faster than if you have to do them once week. Now, obviously you can’t.We doing that forever because eventually you, you need to get more form on each muscle group or would just be too freak, you know, if you hit it too often. But, but, yeah, so that’s like I kinda, I totally agree there because I always, for beginners, I always try and get them to do more simplistic, even full body routines just so they can, just in a few months make dramatic progress. So, let’s kind of, let’s kind of shift gears and talk about what you’d been doing recently to kind of fill the gaps and to, you know, build muscle at an advance level?

 

Vince: Okay. So I think, you know the piggy back up for four-day split You know, everybody wants to do five-day split. My, my simple advice to people I work with, you know, when they say, “Vince, when do I get to do the, when do I get to do the five-day split?” I always tell them, “You need to earn a five-day split.” So, first off, let’s spend six to 12 months taking full body workout as far as they go, and then we’ll go to a two-day split where we can put more volume for the upper, for the upper body than lower body. Then, let’s see how far we can take that. Maybe we get another half a year. Maybe we get a full year gains out of a two-day split. And, then let’s go to a three-day split. No push, pull, legs, whatever. There’s a no way different ways to do that. And, then we’ll go to a four-day split. But, you’ve got to earn it. All right? And, it all… It’s all based on sustaining the quality. If all of a sudden your workout just turned in to junk sets just to achieve something, then you’re totally missing the point of building muscle. Muscle… And, this is, this is probably the key concept that people wanna write down. Building muscle has to do with training disadvantages. What that means is that you wanna figure out how to make things harder on yourself,not easier on yourself, and that all comes down to learning how to create tension to achieve within the muscle, breaking the muscle down and that requires quality and effort. So, once we applied that, you know, training disadvantages equal training effects, you know. If we wanted to train and if you are looking… People that want training advantages, advantages or people who are in like crossfit, power liftings, athletics, people that actually want to get better at that individual thing. But, building muscle is very counterintuitive. You never want your workout become easier. You’re always looking for ways to tell your body, you say, “Holy crap.” You’ve never experienced this before better that. So, I mean, the concept of hypertrophy is the simplest thing in the world. The key is just how you manipulate the variables. So, you know, which leads in to our question. So, for me, today I found that… I’ve found that there’s a lot of different variables. Generally speaking, I train five times a week now and I find that I do very well taking two full days off a week, so every Thursday and every Sunday. So, three hard, one off, two hard, one off. That’s been my goal to split. But, you know, it needs to be mentioned that when I’m trying to lean out, there is a time and place for increasing training frequencies. So, I’ve gained already for a photo shoot in a couple of weeks. So, I still have that same split, but I got 3 a.m. workouts as well on top of all of that, but that’s because we’re in fat loss or deficit mode. So, there’s certainly a time and place to manipulate frequency. You know, we, I’ve even had clients trained up to 10 times a week for a short periods of time. But, it, that’s followed up by also, you know, five plus days of total time off so that they can super compensate. So, but, you know, right now, I find that most people respond in advance. Most advance trainees respond well to that five-day a mark if they’re not working out with helpers.

 

Greg: Okay. Yeah, that makes sense. I mean, so many people right off the bat before they’ve actually gone and built some good strength, jump right through the five-day routine, the five-day split. And, and this is probably most people that are new to training go right to the five-day split. And, it’s, it’s, they don’t realize that they are reading so much in the table just by doing a workout for advance lifters. But, yeah, so I mean, that makes a lot of senses. So, what’s… So, when you’re getting ready for a photo shoot or when you’re getting, you know, ready for competition and you’re dropping the calories down, what, so what’s, what kind of workouts are you adding on top of that? You mentioned that the three extra days in the A.M.

 

Vince: That’s really important to say, you know, before… I mean, I do my best to all cause grade not to drop my calories. Okay. One of the key principles for me in fat loss especially that I’m actually a skinny guy, right? So,anybody who’s listening who is a skinny guy, he needs to pay close attention here. The slower it takes to build muscle, the faster it comes off. Right? So, when it comes to fat loss for a guy who’s naturally thin, who has a hard time building muscle in the first place, I have to cut very, very slowly, like half a pound for a week for the best results. And, that’s actually something I’m doing now. A lot of people don’t have patience for that. They want to lose to two-pound, one, two-pound a week about one or two pounds per week. So, my whole philosophy of losing fat is to burn it off not to starve it off. So, my goal is to keep my calories as high as possible but to increase my training for frequency, plant more energy to train and so that my workouts can be more productive so that it was actually effort there so that I increase my metabolism. I can break more muscle down. I can create more, you know, energy domain after the workout is over. So, does that make sense?

 

Greg: Yes, exactly. I, I mean just to burn half a pound of fat per week is, is not much of a deficit. That’s like 250, 300 calories a day extra, I guess.

 

Vince: So, I mean I’m trying that my goal, you know, my calories right now, fat loss around 2,700 and that’s very different than when I was cutting for a show. They were like under 2,000 and, you know, at the end… And, I was lean and rip, but I lost way too much size. You know, I’m like, “Oh my God. This is frustrating.” So, my goal now is just, you know, do a slower cut, increase, introduce more training frequency to keep those calories high. So, it’s a slower process but allows me to stay fuller and bigger. And, again, it’s probably something kind of counterintuitive for people. So, you asked me, you know, what kind of things do I add. So, the weight training stays primarily the same. It’s mostly hypertrophy workouts. However, this is something most guys don’t talk about. What I have found to be very, very effective when guys are cutting who, you know, have a tendency to lose muscle or who intend to be skinny is to introduce strength based basis for two weeks every maybe month. And, this is very counterintuitive because people are thinking fat loss. I got to do metabolic workouts. I got to burn a lot of calories. I got to keep my rest period short. But, I found that by introducing hypertrophy, sorry strength based workouts like really heavy kind of stuff, I can give you some examples if you want, with longer rest periods and really challenging the load, you, the, the stimulation on the nervous system really helps keep your muscle mass intact more so than, you know, high volume pump style workouts. So, that’s been something I’ve learned recently. And, so, you know, I got the five days a week of weight training workouts. And, then what I also do in the same concept, minimum effective dose, I do barbell complexes once a week. And, are you familiar with barbell complexes?

 

Greg: Yes. When you do it kinda like when you hold the barbell and you go through like a few different exercises one after the other without really resting the barbell.

 

Vince: You got it, man. Yeah. So, I have one workout where I do… Those are brutal by the way. They’re excruciating and, the idea is to increase your performance on them from week to week. So, I have this one work that I’m doing. I do this once a week and this would be considered, you know, my fat loss workout where I do a stiff-legged deadlift in to an explosive jump. That’s exercise one. Then, I go to a bent over rows and then I go to standing shoulder press and then I go on back squat. And, the first week, I did it seven weeks ago, I did five sets,sort of like five rounds of six reps, on each with a 135 pounds and I took two minutes between each round. Last night, so seven weeks later, I’m up to 12 rounds, seven reps a set, still two minutes rest, but I’m doing it with a 155 pounds.

 

Greg: Wow.

 

Vince: And, it’s just been like really small increases in energy output each week. And, just very good, the whole of principle of consent and I have already an improvement. So, I take that approach to all my workout. So, that would be the barbell complex workout. I also do the track. I started off going once a week, but now that as I’m getting leaner, I have to do more. Now, I pumped that up to twice a week. But, like you said, you don’t back yourself in to a corner. You don’t start off with five cardio workouts a week for an hour in a machine. That’s retarded. So, you start off with the minimum effective dose and everybody asked me, “Well, how long do you do it for?” You do that until it stops working. So, you know, I was doing the barbell complexes for, you know, I got a lot of weeks out of it. I was losing my half a pound per week, and then all of a sudden, I just stopped losing fat. I think it was like two or three weeks straight. So, I thought, okay. We’ve plot hold on the barbell complex as I started doing intervals. And, then when I plot told after a few weeks on the intervals, I went back to barbell complexes. So, another concept people need to understand are all these techniques they hear about are simply tools. There’s no right or wrong tool. It just depends on what you need at that moment.

 

Greg: Right. Okay. That makes a lot of sense. You’re kinda flash us some good points there. One of which is, is utilizing strength workouts during a cut which is very senseful. That’s something that I’ve been doing because it’s cool to see… If you build up some solid strength and you lean down while holding that strength, you improve your relative strength and I’ve always been really focused on, you know, building relative strength which is really cool because then body weight exercises like muscle up someone and push, it become really easy. When you’re lean and then you maintain a high level of, of strength which is something that I find pretty cool and so.

 

Vince: You’re right. That’s the form of progressive overload, but a lot of people don’t realize that. If you’re able to do the same amount of weight or lower volume with the, while weighing less, that is a form of progressive overload.

 

Greg: Right. Right.

 

Vince: Right. Yeah.

 

Greg: My… I don’t really think about like that. That’s, that’s absolutely right.

 

Vince: Most people think progressive overload more reps, more sets. It’s like meathead, the whole meathead mentality. Well, there’s actually like literally a dozen different things you could do for manipulating progressive overload. So, you know, that’s just one of many.

 

Greg: Right. And, so, you, you know, some people when they’re, they’re going on like bulking programs and they are, you know, eating way too much, putting on a few pounds a week, they might actually lose, you know, relative strength even though they’re adding weight to the bar because the, you know, the, the weight, the body weight is coming up way too fast versus them on the way they’re lifting which is usually a risk key for disaster. Now, now when you’re cutting like because, you know, you mentioned how you usually cut half a pound per week and you usually, you know, up your, you know, your workload whether it’s through, you know, more, more, you know, barbell complexes or intervals or track workouts or whatnot, how long are you usually cutting for? Like… what body fat percentages do you usually stay in, when you maintain or bulking up, and then what body fat percentages when you’re trying to lean down to, and how long does that take like half a pound per week?

 

 

Vince: Yes so this is, this is, something , this is the trickiest thing again you’ll don’t really learn this until you’ve done a couple of photo-shoots, or competitions, you know, with the hard gone to your head deadline so, the key to all this, is to give yourself enough time, so you want to your –listeners wanna write that down, give yourself enough time, the people that have to resort to all the idiotic you know, extremes styles of eating and things and methods of training, again which have the time and place, you know, if you said, hey Bennie let’s go to Vegas in two weeks, and I wasn’t ready, you better believe I’m gonna do some idiotic things next two weeks, its like pool party in two weeks, so I get it there’s a time and place for that, but, ultimately if you want to look your best, you have to give yourself enough time, so you know , for this photo shoot, I’m doing, I didn’t give myself a hard deadline, now its like you know, I’m getting near the last ten pounds, you know, I’m gonna be shooting at the end of September now, now it’s game on, now I have to stay on track, so I’m you know, how long does it take, it really it’s up to the person, you know, it depends on how quickly they want to arrive at their destination, and how they want to travel to their destination, right so, I’ll be honest half a pound per week is not hard, I mean, you know what I mean? Like You got to stick to your diet but I mean, if you slip up here there, I mean it’s pretty hard not to lose half a pound per week. It all depends on how comfortable and how fast you want to arrive at your destination, so you know, if I wanted to make my diet a little harder, I could definitely do that, and I’m gonna start to loosing fat a little quicker, but I think the key is, I mean that just results in our cascade of negative, not negative, negative but catabolic hormones, right? You start getting stressed, then you don’t enjoy the process and then you regret it and then you binge when you’re done, it’s hard to sustain when you arrive there, so I always find that the slower the progress, the more likelihood of you sustaining it when you achieve it. Does that make sense?

 

Greg: Oh, Exactly! I can relate first hand to myself, and countless examples of people that I work with or the people I know, and you know, it’s funny because the first time I loose cutting to a low body fat, I went hard, I went really hard, I.. calories were where well under 2000 and it was brutal, there were a lot of binge eating then, and a rebound that came after and it just, it just felt like, it just food was just always on my mind. I could just not think about food, and then it was hard just to go back to a middle ground where I just maintained my weight. I just want to constantly eat, and so I did that a couple of times and it just didn’t work so, now, I don’t even like having deadlines. I mean them like having a photo shoot that I have to get ready for. I’ve rather just take my time, get really lean, and then once because I hate the pressure thing. It’s a backfires at me this days because I did that, and I’ve burnt hell from it, even though I’m a young guy but it’s true, so you know, I just like to kinda naturally take my time, getting its like seven to ten percent body fat range and, if I want to cut it like, few body fat percentage points, I can do it slowly over couple of months and I enjoy the whole process and when I get there, there’s like you said there’s not like that, that binge eating that rebound – that re balance.

 

Vince: Got it, yeah, I think that’s the key, so you because yeah, when the changes are smaller they’re easier to manage but when they’re drastic they’re you know, too much change too fast, you know in anything in life, it’s just too much for people,so you know, they get there, and they’re like “Holy crap! What do I do with this body” but when it comes off slowly those habits that they’ve created to get there they’re most likely more solidified.

 

Greg: Right exactly, so like for me, in a like how what I tell my clients is, um well I guess, this first develop for myself, but I just never wanted to to do a cut that I didn’t enjoy. If I wasn’t enjoying it, like I won’t do either, find a way to make it enjoyable and you know, when you’re like 12-13 percent body fat, trying to lose two pounds per week. It is brutal, like those big –it is killer, and then you know, you lose your sex drive and the testosterone drops and so, I rather take a much longer approach for me to be able to enjoy the journey, than slam it with a pedal, probably screw up along the way and you know, the fast approach tends to be the slow approach in the long run.

 

Vince: You’re right that’s a great way to look at it, yeah that’s great, great insight for sure. It’s hard for people to wrap their mind around that, because it’s you know everybody wants, everybody want’s results yesterday so, but I mean, I always tell my clients, to like, let’s focus on the habits that are required not just to get you there but to keep you there, and most people can transform their bodies dramatically, like six to twelve new habits and you know, if you think about it, if you were just to add a new one every month, by the end of the year, you’ve got a dozen new habits, that are gonna help you get to where you want to go, and stay where you want, and ultimate, that’s where your efforts should be focused on things that you can control not the things that you can’t control. So that shifting perspective is very, very, the stuff is application about all areas of life too.

 

Greg: That is, that is a beautiful point, that is because sometimes when you’re just so focused on the external results, what you see in the mirror, what you see on the scale, it drives you crazy, none tells you your effort. And just that, what youjust mentioned instead of focusing on the habits, building the habits of someone that would have the body that you want, you know, worrying about, because weight can fluctuate.. the mirror can just see, it can just, someday it’s on your thin style and this it not and so that stuff can just creates so much anxiety or just so much negative thoughts, the best thing to do is, do we have the habits in place that support the body you want? And then yeah.

 

Vince: And to add to that to, when I always um –do with clients is I find out a lot of trainers just create unrealistic programs, for their, clients students to follow and often timesa client’s failure is because of the trainer, because he made the program too hard to start so. I think one of the key things is to chase people often call business low hating fruit, and Dr. Job already talks about the concept of cha – starting with the habits that have, the greatest physiological change with the least psychological resistance, so starting off with like here’s an example, glass of lemon water in the morning, and that’s it. I don’t need you to change anything else in your diet this week, except I want you to start each morning, with two litters of water with the freshly squeezed lemon. Next week, or you know, maybe whenever they get the habit doubt, two weeks three weeks, alright this weeks we’re going to focus on fish oils, that’s it, easy stuff, easy stuff and then all this things start to stack up on top of each other, and we don’t – start you know even with, I would use an example when it comes to fat loss. I had this client at our gym he was eating two double cheeseburgers a day, and I gave him to one of the trainers to get results for him, and this guy wrote about like the hardest diet in the world, it’s like boiled chicken breast steamed broccoli and baked potato, its like this guy is gonna get ripped. I’m gonna get him so shredded and you know, a few weeks later I asked how is he doing? How is he doing? And he’s like, the guy hasn’t dropped a pound. He’s actually gained weight, I’m like “Are you kidding me? Like let me see this diet” he shows me this body building meal plan, and like, “Dude You’re an idiot” and he said “What you mean I’m an idiot?” this is like –this is how, you eat if you want to get shredded, so he said, “what would you do?” I told the guy, I tell him to start eating one double cheeseburger a day, and the client was like “Okay, I can do that” and then a few weeks we had a meeting, one single cheeseburger and then we had a meeting one burger. And then we had him eating a chicken burger and then a deli sandwich and then we introduced the boiled chicken breast, that was like twelvesteps later.

 

Greg: Right.

 

Vince: That’s kind of like my approach to nutrition and the training, let’s take as many steps possible to overcome, any form of resistance. Whenever there is resistance, whenever it feels like, you’re moving a lot, people lose the motivation, so that’s kind of like my philosophy, let’s take as many steps as possible to make the change feel manageable and almost like there isn’t even change happening, so you know- that’s kind of like an example I use over and over.

 

Greg: Right and funny enough, he probably started losing weight once he wanted two cheeseburgers to one cheeseburger, that’s all he needed to do, that’s it.

 

Vince: Because he could become compliant and, that’s what matter’s compliance, its you know, the best diet is the one that you follow right? The best juicer is the water you use, the best workout is the one that you know that you follow, so it’s all like compliance, compliance, compliance, it figure out where somebody is and then just getting the take those small steps and this goes back to supporting a whole conversation about full body workouts then two days splits then three days splits and so I applied this concept of progression –I call it micro progressions. If people would remember one word from this call, a micro progressions are what you need to make in all areas of your, your all aspects of training, training nutrition, supplements all that stuffs. So focus on micro progressions.

 

Greg: Okay, right, okay cool, and so just one issue , that people being compliant is, is even if the training program is very, you know, and even if they enjoy following it and even the diet, works well for them, there’s always this ton of back of one’s mind that they should switch the program –so program hoppers, people changing the diet, they hear one thing then they, by their friend, then they change, its people constantly changing things up, so I mean what kind of advice do you have to kind of, for that not to happen?

 

Vince: Well there a couple of ways to look at this rate, there is truth to the fact that every program has an expiration date, just like food goes bad, the training program will eventually go bad, great strength coaches are always trying to anticipate when that will happen, and they want to try and change the program before that happens, and not only occurs from the relationship with the coach, somebody whose source more, or a trainee whose keeping meticulous details on his program and noticing holy cow, every six weeks I hit a plateau, every twelve weeks I hit a plateau, so now you know that, we can use that knowledge but you know, the main thing for people to understand is that, you don’t need to change the program if it’s working. It’s not a sexy advice but if you’re moving in the right direction keep following it. I’m now at the point where I change my few first workouts around every six to eight weeks, just that that’s normally where I kind of plateau, but when I first started beginners could go for as longest twelve to sixteen weeks without any changes and see results. The more advanced you become the more often you need a trainer program. You change your program now because I’ve heard this, you know you brought up a great point. I’ve heard this over and over and over, a lot of the programs that I create, I use the one that um perhaps the most popular hypertrophy max , which is when I co –created with high pre pro in Elsie. It’s a twelve month program but the way it’s structured is that there’s a new phase every four weeks. So we have them train hard for three weeks and they go for one, and then they get a new program. Train hard for three weeks and then back off for one week and then every, it’s a curriculum based program so these are twelve random workouts, each phase builts upon the previous ones, so instead of kind of like tell people you suck it up, you don’t stick with it, we kind of say okay fine I get bored too with my workout, so let’s create a program that anticipates your boredom, that anticipates where you’re body’s probably gonna plateau so let’s hybrid the size, lets hybrid the practicality of people just wanting something new every (x) amount of weeks, and let’s just create a skilfully progressive program and I think a good coach you know, will create a program that accommodates the people’s needs like that, because if you know, you can’t program a guy whose getting bored every three four weeks, you have to take that in consideration, and you have to also lean of the flip side of the trainee, that the coach has explained to the trainee, we need to see this, I need to see you progress and tell you plateau, before its change up the program so.

Greg: Yeah.

Vince: I think I get your message, their needs and there needs to be like skillful organization and that’s the whole topic of periodization and that’s why strength coaches understand periodization which basically means a plan they figure out where the client needs to be on (x) day, and then they reverse engineer a program that gets them there, that’s how to look at your training most people try to go to the gym, and it’s just kind of like shooting darts with a blindfold on and they just hopes something they’re doing with works or sticks and it’s kind of like going to a casino. I always tell people hope is not strategy. You come.. you know you take over the gym and hope something works, so yeah, that’s why I been in a program, investing someone’s knowledge, find someone per iodized program could really help you people get faster results.

Greg: Right on, that’s your hypertrophy max program.

Vince: Yeah, that’s a big one. It’s a twelve month program and we put quite a few people through that one. It’s hard, it’s physical, so we ship it to people on the mail each month and it’s one of our, it’s pretty and its awesome, Ben and I created together and it’s just twelve months of greatness. It’s a weird where would people go to check that out. hypertrophymax.com it’s closed right now, we only open it up twice a year, once in June and once in December, so we let an influx of new members come in and then we work with, and the cool thing about the program is that all the new members started together, listen up and everyone starts phase one together. They can’t just sign up and start at phase three or four. It is a curriculum based program and you know there’s a lot of people doing it together, and it’s pretty cool that way.

Greg: Okay, okay, cool. Well you know what, we’ve covered some amazing points today. I had a few more things I want to talk about, but we might have to save it for another episode of you know..

Vince: If you want to go rapid fire that’s fine. I shorten of my answers.

Greg: Okay cool, lets hit on a couple of last final points, what supplements have you found useful for th purposes of either muscle gain, extra performance, fat loss, yes so what are your thoughts there?

Vince: For strength based workouts caffeine, honestly caffeine is is extremely higher dose of caffeine, that’s probably the number one supplement that is ever.. probably the only supplement is ever really helped with performance in terms of strength focus, mental alertness, delayed fatigue, in terms of overall health, I get, I buy my supplements based on blood work, which I do twice a year so for me I have some gut issues, so you know probiotics, magnesiums, zinc, fish oils, to be honest a lot of the non-sexy ones, higher dosages that people would probably be like whoa, and those are from a lot of reading I’ve done there’s certain dosages that are more effective. But yeah a lot of, I’ll be honest a lot of the basics, you know, just to ensure the body is working properly from a foundational standpoint because your body last goal is to build muscles, so it’s main thing is just to take care of its basic needs so um for some reasons, but I’ve got a few supplements in the cupboard, yeah, to be honest, a lot of the non-sexy ones are the things that get the job done for me, you know, I’ve got a couple of pre-workouts I like to have caffeine seldom that I used when I’m trying to keep things up.

Greg: Right yeah you know it’s very interesting. So lot of people just go with the standard multi mineral vitamin, which is very low in a bunch of different vitamins and minerals, that you may already be sufficient and so it makes a lot of sense. You have blood work done and then you might that, “Oh my god, I’ve a huge zinc deficiency” then your bulk my zinc up, and you took a multi vitamin mineral, you’re probably would not gonna get close to optimal intake.

Vince: It’s not full in love so with the zinc deficiency, yeah definitely yeah like zinc vitamin C, vitamin D, Magnesium those are my big ones, probiotics and then I take a bunch of insulin management products things that help me with carb sensitivities and getting leaner, but those are kind of the staples. Like kind of my supplements which in two categories, staple supplements, which I take a whole year round , regardless and then their situational supplements depending on my goal, maybe fat loss and taking more carnitine as well, more caffeine more carnitine, you know when I’m trying to gain size, you know, each produce like creatine, beta alanine, you know things like that I take glutamine, product.. a lot that got helps and that so a lot of stuff that’s no immune support got health, digestion and absorption, those are the kind of things I’m thinking about, for people listening, your supplement decisions needed be based on your current settings, so or another way to put this your weakest links so what is your weakest links, so if you’re somebody who doesn’t sleep, you need to look at supplements that help with your sleep, that’s the most important thing so again, you have to kind of look at your body, what am I lacking, what am I deficient in and bring those levels up first, and all the other of fancy stuff those are kind of like thousand whistles that are icing on the cake.

Greg: Right that makes complete sense and your just final question, What are – what’s your favourite meal to eat this days, as your leaning down for your photo shoot?

Vince: You know what I just took professional chef – sorry professional cooking lessons with a chef in Toronto actually. I’ll hook you up with her if you want it great she’s incredible. I’ve done six days of full day cooking lessons with her. I mean, she taught me how to cook fish tacos which are pretty amazing, pork [inaudible] the stuff that I eat right now is pretty insane, it’s just takes a bit of crap time to create the marinades and the spices and all that, but my favourite, would by far be the fish tacos, which is delicious salsa homemade salsa, chilli chori sauce, and then with the tilapia, that I put on, I grill and then I finish off in the oven, with this home made slice shrub, dude it’s like, dining is never been easier.

Greg: Oh my, yeah, because that’s a hue – you’re just eating foods that you just meals that you don’t enjoy it’s just gonna be a huge croon of extra will power zapping and then if you love your meals.

Vince: I tell you – if you’re a body builder the best money you can send is cooking lessons.

Greg: Right.

Vince: Yeah I know I know a pro, a bodybuilder, and his wife is a cook, and he always joked around about how easy it was to get down a four percent, when everybody is complaining, oh my god, oh my god, dieting is so easy for me, and like, why? What’s your secret what’s your secret? It’s like my wife knows how to cook. Just a couple of simple marinades, a couple of different spices, those go a long ways. You do not have to go choke down tilapia, you don’t have to choke down fish and chicken you tell her how to make pestos healthy pestos and things that will meet your calorie needs, macros you may have to get a little, you might have to cut some back, probably two three weeks, but you can shave up a lot of fat, with really, really tasty food, so I used to do the same things like you said, hard core and hard core, hard core, hard core because that’s what everybody does right, that’s what you see, that’s what you think –that must be the what I have to do, just because everybody else is doing something it does not mean it’s logical it’s effective or it’s rational.

Greg: Right definitely… Um alright so anyone listening, definitely if your cooking some boring blends meals, trying to find some new recipes will do it, fit within your macro guidelines and or satisfying your tasting, so just makes things so much easier, I am pretty incentivised to do some cooking lessons.

Vince: Are you single Greg, do you have a girlfriend or anything?

Greg: I have a girlfriend.

Vince: Oh yes. She’ll love you even more man, like daddy knows how to cook man. I mean most guys are – I mean you’re in mid-twenties right now?

Greg: 23.

Vince: Twenty-three. Oh my god, if you learn how to cook now, wow! Cooking is pretty, I tell everybody, cooking is one skill everybody should every person who graduates high school should at least 5 recipes. This is, really, what do you need going to a university, you learn how to cook, these skills are so so valuable man, learning how to cook is very very valuable.

Greg: And its funny you said five recipes, because I find myself kind of rotating mostly through 5 different meals most of the time.

Vince: You know what, I’ll give you a goal, a challenge you just do 1 new recipe a month.

Greg: Right.

Vince: And you know the more you do it, your just get better and better at it, and by the end of the year, you’ll have 12 insane recipes, that you can impress your friends with..

Greg: Right perfect, perfect. Well thanks so much Vince for coming on, if people want to go and check out your stuff, and see what you have going on, I mean, where’s the best place to go?

Vince: Well I know most people like social media’s, there’s a fan page Vince del Monte live large TV, they just search Vince del Monte. Look find the verified one check off. I’ve also got a blog, vincedelmontefitness.com so people want to join the newsletter, then there’s a lot of ways to do that on that page.

Greg: Alright dude, thanks so much. Everyone go check it out and thanks for listening. Take care.

Vince: Thanks Gregg.

End of transcription: [00:47:55]

Thank You For Listening! To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!


The Adonis Belt – The Key to Perfect Leanness

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BONUS: Download the Kinobody Physique Calculator that will help you determine the exact measurements you need to achieve the perfectly proportioned “Kinobody Physique”.

I want you to forget about body fat percentage. Let go of it completely. I want you to integrate a much more effective and reliable tool for tracking leanness. That metric is the waist measurement. Why am I so fond of the waist measurement? It’s simple and it’s unmistakably reliable.

With body fat testing, you simply have no way of knowing if you’re getting an accurate measurement. Even the most accurate and elaborate devices can be off by as much as 2-3% body fat. In fact, I just scored 4.8% on the Bod Pod test and in reality, I’m more around 7.5-8% body fat.

The waist measurement is the perfect tool for evaluating leanness and fat loss progress. When you get your waist down to ‘adonis belt status’ you simply will have the perfect waist proportion for your height. And the result will be a perfectly low body fat. When you maintain this ‘adonis belt measurement’ while building some solid strength and muscle, you will look damn good.

So forget about body fat percentages. The waist measurement, within the context of your height and weight, tells you the whole story.

Calculating The Adonis Belt Measurement 

For a solid lean and aesthetic physique, you want to get your waist measurement (taken at bellybutton level) to around 44-45% of your height. This is considered quite taut, especially when it’s combined with solid muscle throughout your shoulders, back and chest.

Most lifters don’t look very good because they’re carrying too much fat and they have a few inches to lose off their waist before they have a good level of definition and proportion. If you look at Hollywood actors when they get in shape for movie roles, invariably they have slim waists. The result – sleek low body fat and exceptional muscle tone.

In fact, dropping a couple inches off your waist can drastically change your physique. Automatically you’ll appear much leaner and more defined, your muscles will pop out more and your face will take on a more angular – model like look. Simply look at the picture below:

Adonis Belt

On the left I was about 185 lbs with a 33″ waist. On the right I’m around 175 lbs with a 31.33″ waist and a chiseled adonis belt! Not to mention, my chest is more square like, my face is more angular and I have a much stronger shoulder to waist ratio.

Solid Muscle + Adonis Belt = Perfection 

Now it’s possible that you have the perfect waist measurement, but still lack impressive definition. Invariably, this predicament is the result of lacking strength and muscle mass. When you build a lot of strength and muscle, your waist will naturally be thicker than a skinnier version of yourself.

If you have a small waist, yet lack great abs definition, it’s because you’re under muscled. In this case, if you keep your waist the same, and build lots of strength and muscle, you will look much more defined. When I work with my coaching clients on lean bulking programs, I ensure they gain strength and size while keeping their waist measurement the same.

This results in a much more impressive physique with a noticeable boost in definition. You want to measure your waist first thing in the morning on an empty stomach. Breath out your air and keep your abs relaxed, don’t suck in and don’t push out. You’ll need a cloth tape measurer and you want to take it around your waist at bellybutton level.

If you measure your waist later in the day, when you’ve been eating or drinking, your waist will be a little bit bigger. For the greatest accuracy and consistently, you need to do the measurement first thing in the morning.

What Direction Should You Take 

Find out where you are right now. Maybe you have a few inches you need to drop off your waist, that should be your first priority, before even thinking about lean bulking. Alternatively, you may have a slim waist but you may be 10 or 20 lbs below your ideal weight. In this case you’re going to want to focus on lean bulking – gaining size and holding that perfect measurement.

What is important to note is that unless your waist is within half an inch of the ideal kinobody measurement – you’re going to want to focus on fat loss. Get fat loss out of the way. Then you can slowly and gradually add muscle size, while looking sleek and defined throughout the entire process. If you focus on adding muscle when you already lack definition, you’ll end up looking soft and bulky.

Gaining muscle is a long and slow process. Trying to bulk up in 4 months and then cut all the fat off transpires in very little real muscle gains. Instead you want to focus on leaning down to your ideal waist measurement and then allow for a couple years to pack on some quality muscle.

During the muscle building process, you should take it slowly and ensure that you stay lean. You can work through the three physiques while you stay lean and pack on muscle – warrior, Greek god and superhero.

The Key to a Taut Waist

There are no magical techniques to achieving a taut waist, or what I like to refer as the ‘adonis belt’. Having a slim waist comes down to getting to a low body fat. This is through proper nutrition and intermittent fasting. When you eat to strip off any and all excess fat, you will create the ‘adonis belt’.

Training your abs with hanging leg raises, abs wheel roll outs and renegade rows will build up the musculature in your midsection – injury proofing your body and maximizing abs development and definition. That said, you can’t train yourself to have a smaller waist.

You can only eat to have a smaller waist. What does that look like? Averaging less calories than your body requires over the course of the day, consistently, while being able to enjoy yourself so you actually stick to the program.

How I Eat for an Adonis Belt 

Black coffee in the morning, couple pieces of fruit when I get hungry, big servings of beef, lots of veggies and pounds of delicious potato wedges (all while holding a calorie deficit). This approach is exactly why my clients email me within the first few days of starting their program and are wondering how they will get lean on so much food!

Yet, like clockwork, within the first two weeks of the program, they will drop 1-2″ off their waist. And their lifts will have shot up 10-15 lbs across the board! If I wasn’t coaching these clients firsthand, I would have a hard time believing it. But anyone of my clients can attest to the results.

One of my latest clients, Jens, a Doctor from Sweden, has been on the program for two weeks. In that time, he’s dropped his waist from an average 34.5″ down to 33″ (not bad for his 6’1 stature). He’s also added 16 lbs to his incline bench and weighted chin ups!

Note – Results are usually heightened for the first two to three weeks of the program.Then it usually slows down to one inch off the waist and 10 lbs on key lifts each month. You simply can’t make extreme progress for very long, otherwise everyone would be walking around like Hercules, and I’d be doing a 150 lbs chin up with one arm by now. Sadly, I’m not; I use two arms ;)

Kinobody Resources 

While I have plenty of free resources to getting lean and building a great physique, they simply don’t compare to my full blown courses and especially not my coaching program. If you already have the ideal waist or are within an inch of it. I would get on my Greek God Program and start gaining some serious strength and muscle to maximize your aesthetics.

If you have 2-4″ to drop off your waist and you want to take it slowly, while building muscle to reveal crazy definition – I would work through my Warrior Shredding Program. Finally, if you have a lot of fat to lose (5+” off the waist) or if you want to lean down really quickly, I’d suggest my Aggressive Fat Loss Course.

BONUS: Download the Kinobody Physique Calcluator that will help you determine the exact measurements you need to achieve the perfectly proportioned “Kinobody Physique”.

Episode 076: Intermittent Fasting For Getting (And Staying) Lean

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Click Here to Get Your Free Copy of the Kinobody Fasting Handbook.

In this episode, Tom and I talk about intermittent and how to use it to effortless drop fat without starving yourself. We cover the 10 reasons why you should incorporate fasting into your nutrition along with the surprising health benefits it supports.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

  • What fasting actually means… it’s probably not what you think
  • How long to utilize intermittent fasting to maximize fat burning while making nutrition easier
  • How to make fasting enjoyable (so you can experience the benefits of IF without
  • The truth about eating late and how it relates to storing fat
  • The “eating window” – and why it’s completely arbitrary (a.k.a “Don’t Buy Into The Hype”)
  • How fasting can improve cognitive function (especially in the morning – imagine having mental clarity in the morning instead of grogginess)
  • Can fasting improve acne? (Well, we don’t actually know… But it could quite possibly help.)
  • The “5:2 Method” and how it relates to fat loss and muscle growth

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

Episode 077: Brian St. Pierre On Nutrition Strategies To Support Your Goals

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To download Brian’s “Nutritional Hierarchy Of Importance” to pinpoint exactly where the gaps are in your nutrition plan (so you can fix them to get into the shape you want), Click Here.

brianIn this episode, Brian St. Pierre from Precision Nutrition drops some serious knowledge on proper nutrition surrounding your fitness goals in this episode of Road To Ripped.

We get talk about the good and bad about Paleo, rising trends that are secret calorie bombs keeping you fat, post-workout nutrition strategies for hitting your goals, and the skinny on carbs. We even round this episode out with strategies to increase general well-being – “Deep Health”.

You’ll learn:

  • The skinny on Paleo – what it gets right and what’s missing
  • A source of hidden calories that may be adding hundreds of calories to your diet each day
  • What Brian thinks of Intermittent Fasting for fat loss (after trying it for 8 months)
  • How pre- and post-workout nutrition needs to change depending on your fitness goals
  • The only factor that should dictate which program you should stick to
  • How to determine your carb intake and what role carbs play in your diet
  • The best carb source for satiety (how full you feel after a meal)
  • The concept of Deep Health and it’s implications on your wellbeing
Show The Transcript +

Greg: Hey, what’s going on guys? You are listening to the Road To Ripped podcast.
We have a special guest today. We have Brian St. Pierre from a Precision Nutrition.
And hey, what’s going on Tom? How are you?

Tom: I’m good, I’m doing great man, how are you?

Greg: Pretty good…

Tom: Excellent! Brian, Welcome to the Road to Ripped podcast man.
And I, little bit I know actually when we first reached out to you, you were actually like
a huge figure within Precision Nutrition and it wasn’t until I started reading a lot of the articles like on the site. I thought it was just all jammed already on the site. And you know come to find out that you’re one of the main nutrition figures behind Precision Nutrition, right?

Brian: Yeah, it’s a common I guess misconception because our article titled like the author name is in small writing because really it’s you know, we want to be about the content and less about splashing someone’s name across it but absolutely I do a lot of nutrition work. JB and I work hand in hand on a lot of projects that are precision nutrition system and certification. So I’m highly involved in all that stuff for sure.

Tom: Awesome. Well great. We have tons of content to cover today in this episode. So alright you guys just wanna fire away?

Greg: Now we’ll fire it away. I mean first off you know we’re just trying earlier. Let’s talk a little bit about the Paleo diet and what your thoughts are with this as far as using it as a tool to improve how and even off my performance. I mean what are your thoughts on Paleo and obviously Paleo, there is so many different ways to interpret it and how you can utilize it, but I guess we’ll just leave it at that for now.

Brian: I‘ve a lot of thoughts on the Paleo diet and it really in many ways the answer is almost always “It Depends”.

Greg: Right.

Brian: It depends on a lot of things and that’s not a really helpful answer. No one could take any action from that answer. So really, I actually just wrote a really big article on the P-insight about the Paleo Diet. And really to me where it comes down to is, no matter which end of the spectrum you stand on; the Paleo is awesome; the Paleo misses the point, in the end the actual diet end of itself likely is more right than it gets wrong. You’re getting lots of lean protein, lots of you know fruits and vegetables, and it limits the carbs sources more than I would like, you’re getting in some quality carbs, some healthy fats from nuts and things like that. So it’s giving and it’s minimizing greatly like processed foods. I also recommend you know sunshine, exercise, fresh air like there are lot of components the Paleo Diet that I really like and I think could help vast majority of the people out there. There are other elements where I think it’s too restrictive unnecessarily so, restrictive on grains, restrictive on legumes especially, over restrictive on dairy that I think could push some people away cause it’s harder to stick to when it’s more restrictive. It’s easier short term, harder in long term when it’s more restrictive. And so that tends to try to see people cycle through so many types of diets. So in that regard, I think its part of the reason why the Paleo Diet has evolved over the past few years especially. There are a lot of Paleo advocates used to be really hardcore low-carb in addition to Paleo. Now you’re seeing a greater emphasis of carbohydrates in the Paleo diet in a more sweet potatoes, a more of just a little bit more of a relax attitude starting with that more strict template and then integrating things and see how you respond trying some dairy, trying some dark chocolate, trying some legumes and see how your body responds to it. So people used it from that constructs with that template, I think it could be awesome.

Greg: Right. Yeah that makes a lot of sense and I know quite a few people that have had like various even these health symptoms and when they adjusted their diet to you know going the core of the Paleo, they feel a lot better and obviously a lot of that could be eating merely in protein, vegetables and fruits, but I guess there is something to say about some of these foods you know, people are just don’t do well on. And I know me personally, I know the gluten thing gets a lot of flak like, “oh, you’re getting gluten-free” but no, actually like I have a gluten sensitivity and I know that’s kind of arbitrary and what not but it always felt much better away from gluten and I know I’m not Paleo myself but I do kind of agree with some of the stuff. The only thing is when you kind of talk about earlier these unnecessary restrictions, I’ve always found the kind of me person, I don’t know if you can relate to this, just the whole like basing a diet initially off of picking food you can have and you can’t have, it’s screws me up psychologically. I hate it. I’d rather figure out the man of macros, or cowards I can work into my day, and I gravitate to whatever foods I want to hit those goals. That just makes it so much easier for me.

Brian: Yeah and that’s one of the reasons why I’m not a big fan of like the “you can eat this but you can’t eat this” type of diet because it ends up crackin’ like all or none type of mindset, right? That’s bad, this is good, and people gettin’ to those types of mindsets, they’re either on the diet or they’re off the diet. Alright, and that’s not the recipe for a success long term. It’s not about a “diet” or “dieting”, or being on or off, it’s about just eating pretty well most of the time and that would get most people where they wanna go. So yeah there are definitely people who do better without gluten, they’re people who do better without broccoli, right? No matter how healthy of food might be and all seriousness, there are people who don’t agree with whether it’s green tea or it could be anything, right? There’s any number of foods that people have issues with, so that’s why we tend to be what we call “Nutrition Agnostics” at Precision Nutrition. No matter how healthy that approach might be in general, you have to adjust it for each person and their particular needs, dietary intolerances, goals and things like that.

Greg: Right and I guess, I mean you kind of touch a few things but I guess what would you think the biggest kind of mistakes or unnecessary food eliminations are there with the Paleo Diet? Like?

Brian: I think the biggest one is just eliminating legumes off the top. If you look at the data on eating beans, and lentils and things, it’s nearly unequivocal in their support. The amount of people who have issues with legumes are very very small and even the issues that they cite in Paleo, these fears are, it’s not strong data, it’s just not. When you look at the control trial evidence, observational evidence, the history of eating legumes, humans have eating legumes, even in Paleolithic times, and even in substantial amounts that’s estimated, so it’s just not there. I just find that to be the strangest one to eliminate.

Greg: Okay, very interesting. I’ve always like not been down to eliminate dairies, I’ve always like loved specifically like cheeses like some kind of cheese from skimmed milk, it’s just in the high protein calcium and I find it very very safe —–, in fact I will take as far as getting lean is concerned, I would take dairy over nuts any day. And they just taste so good. I guess is there merit in eliminating dairy for how the body composition goals, I mean what are your thoughts there?

Brian: Uhhmm, yes and no. I mean personally like I like dairy and I eat dairy every day, generally just a little bit of butter and some yogurt but to think that eliminating dairy in and out of itself is just gonna get people leaner, it’ll get you leaner but decreases your calorie intake but in and out itself it’s not inherently fattening or even unhealthy such as more and more control trial evidence comes out for people who can tolerate it, who don’t have a lactose intolerance, don’t have a Casein allergy, or other type of milk allergy. It’s a pretty solid food especially if you can get it from cow’s that are mostly grass-fed outside which is can be harder. It’s not the majority have dairy. I’m fortunate where I live, in Maine, that’s very easy to come by. And there are other great resources of survey by the Cornucopia Institute where they surveyed, they call it the “Organic Dairies” in the US and then based on their responses gave their scores and of course some of the big name companies like Horizon right owned by Dean Foods, the biggest food manufacturing the US wouldn’t respond, other big companies wouldn’t respond, they’re not going to be transparent about their practices. Whereas like Organic Valley and all kinds of smaller or regional producers responded and you can see like Organics organic producers in which one actually produce higher quality milk and that’s something I think it’s valuable to know. And if you’re gonna consume dairy, that’s where out push people towards.

Greg: Okay, yeah that’s I’ve been really lazy, I’ve been getting the Kraft shredded cheese made from my skimmed milk, it’s actually got pretty good macros but I don’t think they do organic pre-shredded cheese.

Brian: They might, I’m not sure actually do Organic Valley does sell a pre-shredded organic cheese. I mean in the end it’s not like that’s gonna make or break your entire health, right? If that’s so, you’re one bad food you know. But if I was to encourage people to make a choice, that’s the direction I would encourage.

Greg: Okay, cool. And you know, just earlier you mentioned how you know if cutting your dairy helps you reduce your calorie consumption and yes we’ll help you get lean and I guess I mean that’s one kind of a tricky area with the Paleo Diet is that yeah it gets you to cut out a lot of you know easily over to consume calories but the same time if you pick up a Paleo recipe book, there like the calorie density of a lot of these meals is crazy. You’re getting like really fatty cuts of meat using tons of coconut oil and making stuff on like ground omen and so a lot of these meals, I mean even though you’re cutting back a lot of hype-easy consume foods, you kind of balance is out. I mean I did the Paleo diet a few years ago, and I had a hard time eating less than 3K calories with like the Paleo style meals.

Brian: Uhhmm.. And that’s when you look at like the controlled trials of Paleo Diet versus the Mediterranean diet or whatever, in those versions of the Paleo diet, you know they weren’t eating meals like that you know like super high fat, they’re actually eating pretty high in protein, so their total calorie intake came down cause of the high in protein content. Right, we consistently see that in literature and people eat more protein, their total calorie intake tends to come down. When you look at a lot of Paleo diet cookbooks, you’re right, they pound coconuts and almonds and in some instances that they allow butter tons of like gee or you’re practicing like the bullet-proof coffee, and you know some people in the Paleo’s fear and now doing huge things in bullet-proof coffee plus their high fat meals you’re talking like 200 grams of fat a day. Well that can be done if you really know what you’re doing, for most people that tends to be an issue in their eating calories and they realize for sure. I’ve seen it over and over again with clients who are trying a Paleo diet and having issues.

Greg: Okay yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Now let’s switch gears here, this is definitely a topic that Tom and I enjoyed quite a bit and that’s intermittent fasting. A couple of years ago, moments for three years ago, John Berardi did this extensive intermittent fasting experiment and he had a lot of you know pretty cool conclusions and so I guess what are people like really need to know about intermittent fasting and it’s beneficial for them and what kind of benefits are there with fasting opposed to a higher meal frequency.

Brian: I mean when JB did it, what he really found was for him personally, you know a study of an equals 1 was that it didn’t, it wasn’t any more effective for him to lose weight in a traditional dieting approach but he was more easily able to keep it off, and he was more easily able to manage hunger which is super important when you’re trying to diet down because hunger is a big recyclable fall off their diets. They’re eating less calories that they need so their body is ramping up hunger signals and he just found you do fasting and your hunger tends to come in waves so you just fast for a little while and unable to eat a smaller time window, you can eat bigger meals and kind of get away with it more because your total calorie intake is where would normally be if your just spacing the amount. So in that regard, he found it very helpful. In our coaching programs, we actually have people fast for days just to experience what it’s like, and a lot of people after that just try with the experiment with that moving forward. And what we really found is it’s most beneficial in younger males who are already pretty lean. So I say a 25 year old guy who’s 15 or 14 percent body fat and wants to be 10, that’s refunded to be the most beneficial. And someone is 45 and 25 percent body fat for male, or in 35-40 percent for female, especially for females, it’s not any more effective than your regular concur approach unless it just helps you control your intake more. But for some people, we find fasting becomes again part of that like all are non-mindset don’t fast that day or their fasting falls through, they tend to get guilty over it and ancy over it because they have this pre-defined idea of success and that success revolves around their fasting window. So, from a physiology stand point, it can have some benefit but again what we really found even a literature is starting to agree, it’s most beneficial in young already relatively lean males and the least beneficial for women. It seems to impact them negatively in terms of ——— can impact them negatively in terms of sleep simply because they’re a mono-profile maybe is suited to it and there’s lots of speculation as the exact reasoning, I don’t think anyone really knows for sure but for women, it seems to be the least effective for health improvements or body composition improvements and things like that.

Greg: Right, it’s very interesting and anecdotally I’ve always noticed that most guys tend to do fine on it, well they absolutely love it and women is very like if it’s very you know you get both sides and I know Tom’s fiancé, she didn’t do well on fasting at all.

Tom: Well yeah, actually when we first starting doing the Kinobody nutrition plan, I mean because you’re the advocate of the intermittent fasting and that’s actually why I heard about it from when I started digging in your courses and then I started researching and I love it honestly I think it’s the easiest way to stay within my macro, you know count every single day and I noticed it’s like natural for me now, it’s like in nature. My fiancé Emily, we did it for the first week, she was absolutely miserable and I mean she is just one I don’t know if it’s just like if it’s leading to wipe like she has to eat breakfast within maybe like an hour of waking up. If she doesn’t have that, like I can drink coffee, I usually fast for the first 5 hours of waking, 4-5 hours and in that section where I did my training to use so I train fast and then I come home within a couple of hours later where I had my lunch, it’s a huge meal it’s like well it’s satisfying. She’s miserable, after the first week she’s like nope, ain’t for me— for me and so she started you know, eating smoothies, you know a later breakfast but yeah, it’s just crazy how it affects guys and girls so differently.

Brian: Absolutely, I mean I personally did it for 10 months after I am working for PN and after talkin’ to JB about it and I was like, “well, how can I really talk about it if I’ve never really tried it”. So I did like the 16/8, lean gain style for about 10 months where all I did was take my breakfast and my normal like ten o’clock mid-morning snack, I just combined it all at ten o’clock so I get up like 5 o’clock in the morning. So I too am awake for like 5 hours, 4-8. So my total calories intake was the same and for me I noticed absolutely no benefit and absolutely no harm. My training was just as good as fasted or fed, and my recovery felt the same, my energy level sleep, it didn’t affect me like honestly it made it was like I did nothing different for me. So I still felt great, I still trained well, I was just as strong, I was same body composition. I enjoyed it by the same time like my kids are older now so we like eat breakfast together, so I prefer you know just in my lifestyle to eat breakfast and enjoy with my kids. And now so to me it’s like again it comes back to, at PN especially we are very results oriented. If you do intermittent fasting and it works for you, then by all means, keep doing it. But if you do it and it doesn’t work for you, don’t just stick to it because it’s supposed to work or it worked for somebody else or it works for your fiancé. So if Emily kept doing it, even if it worked for you, if she was miserable, what good is that? That’s not actually helping her. Be result-oriented.

Greg: So I guess now it’s logical to kind of talk about like really as far as getting lean is concerned in building muscle, intermittent fasting is a tool that can help some people on nutrition life much easier as far as getting macros or just making meals as easier to cook 2 meals and is to have what I guess depend on the meal prep and where not on the mix sets. But you know, what is getting lean and like how important is you know the macros over the course of the day, and then what are your thoughts on like meal time regards to workouts and pre-imposed workout?

Brian: Yeah, so I mean when it comes to you know macros over the course of the day, I am definitely a big picture guy. So to me total intake is far more important than any nutrient timing strategy. It doesn’t mean nutrient timing is irrelevant; it still has a place, it’s just when you look at the literature as it continued to grow and now that Aragon is still too phenomenal, research reviews in the past couple of years that I’ve been fortunate to chat with him about really what it shows. As long as you have good chunk of protein and carbs within an hour or two before, and an hour or two after, your workouts, you’re pie gonna get the vast majority of the nutrient timing if not all the benefits of nutrient timing protocols. So it doesn’t have to be you know, when I was in College, man I had some fast adjusting proteins and carbs, pre-workout, precept it during my workout, had another one after my workout, then ate again like an hour late, it was crazy! Like I was eating like I was eating like 8x a day. Like you wanna talk about ease of meal prep, like in PN, we got which I only recommend, we eat about 4x a day just as a starting point. We just find it tends to be the sweet spot. Reasonably sized meals, they’re filling and satisfying, not so big like people like thanksgiving, alright I just overly stuffed, and some people don’t like that feeling. So for males, we find to be good sized-meals, satisfying, not so much food prep you’re constantly thinking about food or you’re prepping six different meals a day which is difficult, exhausting, you’re constantly thinking about it. And it still allows you to utilize nutrient timing to some degree reading 4x a day, that’s about 4 hours between each meal. So if you eat, like I get myself for example, for breakfast I like at 6, snack at 10, I tend to workout at 8 o’clock in the morning. This is what works for my schedule, so I work out from 8 to 9, come home, shower, whatever, and then I have the super shake, a smoothie at a 10 o’clock. So I eat breakfast at 6, 2 hours after I work out for an hour and then an hour after that, I have a smoothie. So I’m bookending, you know my training with 2 good sized mixed meals, plenty of protein, plenty of carbs, and I’m making sure still in my total intake of the day is in place. So they’re both important. It’s a very long winded answer to a very short question.

Greg: No, no, fair enough. Yeah I guess it’s important to stress up on cause a lot of people get hung up on as you’re saying you know, obsessing about their pre or post workout and during work out shakes and they don’t even bother tabulating their entire macros of the day, right vastly more important and I guess one phenomena that I see some people do make is the goal with getting like literally lean, but then we adding all these pre during post work out shakes, and is like your visible calories up. They may get hard to lean down because they’re taking in a bunch of a fast absorbing and a very minimally stay shaping calories like pact around their work out instead of like really trying to get there like the macros of the day left to hit dialed.

Brian: Absolutely.

Tom: Those are liquid meals so clearly they are free calories.

Brian: That’s right, that’s right. You know like someone we see are a lot of guys who want to get leaner, so afraid to lose muscle like they’ll have protein and calorie drink, you know like a surge type of product or something like that while they’re training. And then their overall intake for the day is actually too high because they had 300 extra calories of protein and carbs supplements while they’re training. It’s just necessary, right? That’s what that research shows like you just have bookend to your session that during work out nutrition specifically you for weight loss, it’s not necessary for guys who you’re trying to squeeze in every last calorie possible to gain weight, there might be a place for it; for endurance athletes, definitely a place for it. At the highest level of sport, like with my work with the San Antonio Spurs for example, there’s a time and a place for it but for most of us like myself who work out 3-4 x a week, they’re thrilled to no need.

Greg: Right and I guess that’s part of the confusion, a lot of the research and literature is based around athletes, and then I guess people are trying to…

Brian: Strap away, that’s right.

Greg: Strap-away that and project that on to themselves when you know they’re not professional.

Brian: One is training 12 hours a week, one is training 3 hours a week, right, there’s a big difference you know.

Greg: I guess it’s a huge difference, and then I guess the pre-post work out strategies for tri-athlete, for professional boxer is vastly different.

Brian: Right, then my 45-minute weight work-out, right.

Greg: Right. So I guess if you are like someone that is training potentially twice a day, that’s a 4 hours a day, like I guess the specifications are like much different like you’d want it refill on a bunch of carbohydrates immediately after training to quickly re-stock glycogen then.

Brian: Absolutely, just because in that case, speed of replenishment is imperative. If they’re gonna do to glycogen depleting sessions a day, then speed of replenishment is critical. If you’re working out on Monday, you’re heading weights again on Tuesday or Wednesday, you’re gonna reflok like you’re number 24 hours easily, just a normal carbohydrate intake. But if you are a high level athlete, a tri-athlete or a UFC fighter for example who might do grappling work, and then weight work and then excess conditioning work in addition catches what fighters do, yeah, speed of light is what punishment is really important but for most people most of the time, it’s simply not.

Greg: Okay.. And like I guess, is there like gonna be improved nutrient partitioning when you don’t get the bulk of your calories and carbs around training or I guess after training as supposed to the different part of the day. And I guess like I might be very very extremely hard to quantify how much that difference gonna make in the grand scheme of things.

Brian: It’s a good question and it’s something that I think most people in like my line of work will tell you it’s true, but to what degree, I don’t think any of us are really sure. It’s probably still a really good idea to get in a good chunk of your carbohydrates or at least make sure that you’re consuming carbohydrates post training coz’ you’re gonna better tolerate them, you’re gonna better utilize them for like a replenishment, oxidizes fuel right, things of that nature and it’ll help with your recovery, are shown improved next to performance, the list goes on and on. Does that mean it’s gonna make you like tremendously leaner if you put all your carbs post-work out versus spread throughout the day? The research doesn’t really necessary to support that. You look at the data, there are studies that people have majority of their carbs and calories are breakfast, versus the majority at night, and the data is equivocal. And some cases, breakfast is superior, and some case at night is superior. Well, that really tells us is it just comes down to personal preference and results. If you’re someone who does best with majority of recovery post work out, then do it. If you’re someone who does best with the majority at breakfast or at dinner, then do it. Don’t stick to anyone dogmatic approaches because it’s a persuasive expert telling you so, find what’s best for you and follow it.

Greg: Right. That makes a lot of sense and I guess all this talk about carbs before and after training, I mean let’s pull back and talk about carbs in general, and what are your thoughts on for someone that wants to be very very lean on doing a low-carb approach like maybe a 150 grams or less a day or maybe even like 50-80 grams. I guess switch experience with what kind of doing low-carb as far as you experienced it and research and stuff about nature.

Brian: Sure, I mean low in carbs is definitely an effective method for weight loss. I think that’s unquestionable at this point especially for lowering calories at the same time. However like a at PN, what we teach for assuming you eat like those 4 meals a day, we recommend many about 2 cup handfuls if you could see my hands, 2 cup handfuls of carbohydrates at each meal, and women about 1 cup handful. Now obviously men don’t need twice as many calories and twice as many carbs as women, but it’s just to get people really good framework, easy way to control portions and just to go from there. Now what we also teach is of you want to lose weight, maybe you remove 1- 2 cup handfuls a day from your intake. We also teach thumbs a fat as well. But in this instance, so we’ll use carbs; so for assuming, 2 cup handfuls, that comes out to about 40% of your calories from carbs, so it’s a pretty moderate carbohydrate intake. However, we definitely know and we found and I’ve written about that to me, carbs need in the fall like a bell curve. Most people do pretty well with that moderate intake, 2 cup handfuls for men and 1 women per meal. However, there’s one standard deviation away who do better with just one for men – 1 cup hand, for women, a half of a handful of carbs at each meal. And even at the farthest end, there are people like on that, that’s more like 150 grams a day a little bit less you’re talking about. On the farthest end, we’re taking like a ketogenic diet right, for a 50 grams or less per day you’re talking, basically 0 cup of handful. Maybe 1 cup handful a day, a little bit of fruit, you know basically coming from vegetables essentially. And so there are people who exist that definitely thrive on that kind of diet. To me there a small segment of the population like in that bell curve most are in the middle that chunk about 15 percent of the population of pie does really well with just 1 cup handful or half a cup of handful per meal. And then it’s like 2 percent of the population does best on a ketogenic diet. Definitely seen the work with clients, I’m working with someone when they’re going low-carb and it is effective, we roll with it. If I’m working with someone who’s going low-carb and it’s not working or noticing some negative aspects, then I try to encourage a different approach. I have seen it work, I’ve used it with clients personally, so one of the things like I was saying, we’ll start with that middle ground but we do pull back carbs coz you only wanna minimize protein so much. There’s a bare minimum for protein you definitely wanna hit and in the reality, this plays a barely minimum fat you wanna hit. Carbs are the most variable depending on the activity level on goals or need. So if you are trying to get ultra lean, and you’re already down to 10 percent body fat, and trying to get down to 6/7, and in that case, you’re getting into levels in body fat that are pretty much like super physiological levels right. There are most people are going to achieve those levels, they’re not just gonna happen upon them, they take a serious and concerted effort. So in that case, yeah you’re probably gonna have to go lower carb and is something I recommend for most people, probably not but for instances like that absolutely.

Greg: Okay, yeah very interesting and I’ve always yeah definitely felt that carbs of various variants, I used to do the low-low carb approach, and ultimately if did not, it was not for me. There are lot of pros that definitely outweighed by the cons. Yeah and temporarily helped like kind of keep a good like you know a curb hunger very well like poor sleep, poor sex drive, poor training. Yeah, I was not worth it and so, you know it’s interesting whenever you worked with clients or you’re talking to people, I mean it’s interesting to see kind of what they gravitate towards these because some people eat like very low, very little fat like less in 20 percent are calcium fat and then it makes me scratch my head and like if I did that, I would kill someone. And then they could eat tons of carbs and then they love it, and then they do it and I guess I was like the old school approach when they eat very high carbs, high protein like minimal-minimal fat, but then those other people that literally if they eat a carb, they go into like a food binge.

Brian: Alright.

Greg: Maybe that’s psychological but you know…

Brian: There is some physiology to it right? I mean you look at like their genes for amylase which is the enzymes into your saliva that helps to start breaking down carbohydrates. There are people who have like one copy, there are people who have like 10 copies. So it’s just in there, that’s one example of a genetic difference and you can get into different levels of insulin sensitivity, different levels of transporters on cells. I mean there’s any number of things that are gonna affect the way people, if different bacteria in your gut, different probiotics in your gut that will handle them differently. There are number of things that differentiate people on carb needs, carb tolerance. If you’re an endurance athlete, you have a much higher demand for carbohydrates that you’re expending a tremendous amount of carbohydrates. If you’re a power lifter, how many carbohydrates are you really expending, right? If you’re doing 8 sets of one rap, you’re not really expending a whole lot of glucose. Maybe in some of your volume work, you’re expending a little bit but you’re right, carb intake is driven by many things; goals, weight loss or weight gain, need so type of training that you’re doing, genetics, you know what type of build you have, if you have a family history of metabolic syndrome, or diabetes or you have metabolic syndrome, right, you’re gonna do better with a lower carb intake, you have a disease where you don’t tolerate glucose as well. Since there are many things at play, but overall, most people won’t be able to process all that on their own if they go exactly what their carbs need are. That’s how we start pretty middle on the road, and then you can adjust from there based on what you respond best to. You’re right coz some people do great with a high carb intake, that same bell curve not other 15 percent do better with 3 cup handfuls from then and each meal. And even a small percentage will do best with like 4 cup handfuls, not like 700 calories from carbs and then they thrive on it but there again, a tiny percent of the population.

Greg: Right, now that’s very interesting that the genetic differences of how you tolerate carbs, and it’s interesting personally for myself, and actually a lot of people I’ve noticed that a certain kinds carbs can be just a bad dietary decisions for as counting is concerned. I mean for me If I eat rice or pasta, it just a bottomless pit. There’s very little signal to tell myself that I am full, and firstly when I eat fruits and potatoes, and sweet potatoes, I get full. Like same way as I would like to eat a piece of meat like potatoes and why not it fills me up. So I do get a quite a carbs and keep my calories controlled as long as I pick my carbs wisely. And that kind of goes against the whole flexible dieting approach but I have that in minds but I have to fill up on my macros with whichever could get the job done makes me well satisfied.

Tom: Yeah it’s pretty interesting that you say that too just because around like the whole topic of dieting in general, a lot of people that I’ve talked to automatically assumed that like if you’re going on a diet or you’re trying to restrict your macros or calories in any way, you have to keep carbs to a minimum. And I found personally if I keep carbs to a minimum, I’m miserable. And you know by introducing a moderate amount of carb, coz’ I keep to about between 30-35 percent of my macro intake a day which I know that is there because I’ve actually done the way in the food and calculating everything and…

Brian: You’re a better man than I.

Tom: Well I started out that way, now I can eyeball it so, but I mean it’s a task though but when I introduced carbs back into my diet, not only was I able to hit my macros a lot more consistently, but I felt a lot more satiated. And I think a lot of people trying to cut carbs out of their diet because of the books that they read or magazine or articles or what not and it’s really a shame because to me it makes dieting so much harder.

Brian: I couldn’t agree more, I mean I found personally and now I’m working with clients over the past 10 years and carbs definitely help increasing satiety and like you’re talking with potatoes, how you find it that they really help fill you up. There something called the satiety index, and now it’s very minimal amount of research but what they did was they feed people foods and then see how long they felt satisfied; the potatoes where far and away, the highest like far and away higher than any other food on the list. And there’s a difference between satiation which is helpful, you feel after a meal like you could eat a big salad and be like – I’m full because the volume of food but within like an hour you’re hungry again, right? Coz there wasn’t a lot of calories there. That is called “Satiety”. There’s a difference between satiation and satiety. And so how satisfied you are between meals is satiety. And some potatoes are helpful there, and most times having any type of fiber scar will definitely assist with satiety. So like sprouted grains or legumes are having some beans. Now they all very and they are between people variations and some people will get fuller from or stay more satisfied from potatoes and sweet potatoes, other people can eat rice and feels satisfied. So it depends on the person but definitely I couldn’t agree more that I found in my work with clients, we’ve just found nutrition in general, going to low-carb for too long for most people leads to some of the problems that we’re discussing earlier like the low sex drive, poor sleep, because what really happens is when you’re going low carb and you’re exercising hard, what will happen quite research shows; testosterone drops, cortisol goes up, thyroid can go down a little bit. There are some negative aspects and now it can lead to weight loss but at what cost? You can go a little bit more moderate, attenuate those problems, kind of prevent those problems from happening, and lower your fat just a little bit and still achieve the weight loss without some of the negative impacts.

Greg: Right, okay. We carry some awesome topics, there’s just one last thing I wanna kind of wrap up and finish off with. You know, you talked about achieving deep help and that kind of goes beyond eating and exercised in a certain degree and so, what are the components of achieving deep help outside of the kitchen and I guess maybe outside of the gym?

Brian: A lot actually, like when it comes to deep health, we’re not just talking about physical health, we’re talking about mental health, emotional health, you can even get to spiritual health. So for example, things you can do to help that would be like adequate sleeping, you talking about the sleep issues you ran into. How many people do you know or how many clients do you have especially in high achieving like business clientele who get 4 hrs sleep at night but take a pad of honor, right. I always sleep like 5 hours a night and they say can thrive on it but in reality, what we see over and over again; people increase their sleep, they feel better; they exercise better; these are losing weight coz sleep deprivation did increase the risk of diabetes, right, and decreases your body to tolerate carbs, again another factor, increase inflammation, I mean it negatively impacts you in so many different ways. So getting better sleep – quality and quantity, using things like meditation, yoga, deep-breathing exercises, even in this drinking green tea can actually help distress, like you need some level of stress in your life that actually helps you to be productive, right? So if you don’t have any stress, you actually can become detrimental, so you need an appropriate amount of stress over the course of the day or time period, I mean that also respond to that stress well. So things like I was saying like appropriate sleep, meditation and yoga can definitely help you or it can rewire your brain to actually better manage stress, decrease inflammation, I mean it improves so many different health markers, and improves you resiliency which is the term that we talked about a lot at PN, be more resilient to life and to life stressors, will just make you a much healthier person over all. When you get a high level of stress, coz it happens you know, life happens, work things happen, financial things happen, family stuff happens, being able to tolerate it better goes a really long way. We also talk about getting fresh air, and sunshine like being connected to the real world having a social network. There’s evidence of isolation, like being isolative from other people is just detrimental as basically like smoking 15 cigarettes a day, of course there’s some other stuff that’s related to really really horrific things are being just unhealthy for you, I mean think about it, they kind of make sense like if you picture like old prison movies, like what are they doing to punish people, they put them in isolation, right, because you drive yourself insane, you just sit in there, no one to talk to. Humans are social creatures, so if you don’ have a social network or are consistently socializing with people, that can negatively impact you. So, there are even more layers but here goes in 3 different big ones; sleep, stress management, socialization.

Greg: Alright, so a couple of things real quick, I mean you talked about meditation and in the research on the benefits of meditation are extensive and balanced. Have you personally started meditating or is it that something that you talked to a lot at clients about?

Brian: It’s something like in our PN coaching program, it’s a habit. It’s something we have people trying to practice, to add in we just start with like 5 minutes a day of meditation, I mean to slowly build it up. Personally, I don’t meditate much but what I do do, for the same kind of benefit, I do a little bit yoga with my wife, I walk my dog everyday in sunshine, in fresh air, I live, I kind of live the of a city in Maine if you really can call it that. And so I get a lot of trees, fresh air and so I get outside, I get to be with my pet, like there’s a lot of a benefits just to that are comparable to meditation. I probably should do more meditation, but personally, no, I don’t do much.

Greg: Right, yeah. I’ve always like kind of a flatter around with the idea of doing meditation for a while and I have done it a little bit but I guess the concepts of meditation is just that you come very presence of moment, state of mind and either ways to that without sitting and staring to walls for 20 minutes.

Brian: And that’s exactly what we teach within that habit we talked about some of those exact things like you don’t just sit there and all of your fingers like in the Zen pose and I could picture people staring at the wall like that’s not required to meditate. I mean you can do, it can work but there are other ways to go about achieving the same benefits in just clearing on my own. I go for a walk, and things just come and go into my head but I don’t necessarily trying to think about anyone thinking particular, just to get some sunshine and go outside and do a little bit of yoga like I said, 1 or 2 times a week. Same kind of idea you’re getting; breathing aspect of it, you’re slowing everything down, you kind of clearing your minds, so much more like a moving meditation. We are not perfectly consistent with it but it’s a very similar approach.

Greg: Alright, you know I think we’ve covered an amazing topics and it’s been a pact episode.
Thank you so much again for coming on. Is there anything that you have coming up soon? And if people wanna to find you or take a look at what you got going on, where should they go?

Brian: Well, a couple of things; first just go to precsionnutrition.com, we have a lot of stuff going on there, I read a lot of articles for the site, I go out and give samples, seminars all over the US which where I attend to record and we post on the site for people to listen to as well. In terms of what we have going on now, we actually have our precision nutrition certification launching in a couple of week and a half maybe something like that – 2weeks, anything about 2 weeks, maybe next week, I should probably know that, within a week or so. Definitely something to keep an eye on, we work with tons of fitness professionals, people like yourselves to become a precision nutrition certified and learn about not just a physiology of nutrition, but the art of coaching nutrition. Access just important, we can talk all day about how many carbs best for this, what nutrient timing is best for here and there, but if you can actually coach that to people in a way that’s empathetic and that they will actually follow through on, then you’re basically an academic, which is nothing wrong of being an academic but is not an effective coach.

Greg: Right okay, awesome! Alright, well, then thanks again, and if you guys wanna take a look at that – precisionnutrition.com. Alright, thanks for listening.

Brian: Thanks!

Tom: Take care guys…

Greg: Bye.

 

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download Brian’s “Nutritional Hierarchy Of Importance” to pinpoint exactly where the gaps are in your nutrition plan (so you can fix them to get into the shape you want), Click Here.

Episode 078: Scott Herman On How To Stay Photo-Shoot Ripped Year Round

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To download Scott Herman’s BSN Workout Routine, Click Here

scotthermanIn this episode, Tom talks to Scott Herman – not only an awesome dude, but Youtube fitness sensation and BSN sponsored athlete as well. Scott has exploded onto the fitness scene in the last few years, building a loyal Youtube and Facebook following in addition to helping people get some incredible results.

We discuss how different people respond to different types of training and how to stay in “photo shoot” condition year-round.

Specifically, you’ll discover: 

  • How Scott went from ground zero to Youtube fitness sensation (and BSN sponsored athlete)
  • How to always be relevant (even when everything changes around you)
  • The dieting strategies for staying lean and cut all year long
  • Ending the age-old debate of “If It Fits Your Macros” (a.k.a. Why a poptart isn’t the same as a sweet potato)
  • If your workout should change depending on your physique goals
  • What supplements actually matter for getting shredded
  • How Scott would have Arnold train for Pumping Iron 2

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download Scott Herman’s BSN Workout Routine, Click Here

Episode 079: David Dellanave on Maximizing Strength Gains With Biofeedback Training

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To compliment the training in this episode, I put together a “cheat sheet” of my favorite exercise variations/substitutions for the key Kinobody movements called the Exercise Rotation Tactics. To download the PDF for free, Click Here.

david dellanaveIn this episode, I have the great pleasure of picking the brain of David Dellanave, a top strength coach and author of Deadlift: Off the Floor and Get Stronger Faster, on his biofeedback training protocol. In fact, David has acheived word class strength for himself and his clients utilizing this very technique.

With biofeedback training, you are doing calibration tests in your workout to determine if you’re going to get a positive stimulus from a specific movement. I was absolutely fascinated discussing this approach with David.

The idea is that if you do the same exercise and protocol for long enough, you overburden your central nervous system. By changing the exercise variation before burnout, you can keep your body fresh and trigger a faster rate of strength and muscle growth.

This is a brilliant set up to always be advancing on your workout routine.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

  • How David took his deadlift from 250 to over 600 lbs
  • Why you should let your body lead the training session instead of a piece of paper
  • The simple flexibility test to determine if you should change the exercise variation that day
  • Why rotating to a different exercise variation will maximize strength gains in the long term

Make sure to download the Exercise Rotation Tactics PDF so you can start using biofeedback today. Funny enough, I’ve actually discovered a similar version of this technique when working up to the one arm chin up. I would build up my weighted chin up strength, then when I was starting to get burnt out, I’d switch to pull ups.

After working on my pull up strength for a while, I’d go back to chin ups and be stronger than ever. If I was getting burned out with weighted chin ups, I’d switch to assisted one arm pull ups. By having two good variations to rotate through in the event of a plateau, you can make killer strength and muscle gains.

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download my Exercise Rotation Tactics (PDF), a “cheat sheet” of my favorite exercise variations/substitutions for the key Kinobody movements, Click Here.

How to Bust Through a Strength Plateau

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matrix_punch

Serious head-turning strength is a rare thing in this world today.

Look around and you’ll see that most of the powerful lifters have one thing in common: they’re all very far from being lean and chiseled. Yep, that’s right! Most strong people today are overweight and lack really solid definition.

In fact, some people don’t even think it’s possible to be lean and strong! They think you have to choose between one or the other. Certainly these people have never been introduced to Kinobody and my training methods.

You see, when most people hit a strength plateau, the common answer is that you need to eat more food. Sure, if you eat tons of food, you’ll gain mass (muscle and fat), which will make you stronger.

But there are two things wrong with this approach:

  1. You’re going to end up looking worse since you’ll be adding a good chunk of fat.
  2. You will be sacrificing ‘relative strength’. Relative strength is really the key to being athletic and functional. Relative strength is how strong you are proportionate to your bodyweight.

 

Lean & Strong is the Key!

Lean & Strong is the Key!

Who cares if you can bench press 400 lbs if you struggle to do 10 chin-ups. Who cares if you can squat 600 lbs if you can’t jump or sprint with power and speed. With relative strength you support total athleticism and body mastery.

Now obviously none of this “relative strength” talk pertains to busting through a strength plateau. And you’re exactly right, but bear with me for a second; there’s a point to it all.

You see, your goal isn’t just to gain strength. Gaining strength is easy!

Instead, your goal is to build relative strength. You want to gain strength without getting fat in the process. This is something that I have mastered. And when you are building strength while staying lean, you will hit plateaus.

Eating more surely is not the answer. Therefore we need a new method to bust right through a plateau. The answer, my friend, is called exercise rotation!

An Introduction to Exercise Rotation

 

Time and time again I’ll get questions on my blog that go a little like this:

“Hey greg. I’ve been following your program and I’ve been making great gains. I’m leaner, stronger and more muscular than before. The only thing is that my incline press has reached a plateau and I can’t seem to get it to budge. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.”

Let’s break this down! When you’ve been advancing on the same exact movement for several weeks, inevitably you will hit a plateau. What’s going on is that your body needs a fresh stimulus.

The more you keep doing the same exact exercise over and over again, the more exhausted you will become. In fact, you may even feel drained just doing a couple sets of that particular movement. Often times, if you keep trying to progress on a movement that has stalled, you will regress and get weaker.

Make a Change (ANY Change Will Do)

What is going on is that your central nervous system requires a new and fresh stimulus to continue making gains. This is literally as simple as making the slightest variation like changing your hand position or switching from barbells or dumbbells.

By changing up the variation of an exercise, you continue to build the same movement pathway and muscle groups, without getting stuck. You effectively take the brakes off your bodies limits. You will then start to make strength gains for several weeks.

That said, inevitably another plateau will set in. It is at this point that you want to go back to the original movement. And what do you know? You will be pleased to find out that you’ll be stronger than ever. Moreover, you’ll start to make progress on the movement again.

An Example of Exercise Rotation

Here’s how it looks:

Let’s say you’ve plateaued on barbell incline bench press. For the next 4-6 weeks, you’d work on incline dumbbell bench press. Once you hit another plateau, usually around the 4-6 week mark, you’ll go back to barbell incline press.

Let’s use another example. Let’s say you’ve hit a plateau on weighted chin-ups and you are struggling to even add a pound to the belt. Well you would then want to switch to pull-ups (hands facing away) for 4-6 weeks. You will definitely find pull ups very challenging at first, but as you advance on pull-ups, you will be improving your chin-up strength as well.

Therefore when you go back to weighted chin ups, not only will you be fresh, but you’ll continue to make strength gains for the next 3-6 weeks! (Yes – it’s really that effective.)

Kinobody Exercise Rotation Tactics

For building the kinobody physique, there are six core movements that support a well developed and athletic physique.

For the upper body these are:

  • weighted chin ups
  • incline presses
  • overhead presses
  • curls

For the legs/lower-body, these include:

  • single leg squats
  • deadlifts or hang cleans

To make it easy for you, I’ve created a short report called the Kinobody Exercise Rotation Tactics (PDF) where I lay out three versions of each Kinobody core movement. If you’re following any of my workout routines you can substitute any of these variations in (as needed) whenever you hit a plateau. This will allow you to make long term gains for life, without having to get fat in the process.

This is truly one of the most effective protocols in existence for busting through strength plateaus! To download the Kinobody Exercise Rotation Tactics PDF for free, Click Here.

Episode 080: The Art of Staying Lean (Why You Can’t Keep Your Six Pack)

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To download the Low Body Fat Maintenance Guide and see exactly how to shift from dieting to effortless body fat maintenance, Click Here.

maintenanceWe’re all determined to shed off every last bit of fat and reveal model worthy definition! So we diet and train our asses off to get into incredible shape. Yet, we’re missing something! We don’t address how to keep our shape. I mean why would we? If we can get the fat off, then surely we can maintain that.

We all know that on paper, it’s a heck of a lot harder to be dropping fat, compared to simply maintaining one’s body fat percentage. But what shows up on paper, isn’t always the same case in the real world. In fact, how many people do you know that lost a bunch of weight only to gain it all back, and then some?

Hell, I’ve done this quite a few times! I’d start around 12% body fat, then I’d shred down to 8, 7 and sometimes 6% body fat. I’d get there, then I’d feel an enormous amount of satisfaction and I’d allow myself to relax, completely.

Like clockwork, I would quickly and swiftly regain all the body fat I had dropped. After doing this several times, I finally had to dial in a cutting protocol and maintenance protocol that allowed me to stay at 6-8% body fat year round.

Well in this podcast, we cover exactly how to keep your six pack abs. In fact, this is one of the most important episodes you will ever listen to. The last thing I want is for you to lose the same 10, 20 or 30+ pounds over and over again.

Instead, I want you to lean down once and stay there. This takes a very methodical strategy, one that I have laid out precisely in this jam packed 35-minute podcast.

In this episode, you will discover: 

  • Exactly why extreme dieting will cause you to gain weight faster than a retired NFL player
  • How to cut correctly in the first place (otherwise you will never maintain your results)
  • Why you must maintain dietary discipline and structure when eating at maintenance
  • How to adjust your calories to maintenance and ensure you don’t gain an ounce of fat
  • The best macro split for eating at maintenance

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download the Low Body Fat Maintenance Guide and see exactly how to shift from dieting to effortless body fat maintenanceClick Here.

Episode 081: Brandon Morrison on Strongman Training

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To download the guide to the best gym lifts for real world strength and Strongman competitions, Click Here.

brandon morrison on strongman trainingToday’s guest is Brandon Morrison, founder of Lift Big Eat Big, on distilling the heavily circulated myths that plague the fitness industry. Using credible studies (and a trusted, well-tested approach), Brandon raises the bar of human performance. His expertise extends to topics relating to fitness, nutrition, recovery, strength and mass gains.

In this episode me, co-host Tom Ness and Brandon have an in-depth conversation on how to maximize your time in the gym and get the most out of your nutrition. 

You’ll discover:

  • How to train for the dynamic Strongman competitions
  • Top nutrition principles to properly support building muscle and size 
  • How to build real world strength and athleticism
  • The best ‘strongman’ exercises and variations  
  • How to utilize these top exercises for building strength and functionally 
  • How to overcome a plateau or what you think a plateau really is 
  • How beginners can add strength while building a solid foundation 
  • Top methods for training your abs 

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download the guide to the best gym lifts for real world strength and Strongman competitions, Click Here.

RTR Episode 082: The Power of Full-Body Workouts

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To download the 3-day full-body workout routine for building strength and density, Click Here.

In this episode, Tom and I have a comprehensive discussion about the power of full body workouts for rapid strength and muscle gain. Most people completely write off full body workouts as being inferior or only suitable to beginners or newbie lifters.

That said, switching to a full body routine for 6-8 weeks can trigger some of the fastest results of your life. I wouldn’t suggest training with full body routines year round, but there is something magical about focusing on the same core movements three days per week as a strength accelerator.

When you go back to your usual two or three day split, you’ll experience heightened gains.

Here is what you’ll learn in this episode:

  • How to triple your improvement with a minimalist approach
  • How to add 50 pounds to your core lifts in 2-3 months
  • The best methods for putting on strength fast (8:10)
  • Is Reverse Pyramid Training right for you?
  • How to differentiate between effective routines and the unsustainable ones
  • The best way to approach full body training

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download the 3-day full-body workout routine for building strength and density, Click Here.

RTR Episode 083: Clint Nielsen on Building A Chiseled Body Without Living In The Gym

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To download “The Power & Effectiveness Behind Reverse Pyramid Training” guide for rapid strength gain, Click Here.
clint

In this episode, Tom and I talk to Clint Nielsen from Reveal The Steel about training and nutrition tactics that are working right now so you can enjoy life while staying lean and chiseled year-round.

You’ll learn: 

  • How to stay under any calorie count year round (even if you’re a full-time parent while running a business)
  • Why you need to calibrate your lifts before following a reverse pyramid training protocol
  • How focusing on “small wins” can lead to the largest gains
  • An awesome exercise to grow your back like an angry cobra
  • Why you shouldn’t skip leg day
  • How to be the MacGyver of training when you go to the gym
  • What 3 supplements Clint uses regularly (and why)

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download “The Power & Effectiveness Behind Reverse Pyramid Training” guide for rapid strength gain, Click Here.

RTR Episode 084: Rusty Moore On Frequency Training To Increase Strength & Muscle Tone

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To read more about Rusty’s newest course Visual Impact Frequency Training that we talked about in this episode, click here.

rusty moore on visual impact frequency trainingIn today’s episode we sit down with Rusty Moore, the grandfather of training for the “lean Hollywood look”.

We take an in-depth look at a new training protocol he has been using with great success: a high-volume frequency training program designed to blast strength gains and increase muscle tone.

Quick warning: this flies directly in the face of my “lower volume” approach. That said, it’s only meant to be followed for a couple months before going back to your normal routine.

Even if you don’t want to train 5-6 days per week, there are definitely some amazing takeaways from this call.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • How to strength train 5-6 days per week without burnout
  • The difference between tension lifting and explosive lifting
  • How to rapidly gain strength through building a more efficient nervous system
  • Why full body style workout routines are really effective
  • Can you actually increase muscle tone without dropping body fat

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To read all about Rusty’s newest FULL Visual Impact course, Visual Impact Frequency Training, that we talked about in this episode, click here.

How to Maintain 6-8% Body Fat Year Round

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To download the Low Body Fat Maintenance Guide and see exactly how to shift from dieting to effortless body fat maintenanceClick Here.

It’s not enough to lean down to a chiseled state, we also must maintain it! After all, what’s the sense in looking good for a few days, only to drift back to average shape, shortly thereafter. This is what bodybuilders and competition fitness models do. They train and diet their asses off to look good for a few days.

This has little to no appeal to me. I only want to get as lean as I can, comfortably and enjoyably maintain. For me, I have found that I can effortlessly stay at an extremely low body fat. To be honest, in the past, I never believed this was in the cards for me.

You see, in the past, I made countless mistakes that made it next to impossible to maintain even 10% body fat, let alone 7%. In this post, I will be fleshing out exactly how I am now able to maintain 6-8% body fat while being able to be quite relaxed.

Rule #1 – Take Your Time to Get Lean 

How to Maintain 6-8% Body Fat Year Round

I can get a pretty good idea if someone is going to get and stay lean just by talking with them. If I get the impression that they’re in a rush to get lean, automatically their chances of getting lean drop in half. And the likelihood that they stay lean (assuming they get there), is reduced dramatically.

The key to getting and staying lean is finding the most enjoyable way to eat to promote fat loss. If you’re obsessed with dropping fat fast, there’s no way in hell it’s going to be enjoyable. That’s the bottom line.

If you’re not enjoying your nutrition plan, well then it’s taking more from you than it’s giving you. It’s just a means to an end. This makes dieting extremely stressful. Stress is created through wanting to be somewhere other than where you are now.

If you’re so obsessively focused on getting lean, as to achieve an enhanced self image through it, you will be burdened with stress that will make dieting unbearable. You will be counting down the days like an inmate waiting to get released from prison.

But even if you manage to stick it out and endure the psychological damage and the hunger, you won’t have the skill set nor mindset to maintain it.

You see, harsh diets don’t teach you how to eat in a balanced way. You only learn how to endure hunger and eat very little, but you don’t develop the skill set to eat ‘enough food’ without overeating.

This makes a transition into maintenance quite difficult. You have to constantly battle the desire to avoid turning maintenance into binge eating.

This is pronounced with low carb dieters. They may cut out carbs to get lean, but when they try to reintroduce carbs they can’t control themselves and keep eating. What’s worse, from extreme low carb dieting their leptin levels are diminished. This results in a heightened appetite and reduced metabolism.

Rule #2 – Keep Intermittent Fasting 

If you’re fasting, it’s not that hard to maintain a low body fat. You only have to eat a couple meals per day and you can eat big, delicious and satisfying meals. By not having to prepare, cook and clean several meals per day – staying lean no longer feels like hard work.

You can wake up, have some coffee and get started on your day. As well, on a maintenance plan, you will have so many calories to work with for each of your meals. This will make going out for food a non issue. In fact, these days, as I maintain 7% body fat, I frequently go out to restaurants for amazing meals.

In fact, in Toronto, I am known to hit up WVRST for pork sausages and a mountain of duck fat fries, Playa Cabana for incredibly tasty chips, guacamole and fish tacos and burger priest for two double patty burgers that are delivered from heaven.

This would never work in a million years if I was consuming 4-5 balanced meals per day. But because I eat two massive meals per day and a couple pieces of fruit, I can have my cake and eat it too.

Rule #3 – Maintain Structure and Discipline 

One of the issues that I see is that people get to a point they’re satisfied with and they get way too relaxed. All of the sudden they stop tracking what they’re eating, they eat sporadically throughout the day, they stop emphasizing filling and satisfying foods and before they know it, they’ve gained 8-10 pounds and they’re freaking the F out.

What makes you think that you can completely soften up and eat as you please and stay lean. That’s utter nonsense. I recommend sticking to a similar script. If you were eating two or three meals per day, well keep doing that.

If your diet was predominately lean meats, fruits, veggies and potatoes.. Well keep emphasizing these foods. The only difference when switching to maintenance is that you have more room to work with. So you can eat bigger portions of carbs and you have a little more freedom to eat out.

That said, 400-500 extra calories per day can accumulate within the blink of an eye. So if you don’t maintain some structure and discipline you’ll go above your calorie numbers and gain weight faster than a retired NFL player.

Bonus Tip – Morning Ritual Routine

Morning Ritual Routine

How you start the beginning of your day, shapes your entire entire day. How you go about your entire day, shapes your life and determines your personal growth and success. Such is the power of the morning ritual routine.

By shifting your body into a heightened state of consciousness, by aligning yourself with the person you want to be and are now becoming – you will move through life attracting exactly what you want with new found energy and discipline.

The morning ritual routine is something I get all my personal coaching clients to do to maximize their success through improving motivation, self belief and adherence to stick to the plan to the utmost of their abilities.

I recommend starting your day by listening to 20 minutes of Eckhart Tolle (practicing the power of now audiobook), getting control over your mind and achieving a deep state of presence. Alternatively, you can do a self hypnosis routine to achieve incredible relaxation and feed positive suggestions into your subconscious mind.

Next, I would review goals, affirmations and your to do list for the day. And finally, I would prepare a delicious cup of black coffee, mhmmmm.

I can not overstate the power of this morning ritual, it is so incredibly powerful. I have only scratched the surface. I will be doing an in-depth post on the morning ritual routine in the very soon future.

Make sure to stay tuned and subscribe to my mailing list by picking up the free low body fat maintenance guide below!

The Kinobody Low Body Fat Maintenance Guide 

I created an awesome free tool for you guys to use when transitioning from cutting to effortless maintenance. It will teach you how to find your new maintenance requirements and how to best set up macros and make eating at maintenance as enjoyable as possible.

To download the Low Body Fat Maintenance Guide and see exactly how to shift from dieting to effortless body fat maintenanceClick Here.

 

click me

 

RTR Episode 085: How To Build A Lean, Powerful & Athletic Lower Body

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To download my free guide on How To Build A Lean, Powerful & Athletic Lower Body, Click Here.

How to build a lean, powerful and athletic lower bodyIn this episode, Tom and I discuss how to build a lean and powerful lower body. Very few people today emphasize this approach. Most leg routines are focused on building a ton of mass.

Here at Kinobody, our aim is to develop lean, hard and athletic-looking legs. This means training to build a natural amount of muscle while optimizing power and athleticism.

As well, I cover how to create the ‘superhero leg effect’. This is where you have incredible proportion throughout your entire lower body.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • How to quickly gain strength and size to your legs (for people with a skinny lower body)
  • Why building big legs is actually very easy to do and why it will ruin your physique
  • How to build strength and power without triggering muscle gains
  • The best exercises for creating powerful and aesthetic looking legs
  • How to jump higher and sprint faster with one simple technique
  • How to achieve the ‘superhero leg effect’. The key is gaining muscle in two key areas

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download my free guide on How To Build A Lean, Powerful & Athletic Lower Body, Click Here.

RTR Episode 086: Why You Must Rotate Your Key Lifts

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To compliment this episode, I put together a “cheat sheet” of my favorite exercise variations/substitutions for the key Kinobody movements called the Exercise Rotation Tactics. To download the PDF for free, Click Here.

In Today’s episode, Tom and I discuss how to hit personal records year round using one simple technique from one of the strongest powerlifting gyms in the world – West Side Barbell.

By applying this simple technique to your training, you can make incredible progress on your key lifts – incline bench, weighted chins, overhead presses and biceps curls, as well as your leg lifts.

Here’s what you’ll learn:

  • Why building strength and staying lean is very hard to do
  • First things first – key concepts to maximizing strength and muscle growth
  • Why even the most effective routines will cause strength plateau’s
  • Exactly what to do when you hit a plateau (it’s completely counter productive)
  • How to get stronger year round, stay injury free and build the best physique of your life

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

To download my Exercise Rotation Tactics (PDF), a “cheat sheet” of my favorite exercise variations/substitutions for the key Kinobody movements, Click Here.

RTR Episode 088: Dan John on Building Strength Fast

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DIn this episode, Greg sits down with Dan John who is a distinguished leader in the fitness community. Dan holds the American record for the Weight Pentathlon, is an All-American discus thrower and has competed at the highest levels of fitness.

If that’s not enough, Dan has worked with the NFL, MLB, NBA, and the United States military. Fortunately for the fitness industry, Dan John has also been designing elite courses and key programs. In these courses Dan’s methods provide a minimalist approach, which is highly effective for building strength fast. This podcast was a blast and I hope you all enjoy it!

In this episode, you’ll discover:

  • The truth about intermittent fasting
  • The 4 pillars of lifting
  • Differences in training practices
  • How to build the elusive “well-rounded” physique
  • The biggest mistakes your trainer is probably making
  • The top workout concepts for beginners to advanced lifters
  • The top, surprisingly common misconceptions in training principals today
  • Most prevalent adverse habits present in the gym
Dan has continually provided the fitness industry with reliable and consistent information that has influenced thousands. I advise everyone to visit Dan’s website for blog posts, and renowned courses and books. As always, if you enjoyed our conversation please let me know on Facebook.

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

The Kinobody Morning Ritual Routine

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I believe that everyone should have a morning ritual routine. It will completely and absolutely transform your life. How you spend the first 30 minutes of your day, will in fact, shape the rest of your day.

Just by doing a simple morning routine, you will be more focused throughout the day, you will be more productive, you will take action when required and you will stick to your plan effortlessly. Each and everyday, you will move closer and closer to the man (or woman) that you want to be.

Moreover, you will carry yourself with a calm, confident and powerful aura that will feel incredible and will support your goals and dreams. Very few people have this aura. And when you notice people that have it, well you can’t help but want to be in their company.

But before I share with you my powerful morning ritual routine, I am going to catch you up to speed on the concepts and inner workings of the mind and how to reshape yourself into the person that you want to be.

Why Most People Never Achieve Their Goals 

One simple reason why people never achieve the goals they want in life – whether it’s to start a business or grow their existing one, transform their bodies or become more confident socially – it’s not because they don’t know what to do.

Most people know what they have to do to get to their goals, one way or another. But something is stopping them from taking action and something is holding them back.

Perhaps you haven’t accessed a part of your brain that is laser focused on taking action and conquering goals?

Perhaps, you are living in fear, fear of failure, fear of judgement or even fear of achieving your goals.

The Number One Driving Force is Not Success 

The bottom line is that the number one driving force is not to succeed. It’s not to achieve everything you want in your life.

The number one driving force is homeostasis. To keep your current identity intact.

Most often, what people want in life, contradicts their present identity and self image. It doesn’t matter if you want to look like an absolute greek god and be strong and chiseled in the future. What matters is how you see yourself right now.

If you see yourself now as fat, out of shape and weak, well you will constantly be defined by that negative perception. You must lose yourself. Let go of any identity that you’re carrying with you. Open your eyes like this is the first day of your new life.

This requires you to carefully observe your mind and tune into all of the negative thoughts and stories that are playing in your head. When you’re able to pull away and witness these thoughts, they lose all power they have over you.

You can then reshape yourself each and everyday. Create a brand new you. But you can only do this once you’ve lost the old you.

The Kinobody Morning Ritual Routine 

Morning Ritual Routine

Each and every morning you are going to listen to Practicing The Power of Now for 20 minutes. You are going to listen to the audiobook in complete stillness, not while you are distracted.

You are going to quiet your mind and allow yourself to reach a state of deep presence and peace. This 20 minute drill will imbue your entire day with positive energy, peace and joy. You will become more grounded, centred and confident.

You will learn to dissolve any fear, anxiety, stress or negativity that you feel. “No fear, no distractions, the ability to let that which does not matter truly slide” (Fight Club).

You are then going to go about your day carefully observing your mind and watching how often it escapes the present moment. You will see just how often you project happiness into the future, complain about the present moment or let the past and your victim story define you now.

You will also witness how often our mind procrastinates and creates false rationalizations, excuses and reasons not to do the things that we need to do. Don’t be shocked or upset. This is a good thing. By observing these mental processes, you will be able to gain control over your mind and your life.

Each and everyday, you will become more and more present. And over the course of the next three weeks your entire life will transform. For probably the first time in your life, you will have complete control over yourself.

Tolle Meditation

Think of this 20 minute drill as a supercharged form of meditation. Meditation has a tremendous and profound benefits backed by science. I will not address them here, because it’s beyond the scope of this article.

That said, I have found listening to Tolle to be definitively more powerful than meditating. In the process of listening to Practicing The Power of Now, you experience a shift in consciousness, as you learn to transcend the ego and enter a state of deep stillness.

You also begin to have deep realizations while gaining perspective on your entire life. Moreover, you learn and develop the skill of moment to moment presence. So instead of just doing traditional meditating for 20 minutes per day, you learn to bring more consciousness, more present awareness into your everyday life.

Don’t just listen to the entire audiobook just once. Listen to it over and over again. Every time you listen to it, you will have new realizations and learn to become more present and more in control of your own mind.

How This Will Transform Your Physique 

When you learn to become present, the entire journey to your goals will become filled with ease, joy and lightness. It will no longer be a chronic obsession to arrive, to attain and to make it. You will truly enjoy each and everyday that unfolds as you work towards your goals.

Furthermore, you will have complete comfort in yourself. Your emotional state and self confidence will no longer be tied to how you look that day or any external validation. You will simply just be.

This will be truly liberating! You will be able to experience true joy and peace right now, no matter what is going on around you.

When you become truly present, you will dissolve false hunger and cravings. You will be in touch with your bodies real physiological hunger. If we can master the ability to eat according to our bodies true needs, not the desires of our mind, getting and staying lean becomes rather automatic.

Now it’s up to you to put this drill into practice and to completely transform your life. I will be doing a follow up article on the next step to supercharge the morning ritual routine. So stay tuned and make sure to get your free bonus below!

To help you practice these drills, I created a free supplementary guide where I detail my 2 most powerful morning ritual routines. To download this guide for free right now, Click Here.

RTR Episode 089: Derek of Greatist.com on Six Pack Abs & Happiness

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Derek Flanzraich InterviewDefinitely a must listen to episode for anyone that has ever been fed up pursuing six pack abs. Also one of my favorite episodes from both the sheer value aspect of it and the entertainment factor.

In this episode, Derek Flanzraich, founder and owner of Greatist.com, sits down with me to discuss six pack abs, meditation, coffee and the psychology behind getting lean and fit, effortlessly.

Interestingly enough, I have come across Greatist multiple times in the last year because it gets facebook shared like crazy. And for good reason indeed. All it takes is one quick look on the site to realize it’s something different.

Greatist is a trusty worth site with great content and best of all, it’s all backed by science. So naturally it was a great pleasure to sit down and talk to the man behind it all.

Derek and I, simply had an amazing conversation. Everything we said seemed to resonate deeply with each other. We’ve both experienced periods of time where we were deeply obsessed with getting shredded, and we both escaped that deadly mentality, and we’ll show you how too.

In this episode, you’ll discover:

  • How Derek got six pack abs in six weeks (and why it wasn’t worth it)
  • The psychology behind being lean for life
  • Why you must experience peace in the journey not the destination
  • Why coffee is indisputably healthy and how it can save your life
  • The science of meditation and exactly what 5-10 minutes per day can do for you (and how to get started today)
  • How to make fitness and nutrition enrich your life, not consume it

Watch the Video Interview Here:

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

RTR Episode 090: How to Build the Body of a Greek God

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Build the body of a greek god

Don’t Just Build Muscle – Create the Body of a Greek God

In this podcast episode of epic proportions, Tom and I flesh out how to build the body of a Greek God. This is the classical physique that was modeled in Ancient Greece on statues. It’s also the same very shape that many Hollywood actors strive to achieve for films in which they must look extremely athletic, powerful and of course, awe inspiring.

Unlike an over bulked physique, the Greek God Physique is the type of shape that women find inherently attractive and desirable. Well in this episode, Tom and I showcase exactly what this physique looks like and exactly how to attain it, with a unique strategy of training and dieting.

Delving into deeper waters, we explain exactly why building godlike strength is a necessity for achieving the dense and muscular look of a Greek God. Then we flesh out key strategies and unheard of tactics to allow you to build strength and muscle faster than you could ever imagine, all while staying lean and chiseled.

You’ll Learn How to Tap Into Strength Gains You Never Knew Were Possible 

These are the very tactics that I have used to build up to 150 lbs chin ups and 315 lbs bench presses at under 8% body fat, among many other feats of strength. This podcast episode is largely based off of the coveted Greek God Program.

The very system that has transformed hundreds of men in average shape into the condition and caliber of Hollywood’s fittest (think Brad Pitt in Troy or Daniel Craig in Skyfall). This is of course while attaining very strong lifts (100 lbs + chin ups and 250 lbs incline presses for reps).

If you want to pack on sleek muscle and attain strength and power that is unheard of today, this is a must listen to! This information is largely missing in the fitness industry and it is my drive to teach all men how to build the strength and physique of a Greek God.

Here’s what you’ll learn

  • Key attributes of the Greek God Physique
  • The best exercises to build the Greek God ratio’s
  • Why building strength is the best way to build dense muscle
  • How to add 50 lbs to each of your key lifts in 12 weeks
  • How to build capped shoulders naturally (a key sign of a Greek God Physique)
  • Calorie and macro strategies to build muscle without fat gain
  • The main drivers of muscle growth and why you can build muscle on less calories than you think

Watch the Video Interview Here

 

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

RTR Episode 091: Tyler Bramlett On Building A Functionally Fit & Athletic Physique

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To check out Tyler Bramlett’s new and revised CT-50 training program (and to get 3 free workouts), Click Here.

Tyler Bramlett CT50In this episode, Tom and I talk to Tyler Bramlett from garagewarrior.com on how to build a functionally fit and athletic physique.

Tyler has a very interesting background, having trained with many top coaches in different styles of training from kettlebell experts, to professional strongman, physical therapists, olympic lifting coaches, and even Circus Soleil handbalancers.

This unique background has given Tyler the tools to forge a very interesting and effective approach to training, based around progressive improvement.

Tyler says it best, “it’s not about the dogma. The only thing that matters is that you’re a little bit better today than you were yesterday.” Well damn, I couldn’t agree more. Funny enough, many fitness experts still haven’t figured this out.

This was a jam packed episode and at times we even got into a little friendly debate! You will definitely enjoy this one, so give it a listen.

Here’s a glimpse into what you’ll discover:

  • Why it doesn’t matter if you train with weights or your bodyweight, and what you must do to become strong and functionally fit
  • Strength targets with bodyweight movements to shoot for to build a strong and muscular physique
  • Unique bodyweight movements to build an incredible chest and powerful delts
  • How to utilize range of motion progressions to achieve mind blowing strength and build your connective tissues and bones
  • How to improve your posture, stand taller and develop your core

Thank You For Listening!

To get more RTR content sent directly to your device as they become available, you can subscribe on iTunes or Stitcher! Also, reviews on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated… We read each and every one of them!

Check out Tyler Bramlett’s new and revised CT-50 training program now (and get 3 free workouts)… Click here now.

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