Digital Social Hour - Busting Fitness Myths, Best Supplements and Setting World Records | Layne Norton DSH #273
Episode Date: February 8, 2024Layne Norton comes on the Digital Social Hour to bust some common health myths on social media, the best supplements to take and how he was able to set world records in the powerlifting space. APPL...Y TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://forms.gle/qXvENTeurx7Xn8Ci9 BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com SPONSORS: Opus Pro: https://www.opus.pro/?via=DSH Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
I don't want to skip over like if there are any concerns, like I would say there is some
data suggesting that they may alter some of the artificial sweeteners may alter the gut
microbiome.
But what's important to point out is we don't really know enough about the gut microbiome
to know whether that change is a good change, bad change or neutral change.
I'm saying when faced with the choice of, you know, diet versus regular diets, definitely
better.
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and here's the episode. Ladies and gentlemen, we got Dr. Lane Norton here today. How's it going,
man? I'm good. How about yourself? Good, man. Any new and exciting studies in your space going on right now?
I mean, there's a lot of stuff coming out.
It just depends on the, I just put up a post about training volume, like a number of, you
know, sets per week.
A lot of what's been really looked at in the resistance training side of things is like,
okay, what is, can we figure out like how many sets you should be doing per week per body
part to like maximize muscle growth.
And without getting too detailed into the new studies, there's basically,
we haven't found the cap yet that, you know,
it's important to realize this isn't like a linear effect, but you know,
if you do a couple of hard sets per week, I mean,
you're getting quite a bit of a response,
but we also even up to like 52 sets per week in a recent study of like hard training for a body
part. Um, they still saw a better results than like 40 sets. So anyway, it's, it's kind of
interesting that, um, you know, we're usually in most things we see kind of a cap out response.
Um, but it doesn't appear we found that dosage with resistance training yet.
Interesting.
So theoretically you could be in the gym for two hours
and still get the same benefits?
Oh, I mean, when I was prepping for – I compete in powerlifting,
and I qualified for Open Worlds in 2015,
and I set a world squat record at that meet.
But when I was prepping for that, I was training for three or four hours at a time. Damn. Yeah. You were squatting for three hours? Squatting,
bench pressing, deadlifting. Yeah. I mean, I had some, I had some, I had some pretty brutal
sessions that took my soul. What's the most you ever squatted? Most ever squat in competition
was 668 pounds in the 205 pound class. Dude, squatting scares me because it's easy to have the wrong
form. Yeah. I mean, it's, and I'm actually somebody who like, I have pretty long legs by
nature. So my, my upper body's about somebody who's five, eight and my legs are about somebody
who's six foot two. Oh yeah. So I do that thing. What's that? Is that a good thing in squatting
to have that? No, no. Typically you want to be a little bit longer torso, uh, shorter. It's really the femur length that makes the difference. Um, so I actually have
quite a bit of forward lean, but I squat and, uh, I don't know, what can I say? I'm just hard
headed. I just, I had skinny legs growing up and I was, I, I took that and people making fun of me
for having chicken legs and was like, well, I guess I'll go show you, you know, how common
are injuries in that weightlifting space? It must be happening a lot, right?
I mean, it depends on what you compare it to.
So if you compare per hours of activity performed,
weightlifting is much lower than most sports that are out there.
It has similar injuries to non-contact sports.
Track and field has similar injury rate there um so it is common especially amongst like
lifters who are higher level because you know once you get to a certain level
and this goes for any sport what it takes to make progress versus what will possibly injure you
because you're not recovered enough is really close together and that's why you see me so many pro athletes struggle with injuries and even the guys who aren't on the dl
um they're usually dealing with quite a few aches and pains like it's it is a very very um
brutal experience being a professional athlete yeah um and and very rarely do you find guys who
are like feeling good, you know, most
of the year, it's just not how it works.
Yeah.
So health wise, what are you keeping a really close eye on?
Is it your testosterone levels, any certain vitamins you want at a good level?
You know, I mean like for myself, um, you know, I keep an eye on my blood lipids, my
insulin sensitivity, um, sex hormones, you know, testosterone, those sorts of things.
Um, but inflammation, um, And based on my last blood draw,
I was in good shape. Nice. How do you measure the inflammation? So you're looking at something
called typically CRP, which is C-reactive protein. That's typically the most common measure for
inflammation. And there's also other things like IL-6. There's quite a few markers.
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your podcast today a few markers but i think crp is the most common interesting um i remember when
i posted that video about diet soda, you got pretty pissed.
Well, not pissed, not pissed. So I think that there's a lot of,
if you don't understand the scientific literature, if somebody's not like had the training to peel
through it, it's very easy to take pieces of studies or even whole studies and make an opinion. And, and I'll give
you an example why it's important to understand like literature as a consensus and have an idea
of what the overall literature states, as well as the differences between studies and artificial
sweeteners are a great, great example of that. Um, so I can remember very clearly years ago,
I was reading, uh, what's called a meta-analysis
of uh smoking and adenocarcinoma now a meta-analysis is basically a study of studies
so they take studies that have similar like methods and they combine them to try to form
kind of an overall effect like what are the because you can always find a couple studies that are different and in this meta-analysis i think there was about 50 studies included and they do
what's called a forest plot which is basically you have a center line if the studies fall to
how far they fall to the right it favors one thing how far they fall to the left favors another thing
so on the right was basically in this study
showing that smoking was a risk factor for adenocarcinoma.
And the overall effect was like a 700% increased risk, right?
But of those 50 studies,
you could find two that were to the other side of the line.
Right.
Right.
So what's the take?
If I just picked out one of those two,
it was like, oh, look at these studies. Yeah. I could say, well, if I just picked out one of those two and was like,
oh, look at these studies. Yeah. I could say, well, look, see, smoking's not bad for you,
you know, but is it about those two studies or is it about the 48 other studies showing the other
thing? I see. Right. And so, um, you know, when it comes to artificial sweeteners, I actually was
on the other side of it, you know, circa like early two thousands, when I was first
getting into competing in bodybuilding, I'm like, Oh, that crap's the same thing. You know, it's
going to have all these health issues. And then I started reading through the research literature.
And what you find is that you can find basically two kinds of studies that will suggest that
artificial sweeteners might not be good for you. The first kind is where they feed it to lab animals
in really high doses, right?
And you can make darn near anything a poison
in the right dose, right?
Like if you drink too much water, you can actually die.
This has happened at college hazing events before.
You can dilute your electrolytes
to the point where it actually **** you.
So even water can be a toxin at the right dose now it takes an
incredibly high dose right um so these these studies in lab animals usually they're giving
a thousand to ten thousand times the normal dose that you could ever get i mean you would
you would actually drown you would actually have the same effect as drinking too much water
than you would ever have from like the side effects from diet soda yeah so there's that kind
of study then there's also what we call epidemiological studies which is where they're
they're looking at groups of people and saying okay this group does this this group does this
what's their disease incidence right and so you know it seems like every few months the media
will say oh look at this new study came out, shows, you know, diet soda, artificial sweetener increases the risk of cancer.
Yeah.
Well, the problem with those is in epidemiology, you cannot separate out different factors with
people. What I mean by that is people who drink diet soda are also more likely to be overweight and some people have
drawn the conclusion that well that means it makes you overweight no it's the people who are overweight
are going to make more diet attempts and they're going to be more likely to use this as a tool
right and i'm thinking of a very recent study that came out where they um there was the nutrasante
cohort out of i think it was france
100 000 people and the takeaway the big headline was aspartame um linked to cancer but if you go
in there they separated into like never users or don't use aspartame low to moderate and high
and from low to moderate there was an effect but then there was actually a
lower risk for the high group so to me if something is carcinogenic what you're looking for is a dose
response i mean if you smoke more you are at more risk of lung cancer right it's not a it's not a
u-shaped curve right right then when you consider um i use this um and i'm involved with them there's a
an ai tool called consensus which basically um is like an ai powered search for scientific studies
if you ask it a question it will basically pull all the relevant studies and then give you what
the kind of the overall message is that's cool yeah it is very cool. And there's also a feature called synthesize,
which it'll tell you like,
you have to ask a yes or no question.
And it'll say like how many studies say yes,
what percentage say possibly,
what percentage say no.
So if you look up,
does aspartame cause cancer?
80% of the studies say,
or sorry, 70% say no,
15% say possibly, and 15% say yes.
So it's like on ballot, you would never think that when you listen to the media, right? But
think about it. What in general on the news gets attention? It's stuff that scares you.
Because if you are, and there's actually research to show this, that stuff that promotes a fear response is much more likely to be shared than things that like are not scary.
For sure.
Right. And part of that I think is kind of a biological initiative as humans that we're trying to protect other people in our tribe. Right.
So when it comes to artificial sweeteners and things in general, the highest quality of
evidence that we see in science is typically called human randomized control trials. And
that means ideally subjects are getting a placebo or not. And you're controlling other variables.
You're controlling a lot of variables. And the reason randomization is
important is, let's say we're going to go into a study, right? And I like artificial sweeteners,
let's say you don't, right? And they say, okay, you can pick which group you want to be in.
Well, I'm going to pick the one that is giving the artificial sweeteners, you're going to pick
the one that's not. But the problem is, we may select that, but we may also have a bunch of other things that are inherent to that selection that influence our
overall behavior. Maybe one of us is more likely to seek other health promoting behaviors because
we're also specifically avoiding artificial sweeteners, right? And so what randomization
does is when you bring people in, you say just randomly, you're going to that group, you're going to that group. And you can assume that any of those traits, inherent traits are going to get
randomly distributed across those groups. So if there's a difference between the groups, you can
assume it's from the treatment effect. And so when we look at artificial sweeteners, and you can't do
randomized control trials for years and years, you you just people don't allow themselves to be controlled that long but if we look at like for example weight loss um if we
look at um like markers of health um most of the studies the randomized control trials where they
say okay you can have either regular sugar beverage or diet beverage,
people lose a significant amount of body weight.
Like I think there was one trial that was,
I think the end point was people lost 13 pounds on average
just from consuming diet soda versus regular.
And their blood markers of like insulin sensitivity
and some of their blood lipids improved.
Now, I don't think artificial sweeteners
are fat burners. What's happening is they're just eating less, right? Because they're replacing that.
But what's really interesting is some more recent studies have looked at, well, what about water?
What if we just told people to drink water, right? And when you do that same experiment,
it still beats water. Diet? Yeah, just by a little bit, not a huge amount, but,
but just a little bit. And I don't, again, I don't think the take home is that you shouldn't
drink water. I think what the take home is people who are using water, maybe they're seeking out
that sweet taste elsewhere. Whereas if they're consuming diet sodas, they don't feel like they
have to go get it somewhere else. So now, again, I don't want people to straw man what I'm going to say. I'm
not saying everybody should drink diet soda or anything like that. I'm saying when faced with
the choice of diet versus regular, diet's definitely better. And I don't want to skip
over if there are any concerns. I would say there is some data suggesting that they may alter,
some of the artificial sweeteners may alter the gut microbiome.
But what's important to point out is we don't really know enough about the gut microbiome
to know whether that change is a good change, bad change, or a neutral change.
Because I'm thinking of one study where they gave sucralose
and saw a change in the gut microbiome.
But one of the species of bacteria that increased in population is a species that's known to produce more butyrate. And butyrate, which is a volatile fatty acid produced by fermentation of these bacteria, actually has a bunch of data showing it to improve health, improve metabolic health, improve insulin sensitivity.
So bring it
all back around recommendation wise. If you can just drink water, drink water, right? That's great.
But I, if you're somebody who has gotten to the point where you're drinking quite a few sugar
sweetened beverages, using diet beverages is a very, very great tool to lose weight. And in fact,
every time I post about this, I get people saying, well, I lost, you know, 50, 60, 70 pounds. All I did was replace with diet soda. Right.
That's fascinating.
So my big thing is like, I'm not saying maybe there's no downsides. I certainly haven't seen
anything yet that makes me real worried. But what I'm saying is like, we got to be careful
demonizing something that could actually be a really great tool for people. Right.
And so that's kind of the take home. It's easy to read headlines. And there's very few people like yourself that could actually be a really great tool for people. And so that's kind of the take home.
It's easy to read headlines and there's very few people like yourself that will actually read these studies.
Absolutely. When I do a blog post on my site,
I always make citations with everything. And we know from tracking clicks on my site
that less than 1% of people will click even a single citation.
And even then, I do understand the difficulties
because even if you click the citation,
I mean, unless you've had training as a research scientist,
it's so hard to read these studies
and understand what they're actually saying to you,
which is one of the reasons I like consensus,
which is great for the average folk.
And then I do a research review every month on my website called Rep, where like we take a few studies that are really popular at the time and
kind of break them down in a way that's easy to understand. Yeah. Another thing or person,
I guess, that you've been critical of is Gary Brekka. He's probably the most viral person on
TikTok and Instagram right now in your space. What are the things specifically you're critical
about him of? I haven't seen him make many claims that i agree with now um a lot of people
will say well you know i know he worked with dana white and dana white's been you know singing his
praises i do i if i i'm not sure about this but i think there's some kind of business association
between the two i could be wrong um but you know dana lost, I think it was like 30 pounds.
The research shows,
regardless of the way you lose it,
if you lose 30 pounds and you were overweight or obese,
your inflammation is going to improve.
Your insulin sensitivity is going to improve your blood.
Your blood lipids are going to improve.
Like you're going to get healthier.
And so I'm not saying that what he suggested didn't work.
I'm just saying it didn't work for the reasons he's saying, right?
Which is all these kind of like biohacking things.
So let's take cold plunge.
He's big on cold plunge.
And one of the things I saw him say was, well, when you do a cold plunge, nothing will, I
think he said, remove calories faster from your body, which that's not really how it
works. But anyway, nothing will get rid of calories or burn calories more than a cold plunge.
And then he said, it also helps you build muscle because it activates cold shock proteins,
which affect muscle building. So this is a case of where, again, what he's talking about,
let's take the cold shock proteins, for example. So this is right in my wheelhouse because my PhD specifically was examining protein metabolism. So I'm very
familiar with this research data. Are you interested in coming on the digital social
hour podcast as a guest? We'll click the application link below in the description of
this video. We are always looking for cool stories, cool entrepreneurs to talk to you
about business and life. Click the application link below and here's the episode guys. So what he's talking about is a mechanism.
So if you activate cold shock proteins and heat shock proteins, there are pathways that lead to
increased activation of anabolic signaling. Okay. But that's just one mechanism. And when you're looking at an outcome of say, like
building muscle, that is the summation of thousands of signals, not just one.
Got it.
And so what I always say is, okay, well, do we have studies that directly address what we,
what we care about, what we're asking about? And we do in the case of cold plunge, we have studies
looking at muscle growth, people doing cold plunge. We have studies looking at muscle growth,
people doing cold plunge versus people not,
and lifting weights.
And people doing cold plunge actually gain less muscle.
Really?
Yes.
Wow.
So now, again, people will strawman what I'm saying.
I'm not saying you can't build muscle doing cold plunge.
You can.
What I'm saying is on balance,
you won't build as much as somebody who's not doing it.
And we have studies showing that basically what happens is it inhibits what we call muscle
protein synthesis. It inhibits the anabolic signaling of the mTOR pathway. Now that's not
to say that there aren't benefits to cold plunge. There are, uh, it does reduce inflammation. Uh,
it, uh, appears to help with recovery from exercise. Uh, it reduces
soreness. So if you're, um, like if I'm a bodybuilder, probably a bad idea, right? But if
I'm an MMA fighter and I'm feeling real beat up, I'm real sore and I'm starting to peak for a fight
and I'm thinking about, man, I just want to be able to get my next training session in,
then it may make a lot of sense. Right. But, and as far as the calorie burn stuff goes, again, we have that data.
We have data looking at energy expenditure in response to cold water and exercise in
cold water.
And I think, I believe that was part of a larger claim where he was talking about Michael
Phelps and why he needed to eat 10,000 calories a day.
By the way, I don't believe that Michael Phelps actually ate 10,000 calories a day.
That sounds obnoxious.
That is such a, that is a job.
And if you're training eight hours, win.
You know what I mean?
Like, I'm sure that there are days that he did.
I'm sure maybe he got there a couple of days or something like that.
But the idea that he did it consistently, maybe I'm too skeptical, but I don't believe it.
I actually know his roommate, so I will find out.
He ate it every day, he said?
I think he said he ate 10,000 calories per day.
I don't know the specific claim.
Well, he's probably burning 3,000 just swimming, right?
Oh, he's probably burning a good amount.
I mean, if you're exercising for six to eight hours a day, which a lot of these guys are
because it's literally their job, you can burn thousands of calories yeah but i mean 10 000 calories to even get that in even from
junk food i mean anybody out there just try to eat five like try that yeah it's like a job that's
five chipotle burritos yeah it's a lot of food so we have studies looking at energy expenditure
and what they show is either it doesn't increase energy expenditure or it does, but it's just a really small amount.
So does it?
Maybe, but it's not this like fat loss modality that's going to make a huge difference.
And there are studies actually showing that people who exercise in cold water actually end up eating
more that they have higher levels of appetite as well. So now, I mean, that could be a useful tool
if you're somebody who doesn't have a big appetite, right? But if you're somebody whose
focus is losing weight, which I'm assuming if somebody's talking about energy expenditure
or calories you're burning, you would want to have increased appetite. So my thing is like,
whenever it comes to anything, I always say there's no solution. This is a quote from Thomas
Sowell, but there's no solutions. There's only trade-offs. And so be very wary of anybody who
claims that like, whatever they're recommending, that there's no downsides to it whatsoever.
I mean, even with like the artificial sweetener stuff, you still hear me couching with like,
well, there's this thing. And I would love to see more research. Like, you know, even with like the artificial sweetener stuff, you still hear me couching with like, well, there's this thing. And, you know, I would love to see more research.
Like, you know, I hold open the idea that, you know, one, that the literature could change.
And two, that I don't know everything.
Right.
And three, that anything we do is a trade off.
Right.
There's no magical substance that has no side effects yeah i mean you
know there's there's things that like you know when it comes to like supplements and that sort
of stuff i mean there's stuff that appears to be like very very well tolerated like take creatine
for example the most studied most effective um safest supplement that we know of. But some people do get GI irritation from it. Like they get diarrhea,
they get bad stomach cramps. And so again, like it depends on the population and everything has
a downside and it's up to you as an individual. And that's why when people say this thing worked
for me, this thing didn't work for me. I don't think a lot of that boils down to like huge
differences in physiology. A lot of it's psychology,
but then also just like people's experience.
And I always tell people your experience is totally valid.
Like what your experience is totally valid.
Just be careful thinking that it applies to everyone else.
Yeah.
Right.
I like what you said about the literature changing.
Cause when I was a kid growing up,
I'm taught all these things are bad.
Certain things are good.
Like certain foods were super foods like kale. And now it's like the
opposite. And it's like, things could change at any time. Yeah. I mean, you know, I tell everybody,
are there foods that appear to be more health promoting than other foods? Absolutely. Like,
you know, if you look at the research on fruit and vegetables, I mean, I know it's boring because they've been saying this for years,
but so, and fiber intake, if you look at our most,
the biggest meta-analysis I've seen,
which was almost a million subjects in total,
basically they did what's called a meta-regression,
which is where they take the data they have available
and try to project out like what the dose response is. For every 10 gram increase in dietary fiber, there was a
corresponding 10% decrease in the risk of mortality, cardiovascular disease, and cancer.
Now, before anybody thinks I'm going to eat a hundred grams of fiber a day and live forever,
keep in mind that these are like relative percent changes. So what I mean by
that, and this is where people get screwed up with media headlines as well. You'll see something says
increases risk of cancer by 20%, right? Sounds really scary. If your absolute rate of the
possibility of getting cancer in say the next 10 years is 5%, like I'm just throwing a number out
there. A 20% increase in the relative rate would mean
your absolute risk goes from 5% to 6%. Right. Now still, like obviously you would want to avoid,
you know, like things that increase your risk, but 5% to 6% doesn't sound nearly as scary as 20%,
right? Exactly. So same thing with fiber, right? Like if your risk of developing heart or having a
heart disease in the next 10 years is let's say 10, 10%, every 10-gram increase in fiber you go up, a corresponding 10% decrease in the risk.
Now, I think that probably caps out somewhere.
But there are foods that promote more health.
Fruits and vegetables seem to be pretty consistently in the literature show up. But yeah, like the idea that like there's like one superfood
that everybody should eat, you know.
I'm a big fan of eating a diverse array of foods
and even, you know, some foods that you enjoy
that may not be healthful
because I always compare it to like having a budget, right?
So if you're an athlete, say like Michael Phelps, right?
You expend a ton of energy, right?
You have a huge budget.
And so if you are somebody who, like a financial advisor, financial example,
if you make a million bucks a year and you want to buy a sports car for $250,000,
is it okay to buy that if you're still putting money away for retirement,
paying your mortgage, taking care of all your responsibilities? Sure, especially if it's
something that you feel good about and it makes you hungry to work hard. But should you do it if
you can't afford it and you can't afford to pay these other... Of course not, right? Because it's
a bad investment no matter how much money you have, because it's well most are going to go down in value um but that doesn't mean that you
shouldn't do it if you can afford it right and so the same thing with you know if you're somebody
who expends a lot of energy you can still meet your nutritional requirements with you know fiber
and protein and these sorts of things and have room left over to have some fun with foods that
you enjoy yeah and so i think there's probably not enough of that messaging either.
For sure.
And speaking of nutrition,
the nutrition on the back of every item at the grocery store,
I saw you made a statement saying that could be off by 20%.
Yes.
So I think it's the FDA allows up to a 20% variance in the energy and
macronutrient contents,
which means if something says it has 20 grams of protein,
it could have anywhere from 16 to 24 grams of protein.
Now,
what I will say is,
you know,
people will kind of use that as like,
well,
that's why I like,
for example,
like tracking your nutritional intake is a waste of time. Um, you know, well, that's why like, for example, like tracking your nutritional intake
is a waste of time. Um, you know, and, and full disclosure, conflict of interest. I have an app
that functions based off of like providing macronutrient recommendations and making
changes in tracking. Um, but that would be like saying it's useless to keep a budget because you
can never know exactly what inflation is doing. You can't know what interest rates are going to do. You have investments that you don't know
what they're going to do and you have unexpected expenses, right? You don't have to be exact.
What you have to be is consistent, right? And also, do you need to keep a budget to save money?
No. Plenty of people do without one. Is it a useful tool for a lot of people,
like seeing where your expenses are going?
Absolutely, right?
So same thing with like tracking calories, tracking macros.
Do you need to do it to lose body fat?
No.
Is it a useful tool for a lot of people?
For sure.
Yeah, so like I remember one of your competitors had a brownie
and you took it to the lab
and you found out he lied more than 20%, right?
Well, so this was a small company so i want to say that right like i i this wasn't something you could
go buy off a grocery store but i think one of the things i will tell people like if because i'll
hear people say man i'm eating low calories and i can't seem to lose weight and invariably usually
when you look at this literature people people under-report their nutritional intake
in studies anywhere from 30% to 70%.
Wow.
So there was actually a study I'm thinking of,
I think it was in 1992,
where they had people who self-reported
had difficulty losing weight on low calories
submit themselves to what's called a metabolic ward,
which is basically food jail.
Like you are housed and you have all the food provided for you and they can
track everything you're eating and they can track your daily energy
expenditure,
everything.
It's very controlled.
And what they found was these people reported that they were eating 1200
calories.
And on average,
they were eating over 2000
calories per day. And, um, getting back to this, the way this whole thing came about was we had a
client who was having difficulty losing weight when we found out she was having a couple of these,
um, these like low calorie brownies per day. And I don't remember the exact macros,
but it was supposed to be something like 17 grams of protein, 12 grams of carbs, and like
three grams of fat. Had it purchased one, sent it direct to the lab. Didn't even never touched it.
Right. Lab comes back and it's like, I think it was like, it was over 10 grams of fat i want to say it was like
close to 15 or 17 like 50 grams of carbohydrate and three grams of protein right so what i'll
tell people is like what's what's more likely that like you know so if you're having trouble
losing weight and you're consuming a lot of like like low calorie diet products maybe cutting back
to like more whole single ingredient or whole foods. I don't like
using those terms because it's kind of nebulous, but you know, when it comes to that, it's kind of
like, you know, fruits, vegetables, lean meats, you know, try that for a week and see what happens.
Right. And the other thing is too, people are really bad at remembering. We remember our meals,
but not our snacks. So a great example of this is if you
look at dietary food recall data the average caloric intake in the u.s is pegged at about 2500
which doesn't make sense based on the obesity crisis but if you looked at the data based off
of food production and consumption it's like 3500 calories a day and i think a big part of that is
when i think about like,
do you remember what you had yesterday to eat?
I mean,
you,
somebody could probably pry it out of you,
but you'd remember your meals.
But if you grab like a handful of chips or like some nuts or like a few,
like whatever,
that stuff adds up over time.
And like in research studies,
when they actually track it and it adds up usually
to a few hundred calories a day the people don't aren't aware that they're they're getting in yeah
and even like take like the professionals registered dietitians when they did research
studies on them and their tracking they still underestimated by about 10 percent wow and i
think people get really like defensive about that stuff because they think if I say that they think,
Oh,
Lane saying I'm lying about what I'm consuming.
I don't think people are necessarily lying.
Some are,
but I think mostly people are just really bad estimators of portion sizes.
Like if you ever want to be depressed,
go away on a serving of peanut butter.
Like it says two tablespoons.
If you go out to,
I've weighed like two tablespoons before the serving size is supposed to be like 32 grams.
If you take two, like not even crazy big tablespoons,
but just like a good scoop, I weighed it was almost double.
And then if you look at a serving of cereal,
I mean, with the bowls we have these,
it barely covers the bottom of the bowl.
You know, serving ice cream, most people,
a bowl of ice cream is probably three to
four servings of ice cream. Wow. So like the most I ever learned about nutrition, honestly, even
after doing a PhD and everything was when I first got into bodybuilding and I got a food scale and
I just started weighing everything. I'm like, oh man, God, I've been eating like four servings of
cereal at a sitting, you know, like, you know, you never truly realize that you have that experience.
Yeah. Cause you just assume one serving in your head when you see the nutrition
fat, but it's double tripled up. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. Lane. It's been fun, man. I've definitely
learned to be more diligent with my research. Anything you want to close off with or promote?
Yeah. I mean, if people are interested, like, you know, I've done nutrition coaching for a long time.
I have an app carbon diet coach, which basically is an algorithm-based coaching app
where people can put their information in and it will generate out dietary recommendations based on
their goals. And then it will not just do that, but it will adjust them as they progressed to
optimize things. And we have a tracker embedded in that as well. That's done really well. My
research review I talked about. I've got some courses and we also do one-on-one coaching. So I pretty much do
everything. Awesome. Sounds good. We'll link it in the description. Thanks for coming on, man.
Thanks, Sean. Appreciate it. Thanks for watching guys as always. And I'll see you next time.