Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2607: The Ultimate Fat Loss and Muscle Gain Cheat Sheet
Episode Date: May 29, 2025The Ultimate Fat Loss and Muscle Gain Cheat Sheet They have a lot more in common than people think. (1:04) The Ultimate Fat Loss and Muscle Gain Cheat Sheet #1 - Caloric deficit/surplus. (2:36) ... #2 – Lifting Weights. (12:57) #3 – Sleep. (21:10) #4 – Water. (30:04) #5 – Supplements. (34:28) Related Links/Products Mentioned Mind Pump Group Coaching Scholarship May Special: MAPS 15 Performance or RGB Bundle 50% off! ** Code MAY50 at checkout ** Mind Pump # 2450: The Smartest Way to Use Protein to Burn Fat & Build Muscle Mind Pump # 1835: Why Resistance Training Is the Best Form of Exercise for Fat Loss and Overall Health Mind Pump # 1547: The Hidden Benefits of Lifting Weights Mind Pump # 2518: Five Tips for Amazing Sleep (Listener Coaching) Mind Pump # 2377: The 4 Most Valuable Supplements Everyone Should Take Mind Pump # 2497: The Amazing & Weird Side Effects of Creatine Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go
Mind pump with your hosts Sal DeStefano Adam Schaefer and Justin Andrews
You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast. This is mind pump today's episode
We talk about fat loss and muscle gain
They have a lot more in common than you think we're're only gonna talk about the stuff that matters. By the way, we are doing two groups right now with coaching.
We have a fat loss group, 50 people, that's it,
and a muscle gain group, 50 people, that's it.
They are being coached by our trainers,
and because of this episode,
we're gonna give away a scholarship
to a fat loss individual and a muscle gain individual.
In other words, you can get in there for free
and get coached by our trainers and coaches for free.
If you want to apply,
it's mindpumpgroupcoaching.com forward slash scholarship.
Go there, apply, and you can possibly get coached
by our trainers, Mind Pump trainers, for free.
Again, it's for fat loss or muscle gain.
Go check it out.
This is the ultimate fat loss and muscle gain cheat sheet.
We're only gonna talk about what really matters
for fat loss and muscle gain and nothing else.
Let's do this.
Yeah.
All right, the two most popular things to talk about
in fitness obviously are fat loss and muscle gain.
And yes, they can be complex,
mostly because people are complex.
That's what makes this so challenging.
It's not necessarily the steps,
although I'll be clear, there's a lot of misinformation
that's out there, there's a lot of bad information
that will move you in the wrong direction,
so we're gonna clear that up.
Well, is the idea for us to highlight the similarities in the two of these?
Cause I think that-
They have a lot more in common than people realize.
Yeah, I think that's the, I don't know, the more interesting part of this
conversation is the average person would think that a fat loss journey versus a
muscle building journey are very different.
Classically different, yeah.
And they really are not.
They're very, very similar in many ways.
And I think that if people understood that,
I think they'd have more success with both pursuits.
100%, 100%.
So we're gonna talk about those things
and what are the things that they have in common?
What are the most important things to focus on
to get yourself to either goal?
And again, both have a lot in common.
As Adam was saying, whether you're trying to gain muscle or lose body fat,
the strategies are incredibly similar, which is really interesting as we get into it.
So let's talk first about food.
With fat loss and muscle gain, you have to eat right.
Both of them require to eat right.
But one of them requires you to eat
in what's called a calorie deficit,
and the other one, in a calorie surplus.
Essentially what that means is,
if you wanna lose weight or body fat,
you have to eat less calories than you burn.
What this does is it forces your body
to tap into its stored energy reserves, AKA body fat.
So if you eat less calories than you burn, this is going to put you in a situation tap into its stored energy reserves, aka body fat.
So if you eat less calories and you burn, this is going to put you in a situation
where ideally you lose body fat.
When you're trying to build or gain tissue, gain muscle,
you have to have more energy than you're burning,
otherwise you'll have nothing left to build with.
And so that's really the big difference between the two.
But when we dive into the diet, there's a lot of crazy similarities.
And there are some different strategies.
One of them, you're challenged with maybe not overeating.
The other one, maybe you're challenged with not under eating.
So we'll talk about those.
But both of them require you to eat essentially healthy
and both of them benefit a high protein diet.
Well, I think it's interesting to talk about
how both these clients, right,
so they were two unique people that had two separate goals,
the same, I'd give the same advice around
what types of foods they would eat,
which would be high protein meal and not processed foods.
So even though they have totally different goals,
and one of them requires eating in a surplus,
one of them requires eating in a deficit,
but the advice stays the same here
of avoiding heavily processed foods
and eating high protein meals
because it's essential to the success of both these people.
For different reasons though, right?
They are, right.
So processed foods, heavily processed foods
make you overeat.
This is why it's super important
for people who are trying to burn body fat.
The studies on this are really, really good
and really clear.
A diet that is predominantly heavily processed foods,
like most people's diets, the average American,
about 70% of the calories come from heavily processed foods.
This will typically result in five to 600 calories of additional consumption.
In other words, if you just avoid heavily processed foods and eat until you're
satisfied, your calories tend to drop naturally.
This is beneficial for, especially beneficial for fat loss.
Now for muscle gain, it's a little bit different.
Processed foods are still important to avoid.
It's not as important, but it's still important to avoid
because processed foods tend to be lower in quality protein.
Now yes, there are bars out there and shakes
that you can eat.
Those are still processed foods technically,
but people typically aren't going,
70% of people's calories aren't coming from
those kinds of processed foods.
Processed foods tend to be high in the nutrients that don't lend themselves well to building
muscle.
They just, and they also tend to cause digestive distress, which if you're trying to gain muscle
and you're eating in a calorie surplus, this becomes a big challenge where you feel bloated
or stuffed or whatever. Yeah, I mean it's already pretty much a chore for people to go outside what they would normally
be inclined to eat and add on top of that.
It's always funny because it seems like such a better situation until you actually have
to deliberately exceed that amount of calories and consume more food. And now to do that when you have any kind of digestive
type of feedback that's negative,
that makes it even extra challenging to keep doing it.
I want to be clear, gaining weight is really easy.
Gaining muscle, much more difficult.
And so, this is, I mean, I remember being a young,
skinny kid who wanted to build muscle really bad,
and I understood the calories in and calories out thing.
And so it was just at all cost, eat calories.
And I would put some weight on the scale,
but it wasn't good weight, it wasn't lean tissue,
it was just extra body fat.
And bloat.
And bloat, because I added a lot of those junk calories
And when you're trying to build lean tissue, you need good quality calories
You need high protein and if you're eating and what ended up happening when I started counting macros
I realized I was eating high calorie but low protein
So it was mostly carbs and saturated fat is what put the calories up there
But then I was missing
on the protein.
And so that's why the advice stays the same, whether you're trying to build lean tissue
or burn body fat, I still want you on a very, very low processed diet with high protein
because it's going to be essential to you hitting your targets.
Yeah.
Now, speaking of protein, the studies on protein intake and muscle gain are very clear.
If you eat, now there's essential protein intake, which most people are not deficient
in protein, but most people don't get anywhere near what the studies show to be the optimal
amount of protein for muscle gain.
And this, depending on what study you look at, is right around one gram of protein per
pound of body weight. So that's a lot of protein. You're a 160 pound guy, that's 160
grams of protein. You're a 120 pound girl, that's 120 grams of protein. That's a
lot of protein, but that's where we start to see the upper limits of benefit when
it comes to muscle gain from protein intake. Now when it comes to fat loss,
it's even more interesting.
A high protein diet with the calories being the same,
in other words, you take two groups of people,
same calories, both calorie deficit, both losing body fat.
One group eats that one gram of protein
per pound of body weight, the other group doesn't.
They're getting more carbs and fats.
What you see is more fat loss and more muscle preservation,
in some cases, a little muscle
gain.
In other words, if you lose 15 pounds of body fat on a high protein diet, it's much more
likely to be all body fat, right?
It's most likely to be body fat and not just body weight.
Whereas in a calorie deficit without that high protein intake, sometimes or oftentimes
you see muscle loss.
So protein is very, very important in both cases.
Crucial.
Although you know gaining muscle I typically don't have to convince people to eat high protein when they want to gain muscle.
Although they often miss it because they do what you just said Adam.
Yes.
They're just eating a lot of calories.
Yeah.
And you know you have like I was the same way 160 pounds eating a ton 4000 calories looked at my protein 120 grams.
I wasn't even hitting my body weight in grams of protein
until I went to Whole Natural Foods,
ate the chicken, ate the steak, the ground beef,
and then it made a huge difference.
And then with muscle gain, same calorie diets,
both calorie surplus, one high protein, one not,
you're gonna gain more muscle and less body fat.
So in both cases, high protein is extremely important.
The difference is
One is in a calorie deficit one of them you have to eat less calories in your burning the other one you eat more calories in your Burning depending on your goal. Yeah, I would actually say that people that
Don't hit the high high protein and exercise
They also tend to over train under eat and miss protein and so more often than not
They don't just lose
weight on the scale, they mostly lose muscle. I don't know how many times I had got somebody
who hired me, who this was the challenge was Adam, I don't understand. I did my body fat
test, I lost 10, 15 pounds and it actually said that I stayed the same or in some cases
I went up in body fat percentage. Make that make sense to me. I'm following the whole law of thermodynamics,
I'm eating less, I'm exercising more,
why is this not adding up to me? And the reason why is because they're either too low and or over activity and or
under eating on protein and many times all three of those.
Yeah, and the type of exercises they're doing aren't conducive to building muscle. Totally. So not only do you need to be doing,
I know we'll get to the lifting weight parts, but you've
got to have the protein intake up there. Otherwise, if you're just in a calorie
deficit, you're gonna end up losing as much muscle as you lose fat.
Now with carbohydrates, carbohydrates are not essential, but they are valuable
especially comes to performance. And I would say for muscle gain, carbs can be cut more for fat loss
and some people just respond really well to lower carbohydrates.
Muscle gain, you can gain muscle on a low carbohydrate diet, you can't.
It's just way harder. It's just way harder.
So carbohydrates become more important.
And then fat, fat is essential as well for fat loss, I'll say this, for people with fat loss,
don't go too low on fat.
When you go too low on fat and you start to toe the line
of essential fat, you can see hormonal issues and problems
and you can get stubborn fat loss,
that doesn't want to happen because your fat is too low.
I've had this with clients where I bump their fat
and then boom, we start to see fat loss.
Muscle gain, I think you're probably okay.
If you're getting high protein and you're trying to gain, you're not eating super lean
cuts of meat, you're probably getting adequate fat intake.
Now the one area where I'd say I think muscle gain might have an advantage is with protein
shakes.
And what I mean by that is protein shakes are more valuable for muscle gain.
I don't think they're as valuable for fat loss. And what I mean by that is protein shakes are more valuable for muscle gain, I don't think they're as valuable
for fat loss, and here's why.
Protein shakes don't satiate you like protein from food does.
So if you're trying to be in a calorie deficit,
you're probably gonna struggle with appetite
throughout this fat loss journey.
A protein shake, you know, 50 grams in a protein shake
isn't going to suppress appetite or satiate you
like 50 grams of protein for food.
So I like shakes more for muscle gain,
and then on the other side of the coin there,
sometimes people have trouble eating
in a calorie surplus and a shake,
the same reason why it was difficult for fat loss
now makes it valuable for muscle gain.
You can have a shake and it's easy to get that extra
50 grams of protein
if you're already full, for me, a lot of people.
You can make the case for either one.
I mean, the irony of this is still,
it's another example of how they're similar.
Is that both situations, a, I mean, we're always,
regardless of if you're trying to build muscle
or lose body fat, always trying to get the client
to do it through all whole foods.
The reality is, there is an argument on both sides,
both fat loss and building muscle,
where you can make the case where the shake is advantageous,
where it makes sense and it's helpful towards the process.
It's just, they're both ideal to not do it without that
and just do whole foods.
Right, now next up, lifting weights.
Lifting weights or strength training or resistance training
is the ideal.
If you have to pick one form of exercise that's going to help with fat loss or muscle gain,
it's going to be strength training.
Strength training is the best form of exercise for both.
I'll start with the easy one, gaining muscle.
I don't need to make this case.
I think everybody understands by now if you want to build muscle, well, you should strength
train.
No form of exercise is going to build muscle like strength training.
Not even come close.
It's the muscle building form of exercise of all the forms of exercise.
All right, what about fat loss?
Why is strength training so effective for fat loss?
It doesn't burn many calories.
Traditional strength training doesn't burn a ton of calories.
It really doesn't.
In comparison to running or swimming or cycling, it burns a fraction of the calories.
Yet, when people use strength training as a primary form of exercise,
you see more pure fat loss.
Why is that?
Muscle preserving.
It stops what your body tries to do every time you cut your calories.
When you cut your calories below maintenance, your body automatically
tries to adapt to the lower calories by reducing its metabolic demands.
And one of the best ways it does this,
one of the most effective ways,
is by pairing muscle down.
Strength training sends a direct opposite signal
that says no, halt right there, we need this muscle.
So if you go into calorie deficit and you strength train,
then you're far more likely to lose all body fat,
no muscle.
And here's the other, even more important part about it,
your metabolism won't slow like it will
if you don't strength training.
Or, in many cases, you may actually find yourself
with a faster metabolism from the strength training.
So this is the ultimate form of exercise
regardless of what the goal is.
I thought you were gonna be even more specific
to how you strength train.
I would make the case that I would strength train
the same way.
Both, the goal is to get stronger.
Lift heavy, get strong.
You're trying to build muscle on both of them.
Because here's the mistake that some people make
that are in the fat loss group,
is they think that they're gonna lift weights circuit style
or high repetitions, low rest periods,
and they want this, again, trying to burn the calories
in their workout.
Huge mistake.
And it is a huge mistake,
especially when you're a calorie deficit.
What you want to do is send a signal to the body to your point to hang on to as much muscle
as possible because you're in a calorie deficit.
One of the best ways to do that is lift heavy, get strong.
And so, which is also one of the best ways for you to build muscle when you're trying
to gain muscle is lift heavy and get strong.
That's the pursuit, but psychologically, obviously, it's difficult because you aren't going to
feel strong. That's the pursuit, but psychologically obviously it's difficult because you aren't going to feel strong. You're not going to have that kind of energy in your workouts,
but producing that same type of effort will be able to maintain that muscle mass.
Yeah, and just because you're using weights or machines does not mean you're strength
training. Strength training is organized in a way to build strength. What that looks like is a set and then rest, and then a set and then rest. The rest period
is on the short end about a minute, but usually about two to three minutes is what it should
be. You're not trying to build stamina and endurance.
Super important and overlooked.
If you don't rest and you use circuits with weights, you're doing cardio. Yes.
You might as well get on a bike.
It's almost identical in terms of what it's doing
for the body, and it will not preserve muscle
like traditional strength training.
Now, when it comes to building muscle,
again, I don't need to make this argument.
Lift weights get stronger.
In both cases, by the way, if you're getting stronger
while losing weight or getting stronger while gaining weight,
both cases, this is a great sign.
On the building muscle side, if I'm getting stronger,
I'm building muscle.
On the fat loss side, if I'm getting stronger
while I'm losing body fat, I'm not losing any muscle.
And I may actually be gaining muscle at the same time.
That's a very, I mean, to Justin's point.
It's a unicorn.
Yeah, to Justin's point earlier,
it's common that you're going to lift to be strong, but
you'll feel weaker, which is totally normal.
It's very normal to be in a calorie deficit and see weights go down a little bit, but
the pursuit or the goal while you lift is to try and lift heavy, is to try and be strong.
And occasionally you do see examples of somebody, this tends to be with people that are newer,
right?
Newer into lifting, and so they're getting the benefits of a new adaptation, the
novelty of lifting weights, while also being in a caloric deficit. So sometimes
you get that kind of unicorn or that what we call the Goldilocks phase where
you are losing body fat but simultaneously building muscle. It's
possible, but I always tell a client that's in fat loss in that in a calorie
deficit that don't expect us to gain muscle
or gain strength while we're in this,
although if you do, it's an incredible sign.
Now here's one of the, just the most magical parts
of strength training, is it optimizes your hormones
better than any other form of exercise.
So to be clear, all forms of exercise,
when done properly, if they improve your health,
so you're using the right form of exercise,
you're not overdoing it, you're not over training,
not under training, it's the right amount,
and your health gets better,
typically your hormone profile improves a little bit.
But strength training sends a direct signal to the body
that optimizes your hormones in a different way.
Number one, building muscle or getting stronger
increases androgen receptor density.
These are the receptors that testosterone attaches to.
So if you have more androgen receptors,
your testosterone becomes more testosterone-like.
What does that mean?
That means you're going to burn more body fat.
You're going to build more muscle from the same testosterone
because you have more androgen receptor density. Strength training does this. This is important for
fat loss as well. More androgen receptor, let me put it this way, if someone was
trying to lose 50 pounds of body fat and I doubled their androgen receptor
density, they'd lose body fat faster, they lose more body fat and they would lose
no muscle because of the androgen receptor density. So that's number one.
Number two, insulin sensitivity. Let's talk about fat loss for a second.
Being more sensitive to insulin means that when your body
does release insulin, you are taking those calories,
you're shuttling into muscle,
you're not in this fat storage mode.
In fact, when you see people with insulin resistance,
what typically goes along with that is obesity.
Being insulin sensitive is healthy, and it optimizes insulin for muscle gain, not for
fat gain, which is what can happen with insulin resistance type stuff.
Then for muscle gain, insulin sensitivity is great, like I said, it's an anabolic hormone
when it comes to building muscle.
Growth hormone is another one.
You have more optimized levels of growth hormone through the muscle building
process. Growth hormone aids in fat loss, aids in muscle gain as well. And then cortisol,
strength training can balance out cortisol so that it's the way it's supposed to be,
a little higher in the morning and lower at night.
It tapers off.
And then in women, when you improve insulin sensitivity, what you tend to also see is
a balancing of estrogen and progesterone. In fact, hormone imbalances in women oftentimes can be connected to insulin resistance.
So that building muscle process
or the strength training process,
it actually takes your hormone profile,
turns it into a more youthful hormone profile,
which is, if you remember what it was like
being in your teens, it's pro muscle, anti fat.
It positions you to be in a better position for fat loss
and muscle gain. Again, something they both have in common.
This is something that I think is also a great strategy for anybody who's about to pursue
one of these journeys, is to actually get your blood work done before and then test
it as you go. It's a great indicator if you're moving in the right direction. How many times
have you guys had clients that have maybe big long-term goals to lose a lot of weight
or we gotta build a bunch of muscle,
but they're just a wreck hormonally,
they haven't ever dieted correctly,
they haven't exercised, and sometimes it takes
a little while before you really show those people
a lot of muscle or a lot of body fat coming off.
But one of the first things you start to see
is you start to see these hormones
start to organize themselves
in a healthier way.
And so getting your blood work done when you first start a journey like this
and then testing that, say, a couple months down the road,
this is one of the first things that you'll start to see
when you're moving in the right direction.
And or this is also a great sign if you're not,
because sometimes people do cut too hard
and do use exercises almost like abuse.
And what you'll see
is that hormone profile will get even worse.
So it's a great way to use that as a gauge is am I doing the right thing?
That's right.
All right, next up we have sleep.
Both fat loss and muscle gain need good adequate quality sleep.
Now we'll start with fat loss.
In the studies on fat loss, when they take groups of people
and the only controllable that they change is sleep.
One group has good sleep, one group has bad sleep,
and they put them both in a calorie deficit,
the bad sleep group loses twice as much muscle
and half as much body fat.
Which is wild.
They're both in a deficit, everything's controlled,
they're both doing the same thing,
the only difference is bad sleep, good sleep,
the bad sleep group loses twice as much muscle,
half as much body fat.
Now when it comes to muscle gain, oh boy, this is huge.
I'm gonna be even more pointed about this.
If you have poor sleep, you're not gonna build muscle.
Good luck, impossible.
You go into calorie surplus, you'll lift weights,
terrible sleep is gonna result in fat gain.
That's it.
You're not gonna gain any muscle.
Poor sleep, in fact, is the number one risk factor
for injury while exercise.
When they compare bad form, poor warmup,
you know, like all kinds of different things,
poor sleep.
So many detriments to it, man.
Dramatically increases your risk of injury.
And then back to the fat loss,
when your sleep is poor, your cravings for hyper palatable foods
goes through the roof.
Simultaneously, your ability to resist
eating those foods goes down. You actually start to become less inhibited. You become uninhibited.
So you go uninhibited, high cravings, good luck trying to eat healthy with poor sleep.
Now all this is interconnected to the point
you just made before that, right?
Hormones.
I mean really when you disrupt your sleep,
that's a-
Well that's a big part of it.
You're gonna disrupt your hormones
and it's gonna make losing body fat
or building muscle near impossible.
One night of poor sleep,
you'll see a measurable drop in testosterone.
One night of poor sleep and you see a measurable change
in insulin sensitivity.
It's a massive signal to the body. I mean you're not recovering so now we have to go into survival
and that's really like your body's on reserve. I have to like store energy.
That's right.
I have to keep you alive.
That's right. Now ideal sleep is about eight hours. I know what the studies say, seven to eight,
but I found with clients eight was, again,
there's like what's enough and what's optimal.
Eight hours is, in my experience, the best.
This means you need to go to bed eight and a half hours before you're going to wake up.
Why?
30 minutes to fall asleep.
This is where people make a mistake, by the way.
They'll look at the seven to eight, they'll go to bed seven hours before, really, they
get six and a half.
It takes them 30 minutes to fall asleep.
Right.
This is also another area where the bodybuilding community really figured this out. I felt like that. They did. I mean not only did
they focus on their night of sleep, they even did naps in the middle of the day to get optimal
sleep. This is an area where it was very obvious that you could build more muscle when you're
you're better rested. Yes and again this is how big of a deal it is. You can measurably reduce
your strength performance, dramatically increase your risk of you can measurably reduce your strength performance, dramatically
increase your risk of injury, measurably reduce testosterone and make your insulin sensitivity
go down with one night of suboptimal sleep.
Now I don't want everybody to freak out, but my point is when we talk about sleep, I think
people don't realize how important it is.
They think training and diet are important.
And sleep, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's kind of important,
but I'll put that down here.
No, no, no.
Sleep is so important that a good night of sleep
should be more valuable than exercising is
if you have to trade the two.
It's true.
If you get a bad night of sleep,
you're better off skipping the workout
so you can sleep in a little bit.
Changes your whole priorities.
That's right.
Yeah, once you figure that out.
Well, a bad night of sleep, if you have a client, I don't know how many times this has
happened to me too, where you have a client who is just so adapted to getting bad sleep
all the time, but they're doing everything else and they're at this hard plateau.
That one or two nights of bad sleep every week is enough to cancel all the other good
work they're doing.
That's how important and impactful it is, is many times that client is better off
reducing the training volume
and focusing on just getting a good night's rest
than they are trying to add another day
of training into the day.
So it's that powerful.
When I figured this out as a trainer,
I figured this out way down the line.
I mean, I was a good 13, 14 years into my career
when I realized how impactful this was.
And I, I mean, I had clients where they plateaued real hard and we're doing
everything right and everything looks good and I'm modifying intensity.
We're seeing some progress, but it's really slow.
And I literally made a concentrated effort with the client and they agreed.
Of course they have to, they have to be, go along with it to improve their sleep.
And all we did was improve their sleep.
That's all we did.
And their results turbocharged.
It was like a brand new person when it came to both muscle
gain and fat loss just from that.
So some tips, go to bed eight and a half hours before you need to wake up, go to
bed at the same time and wake up at the same time every day.
Here's what can happen.
We go to bed late Friday nights, trying to sleep in Saturday.
Same thing Saturday night, sleep in Sunday morning.
Monday comes around, we've already shifted
our circadian rhythm.
Now we're jet lagged on Monday as if we had
just traveled and we end up jet lagging
ourselves every single week.
Don't be on electronics before you go to bed.
This literally tells your body that the sun is out.
So you just close your eyes, ready to go to bed.
It takes a second for your body to process.
The sun is down and that's a valuable time
you could be getting into sleep.
It reduces melatonin production,
which also affects your growth hormone.
So don't be on electronics and don't eat right before bed.
Go to bed same time, wake up the same time every day
and prioritize this.
This will make a dramatic impact
on your fat loss and muscle gain.
Huge, the other thing it does too
is it really keeps the cravings in check.
Huge.
If you get poor sleep,
that was one of the things that took me a long time
to connect those dots of realizing like,
every time I had these weird ravenous cravings
for weird things that I didn't think I ate on a regular basis,
like why do I want that?
It was always connected to a rough night of sleep.
And I don't care if you're trying to build muscle
or lose body fat, nothing will deter you from your plan
than eating some crap that doesn't benefit you either way.
Well, like I said earlier too, that's income,
and I have to say this again,
because I want people to really get this.
It's not just that it increases your cravings
for food that are not going to serve you.
It also reduces your willpower.
This is a, by the way, this isn't like, I'm not just saying this like I've seen this
because I have, but this is like a number one way that foreign countries would take
prisoners of war and break them down.
If you wanted somebody to give up the nuclear codes or whatever, you're going to deprive
them of sleep.
It destroys your willpower.
So if you're on this journey of staying consistent,
being disciplined, whether it's making it to the gym,
eating the right foods,
hitting your protein intake or whatever,
being sleep deprived, that willpower,
you can say goodbye to it.
It crushes all of it.
So you're more likely to do things
that are not going to help you,
and you're less likely to stay disciplined
and consistent with your goals.
It's funny, when you're talking about weird cravings,
like weird food just pops up.
Remember Bugles?
Oh, I do remember Bugles.
It looks like it's so random.
You never know what weird food.
Did you put them on your fingers
and make fingernails?
Yeah, just one by one.
No sponsorship.
Do they still exist?
No nutrients in there at all.
They are still a thing?
Yeah, they do.
I've seen them at grocery stores. Oh, wow, I haven't seen, I haven't gone down that aisle in a hot minute. I know.. They are still a thing. Oh, wow. I haven't even I haven't
seen I haven't gone down that aisle
in a hot minute.
That aisle is normally.
I'm having cookies and cracker.
Yeah, I had bed.
It's so it's a I tell you what,
I don't want to just skim
over this lightly.
It's a big hack to
be even just being aware of
that is a big deal. I remember how much that person., you're right like oh, I'm gonna go in and yes
I remember just and there's something about when you when you know that it's coming in
It's for that reason it's easier to say no to it than if it was just I'm tired exhausted expect it
Yeah, so when you expect like okay, I had a rough night's sleep. I'm gonna at some point today
I'm gonna want something playing ahead of yes
And you just you being aware of it
makes it easier to resist that,
versus blindly going in and just craving these foods
and not realizing what it is.
So I can't stress this enough to the average person
that's listening to this, like man,
when you're on your journey and you have a bad night of sleep,
be prepared, because you're probably gonna crave that day
and have a really hard time resisting
I'll tell you just a few real easy ways
To help your sleep you can wear blue light blocking glasses at night
If you don't want to come off electronics wear an eye mask when you go to sleep
I know it sounds dumb, but studies will show even
What do they call it like a little bit of light pollution in your room because your your light switch has a little light on
It actually does so an eye mask actually They call it like a little bit of light pollution in your room because your light switch has a little light on. It affects me, man. I can tell.
It actually does.
So an eye mask actually makes a difference.
And then like I said, bed and wake at the same time.
That will take away that jet lag
that actually gives you terribles.
Even if you go to bed on time on Sunday night,
it's harder to fall asleep
because you've already reset your circadian rhythm.
And then wake, this is why everybody hates Mondays.
It's because they're totally jet lagged.
All right, next up is water.
Now there's, most people in modern societies are,
they're not gonna, they're not dehydrated.
I know what people say about water,
and you gotta drink more water, your body's dehydrated.
No, you're not dehydrated.
You're probably, if you're drinking when you're thirsty,
you're drinking adequate water,
but that's not the same as optimal.
Okay, just like protein.
Most people in modern societies
are not deficient in protein.
We don't have people being hospitalized
because they have too little protein.
People are not going to the hospital,
except for maybe when they go to festivals or something
where they're heat stroke.
For the most part, everybody's getting enough water
in modern societies, that's great. But optimal is more than that. And optimal. For the most part, everybody's getting enough water in modern societies. That's great.
But optimal is more than that.
And optimal water for most people, in my experience, is about a half a gallon to a
gallon of water a day.
Now what this does is it dramatically improves
recovery.
In the gym, you have better performance, better
connection to the muscles.
Your muscles are 70% water, by the way.
Way better pumps.
So way better pumps, way better connection.
You're doing those exercises.
Cognition.
You could feel the muscles squeezing and contracting,
which actually lends itself to a better quality
workout, better technique and form.
It reduces cravings.
That's one of the most dramatic things people
will notice is it reduces cravings.
It reduces inflammation.
A lot of people don't realize this,
but some of their aches and pains can be gone
by simply drinking optimal amounts of water.
This I noticed especially true for my middle-aged
and older clients.
Yeah, ligaments and the dry factor to that.
Oh, it's crazy.
Definitely contributing.
And digestion, it's better for digestion,
especially constipation.
I can't tell you how many times I had clients
with digestive issues, we bumped their water, fixed it.
It fixed it simply because they weren't drinking enough water.
I would make the case energy too.
I've had clients who under-consume water,
then they start drinking optimal water,
and they notice a difference in energy levels.
Just by starting the day off with it,
they would go all the way till midday
before their first glass of water,
and me just simply giving the advice of,
hey, let's just start every day with like two glasses
of water, and man, just, oh my God, I notice energy.
So you'll even notice that from it.
So it seems like, again, like sleep,
like these things that seem so basic and simple,
but really can make a big difference
if you're consistent with it.
I think one of the ways that,
one of the best ways to do this for people to get
used to is get yourself a container that is like either a quarter of a gallon or
one fifth of a gallon, whatever that number is, figure that out, know how many
you need to drink throughout the day, and then pace yourself.
Okay, I'm going to have this one before this time, this one before that time.
Before you know it, you'll get used to drinking that much water and it won't be a problem.
But initially track it and it makes a huge difference.
Again, you'll see more fat loss,
probably through better digestion, less cravings,
better energy, more movement.
And then when it comes to muscle gain and pumps,
like this is.
I mean your whole body just operates better.
You're what, like 70% water?
You're mostly water.
Water, yeah, it's like you're depriving yourself
of what you mostly are. That's right, that's right. I mean, I Like mostly water. Water. Yeah. It's like you're depriving yourself of what you mostly are.
Yeah. That's right. I know we've, I know we've teased the,
the bros for carrying the gallon around, but I see tremendous value in just say,
whatever the target may be. Then the only drawback I feel of the ones that you
have to drink three, four or five is people lose track.
Whereas if I have this gallon or half gallon, whatever it is going to be,
but I can, yeah. And, yeah, and it really brings awareness
to how little, I mean, it did for me.
I remember the first time that I started.
So you get to 2 p.m. and you barely had water.
Yeah, and I'm looking, I'm like,
damn, I thought I drank a lot of water.
I don't drink a lot of water.
And it's hard to realize that if you're doing it
by the glass, you think, oh yeah, I had a lot.
And then you actually measure it or have the full gallon
and you look at it and you go,
oh wow, I was nowhere near that.
So I always recommend to someone who hasn't done this before to at least do that for a little
while to get an idea of where you probably went. By the way, some side
notes with water. I said poor sleep is the greatest risk for injury. The second
greatest is dehydration or not having enough water. Very much more common to
have muscle pulls and tears and strains when you don't have enough water.
So that's another one that you need to focus on.
And then when it comes for fat loss, you know,
drinking a lot of water means you're probably going
to drink less of other potential calories.
And so you end up finding like, oh, I got to drink
my water, I'm going to have less of these other
things that may-
You're not going to drink your calories.
Yes, that might have calories or may spike my
appetite as a lot of sweetened zero calorie
beverages can do for some people to actually make them crave more food.
Lastly, supplements and this is last because it's the least important but
there are two supplements that we recommend to everybody regardless of
their goal. I'll start with the easy one which is a multivitamin. Multivitamin is
important because nutrient deficiencies are far more common than people realize.
If you added up all the common nutrient deficiencies from vitamin D to magnesium to B vitamins
to maybe iron for women, all that stuff, if you add that all up, you're probably looking
at 50 to 60% of everybody could definitely benefit from supplementing with the multivitamin.
They're also very inexpensive.
Now, a multivitamin is not magic.
However, if it fills a nutrient deficiency, it will feel like magic.
Having a nutrient deficiency is literally like your car, not having oil or
something essential.
It will, it can, you can have increased rates of pain.
You can have depression, anxiety, neurological weirdness, muscle twitches, fatigue, all these
kind of like weird odd symptoms that you're like, I guess I just have a headache.
Maybe that's just because I get headaches or I get a little bit of pain here.
Not knowing that might be a vitamin D deficiency, for example.
Multivitamin fills all that.
The data on this is pretty clear.
People that take multivitamins, far less likely to have nutrient deficiencies, obviously,
but they tend to have better cognitive performance, less depression, less anxiety.
Again, it's an inexpensive supplement.
I think it's just kind of a blanket that covers most of all your essentials, right?
I definitely think regardless if you're trying to build muscle or lose body fat, there's
tremendous value in finding out where you might be lacking. That's ideal.
Because most people are lacking in two or three different things and over any fat loss,
muscle building supplement that's out there, nothing is better than getting what your body
needs to be run optimal, regardless of the goal. So figure that out, whatever that is,
multivitamin kind of is a nice blanket covers a majority the most common ones
But I think there's some value in well
I'm finding out what your good luck trying to build muscle or burn body fat with a nutrient deficiency good luck
I mean you have a magnesium deficiency
Unless it's severe in which case you're sick, but even if it's just a little deficiency you're anxious
Your sleep is poor, you're
not as strong, you just don't know why you don't feel so good, it's kind of vague.
Downstream effect.
Yeah, it's like, okay, I don't know why I'm not feeling like myself, or maybe it's been
so long that this is how you think you're supposed to feel, right?
Vitamin D, good luck trying to build muscle or burn body fat with a Vitamin D deficiency.
Immune system is not optimal, your hormones are going to be affected Depression and anxiety are much higher with a vitamin D deficiency and those are just some of the common ones
So a multivitamin kind of covers all of the basics and again, it's inexpensive and then next up the the one supplement
That would be both muscle building and fat burning which is creatine
Creighton aids and the muscle building process. It's good for your brain, it's good for your organs,
and because it's good for muscle building,
it's also good indirectly for fat loss.
Because if you can build muscle or preserve muscle,
you're more likely to maintain your metabolism.
And one of the most challenging things
for anybody on a fat loss journey is the dreaded plateau
where they were losing weight on X amount of calories,
suddenly they stopped losing weight because of metabolism, learned to adapt.
And then they're stuck with this. I got to cut my calories more.
I got to move even more. I still have 30 pounds to lose. What am I going to do?
Creighton can help offset that because of its muscle building effects.
And without getting too deep into it,
Creighton increases the amount of available energy for every cell of your
body. It literally, and the studies on this are amazing,
it is the ultimate, it used to be labeled
just a muscle building supplement,
but now what we're seeing is it is the best supplement
for overall health aside from filling nutrient deficiencies.
Now, I'm gonna be real clear here
with what we're talking about.
Yes, we just gave you all the basics, but it can be a challenge
It is a journey. It is a journey about learning about yourself. What if my body hits a plateau?
What about these foods right here? They're not working for me. Am I training properly is is this workout effective?
This is where coaching can be tremendously valuable
the
greatest success that you see in all the data when it comes to fat loss or muscle gain is when people work with a good
trainer notice I said good because there's a lot of trainers out there
but there's not a lot of good ones a good trainer can do this for you what we're gonna do because of this episode is we're
gonna offer a free group coaching
Scholarship to one of the listeners. So we offer group coaching. It's very limited
We have two groups in fact that we're gonna be running here
very soon, one is for fat loss, one is for muscle gain.
It isn't inexpensive because it is very valuable
and it works, but if you go to mindpumpgroupcoaching.com
forward slash scholarship, you can apply
and we're gonna give one away for free for each group.
Yeah, for each group.
For each group, so one fat loss person is gonna be in group coaching for free, each group. Yeah, for each group. For each group. So one fat loss person is going to be in group coaching for free.
One muscle gain individual is going to be in there for free.
And it's three months.
It's only 50 people that are going to be in each group and it's taught
by our trainers and our coaches.
So you go to mindpumpgroupcoaching.com forward slash scholarship, put your name in there.
You have a good chance of winning.
We do get a 10 people that apply for that. And again, hopefully you get in there. You have a good chance of winning. We do it a ton of people that apply for that.
And again, hopefully you get in there for free.
Look, if you like the show, come find us on Instagram.
Justin is at Mindpump. Justin, I'm at Mindpump.
DeStefano Adams at Mindpump.
Thank you for listening to Mindpump.
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