Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Kurtis Frank on the Science of Controlling Your Appetite

Episode Date: October 24, 2018

  In this episode, I interview my buddy Kurtis Frank, who’s the co-founder and former lead researcher and writer of Examine.com and the current Direct of Research for my supplement company Legion A...thletics. This time around, Kurtis and I dive deep into the science and physiology of appetite, including the body’s primary levers for controlling it, how appetite is influenced by different types of foods and diets, easy ways to reduce your appetite while cutting and increase it while lean bulking, and more. So, if you’d like to gain a deeper understanding of how your body’s appetite works and how to make it work more the way you’d like, you want to listen to this episode. 4:11 - What is appetite? 6:04 - What are some common factors that screw up natural appetite? 17:58 - How is appetite affected by different types of diets? 19:29 - What do you mean by handling carbohydrates well? 
 20:48 - What are some signs of insulin sensitivity? 22:41- How does a high fat diet affect appetite? 
 24:15 - Is it true that your body is better at sensing food volume than caloric density? 26:17 - Is a high fat low carb diet what it tends to be lower in fiber?
 29:07- If you could cut on 2500 calories per day, should you add more carbs?
 32:08 - How do you reduce appetite while cutting?
 32:40 - Is it true that having water with food increases the satiating effect? 34:04 How much water should you drink per day? 
 38:30 - What else can people do to reduce their appetite while cutting?
 37:47 - Does caffeine suppress appetite? 37:13 - Can you sense caffeine tolerance?
 40:12 - What are some tips when increasing appetite while bulking? 46:48- What does the endocannabinoid system affect?
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Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 and if there are certain times of the day of which your appetite peaks, if you time exercise at those specific times, you could potentially negate the increase in appetite. Hello, this is Mike Matthews from Muscle for Life and Legion Athletics, and it is time for yet another episode of the Muscle for Life podcast. And this time around, I interview my buddy Curtis Frank, who is the co-founder and the former lead researcher and writer of examine.com and the current director of research for my supplement company, Legion Athletics. And in this interview, Curtis and I deep dive into the science and physiology of appetite, including the body's primary levers for influencing it, how appetite is affected by different types of foods and diets, easy ways to reduce your appetite while cutting,
Starting point is 00:01:06 very useful, and increase it while lean bulking, very useful for some people, and more. So if you would like to gain a deeper understanding of how your body's appetite works and how to make it work more the way that you like, you want to listen to this episode. This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm just going to quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically my 100% natural pre-workout fat burner supplement, Forge. Now, it was designed to be used specifically when exercising in a fasted state, and it helps you maximize fat burning while training on an empty stomach, minimize the amount of muscle that you lose while training in this state, and maintain
Starting point is 00:01:57 intensity and focus in your workouts. All that is why Forge has over 400 reviews on Amazon with a four star average and another 220 on my website with a four and a half star average. So if you want to get leaner, faster, and especially in the quote unquote hard to lose spots like the hips, thighs, and belly, then you want to head over to www.legionathletics.com and pick up a bottle of Forge today. And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code podcast at checkout, and you'll save 10% on your entire order. And lastly, you should also know that I have a very simple 100% money back guarantee that works like this. You either love my stuff or you get your money back, period. You don't have to return the products. You don't have to fill out forms. You don't have to jump through any other hoops or go through any other shenanigans. So you really can't lose here. Head over to www.legionathletics.com now, place your order
Starting point is 00:03:03 and see for yourself why my supplements have thousands of rave reviews all over the internet. And if for whatever reason, they're just not for you, contact us and we will give you a full refund on the spot. All righty, that is enough shameless plugging for now at least. Let's get to the show. My main man, Curtis Frank, back on the show. What's up, man? Not much. I'm here and ready to talk.
Starting point is 00:03:29 How is Canadian Thanksgiving? What is Canadian Thanksgiving anyway? Exact same thing as American Thanksgiving, except a month earlier for no reason I can think of, really. It just screws with schedules and working internationally. Interesting. And do you eat turkey? Oh, yeah. Everything the same as the Americans, except my family's Italian. So I had lasagna for some reason with the turkey. It was quite nice. Interesting. All right. Well, I just learned something. So today's talk is going to be
Starting point is 00:03:58 about appetite, which is something I actually haven't written or spoken much about at all. At least I haven't really gotten into the details that we're going to get into here. And I think a good place to start is just physiologically speaking, what is appetite? What are the drivers? What's going on in our bodies when we are feeling hungry or feeling full? There's a surprising amount of different factors that are at play here. And there's some long-term factors that sort of regulate, I guess, in relation to your overall body weight. Generally speaking, organisms, and I do use that word specifically here,
Starting point is 00:04:36 that have higher energy stores, aka obesity, should experience less appetite if they're in a healthy state because they don't need the food. Whereas organisms that have less energy stores experience less appetite if they're in a healthy state because they don't need the food. Whereas organisms that have less energy stores experience more appetite. But then there is also an acute sort of daily flux that just usually starts in the morning, although not always, where people just go to get food. Because understand that in the past, like before we became sapient beings there were a lot of species out there that just kind of died out because they never got energy they had no impetus
Starting point is 00:05:13 to get energy they didn't understand what the heck energy was they just kind of swam around in the ocean then they just died so they're not around anymore. But any species that has survived to this point has biological mechanisms in place that spur the organism to go and get food of some sort. And that's the basis of appetite. and we just try to sort of micromanage it in this ever-changing world because we did not evolve to be around like neon science and marketing and advertisement and that can play around with our instincts a little bit and to that point you have obviously a lot of overweight people out there the reason why they are overweight is because they have been overeating for some time now and continue to overeat and continue to gain weight. What are some of the common factors that screw up their natural appetites? Why are they? Because the body instinctively, it doesn't want to be in a caloric surplus regularly. It just wants to maintain its current state or am I wrong there? Oh no, you're right right i don't know all the
Starting point is 00:06:25 reasons but there's two that have been drilled into my head and i agree with the first is when it comes to raising a kid if you have a kid who's like five or so years old and you instruct them to clean the plate that is a big no-no you do not teach a kid to shove stuff in their face when they don't want to secondly there's just marketing commercials and all that stuff is that just just interject there i assume there's research on that huh yes there is it's been a while since i looked into it but the general idea is that those who have been instructed to force feed themselves as kids they have sort of dysregulated appetite. And normally when your body says, no, I don't want any more food, people who have been forced to force feed themselves as kids,
Starting point is 00:07:10 because their parents ordered them to clean the plate, tend to be able to override that accidentally. Even they're more prone to accidentally eating the entire bag of chips at once. Interesting. I'm just thinking of my son. I have a six-year-old son who doesn't particularly have a big appetite. And I feel like, for example, we don't ask if he wants food, we make him food to make sure that he eats enough. And it's usually not the only, I guess, types of food that I've myself been like, you got to finish eating that would be vegetables, which actually he does, which is nice. Like some stuff he'll eat broccoli, but if you make him a bit of broccoli, he might eat half of it. And then I'll tell him, okay,
Starting point is 00:07:52 finish the other half. Not even, not even, he doesn't even get a reward for it. I just kind of tell him Lennox, you got to finish your broccoli. But anyways, I was just thinking that I feel like I have to do that a little bit with my son or he probably would under eat. Yeah. Like I'm not an expert on a child development and all that, but I do believe that like, it's okay. As long as it's a kind of infrequent or at least at the very least tied to a sort of stimulant, like finish your vegetables means that he's going to finish his vegetables. But if you get in the mindset of always finish everything on your plate under all conditions all the time that's not what you want
Starting point is 00:08:30 to do interesting and i was i was raised italian so i have a lot of experience and you eat all the pasta or else grandma's gonna cry she never cried i was just deadly scared of not doing it so i over ate pasta and became a very fat kid. I see. Yeah. But the other reason that I wanted to get into was marketing. And basically, in the past, we only ate food when we were hungry. And that makes sense.
Starting point is 00:08:56 You're hungry. You eat food. But when it comes to marketing, particularly a fast food, but this does apply to all food, when you have those commercials where people people eating yogurt and they're smiling and they're with their friends and you'll get to social event it actually takes the concept of food away from the concept of hunger and it's to the point where sometimes you invite guests over and you're not hungry your guests aren't hungry you never confirmed hunger at all and yet you still get food out for some reason. With marketing, just food and hunger have become two separate issues.
Starting point is 00:09:33 And the more we introduce food into scenarios of which we aren't actually hungry, then the more dysregulated we become over time. And that's, of course, by design to associate positive social experiences, for example, with eating certain types of food or drinking certain types of beverages. That's the focus of Coca-Cola's marketing 100% is having a drink Coke when you're with friends and you'll have a great time. Yeah, it's not good from a health perspective, but from a marketing perspective is absolutely genius. Right. And I'm sure one of the reasons why I think it was, I'm trying to remember, I think it was, there was some research on it. So I want to say that, that the average person makes over 200 food decisions per day, something like that. And which, if you think about it, like what a waste of mental resources.
Starting point is 00:10:26 I mean, that's one of the reasons why I just tend to eat the same foods every day is I want to make as few trivial decisions every day as possible because they, they cost energy and, you know, research shows that the more decisions you have to make in a day, the worse those decisions become and the more psychologically and then also even physically drained you become. But you have, I guess, the average person, according to research, I believe it was in that book, Mindless Eating, which I know Wancic, a bit of his research has been shit on for funding biases. But as far as I know, this in particular was okay. It passed the sniff test. And that thinking about, I mean, a couple hundred, I can't even imagine thinking
Starting point is 00:11:14 about food a couple hundred times per day, let alone making some sort of decision. Should I eat this? Should I eat that? When should I eat this? When should I eat that? And that is, I'm sure, in a large part, a result of the nonstop food marketing. Oh, yeah. Even like a display at a bakery, if they have 20 muffins on display, you may unconsciously make 20 different decisions at once. Yeah. Scanning over, should I eat this one, that one, starting to narrow them down. And that could be a couple minutes of mental processing that could be used on other things i wonder how the world would change if i'm going to change in many ways but specifically in this way where people would
Starting point is 00:11:56 put the energy if food were gone and you just ate a couple pills and that's it that was a meal is a couple pills and you swallow them and you're done. And probably a lot more boring, to be honest. You think so? Like I do. I have a little bit of a connoisseur minded to myself. Like my diet that I tend to go on nowadays, it's all my meals are predetermined except twice a week, in which case I just get really fancy with my cooking. And like right now I'm trying to do french omelets and i suck at them but like i've designed a ghetto french omelet where everything is perfectly french omelet until i come to the flip which i suck at so i screw it up or whatever
Starting point is 00:12:34 tastes the same but yeah like there is some manner of like emotional relation we have with food in particular there's probably some food that you grew up on that you can even say objectively speaking it does not taste that good but you love it because like that's something your parents made for you like every friday when they had a bit of extra time there is a deep emotional connection with food and we can't just eliminate that with pills but at the same time, that is something that marketing does capitalize on. They try to subterfuge or overcome your emotional connection with food to get a brand value on it, which the more I speak about it,
Starting point is 00:13:17 the more despicable it sounds. It goes even further than that. When you look into the world of food science and how engineered, highly processed, many highly processed foods are, Michael Moss's book, Sugar, Salt, Fat, I believe it's called, is all about that. And as you can imagine, a lot of these food companies go to absolute extremes to discover what they call a food's bliss point, which is the perfect amount of mostly it's sugar, salt, and fat, hence the name of the book. But there are other things, of course, as well that are put into
Starting point is 00:13:47 foods to make them more palatable. But to get to that point where it just perfectly, it really comes down to, of course, just neurochemical reaction, but where it gives you the maximum feel good per bite or per serving. And they are very scientific about discovering that. I mean, in some cases you might have take a chip or something. Well, that chip or that bag of chips, but it comes down to that flavor profile. Actually, it goes beyond the flavor profile. It's also the mouthfeel. So how thick should the chips be? How crunchy should they be? And then you have all the flavoring. I mean, there could have been hundreds and hundreds of scientific trials conducted with varying levels of both
Starting point is 00:14:31 the textural stuff as well as the flavor stuff and just trying hundreds and hundreds of combinations to get to something where they go. Beyond this, we've taken it so far already sure it probably can be improved slightly but this is it we've squeezed definitely the 80 out of out of how delicious we can possibly make this and that's that's done with a lot of just mainstream foods that people buy and eat oh yeah then there's also psychological aspect, which in my mind is a bit more infuriating. Because like with the scientific aspect, like it may be, it may seem a bit sketchy. But at the end of the day, you kind of respect the fact that they're putting in so much effort onto something. But then there's the whole commercials where it's like a $2 spaghetti sauce.
Starting point is 00:15:18 And it's like, just like your Nana used to make in any Italian. It's just like, no, that's not what my Nana used to make. F off with that. Yeah. Like it's bloody insulting. Just like your Nana used to make. No, your highly processed BS is not what my Nana makes.
Starting point is 00:15:36 Yeah. That ends up just getting like poured over a pile of cold spaghetti and thrown in the microwave. Exactly. But at the same time, the only reason they do that is because it does work for a lot of people, particularly those who don't have nanas who beat into their heads what a spaghetti sauce is. It works for them. And they're the majority demographic. Yeah. Which is why marketing and advertising on the whole works
Starting point is 00:15:59 at all. It's not just food. It's everything, really. As long as it increased revenue. At all. It's not just food. It's everything, really. As long as it increased revenue. That's all that matters. Anything is fair game as long as it does that and no one complains. But if they complain and it doesn't decrease revenue, it's still fair game. Now you're thinking. Now you're thinking. Hey, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives, please do consider supporting my sports nutrition company, Legion Athletics, which produces 100% natural evidence-based health and fitness supplements, including protein powders and bars, pre-workout and post-workout supplements,
Starting point is 00:16:54 fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more. Every ingredient and every dose in every product is backed by peer-reviewed scientific research. Every formulation is 100% transparent. There are no proprietary blends and everything is naturally sweetened and flavored. To check everything out, just head over to legionathletics.com. And just to show how much I appreciate my podcast peeps, use the coupon code MFL at checkout and you will save 20% on your entire order if it is your first purchase with us. And if it is not your first purchase with us, you will get double reward points on your entire order. That's essentially 10% cash back in rewards points. So again, the URL is legionathletics.com. And if you appreciate my work and want to see more of it, please do consider supporting me so I can keep doing what
Starting point is 00:17:44 I love, like producing podcasts like this. All right. So how is appetite affected by different types of diets? Like for example, low carb, high carb, and then of course you have high fat, low fat accordingly, or respectively. Certain types of foods that we could be talking about, certain macronutrients individually or just actual foods. For example, apples are known to be particularly satiating, whereas other types of foods are known not to be satiating. How do these interactions work? We might as well start, Well, let's start with, with high fat dieting, right? Cause that's, that's just the craze now. Keto ketogenic dieting is, is it's so absurdly popular. I'm actually amazed. I mean, just go look at, for example, like the top 100 books on Amazon and you will be astounded by how many of them are about the keto diet. Keto cookbooks are dominating.
Starting point is 00:18:43 It's kind of strange. There's some truth to that, I guess, because when it comes to how your diet affects appetite, there are two main factors that are important. One of them is a sort of balance between the intake of fats versus carbohydrates and how they interact with your own biology. It's going to be different for each person. But the other factor is more of a mechanical fiber-based one. When it comes to the fat and carbohydrate balance, there are some people who can handle carbohydrates very well. They tend to be younger, more athletic, and I don't really think there's a major genetic connection. It tends to be just people who ate a lot of carbs in the past and were always very athletic. And they were never actually fat at any point in their entire lives. And what do you mean by handling carbohydrate well?
Starting point is 00:19:35 So the hormone insulin that is secreted when you ingest carbohydrates actually suppresses appetite. A lot of people don't really know this because every time insulin comes up with a conversation, it's always the negative effects of insulin. But every hormone has positive and negative effects, and insulin is an appetite suppressant that increases cognition. So it's pretty bloody cool. The thing is, if you can't handle carbohydrates well, you become insulin desensitized, which means that the positive effects of insulin are blunted so it's not able to suppress appetite as much it's not able to increase cognition as much so when you eat a bit of carbohydrates your body only gets like let's say half the
Starting point is 00:20:20 stimuli from that so then your body assumes we only eat half as much carbohydrates as you needed, we need to eat a bit more to get the full stimuli. So you end up eating double the amount of carbohydrates. These are the type of people who do well on a ketogenic diet, because they just eliminate carbs from the entire equation. But for people who this does not exemplify, they can eat carbs just fine and have no problems with appetite or anything. And what are some of the symptoms?
Starting point is 00:20:50 So if someone's listening, wondering, do I do well with carbs or not do well? I'm not sure. Like, what are some of the, what happens? Let's say you have a problem with insulin sensitivity or you have somebody who has lower insulin sensitivity and they eat let's say it's a decent amount of carbs let's say it's 80 100 grams of carbs how might they experience that especially after the meal versus somebody with high good insulin sensitivity the major factor would be sort of blood sugar levels if you're the type of person who can eat either a small or large
Starting point is 00:21:26 amount of carbohydrates and not feel any different like you just feel normal then you probably have good insulin sensitivity but if you eat a small amount of carbohydrates and you're fine but you eat a large amount of carbohydrates and all of a sudden you go like from a bloated to a highly energetic state to a very lethargic down state and you have that big old curve of like energized to lethargic to energized to lethargic that is completely based on when you eat carbs that is the major sign of you probably not handling carbohydrates all that well and i guess another one would just be if you would have a meal that has X amount of calories, let's say 500, and the protein is kept static.
Starting point is 00:22:09 If you were to have a meal that has fats or you would have a meal that have carbs alongside the protein, of course, and they're both kind of equally satiating, like they both fill you up kind of the same amount, you're probably good on the insulin sensitivity but if the meal with fats fills you up but the meal with carbohydrates actually sort of makes you a bit more hungry makes you want more then that's probably a sign that you're not the best at insulin sensitivity makes sense so that was that was the first factor right here was was the hormonal factor was there anything else in addition to to insulin on uh a how a high fat diet can play into appetite and how it can affect appetite uh not necessarily for the high fat and carb dichotomy like fats themselves are satiating so
Starting point is 00:23:00 that is something to remember but also proteins are satiating so if if all three are satiating, it doesn't really mean much. Like focus on the carbs because they're the ones that flip back and forth the most. But beyond that, there is a mechanical aspect. And by mechanical, I quite literally mean physical pressure base. There's a type of receptor in the body known as a mechanoreceptor. Now you hear about the insulin receptor. It reacts when insulin touches it. The testosterone receptor on the nucleus responds when testosterone touches it.
Starting point is 00:23:31 Mechanoreceptors respond to physical stimuli. A good example is just you have your arm and you slap it and you feel a bit of pain, but you didn't disperse molecules when you slapped your arm it was quite literally physical stressors there have to be receptors on your body to perceive physical stressors there is a lot of them in the stomach and the intestines basically your stomach is an organ that is quite small initially and can expand quite a lot but the the more it expands, the more the mechanoreceptors are activated, and the more they suppress appetite. Because I mean, if your stomach's full, it kind of means that you're eating a bunch of food, you don't need to put any more food in your stomach, it might damage the actual tissue. And it's true, right, that your body is better at sensing
Starting point is 00:24:20 food volume than caloric density, right? So you could have high volume, low calorie food, and that can be quite filling, whereas low volume, high calorie food can be a lot less filling, even though you would think you say, well, body, you're getting a lot more energy here. I don't need to keep eating. But that's just how it works, right? Yeah, like I'm uncertain if one is more strong than the other. It probably varies from individual to individual. But generally speaking, if you can keep the calories constant, increasing volume will suppress appetite.
Starting point is 00:24:56 If you can keep the volume constant, then increasing calories will also suppress appetite. They're both independent factors that play alongside. Makes sense. And when it comes to just diet, when it comes to a stick of broccoli, you have the stick of broccoli in your hand, you're looking at it. It's probably about 100 grams of green right in your hand. But you look at it at the nutrition label
Starting point is 00:25:21 and it's like four grams of fiber and like two grams of protein one gram of fat there's like 10 nutritive grams in like the 100 grams of green you have in your hand that's 90 grams of stuff that just has to go through your body and may contribute to appetite suppression so as a general rule of thumb when when it comes to your diet, even independent of macronutrient balance, the more bulk you have, the better. And soluble fiber also plays a part because it just has gel forming properties. And one gram of soluble fiber may turn into like 10 grams of soluble fiber, grabbing all the water it can and just making a big ball, making pressure and all that. Wow. I didn't know it could expand that much. I don't think it's a tenfold expansion. It's probably more like four to five fold.
Starting point is 00:26:12 But generally speaking, it has surprising expansive properties. Well, it depends on the soluble fiber. They're all different. And the point there then, right, is a high fat, low carb diet, what it tends to be lower in fiber? right is a high fat low carb diet what it tends to be lower in fiber yes pretty much because some keto diets have let's say a 20 gram carbohydrate limit and some people then just say and whatever there aren't carbs and meat and butter and they only eat meat and butter but if you want to optimize the keto diet you're gonna need to have some really low carb vegetables so you have your meats you have your butters you have your nuts low carb vegetables. So you have your meats, you have your butters, you have your nuts and all that. But then you have some broccoli, some lettuce, some kale also.
Starting point is 00:26:51 And that stuff will help a lot in the long run. And so some people assume that vegetables are the carbohydrate source, like they're low calorie carbohydrate sources, but they're still carbohydrate sources. So they avoid them. And that is not optimal when it comes to keto diet. If you're really going to keep your carbs at 20 grams or under, you're not going to get enough fiber in your diet. Even if you go, okay, I'm just going to eat meat and broccoli, you're not going to have very many calories or grams of carbohydrate left for the for the broccoli because you have to you if you're let's say you're a guy into weightlifting because you have to eat quite a bit of meat depending on what it is it's going to come with i mean you could
Starting point is 00:27:33 probably what what do you think uh for for an average dude that's eating let's say 150 to 180 grams of protein a day from meat and then if you add in any other animal product i don't know if you can keep that under 10 to 15 grams of carbs just because of the trace amounts maybe the only way would be like sugar-free metamucil but even then like the entire point of eating vegetables is to have the bulk not necessarily just the fiber it's a partially reason why I don't personally like keto diets. I like low carb diets. They're great because the 15 to 20 gram limit is up to like 50 or maybe even 70. And that allows a lot more veggies. It's basically a keto diet where you triple the veggies. Like that's the type of diet I like, but it can't be classified as keto at that point. Yeah, of course. And when you say that you
Starting point is 00:28:25 like, you mean you like for you personally or? For me, like that's the diet I use when I'm cutting because like I'm, I wouldn't say hypothyroidic, but I do bulk on 1800 calories a day. So I'm, food doesn't like me all that much. That is the diet I use for cutting. And when it comes to bulking, I just add in a few carb sources. But I personally would recommend that diet to any non-vegan person who wants to lose weight. Like when it comes to just eating meat products and a ton of veggies, you can't really go wrong with that unless you have some like manner of intestinal disorder that your doctor cautioned you about eating certain veggies. Sure. I mean, I guess it also depends how many calories you're working with, right? So if you could cut on 20, let's say you would start your cuts on 2,500 calories a day,
Starting point is 00:29:14 I'm assuming you would add some other carbs and it wouldn't just be vegetables, right? Well, if I were to cut on 2,500, then I would personally add more carbs. But since I cut on 1,800 or whatever, I have like maybe one grain source a day. And honestly, about a week into my cutting diets, I switch out that grain source for just having sugar during my workouts. Because, oh my God, does it preserve strength so much? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's a good tip for anybody who has to cut on. So wait.
Starting point is 00:29:44 Well, first I'll say this. Anybody who has to cut on lower calories is have your carbs around your training, especially have some carbs before your training. I personally make a drink. I have some pulse and then I just mix in some carbohydrates. I drink half of it about 20 minutes before my workout. Then I just bring the bottle with me and just sip it throughout. 20 minutes before my workout, then I just bring the bottle with me and just sip it throughout. It does a lot. Just the sugars itself do a lot to preserve strength during a cut. And you probably also get the acute performance benefits that have even been shown with just having carbs in your mouth. And you have the mouth swishing studies, for example. Yeah. But again, I'm in a cutting diet, so it's not like I'm breaking it.
Starting point is 00:30:22 No, not at all. But you're doing everything you can to i mean i'm happy if i can get through a cut like a real cut you know it takes 8 to 12 weeks with only having lost a few reps on my big lifts and not even having to go down and wait necessarily i'm happy oh yeah that's kind of what i'm at like every now and then i break a new record on a cut but it's not frequent but at at the very least, I have my pride intact. Like my lips don't go down 20%. I'm just like a sad lump of muscle and not fat anymore. Less muscle. Yeah, less muscle, but more or less fat.
Starting point is 00:31:00 And so wait, so do you cut on 1800 or you bulk? Because previously you said bulk but maybe you misspoke okay so i may have been a bit facetious back then uh so when i cut i tend to be in the 1400 to 1800 range when i bulk i tend to be in the 2000 to 2400 range i see and what that depends on how much how much you're training but even then then, when I'm on 2,400 calories a day, I do start to pack on fat, which seems very unfair given how hard I train. I've seen people just downing 4K calories a day. It's like, you motherfucker, I want to eat McDonald's. Yeah, until you do it for a little bit and then it gets real old. Yeah. I haven't done a real lean bulk in a while because I haven't
Starting point is 00:31:43 really wanted to. But the last time I did, yeah, I was finishing. In the end, I was eating, I had to eat 4,000-ish calories a day just to keep gaining weight. It was gaining a quarter to a half pound a week. It sounds nice and it was fun, but then at the end, I actually couldn't, I had to force feed myself. That's what it felt like. I couldn't wait to cut just so I could cut my calories in half and just not have to eat two dinners every day. Reducing appetite when cutting. The first go-to, first of all, is water. It's kind of a basic one. Anyone who's already in the know and drinking a lot of water shouldn't need to drink more water. But when you're doing your first cut, sometimes people just forget to
Starting point is 00:32:25 drink a lot of water. And they would be surprised at how much it actually increases appetite when you're not having your belly filled with water. Beyond that, I would aim for the general idea of increasing the bulk of your diet without increasing calories. Regarding the water, just to ask, is it true true i feel like i've heard this and maybe even seen some research on it but i can't remember exactly that having water with food actually even increases the satiating effect i think uh those studies are based more on the temperature of water and the idea that if you drank ice cold water it would increase the metabolic effect that your body like your body would need to expend more energy and heat to like metabolize the water and those studies ended up being technically true but so insignificant
Starting point is 00:33:12 that it didn't really matter that much yeah sure no this was actually this was actually just on the satiating effect of water when combined with food um anyways it just randomly popped into my head it wasn't it was something i think i was writing a long form article on water and I came across and I was like, oh, that's kind of randomly interesting. It didn't really warrant, I don't even know if I mentioned it because I was like, yeah, it may just be increasing the volume of the meal, like whatever. It's not worth diving into because it's insignificant one way or the other, but I thought I would ask.
Starting point is 00:33:39 Yeah. Well, it may have been like related to the whole soluble fiber, like expanding aspect because even though soluble fiber expanding aspect. Because even though soluble fiber expands the most, all carbohydrates expand a little bit when paired with water. So eating carbohydrates along with drinking water could very well increase the amount of mechanoreceptors activated, could increase satiety. But at the very least, a general rule of thumb, just drink water all the bloody time and you won't need to care much about this. So yeah, exactly. Just drinking and what, three quarters of a gallon per day is probably a fair recommendation for most people. I tend to go on the clear urine analysis. If you piss and it looks like water,
Starting point is 00:34:21 you're drinking enough water. If you piss and it looks yellow, drink more water. Okay. Yeah. I mean, what I do is I just keep a, actually, what is this flask? It's probably a liter and a half. It's just a metal. And I fill it up and I'm always just kind of sipping. So for people listening, oh, there was a bit of government research just on basic recommendations for macronutrients and then water. It was about three quarters of a gallon. So you're going to get water from your food as well.
Starting point is 00:34:44 But if you just have water nearby and just kind of drink as i just kind of drink as i get thirsty if i notice like oh and then i drink a little bit and i drink a little bit and it probably comes out to about a gallon per day how much is a gallon in canadian terms uh you imperial scum yeah i was gonna say three and a half liters something like that yeah because like i remember back when i first started lifting people said to drink two liters of water a day i was like shocked at how much that water that was like how could anyone do that and i'm sitting here holding a 1.5 liter bottle thinking i go through three of these a day without trying exactly you just get into the habit of it you don't think about it anymore it's just a death like you don't sip it just kind of falls down your throat like half a gallon at a time just like so what else can people do to reduce their appetite while cutting uh beyond the whole um
Starting point is 00:35:36 like finding the macronutrient that works for you and focusing on the bulk in your diet and then drinking water yeah i think that's a good tip i think that's that should be highlighted that people if you do have appetite problems while cutting if you do tend to be hungry and if it is at a level where it's annoying then doing that test that that curtis was talking about earlier would make sense to find out um i guess really what you're trying to find out find out is how whether you're a fat person or a carb person. Yes, exactly. And then adjusting your diet accordingly. And then, of course, increasing protein intake is always beneficial.
Starting point is 00:36:17 Protein does not contribute to fat gain, but contributes to satiety. Given how both carbohydrates and fat could potentially contribute to fat gain, the third macronutrient doesn't do that so increase that to about 40 percent of calories or 150 grams whichever is easier but beyond those uh the last avenue would be anything pertaining to adrenaline or the fight or flight response the more adrenaline you have circulating through your veins every now and then the better because adrenaline like when it comes to the fight or flight response you can fight you can flight and recent evidence suggests you can also freeze but in none of those situations are you eating
Starting point is 00:36:57 this is because all the catecholamines suppress appetite and if you can stimulate your body in such a way it will suppress appetite and if there are stimulate your body in such a way it will suppress appetite and if there are certain times of the day of which your appetite peaks if you time exercise at those specific times you could potentially negate the increase in appetite so if you have your lunch and all of a sudden at 3 3030, you get really, really hungry. You could potentially just have a workout at 3 o'clock and completely ablate that hunger. So timing when your body becomes stimulated by adrenaline could potentially go a long way in having a successful cut. It will need some practice, however, because there's the difference between ablating and just stalling the hunger for an hour. So teach their own.
Starting point is 00:37:45 You need to like play around with it a bit. Okay. And what about for people who they can't go work out at three o'clock? I guess you could maybe have some caffeine if that's not going to interrupt or interfere with your sleep. I'm not sure if I'm going to recommend it anyways, even if I can't. Efrigin would probably be the better one
Starting point is 00:38:03 because efrigin reliably increases catecholamines caffeine only does it when you're not tolerant to it if you take caffeine daily then taking more caffeine won't suppress appetite but if you never take caffeine and you want to take it once a week it could be a very viable option to suppress you think just once a week you couldn't go a few times a week and still maintain your sensitivity? The thing is with caffeine, there is the whole interpersonal variation. So each person is going to differ a bit. But caffeine tolerance is kind of like a guy waiting around the corner with a brick.
Starting point is 00:38:39 It just bloody hits you and you're out for two weeks. Some people can only have caffeine once a week some people can have 150 milligrams four times a week and still be tolerant but as soon as you cross your individual line and you become tolerant it is the insurmountable tolerance so it's kind of like a light switch it's like bam you're tolerant Okay. Wait a month and maybe you can try again. So when it comes to this topic, it's best to be a bit more prudent and like slowly inch up. Am I correct in that that tolerance is not something that you can sense because you can still get the energy, the boost in energy, but now it's no longer going to give you the, you know,
Starting point is 00:39:23 the fat loss effects are not going to be there. The appetite suppressing effects are not going to be there, but you still feel it. You can sense it, but at the same time, it's very easy to accidentally ignore it because caffeine both has pro stimulatory effects and anti-sedation effects. And when you're tired, any anti-sedation effect will feel like a stimulatory effect. The anti-sedation effects caffeine will always persist. So if you're somebody who wakes up in the morning and you're tired, caffeine will always work for you. But these anti-sedation effects are not the fat burning effects, nor are they the appetite suppressing effects. effects nor are they the appetite suppressing effects it is the pro-stimulatory effects that have those properties and these are the ones that could potentially uh become tolerant to if you
Starting point is 00:40:11 take a bit too much caffeine i see makes sense okay i think we should flip to the other side now of increasing appetite while bulking what are some tips for people who struggle to eat enough you know when they're bulking weed and cookies basically weed or wheat weed and cookies uh let me start with let me start with the cookies ones because it's a bit more interesting the hormone insulin suppresses appetite but the sensation of sweetness stimulates appetite if we are to eat normal food, these two things balance each other out. And this is the dichotomy that sometimes comes up a lot when it comes to artificial sweeteners that have a sort of perception of sweetness, which stimulates
Starting point is 00:40:57 appetite, but then don't increase insulin. So they don't have a refractory suppression of appetite. And I bring this up because when it comes to a lot of bodybuilders who bulk on high calories or simply have low appetites a common technique is to have ginger cookies because ginger first and foremost has a bit of anti-nausea effects and the anti-nausea effects can help if you're just cramming a bunch of fruit in your stomach and ginger cookie is also very sweet. So you take a bite of your actual meal. Then you nibble on a ginger cookie.
Starting point is 00:41:32 And it just kind of slowly stimulates the appetite a little bit because you perceive sweetness. And maybe it reduces nausea just enough for you to shove another pile of steak in your face. That's like a sort of, I'm not sure if I can say ghetto solution, but it's totally ghetto solution. Just get some ginger. It's a simple one. What about something like diet cola or diet soda? I do not think that'd be a viable option because they are carbonated. Unless you can burp large amounts at will, carbonated beverages will increase the pressure in the stomach and activate the mechanoreceptors. And so on the flip side, then when you're cutting, that may help or?
Starting point is 00:42:10 Oh, if you're cutting, yes. Especially if you're somebody who just cannot burp, then like diet sodas can increase pressure in the stomach and suppress appetite. Then it'd be any carbonated beverage. It could be sparkling water or just straight soda water. Or I guess if you don't want to be drinking a bunch of artificial sweeteners, if you're concerned about that, it could just be some naturally sweetened. Like, what is there? Zevia? I think that's one of them, right? That's out there.
Starting point is 00:42:37 I think so. But yeah, like I actually did a test in the past about how effective pressure was when it comes to regulating appetite. And you know those weightlifting belts, the ones that you just tie around your gut and tighten? I basically did that, like just at the dinner table, put on a weightlifting belt, tightened it,
Starting point is 00:42:56 and chugged two liters of Diet Coke. I do not recommend this. It hurts. That sounds awful. A lot. Yeah, I didn't want to eat for an entire day so i guess it worked but new diet yeah pressure is a pressure is surprisingly strong regulator of appetite science but yeah beyond that uh when i uh casually mentioned weed earlier it's because
Starting point is 00:43:20 when it comes to dietary supplements appetite appetite stimulants, there's no good supplement option for that stuff. All potential dietary supplements to stimulate appetite, they just bloody suck. Just going on a casual walk around the neighborhood surpasses any appetite stimulant on the market, except marijuana. Marijuana is the only thing that actually seems to have an honest to God appetite stimulant effect. It may be like a small amount of alcohol. I know at retirement homes, they're saying that a little bit of sherry helps everything go down.
Starting point is 00:43:57 And it's because a small amount of alcohol can also stimulate the appetite. But generally speaking, when we're in the health and wellness field, and the only two potential beneficial options are alcohol and weed, it's a bit of a weird category to get into. And I don't have much to comment there because I'm not into either. And I haven't really looked into, it's pretty well established now that drinking alcohol regularly is just bad for you, period. And I guess there's more and more evidence coming out that indicates it may just be bad, even if it's intermittently, even if you're just drinking intermittently, that may at least have no health benefits, really. But as far as weed goes, I don't know. I mean, obviously, it's a thing these days, and it's becoming more and more of a thing, and
Starting point is 00:44:38 people are talking about cannabinoids. And I don't know, I haven't looked into it. It's not particularly interesting to me. So I don't know what to say. looked into it. It's not particularly interesting to me, so I don't know what to say. Well, it is interesting to me, so can I ramble? Are you into it? Do you smoke it yourself? No, I don't. Because basically, when someone does smoke marijuana, they list off a few effects, a few benefits for them. It reduces anxiety, it makes me more chill chill it reduces pain or whatever but i'm already uh i'm never anxious i have like minimal motivation at times and i am highly resilient to pain so the effects of weed are basically my stand like they're my basic position
Starting point is 00:45:19 if i were to actually use marijuana then i would just become like a bump on the log, completely unmotivated POS. So I don't use it. But it's interesting because just there is weed and it had effects. And like weed is cannabis sativa. And the system of the body is called the endocannabinoid system. We literally found weed affecting a system that we did not even know existed. And then we figured out that the system existed. And it was just like an entirely new realm of science because people started smoking weed and refused to stop. So it's a bit interesting because stuff like this almost never happens. We usually know of the systems before we know of like a prime inducer of that system. but the endocannabinoid
Starting point is 00:46:06 system is literally named after marijuana so it's just really interesting from a scientific perspective but beyond that it's just the endocannabinoid system is one of the major regulators of appetite and not just for marijuana or things you put in your face that influence it. But it turns out fatty acids in the body, a major reason they suppress appetite is because they turn into different sort of fatty acids that influence the endocannabinoid system. There is one called anandamide, which is, I believe, a metabolite of an omega-6 fatty acid. I believe a metabolite of an omega-6 fatty acid, but it is a major appetite suppressant in the human body at just normal levels. What else does this system affect? Endocannabinoids, anxiety, it dips into. The major ones are appetite and pain sensation. I've had an opinion for a while that large-scale businesses have everything wrong with giving a golden watch to people who retire they should give a golden watch to people who just get hired
Starting point is 00:47:12 with company because that's when you care about status but when you retire they should just give you a big bag of weed because weed is the perfect old person drug if your joints are going downhill we can help with that if you have muscular pain we can help with that. If you have muscular pain, we can help with that. Oh, you have glaucoma. We can help with that. Oh, you have a little bit of mental degradation.
Starting point is 00:47:32 We can help with that. Like, and old people even have suppressed appetite. So we can help with that. Like weed is the perfect geriatric drug. I did not know that, but it makes sense. We can all look forward to our to our later years we just live in a in a weed induced stupor yeah i'm old what do you want
Starting point is 00:47:53 some of the oldest people in the world because i remember there's a a few times in the past people try to unlock the secrets of longevity and so they tried to figure like find the oldest people in the world and how they live so long. But it was hilarious because it's not like all these people just like fight for one hour every day and eat healthy food. No, there's like one Frenchman who smoked two cigars every day and just said F off every other sentence, which I loved. And he was like 110. And then there's a bunch of people just like, yeah, I don't know why I'm still alive. I just smoke weed. You know, I have no interest in writing this book. So I'll just openly say there's a book
Starting point is 00:48:33 that could go supernova because longevity, anything related to longevity, it's a hot area that stuff sells as we see the marketing machine is constantly churning stuff out. And weed is super popular right now. And you have a lot of people that would love to just have another reason to smoke a bunch of weed. So there's a book. Two dozen people probably already writing it. Yeah, that's true, actually. Yeah, you have like weed plus marketable term.
Starting point is 00:49:01 Put them together, write the book. Yeah, exactly. As soon as you're done all we need is some fake science to show that smoking weed can help you lose weight or something then that'll be a whole thing it's epidemiological research so survey based and pretty much you have two groups of people those who smoke weed those who don't and they self-report the same amount of caloric intake that people who smoked weed have better insulin sensitivity in lower body that's all that's needed for uh for some headlines
Starting point is 00:49:30 and there's a whole brand right there there's your diet and weight loss book and there's the cannabis cookbook to go with it you say correlation i say scientific evidence correlation causation whatever tomato tomato yeah so yeah we could be good for steaming that appetite but check the legality of it in your uh area don't blame me if shit goes wrong all right well um the last question i had was if somebody's hungry all the time what should they do i don't know if there's anything actually to add in addition to the strategies you've shared but if you do have anything now would be be the time to spit it out. So if you were in that position,
Starting point is 00:50:08 first and foremost, this is actually a technique that I have used a lot and it's video games. And it's not necessarily just because it's video games. It's because sometimes when I'm really hungry... First weed, now video games. Oh yeah, you know exactly what type of person i am now but it's because sometimes when i'm really hungry it's literally because i'm bored like emotional eating is an entire
Starting point is 00:50:33 spectrum of science i mean that that's a yes that's a that's i think a lot of people we've all experienced that i mean i know a couple guys in the office will openly say that they'll say like on the weekends they have to make sure that they're basically not bored that they're doing things or they'll just end up eating random food yeah and uh for me video games was my uh unique spot because every now and then there's a video game that i could pull myself away from if i wanted to but if i had no reason to i'm not going to uh for me minecraft was the example because there's basically zombie apocalypse lego and a lot of times when i'll just like intentionally not play the game so my desire to play it increases then when i'm cutting and i get into one of those days where i'm like i really
Starting point is 00:51:17 just want to show stuff in my face i'll intentionally play a somewhat addictive game just to take my mind off it and it turns out that the vast majority of the just to take my mind off it. And it turns out that the vast majority of the time, just take my mind off a situation works completely. So there's yet another diet weight loss strategy in the making. Give people a reason to play more video games. I mean, so the point though is anything that takes your mind off of food, right? Exactly. It could be a walk. It could be doing some chores around the house. But you just have to play around with it and just find what's most successful to you.
Starting point is 00:51:52 It may not necessarily be productive, but as long as you enjoy doing it or you need to do it otherwise, then it can work. And beyond that, the only stuff that's really worked for me, aside from keeping protein intake high, which is not really an acute thing, is sometimes just eating vegetables with a carbonated beverage. I wouldn't say it's all that pleasant. Sometimes it does cause a little bit of gastrointestinal pain, but I can't recall the last time that I was in gastrointestinal pain and was also hungry. It just completely negates my desire to put more food in there and just make the problem worse.
Starting point is 00:52:26 There's also something to be said for making sure you're getting enough sleep as well. If you're not sleeping enough, it's going to make it rough. Oh, definitely. As a general rule of thumb, every problem in life is worsened by lack of sleep. Yes, that's true.
Starting point is 00:52:38 All right. Well, I think that's everything. That was great. That was very insightful as always, my friend. Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode everything. That was great. That was very insightful as always, my friend. leave a quick review of it on iTunes or wherever you're listening from. This not only convinces people that they should check the show out, it also increases its search visibility and thus helps more people find their way to me and learn how to build their best bodies ever too. And of course, if you want to be notified when the next episode goes live, then just subscribe to the podcast and you won't miss out on any of the new goodies. Lastly,
Starting point is 00:53:25 if you didn't like something about the show, then definitely shoot me an email at mike at muscle for life.com and share your thoughts on how you think it could be better. I read everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback. So please do reach out. All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this episode, and I hope to hear from you soon. And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me. Seriously, though, I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm going to just quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically my 100% natural pre-workout fat burner supplement Forge. Now it was designed to be used specifically when exercising in a fasted state, and it helps you maximize fat burning while training on an
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