Mike Matthews returns to discuss male fitness.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft027.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Michael Matthews, Founder of Muscle for Life
  • Book Title Bigger, Leaner, Stronger & Thinner, Leaner Stronger
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/muscleforlifefitness
  • Guest Twitter Account @muscleforlife
  • Guest Bio Mike Matthews is a bestselling fitness author and entrepreneur, and the creator of MuscleForLife.com and Legion Athletics.

    His simple and science-based approach to building muscle, losing fat, and getting healthy has sold over a million books and helped thousands of people build their best bodies ever, and his work has been featured in many popular outlets including Esquire, Men’s Health, Elle, Women’s Health, Muscle & Strength, Elle, and more, as well as on FOX and ABC.
  • Transcription Male Fitness with Michael Matthews

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): Hi, I’m Lisa Davis. So, glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. I recently had the wonderful Michael Matthews on the program. We talked about Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Female Body and today guys, it’s your turn. Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Male Body, Michael Matthews is back. Heh, Michael.

    Michael Matthews (Guest): Heh, thanks for having back on the show.

    Lisa: Oh, it’s great to have you back. So, just like in the other book, you start with some wonderful before and after pictures. Those are so motivating. You have your own before and after picture which is great and if people missed our interview that we did on Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Female Body; you did share about your experience and how you got into the field. If you could just tell us briefly now again, for people who missed it.

    Michael: Yeah sure, so I got into weight lifting as a teenager. I was 17 turning 18 and I grew up playing sports, played a lot of hockey and then wanted to keep doing something with my body and got into weightlifting and in the beginning, I really didn’t know what I was doing. Like most people, I picked up some body building magazines and looked around the internet and found a couple of work out routines and just started going with it. and in the beginning, your body is hyper responsive to resistance training, so you are going to see results with just about anything that you do. However, that lasts for let’s say six months or so, that’s on the high end. For some people it’s the honeymoon phase, the newby game phase. Right. Let’s just say it’s four to six months for most people and then things start to slow down and then if you want to keep progressing, you are going to have to really learn what you are doing.

    What got you there is not necessarily going to get you where you want to be and so I learned that eventually. I kind of I would say more or less spun my wheels for many years doing more traditional body building style workouts that weren’t guided by any real basic understanding of the physiology of muscle growth and of strength gain and fat loss and again, I was more just following various tips and programs and things that I would find in magazines and on the internet. But fortunately, I knew that I didn’t really know anything about this. It was something I just enjoyed doing. I would do it with my friends. We weren’t taking it that seriously.

    But about let’s see it was probably about five years ago now, it was about seven years into my personal fitness journey I guess, is when I really just decided to start educating myself because I wanted to just see what could I do with my body. What’s the – how lean could I get? How much muscle could I gain? If I was going to keep on working out, I might as well try to get the most out of it and so I really started to educate myself and went primarily to the scientific literature, that’s where I started. Because I was looking to first understand the first principles. I was looking to understand the laws and if we are talking about the dietary side of things; I wanted to understand how does the human metabolism actually work? And if we are talking about the training side of things; how does the physiology muscle growth work? How does the body’s muscle building machinery work? And from there, then I figured I could better vet what I was doing. I could better vet potential diets and potential training programs and maybe even just come up with my own kind of approach based on my understanding.

    So, that was again that was about five years ago, and it went well and fortunately there’s just a lot of good information out there. It’s not like – I mean I don’t say that I have – there is nothing breakthrough about me or my work. I have just done a good job I would say finding good information and understanding it and figuring out how to explain it to other people in a way that they can understand it and apply it and get results with it. And so, when I went through that process of educating myself and then I changed how I was eating. I changed how I was training and over the course of the next few years; I was able to dramatically improve my physique, so I was able to get lean and stay lean and add quite a bit of muscle to my frame and I would say achieve the type of body that most guys want. So, not a body builder body per se, but I would say more like maybe an athletic kind of fitness modelish kind of body. And then from there, I was like well, I want to educate other people. I want to share what I have learned with other people, because ire member how annoying it was to not – to just be lost in all of the noise and to not know up from down and to be constantly chasing one method after another or working with one trainer after another and not really seeing clear results or clear progress.

    And so, in 2012, I published Bigger, Leaner, Stronger and it was like a first edition. It was kind of a minimum viable product type of approach. I think it was maybe fifty thousand words or so, no more than seventy thousand words. I don’t remember exactly, but I just wanted to put something out there and it wasn’t about marketing or trying to sell the sizzle, it was really just straight to the point. Here’s the book I wish somebody would have given me when I first started working out. It would have saved me a lot of time. It would have saved me a lot of trouble and I would have gotten to where I am now a lot faster. And yeah, so that was 2012 and now I have gone through – that book has gone through several revisions based on further research and just good feedback from readers and bringing up good points and asking good questions and it has now sold close to 300,000 copies and continues to sell well and yeah, so that’s how Bigger, Leaner, Stronger came about.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s fantastic. You know in chapter five, the seven biggest muscle building myths and mistakes you write nine out of ten people you see in the gym don’t train correctly. I know that sounds a bit harsh, but it’s true and soon you will see why. Alright, what’s going on in the gym? What’s everybody doing that they shouldn’t be doing and what are some of the myths that they think are true and are keeping them from attaining the body that they really want?

    Michael: Yeah, and so this is more particular to guys. What you will see a lot of guys in the gym doing is you will see them do – they are usually doing very long workouts that are focused usually kind of just on one muscle group and they are doing a lot of reps , usually very high reps, not very much weight, kind of focusing on getting a big pump and really trying to kind of blast or just annihilate this muscle group and then let it recover for five to seven days because if you train – when you are training a muscle group when you are doing resistance training, you are causing damage like micro tears in not necessarily the muscle fibers it looks like it is actually more kind of the connective tissue around the muscle fibers, but there is damage that needs to be repaired and until it is; things are going to be too sore and too painful to really train again.

    And what you want to be doing and this is again, this is one of the things that I really, really learned in my not just research, but then in my subsequent experience, and now my experience working with thousands of guys is you really want to be focusing one on increasing whole body strength. That really needs to be your over riding goal. If you’re a guy and you want to be gaining, you want to gain muscle as quickly as possible; then you want to gain strength as quickly as possible. Now that’s not necessarily – where this can kind of throw people off is in the beginning as I mentioned, your body is hyper responsive to weight lifting. You will get results no matter what you do in the beginning. You don’t necessarily have to get strong in the beginning to gain some muscle. However, things change after that newby gain phase. Once you are moving out of your beginner phase to your intermediate kind of phase, so once you have got your first year of weight lifting under your belt; then strength and size become much more correlated. Meaning that you are going to have to improve your strength if you want to continue getting bigger.

    Okay so, if that’s true; then how do you best get stronger? Well there’s a lot of research. I mean there is just even recently a meta-analysis by Schoenfeld and there was who else, there was Brad Schoenfeld and one or two other people that worked on this paper and it’s very clear, there is no question at this point that lifting heavier weights for fewer reps is better for getting stronger. Furthermore, compound exercises which are exercises that involve multiple joints and multiple muscle groups; are better for increasing whole body strength. So, for example, doing heavy squats, so doing let’s say squats with about 80-85% of your one rep max for somewhere around let’s say four to six reps; that is better for gaining strength than doing let’s say leg extensions on the leg extension machine for who knows how many sets of 12-15-20 reps followed by maybe hamstring curls, another machine exercise – those are isolation exercises because they are using – they are really just using one joint and they are focusing on one major muscle group. In the case of leg extensions, the quads, in the case of the hamstring curls, the hamstrings.

    So, that was one of the big changes for example my own workouts. I used to do workouts very much in that way. I would have like a chest day that would just be not too much bench pressing, more pushups and dumbbell flies and pec deck, really trying to isolate the pecs and then also doing a lot of sets and a lot of reps whereas now, yes I still have you could say a chest day; it’s more like a press day where I am doing – I’m working on my chest – my pecs, I’m working my triceps, I’m working on my shoulders; but the workouts now are quite different. I’m doing stuff like barbell bench press, dumbbell bench press, close grip bench press and for shoulders, it’s usually stuff like the overhead press, or the dumbbell press. And then also, usually some isolation exercises for in the case of the shoulders, like side raises and rear raises. So, it’s not that isolation exercises are bad; but you really need to be focusing most of your efforts on getting stronger and on preforming compound lifts. So, that’s just – that’s an example of something that if guys where to just to that; they would – and if they were stop doing what we see a lot of what’s going on in the gym and just start doing that; that alone would really – the results that they would get from that would be very surprising.

    Lisa: You know one of the things too that struck me is myth and mistake number 5, lifting like an idiot. You basically talk about that most guys don’t have a clue about proper form on many exercises and this ignorance stunts their gains, causes unnecessary wear and tear on ligaments, tendons and joints and opens the door to debilitating injuries. That’s huge. Because if we are talking about lifting heavier weights and there’s also a bigger risk, right, if you are doing it incorrectly. So, how important is it to work with somebody else, especially if you are brand new. Maybe to have someone guide you at first, a trainer or someone who know what they are doing. Talk to us about this.

    Michael: Yeah, and that’s a good point. There are – there have been a few studies that – I actually was just reading recently on the safety of weightlifting and fortunately; if it’s performed properly, weightlifting and even powerlifting is actually quite safe. But, if it’s performed correctly. If it’s performed incorrectly, then it’s yes, it is a dangerous activity. If you are for example, - let’s just take about some common form mistakes. So, for example, you will see when people are squatting a common mistake that we will see is as they are ascending the knees will start to cave in, right, so we have probably all seen that. Whereas proper form is when you are squatting your knees should be in line with your toes at all times. You actually a good cue when you are standing up in the squat is until you really have it grooved in; you almost want to get the feeling of pushing you knees out as if you are pushing them away from each other. What you don’t want is them to buckle in toward each other. On the dead lift which is for anyone not familiar with it; it’s an exercise, barbell on the floor, essentially you are just picking the barbell up. Sounds simple. It’s very difficult, probably the hardest exercise you can do.

    But a common mistake that we see on the dead lift is rounding the lower back. In some kind of elite dead lifters like competitive weightlifters; you will see a little bit of rounding in the upper area of the back, that’s not so much an issue; it’s the lower back where you look kind of like a scared cat as they are picking the weight up. That is – you are just asking for a disk injury. Also, another common thing that we see on the dead lift is really yanking the weight up at the top and hyper extending your lower back at the top. Very bad idea, asking for a disk injury. On the bench press, this is an exercise that many people think just ruins your shoulders. Period. No, that’s not true if you do it wrong; it can ruin your shoulders. And one of the most common mistakes that people make on the bench press is they flare their elbows up, so when they are pressing – because it gives you a little bit more leverage and it helps you get the bar up; if you move your elbows away from your torso and up towards your shoulder up to the point maybe where it’s even like a 90 degree angle; that is bad for your shoulders and it’s bad for your rotator cuff muscles in particular which again, if you injure a rotator cuff muscle; it just is a very long annoying recovery. So, what you will see then is aa lot of people that and you know, you see it more with guys because will get competitive and also, they just kind of want to look cool and they want to put up as much weight as possible and what that usually means is form breaks down. Now not only does this increase the risk of injury; it also decreases the effectiveness of the exercise. So ironically, really all you’re getting out of it is an increased risk of injury and you’re getting less muscle gain and strength gain.

    It’s much smarter to work with lower weights and proper form and that also then means you are going to progress in – you are going to progress in a way that your body is able to keep up with. Because remember, it’s not just muscles that are involved, it’s also tendons and ligaments. And your muscles – and you will see this actually with steroid users, right, where there is one of the reasons why a lot of steroid users get injuries to particularly to joints and the tendons and ligaments is their muscles get super strong, super-fast, but all the supporting structure, the infrastructure of the body can’t keep up with it and if they don’t know what they are doing in the gym and they just think like this feels light, I’m just going to keep going. I’m just going to keep going. Until eventually, a muscle tears or they have some other type of serious injury. And you see a similar effect when people use improper form to try to add weight. They are demanding more of their body and its sometime muscles, but it’s more often joints and tendons and ligaments than the body can give. So, again, proper form is crucial and if that means slower progress; that’s totally fine. That’s natural. That’s the way it’s supposed to be.

    Lisa: Oh yeah. I completely agree. You know another thing you have in the book under these seven biggest myths – excuse me building myths and mistakes, muscle building myths is you have to feel the burn to grow, that’s one and then another one is constantly changing up your routine. Talk to us about those.

    Michael: Yeah so feeling the burn, right so again, I used to think that was super important and really what that is, is its lactic acid building up right, so as your muscles get more and more stressed, lactic acid levels rise and we experience that as a burning sensation. There is actually quite a bit of research that has been done on this. I wrote and article on it recently. How important is that? How important is getting a pump? Those things usually go hand in hand like feel the burn, get a pump. And a pump of course is just muscle, you know your muscles are engorged with blood. And the long story short is those are basically non-factors as far as muscle growth goes. The primary drivers of muscle growth have been pretty well taped. We are looking at progressive overload, which basically means adding weight to the bar over time, subjecting your muscles to more and more load over time which is again, that ties back into why I am saying as a natural weightlifter, our number one goal is to increase whole body strength over time. Yes, there are sub goals or other things we can do especially if we really want to perfect our physiques, so to speak; but we need to make whole body strength our primary objective and then you also have metabolic stress, you have muscle damage, those are two other factors. But muscle pump and muscle burn are really non-factors. They look cool, and they might feel good and people get into that and that’s fine if you really like that then you can actually save some of that stuff for the end of your workout.

    So, if you are – you know whatever muscle you are training regardless, once you have done your heavy strength training; if you want to do some pump stuff just because you like how it feels; there’s nothing wrong with that as long as you don’t sit in there for like another 45 minutes doing a million sets. But if you want to end with a couple of 20 or 30 rep sets, just to end with a big pump; do it. Nothing wrong with that. But, if that’s the – if that’s like the majority of your workout is just 20 or 30 rep sets and just trying to get a pump; you are not going to get very far. So, that’s that point of why feeling the burn is really just not that important and sorry what was the second point?

    Lisa: Oh, the other point was about that you have to change things up al the time.

    Michael: Oh, right muscle confusion.

    Lisa: Yeah, muscle confusion.

    Michael: So yeah, that’s of course been, and I used to think that I read about that in magazines and I thought it was very important. Again, the basic theory seems to sound right and like oh well you are – you need to be like constantly stimulating your muscles with new types of movements and new types of well there is also I mean there is the exercise themselves, but it is also how it trains muscles. You have different planes of motion and so forth. And the long story short here is this is actually counterproductive because one, there is really no evidence to support that there is much of a novelty effect meaning that when you do a new exercise, your muscles don’t like go into this hyper responsive mode again like you were new to weightlifting. That’s just not how it works. You are hyper responsive in the beginning and then once that’s gone, that’s gone for good. There is something to be said for training muscles in different ways with different types of movements, yes, for sure. But, why muscle confusion, why constantly changing up your routine, I think is more counterproductive than anything else is it doesn’t allow you to get good at any particular exercise. And in terms of exercises, out of all the exercises you can do for all your major muscle groups; there’s really a you know you have a [inaudible][00:19:31] principle in play. You have twenty percent of those exercises are going to produce eighty percent of the results. And of those twenty percent; eighty percent of those exercises are going to be compound exercises.

    So, for example, the best exercises to build a program around are the big compound lifts, the strength training lifts, the squat, the dead lift, the bench press, the overhead press. Now if you can’t do any of those exercises for any reason; that’s okay. You can work around that. But if you can, if you don’t have any injuries or dysfunctions that preclude you from doing them; those are the best place to start. And what happens is if you are constantly changing your routine; you are not given enough time to really learn proper form and learn proper techniques and improve your technique. A lot of people don’t realize that some of these exercises are kind of technical movement. I mean a squat is not a golf swing, but there are a number of elements to a proper squat and there are a lot of muscles and a lot of joints that have to work in pretty good harmony to produce a good squat. And as with anything; the more you squat, the better you get at squatting. That’s one of the ways to get stronger on the squat is to simply squat more frequently. That’s why many strength training programs have you squatting two or three days per week. There is some evidence to show that higher frequency is better for muscle growth. Period. But what we know for sure is that the higher frequency improves your skill faster and the more skilled you are at squatting, and we can quantify skill in terms of bar path, in terms of angles of your body and of your joints at different points in the squat. Like there is an objective- there are objective measures for good and bad squatting and the closer you get to the good squat; the better you are going be able to squat because what you are doing is you are basically gaining more leverage on the weight and you are also from an anatomical perspective; you are allowing your body to most efficiently move that weight and allowing your muscles to work together as efficiently as possible to produce as much power as possible.

    So, what you want to do then is you want to have staple exercises which are your most productive exercises and you want to be doing those frequently. You want to be doing those every week and in some cases several times per week so you can get better at them and so you can continue to get better and better at them and you might – it really kind of depends on I guess your – how quickly you pick up on things and just some people are just naturally very good at duplicating physical motions like being able to just look at things and do them and they improve very quickly. But, you are going to see significant improvements in your technique probably for your first 100-300 hours of doing the exercise. It’s not just like you are going to squat five times and you are going to have it nailed. It might take a bit of time to really get in perfect technique and so that’s why if you change exercises every week, yeah you are giving your muscles some different stimuli and there’s probably some value to that; but you are never going to get really good at any individual exercise and you are not going to be getting good at the exercises that matter most.

    And so, those are the main reasons why I’m just not really a fan of muscle confusion. I’d say the benefit of it is it helps keep things – it helps give variety and some people find that that makes the workouts more interesting, but I have worked with a lot of people that had that initially the had that consideration like if they were going to do this same kind of routine, if they are just going to squat every week and there is not that much variety, is it going to get boring and I would say I mean how I have kind of helped them with that is let’s reframe it really look at what our goal is here. Our goal is we are not going into the gym to just exercise. We are not going into the gym to just burn calories and move our bodies. That’s fine, it’s not that those are worthwhile things, but we are going into the gym to train and training has a specific goal.

    What’s our objective? Our objective is increasing whole body strength. Why is that our objective? Because that’s what’s going to ultimately get us to the ultimate goal of looking the way you want to look and also feeling great and increasing our longevity and reducing our risk for disease and dysfunction and so when you look at it that way and you go okay I have a very – like I really want that goal. That is motivating to me and if that means that I have to do workouts that on the surface seem kind of boring; then I’m going to do that. And then when they get into the groove of doing it, they often find that they really enjoy the workouts because they are able to progress. And of course, that feeling of progression toward goals is what produces satisfaction. So, all of the sudden, now they don’t care that they are squatting again, or they are dead lifting again or bench pressing again because look at the progress they have made. In the last year, they’ve gained a hundred – they have put on 100 pounds on their big lifts and they are continuing to progress and they know that every time they gain a rep, every time that they are able to put more weight on the bar; they are a little bit closer to the long-term goal. And so, it’s just a – changing the perspective.

    Lisa: Oh, completely. Well you know you have got to come back a lot because I think you are fantastic. One of the things that I want to get into when I have you back again is you talk about three different types of meal plans; one for cutting, one for bulking, one for maintaining. There is so much more in the book. we are also going to have you back to talk about your cookbook, the Shredded Chef and in the meantime, tell us all the ways we can find you Michael.

    Michael: Yeah, absolutely. So, my central hub I guess you would say is my website muscle for life which is muscle F-O-R life.com and from there you can find my books and I also have a supplement company and you can find all of my things and you can also find me on the social medias although, I will say that I’m not very diligent with them. I don’t spend too much time on them because I’m kind of wrapped up in other things, but I am there. So, you can find me on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter at either muscleforlifefitness or muscleforlife and yeah, I would say those are probably the easiest ways to find me and my stuff.

    Lisa: Awesome. Well Michael, I can’t wait to have you back. This has been so incredibly enjoyable and informative. If you want to learn more about Talk Healthy Today, Talk Fitness Today you can go to www.itsyourhealthwithlisadavis.com , lots of great stuff there. You can check us out on social media on Twitter @talkfitness2day. Everyone have a great day and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 26:10
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis, MPH
Getting into awesome shape isn’t nearly as complicated as the fitness industry wants you to believe.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft026.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Michael Matthews, Founder of Muscle for Life
  • Book Title Bigger, Leaner, Stronger & Thinner, Leaner Stronger
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/muscleforlifefitness
  • Guest Twitter Account @muscleforlife
  • Guest Bio Mike Matthews is a bestselling fitness author and entrepreneur, and the creator of MuscleForLife.com and Legion Athletics.

    His simple and science-based approach to building muscle, losing fat, and getting healthy has sold over a million books and helped thousands of people build their best bodies ever, and his work has been featured in many popular outlets including Esquire, Men’s Health, Elle, Women’s Health, Muscle & Strength, Elle, and more, as well as on FOX and ABC.
  • Transcription Female Fitness with Michael Matthews

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. If you are looking for a book, ladies out there, that is going to give you everything you need to build the ultimate female body; I have go the book for you. It is Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, the Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Female Body. It is by Michael Matthews who joins us now. Heh Michael.

    Michael Matthews (Guest): Heh Lisa, how are you?

    Lisa: I’m good, how are you doing?

    Michael: I’m good. I’m good.

    Lisa: Good. I have to say Michael, I’m super impressed. I get about four to six books a week and when I got your book, I though holy cow, you cover everything. It’s really impressive. You start out in the book, you have got these amazing before and after pictures, you have your own; I like this not very impressive, something had to change picture of you and too wow, you are stunningly handsome and ripped and strong and fit. Talk to us about your evolution and then I want to talk about the women out there and what we can do.

    Michael: Yeah absolutely. So, I started lifting weights. If got into it when I was like 20, I think I was 17 turning 18, so I grew up playing sports. I played a lot of hockey and when I stopped playing hockey, I wanted to continue doing something with my body and honestly, I mean I was 17, and I was like hmm, I like girls and girls like muscles so I’m just going to start doing that. And so that’s how I got into it and in the beginning, I didn’t really know what I was doing, I just picked up some body building magazines and did whatever kind of workouts were in those magazines and it went on like that for years. Something I kind of stayed with my friends and honestly, I didn’t take it - I guess I could say I didn’t take it very seriously in that I wasn’t – I wasn’t very educated, but at least I knew I wasn’t very educated. And eventually, I decided to get a bit more serious about it and see what could I really do with my body just for the sake of why not. Let’s see. What’s the best shape that I can possibly get in and what does that require. Because I had picked up various things along the way. A lot of things that people still kind of -are still very commonly believed today like for example, if you want to get lean, you have to do a bunch of cardio or you have to eat a bunch of “clean” or healthy food and you can’t eat “unclean” or unhealthy foods and you should be training certain ways with weights like really high reps to really feel the burn if you want to bring out the striations and just a lot of things like that.

    And when I really got down to educating myself and learning the kind of like I went to a – I wanted to go learn the first principles. I wanted to learn the – what are the laws of if we are talking about diet. How does the human metabolism really work? I didn’t want to just learn about random fad diets or diets that revolve around usually like restricting or emphasizing one particular food or one type of food over another. Again, I wanted to understand the machinery of the body and then from there, turn that into more practical kind of guidelines. And so, that was probably about six or seven years into my fitness journey I guess. And at that point, I looked okay and I had made decent progress simply because I was consistent, and its years and years of consistent work is going to produce something. But, it wasn’t exactly what you would expect for like 1500 plus hours of exercise and so, yeah from there I educated myself and went first and foremost to just the scientific literature and that was particularly fruitful on the dietary side of things because we have over a century of metabolic research now that is just easily accessible and because of the amount of not only clinical trials but the amount of reviews and metanalyses that are out there; you really don’t have to do that much reading to get a good general understanding of what matters most in terms of losing weight, maintaining weight, gaining weight and also you can break that down into losing fat and not muscle, gaining muscle and not fat and so forth.

    On the training side of things, it’s a bit more complicated, the science which is a bit more contradictory and it’s more nuanced, but there are a handful of books that I started with that broke it down, in a pretty straightforward manner and made arguments that really spoke to me in terms of the importance of focusing on strength training over everything else as opposed to more traditional I say like “body-building” training. And so, from that point, again that was probably year sevenish, over the next three to four years of educating myself and then putting what I had learned into practice; I was able to dramatically transform my physique. I was able to lose a lot of body fat and get very lean and then subsequently actually stay very lean, but also put on a fair amount of muscle in the right places on my body that gave me the type of look I guess that most guys are going for. I don’t think I look like a body builder per se, I say maybe a little bit more like an athlete or fitness model kind of look. And so from there, that was kind of my personal transformation and then I decided to start educating other people and I had always been interested in writing so, I thought that would be a good place to start and that was 2012 when I wrote my first book and it’s been kind of a rocket ride I guess since.

    Lisa: Well, I’m not surprised. Because you have so much great information in the book. you know one of the questions that I have has to do with a woman and her curves. So, I’m curvy. I like it. And my fear is if I do too much, I’m going to lose – because you end up, you can’t just lose weight and spot reducing, right, there is no such thing as spot reducing. So, if I want to get leaner overall, then there go the boobs, there goes the butt, it seems like. So, what do you say to that because I’m at this point where I’m definitely not as lean as I’d like to be; but I don’t want to lose weight right now. I just want to firm up, but I don’t want to get too lean, so like how do you access all that. Because I think there are other women out there especially now because curves are very popular, and I know it should just be because they are popular, but I like mine. So, what do you say?

    Michael: Yeah, yeah and you know, to give just a hundred percent honest answer, is it kind of depends on your body. Genetics are going to play a big role in that. Especially if you are talking about boobs, that is very much a genetic thing. Some women will get very lean and yeah, they may lose a little bit of size, but not very much while other women will lose more than they want to. But as far as butt goes, that you can manipulate through training. So, you know like you can definitely – let’s just say that – I have worked with thousands and thousands of women over the years via the internet virtually right and I have stayed in touch with a lot of women over the course of really their like in some cases, it is multiple years now; and you can definitely like the look that most women seem to resonate best with most women is about let’ say eighteen to 20 percent body fat with anywhere from fifteen to probably twenty pounds of muscle in the right places and that’s for most women seems to be the sweet spot because at eighteen to twenty percent body fat, you are not super shredded. You don’t have things coming out everywhere but you have clear abs, and again depending on your genetics, it might be even as much as like a six pack, but you are going to have clear stomach definition, you are going to look tight, you are going to have muscle definition in your arms and you also though are going to have enough fat to have boobs and to have a butt and then again in the case of butt, you can also – you can kind of manipulate that through training.

    So, in my program for women, it is more lower body centric than upper body whereas my program for men has more work on the upper body than the lower body. We are not neglecting the lower body, but the reality is for most women, you are going to have – you are going to be happy with your upper body fast than your lower body for most women. It’s going to take more work to get he lower body that you want than the upper body and for men it’s usually the other way around. Most guys are going to be happy with their lower body development sooner than their upper body, so you have to kind of program for that. But with the butt in particular, like in my program for women; you’re training it three days a week, two day are kind of more indirect – well I wouldn’t say indirect, but you are doing things like squatting and you are doing glut specific training and that’s about the most you can get away with as a natural weight lifter is taking a major muscle group and training it two to three times a week is a lot and you can do it as long as it’s set up correctly. More than that probably becomes a bit counterproductive.

    So, in your case, the question would be – I would be curious to see like what you would think if you were at about twenty percent body fat and you had trained in a way that’s specific to the body that you want. Now, for example, if you are talking about your chest; training the chest muscles can help a little bit because the fat is on top of the muscles, so it can kind of move it up a little bit and perk it up a little bit. But that is harder to – you are not going to be able to influence that as significantly as you can influence your butt for example where you can be very, very lean and actually have a very round and noticeable butt simply because it’s muscle. So, yeah I mean again I would say you have to kind of see how does your body respond and the good thing about it also is the worst case scenario, is let’s say you were to do that and you were to get to twenty percent body fat which again if you are like most women, is probably where you would – as far as just pure body fat percentage goes, my guess is that you would be pretty happy with that. And then you have to access your body and you have to look and you have to be like, you know what, honestly, I don’t like that I don’t have enough boobs at twenty percent, so I’m going to go up a bit. I’m going to go up to twenty two percent and I’m going to see and so then over time, you eventually find your sweet spot and you go okay cool, this is where I am happiest with everything and then the game is of course, you can maintain it and then you look at how can you improve very specific things so at least you are keeping it interesting. You are not just kind of going through the motions everyday because that does get a bit boring.

    Lisa: Yeah, that is true. Alright, well I want to jump into some of these. You have so much good information as I mentioned. Okay I love this; five biggest fat loss myths and mistakes. The first one is watching calorie intake is unnecessary. Talk to us about that.

    Michael: Yeah, so I know this is pretty trending these days and I understand from a marketing perspective, yeah, it makes sense to kind of be one contrarian like contrarian positioning is always good marketing because it gets people’s attention. And this also plays into what people want to hear and what they want to believe because tracking calories is annoying. If you are going to even if you use an app like My Fitness Pal, it is still kind of annoying and in meal planning can be kind of annoying. It can also be a little bit confusing if you don’t know what you are doing with meal planning and it also generally means a little bit less variety in your diet. But, the long story short is there is something called energy balance. This is kind of a technical term, a scientific term and it refers to the relationship between the amount of energy that you are eating, and this energy is measured in calories or kilocalories, right that’s how we generally measure it versus the amount of energy that you are burning. And that relationship is called energy balance. So, your body, in its natural state assuming that there is nothing particularly wrong with your metabolism or hormones; it basically wants to maintain a neutral state of energy balance. It doesn’t really want to gain weight, it doesn’t really want to lose weight; it kind of just wants to stay the same. So, if you are eating unprocessed nutritious foods and you just kind of listen to your natural hunger and satiety cues to eat when you are hungry, and you eat until you are satisfied. You don’t stuff yourself. If you do that, and anybody that has done that over time, you probably notice that your weight doesn’t really change. It probably fluctuates let’s say anywhere from one to three pounds and that’s it. And that’s good. That’s how your body is meant to work.

    Now, if you want to lose weight and of course when I say lose weight, really what I mean is if you want to lose fat and all body fat is, is it’s just energy stores for your body to tap into when it doesn’t have energy from food. You are going to have to restrict that energy intake. You are going to have to again, scientists refer to it as a state of negative energy balance which means that you are going to have to intentionally give your body a bit less energy than it’s burning. Now, if your body didn’t have a way to get the energy that it needs; so again, let’s put real numbers on it. Let’s say just for a simple number, let’s say you are burning about 2000 calories a day. That’s how much energy you are burning because it requires energy to just stay alive, every organ in your body of course requires energy to just operate, the brain requires a lot of energy. So, if you were just to lay in bed all day, you are still burning a fair amount of energy. Then of course you add on top of that physical activity, right so exercise, but not just exercise, every physical activity; walking around, even fidgeting, right? So, there’s research that shows that some people are just very high activity types and they are always kind of moving. They are always – if they are reading something, they are bobbing their leg, or they are playing with their hands and this expresses itself in many ways and that actually can add up to quite a significant amount of energy every day. Like in some studies, they have shown that that alone in some people is like three to five hundred calories a day of just kind of fidgeting and just moving around, right.

    But if we just want to put a simple number on it, right, let’s just say it’s 2000 calories. Let’s say that’s what you are burning in a day and you ate 1500 calories, so your body was short 500 calories for the day. If it didn’t have a way to get that energy that it needed; you would just die. Because of course, our cells, they need a constant supply of energy. They can’t just sit around and wait like everything can’t just shut down and go well we don’t have any energy from food, we ate food like three hours ago and we are done processing that, so where’s the energy going to come from? Of course, the body’s primary source of energy is body fat. When it doesn’t have energy from food, it goes to body fat. So, when you underfeed your body by let’s say 500 calories in let’s say a 24 hours period; most of that energy is going to have been pulled from body fat.

    So, essentially what has happened is, in that 24-hour period, you have a little bit less body fat because your body had to go to its body fat stores to obtain the let’s say 500 calories give or take that it didn’t get from food. And then when you rinse and repeat that day after day; that is of course what adds up to fat loss over time. And when you look at it day by day, it’s not that much. A pound of fat contains approximately 3500 calories and it actually requires quite a bit more – you have to burn quite a bit more than that to actually lose a pound of fat, but my point is these changes are pretty small, so you don’t see them day to day. And again, that is an undisputed fact of science. Every clinical trial that you can find on PubMed that demonstrated significant weight loss relied on the manipulation of energy balance. It requires an energy deficit. There is just no other way to do it. And some diets that are highly restrictive for example just force you to be in that caloric deficit. You know if you are not allowed to eat half of the foods that you actually like to eat, and if you have to eat foods that are relatively low in calories but relatively high in volume, so they are very filling; you are naturally going to eat quite a bit less and you are naturally going to be underfeeding your body.

    So, that’s why we can never get around the fact that calories matter. Now, a calorie is not a calorie in the sense of when we look at it in terms of body composition; not all calories are the same, yes that’s true. But if we are going to gain control of our weight and if we are going to really know how to lose weight or maintain weight or gain weight as desired; we have to understand energy balance and how it affects the body and how we can use it as a tool as opposed to having it work against us or work mysteriously.

    Lisa: Oh yeah. I completely agree. Now there’s some other mistakes in there. People have to get the book. you have got myth and mistake, chasing fad diets, doing tons of reps brings out muscle definition, trying to spot reduce fat which I mentioned earlier. Let’s jump into the thinner, leaner, stronger workout routine. Give us an idea of what we gals will be doing.

    Michael: Yeah, so it is really what it is – it’s in the weightlifting lingo, it’s kind of like a push-pull-legs program, if people have heard of that type of programing where you are working your push muscles which is obviously like your upper body, it’s your pecs, it’s your triceps, it’s your shoulders, you are working your pull muscles, your biceps, your back and you’re working your lower body, your legs and it’s strength training type of program. It’s not a hard core strength training program in that I’m not asking women to lift tremendous amounts of weight, but it is a lot heavier than most women are used to lifting because many women that get into resistance training of any kind, usually are told that you are supposed to use very little weight and you are supposed to just do a lot of reps because if you do anything else, you are going to get bulky, right so that’s the – probably the primary concern at least in my experience of women who are getting into resistance training. Yes, they want to have muscle definition. They want to have muscle tone. They want to be lean. They want to have curves, but they don’t want to be bulky. And I understand. And the – I think it’s worth just talking on that just for a minute.

    Because the key here is because bulkiness does not come from – well first let’s just say that strength training, the reason why I am focusing on strength training and why I want women to focus on strength training one of the reasons at least in terms of body composition is it’s the most effective way to gain muscle. It just is and there’s – that’s a whole other discussion if you wanted to get into the science of that, but if you want to and again this applies to men too: if you want to gain muscle as quickly as possible, then you want to be focusing the majority of your efforts on strength training and that involves exercises that are difficult.

    Exercises that involve multiple joints, multiple major muscle groups, right called compound exercises so like for example the squat is a great exercise. Difficult exercise whether it’s a barbell on your back or a barbell in front of you, the barbell squat is a strength training exercise. The dead lift, where you are picking a barbell up off the ground, sounds simple. It’s hard. And it involves pretty much every major muscle group in your body. You have stuff like the bench press and the overhead press. Now again, many women they hear these things and they think well isn’t that more like what guys are supposed to be doing? Because guys want the big muscles and yes, that is true that is what guys should be doing if guys want big muscles. But it is also what women should be doing because women need to gain muscle as well.

    And they need to gain muscle in the right places to have the look that they want and coming back to the bulkiness point now, gaining muscle is not what makes women bulky. What makes women bulky is having too high of a body fat percentage. So if your body fat levels are too high, and you start adding muscle, then yes you can start to get that kind of bulky just bigger look, because of course, muscle does have size and if you are adding – if you take a woman who maybe is – her body fat is already higher than she would like it to be, and you start adding muscle underneath the body fat; of course now she just looks bigger and that’s not the goal. I haven’t met very many women that say I just want to be bigger. However, if you add muscle in the right places and reduce body fat, now all of the sudden the whole landscape changes. Now you don’t get bulky, that’s how you get that kind of athletic, I wouldn’t say muscular, but it is more like a lean, toned. Because for a woman to truly look muscular, to be like low body fat, high amounts of muscle mass; it takes a tremendous amount of work. I mean it takes years – I would say three to five years of really deliberate dedicated hard work for a woman to truly look bulky if she also has a relatively low body fat percentage.

    And again, I keep on coming back to this twenty percent level because that is generally the level where – like most high-level athletes for example are – I can’t say most, but many high-level athletes have a body fat percentage of let’s say sixteen to eighteen to maybe twenty percent. That’s that athletic look and when your body fat is relatively low and you add again coming back to that number; most women if you add fifteen to twenty pounds of muscle in the right places and a lot of that is in the lower body; so a lot of that is going to be in the legs, it’s going to be in the gluts and a fair amount is also going to be in the upper body in the arms, in the shoulders and the back and combine that with that lower level of body fat percentage, not – there is no woman that looks bulky with that combination.

    Lisa: Yeah, and you can get there not to like the body building competition level where you have to spend like you said three to five years, but you don’t have to spend a ton of time because you are doing the higher reps. So, in the last few minutes, talk to us about the time commitment for this to get to the twenty percent and to get that extra muscle.

    Michael: Absolutely, I would say for and this is again now I have worked with thousands of people. Let’s say that in my experience, most women can go from wherever they are and even women that start out very overweight or in some cases very underweight; can go from that to the type of body that they have always really wanted in let’s say their first year to two. And the reason – I know it’s a big range, but I would say if you are starting out in a normal place as a woman, you are not particularly overweight, you are not underweight you just look totally normal I would say a year of hard work is generally enough. It does again, depend on how well your body responds to the resistance training because there is variability there and that’s just genetic but if you respond fairly well; let’s say it’s a year of three to five hours per week. That’s it. You don’t need to be in the gym two hours a day six seven days a week. You don’t have to be doing tons of cardio. Cardio is good for you and I do recommend under certain circumstances, but I would much rather see people focus their efforts on strength training because strength training delivers a lot of the same cardiovascular benefits and metabolic benefits as cardio, but it also provides the body composition benefits and other benefits even related to like longevity that you don’t really get from cardio. So, three to five hours per week, let’s say a year. A year to a year and a half and most women are super happy with their body at that point and of course, being humans, we are never satisfied, regardless of what we have. We always now have to go to he next thing and that’s fine, but yeah that’s generally and for someone that wants to be like oh my God fit, that wants to be ready to go on a fitness – on the cover of a fitness magazine let’s say realistically probably three to five years.

    Lisa: Alright. Wow. There is so much great stuff. We only just skimmed the surface. Again, the book is Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Female Body. Michael Matthews. Michael tell us all the places we can find you and your great work on social media.

    Michael: Yeah, so I guess my central hub is my website muscleforlife.com and that’s just muscleforlife.com. And then on social media you can find me on Instagram muscleforlifefitness and muscleforlife on Facebook and also muscleforlife on Twitter. Although I’m not too big on social media, honestly, but I’m there.

    Lisa: And last question, do you work with people via Skype. Like I want to bring you into my home and have you help me, but I don’t know if that’s something you can do. Or how does that work?

    Michael: I actually do a little bit of coaching. I have a coaching service, but I don’t coach people myself. I work with coaches. I Mean I would be happy to after we – if you have questions, I would be happy to help you out, but the reason why I don’t do it myself is while it would be fun to spend my time just talking with people and helping them through their various obstacles and whatever; it is just I have so many other things between – I am working on a new book projects , I also have – I have a supplement company as well and so it’s just I can’t – I just don’t have the time to do it myself and so that’s why I set up the service where I have trained coaches and we have worked now with hundreds and hundreds of people of all ages and circumstances and we have some really, really cool success stories actually because it’s not just about losing some fat and gaining some muscle and getting abs or something like that. But it really – when people get into really good shape it inevitably just changes their entire life for the better. So, it’s pretty cool.

    Lisa: Oh, that is so true. Well I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can find this show and Talk Healthy Today if you go to www.itsyourhealthwithlisadavis.com .Check us out on social media, TalkFitness2dayo on Twitter and Snap Chat. Thanks for listening and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 26:56
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis, MPH
Have you ever had one of those days when you just couldn't get enough of your favorite comfort foods? That's the very definition of "emotional eating."

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft024.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Hollis Lance Liebman
  • Book Title Complete Physique Your Ultimate Body Transformation, Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/hollis.liebman
  • Guest Twitter Account @hllpac
  • Guest Bio Hollis-Lance-LiebmanHollis Lance Liebman has won national body building competitions, trained celebrities like Hugh Jackman and Jane Lynch, and worked as a fitness magazine editor and photographer.

    He has published twelve books on exercise and anatomy, including 1,500 STRETCHES: The Complete Guide to Flexibility and Movement.

    He lives in Los Angeles, California.
  • Transcription Emotional vs. Conscious Eating with Hollis Lance Liebman

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): I am so lucky to get to do this show Talk Fitness Today because I get to talk to fantastic people and one of them is the wonderful Hollis Lance Liebman. He is back. We are talking about his book Complete Physique Your Ultimate Body Transformation Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle. If you missed our last interview, you can go to itsyourhealthwithlisadavis.com and on the home page you will see Talk Fitness Today, just click on the graphic and you can listen. We talked all about the book. Today, we are going to talk more about the book. We are going to talk about the mental side of things. We are going to talk about emotional overeating and conscious eating and all kinds of good stuff so Hollis, welcome back.

    Hollis Lance Liebman (Guest): Oh, thank you for having me and again, Happy New Year to everybody. Thank you again, for having me.

    Lisa: It’s so good to have you on. You know Hollis, you mentioned in our last interview that you had been bullied as a kid and I was picked on a lot. I was very skinny. I mean skinny, skinny, skinny and very uncoordinated and I know I have mentioned this before, but I think I might have mentioned this with you in another interview we did, but I not only got picked last, but they fought over who got stuck with me. So, I was – and I went to school with the same kids from kindergarten all the way through high school and it really sucked because it seemed like no matter what I did, how I changed, I was still just like that uncoordinated nerd kid. And it really affects your self-esteem and I remember eating peanut butter sandwiches at night and trying to gain weight and this and that and then my mother used to like hide junk food because she was super healthy but then that lead me to bad habits and it’s interesting how the self-esteem and my long story is trying to get to the fact that it’s very easy to become an emotional eater when you have all these things going on in your life and so I was curious about if that was something that happened to you or was it more that you turned to the body building because I know you mentioned that because of the bullying?

    Hollis: I don’t think I’m unique that much in regards but many of us have been bullied. I think it what we do with it in our life. Look at you now with this very successful show you have so here you are. I don’t know where your bully is today, but here you are. So, for me it was never to get revenge on the bully, but I just thought it was so cool that I just learned at a very young age that our body is the one thing we have control over. Maybe because of all the He Man cartoons I watched and GI Joe and subconsciously all the muscles were implanted in my brain but when I saw a friend that I grew up with work out one day, I never knew he had muscles and I was like wow, where did that happen from and I just thought it was so cool that all the anxiety and fear because let’s face it, that’s what bullying does. I could put that energy somewhere else into a war against myself and I used that word war because it was a war a positive way of letting out all this angst and terror and horror into a positive thing of bettering myself and I just think that body building, the gym, writing, whatever your listeners might fall in love with is a very positive thing to displace negative energy and I was fortunate to be able to marry my two loves of life, the body building and writing and here we are and I have this book.

    And I learned from the master on writing Robert McKee the famous author of Steering, to tell the truth. He signed my book tell the truth and I asked him what’s the greatest lesson you can teach and that’s what he wrote and when I write, I am always telling the truth, even when I do my children’s books, I’m still trying to tell the truth even if it is fictional medium. Tell the truth to me means let it out, pour your heart out, be real because somebody is going to feel as you do and it’s going to resonate with somebody else. And tell the truth, I think writing is a very powerful, beautiful medium that can touch people and people know when you BS them and they know when you are being real. And life is too short, why not be real.

    Lisa: You know, I do want to have you on my other show to talk about your children’s books I have been meaning to say that. So that’s exciting. Yeah so, for you, I wish I had had that. To me, what happened is when I was made fun of for being unathletic, rather than being like well I’m going to prove to them I’m athletic; I was just like okay, I guess I’m unathletic. And this is back in the 70s and 80s, so I just kind of turned away from it and it wasn’t until I was 17 that I started swimming. My family joined this club that had a pool and I was like wow, I’m really good at this and it kind of shocked me because I just thought I was such a loser and I was never good at anything in that regard, anything athletic and I thought wow, I wish I had discovered this sooner. So, I’m so glad that you were able to go to the gym. I know you mentioned in our last interview about your mother taking you to the Y when you were 13 and that’s when you started getting into working out. Whereas for me, I just I shied away, and I think that’s such a shame when that happens to a kid where they are not encouraged because they are told they are no good. So, it’s complicated.

    Hollis: Well, yes, however I would say to me I don’t think it’s as important as when we discover our passions but rather that we do. So, whether you discover it at 13 or 25, you are doing it. And some Oscar winning actors and actresses started their careers very late and some early. And I think the point is, that we discover these things. In my case, I would probably be dead or in jail if I didn’t discover body building. I’m joking. But no, not really. But a positive place to displace my frustrations as a youth. And I was no different, but millions of people go through this, so I think what I’m trying to say is if you find a passion, something you care about, something that makes you put foot A in front of foot B every day, you owe it to yourself to take it to its fullest extent or explore it. You never know where it might lead. And I think that’s very important.

    Lisa: Yeah, that is true. And my love of swimming, is what led me and also my parents are very health conscious and led me to want to work in the health field and there are a lot of other reasons too as well, but that was sort of that impetus and you’re right. I mean, I was 17, it wasn’t like I was 110 so I did discover it. But I want to go back to the emotional eating. Because I think that’s something that a lot of people struggle with. Let’s talk about that and talk about the mental side of things too and your book.

    Hollis: Well, yes, the mental side of things basically to me is about fortifying the self, it’s about in my case, with these books these fitness books, I’m always trying to outdo myself and tell the truth. So, fortifying oneself in anyway that one can. For me that might equal taking a photo from my last shoot and saying I’m going to look better than that. It could mean being strong when you are going out with someone or friends that don’t follow your lifestyle. I have been on many dates where I have to eat in the middle of perhaps making out or whatever and it’s about being true to you. So, the mental state is to me it’s just about what can you do to ensure your own success and as I said earlier, I think if you fall in love with something you owe it to yourself to see it through. I was so dead set on bettering the book I did prior to this that I was willing to do almost anything, turn over any stone, leap any height I needed to do to do so.

    So, the mental process is sometimes you have to go to a place that is maybe a little dangerous or a little scary to you in order to harness the will and the strength and the power to get things done. And that’s okay. I think, is basically the great challenge of how good can I be. Very few of us in any endeavor, any endeavor, baseball, race car driving, authorship, whatever it might be, in my case, with my parents and I do believe I had the greatest parents ever, they were, I believe they found out how great a parent could be and I just think to me, that’s a big thing in life is whatever endeavor, how great can I be and when you fortify yourself with all these questions, how can you not succeed. That’s really one of the best things that I could say about that.

    I will say this, without putting another whack down, a former book, I’m very, very proud of as well, they did not put the gorgeous female model on the cover and I begged them, and I said if you don’t because the book is for both sexes. It’s not – I feel we will lose half of our readership and it’s not getting the book out as successfully as it could. And they went and published the book and I’m thankful and it was all good, and I said to myself that no matter what it takes, in mental preparation for this book, you will have the female on the cover because she is as important as you to this book. And I fought, and I begged for it and it happened with the publisher.

    So, I might be going in circles, but mentally, to your listeners, do whatever you can to make your dreams and goals a reality. It’s sort of like mental lining that armory if you will that build up and when you – let’s face it, everything in life worth having is tough, everything. And we all question why am I doing this, but when you have that checklist to go back to, the answer is so apparent and obvious, you continue on seamlessly on your journey. And to me, without the mental, physical will not follow. If you don’t have the mental down, without the why then the what is not going to happen. So, I think you got to check yourself and – it’s like when you go into a store at least for – I don’t want to sound sexist, but I think for men, when we go into Target, we go in knowing exactly what we want and generally come out with finite amount of items. Perhaps, some females go in there and maybe not knowing what they want and sometimes come out with a whole lot of items. Sometimes good by the way and sometimes the man goes oh I didn’t think of that. So, I don’t know what my point was, but just making that joke. But I think when you go into an endeavor with an exact plan, you are going to get very clear and specific in what you want, I believe you will get more out of it.

    Lisa: Yeah, I think that’s such great advice. I want to go back to this okay, so you have to eat while you are making out? Okay, we have to go because it is just like because you were going to train, and you have to eat like a certain amount every hour or something because that’s what stuck in my head. And I know if I didn’t ask, the audience would be like what the hell. What’s going on with this eating while making out stuff?

    Hollis: That particular, yeah, I was dating this one girl one year and when we are kissing and making out and it was great and my watch alarm, when I have had, remember those, my alarm went off on my watch and she’s like what the hell. And I swear to you, I literally, I reached under the seat and pulled out like chicken breasts and rice. And she was like are you kidding me? And I said listen, I’m going to be in basically my underwear on stage in about five weeks, I have got to get my meals in. It was a little weird. I can’t remember if we went back to kissing after that. I might have had gum or Binaca after the chicken got stuck in my teeth, but the point is that is where I needed to go to get my goals accomplished and I was at my grandfather’s funeral one time and I remember I didn’t eat for another hour and a half and I remember the whole family was there and everybody is staring at me. Now my grandfather who I was close to passed and we’re Jews and the Jews eat. That’s what we do.

    Lisa: Yeah, I’m Jewish too. I get it.

    Hollis: Okay, so you get it. There you go. And actually, my question to you is pastrami, corned beef or brisket if you can only have one. Which one?

    Lisa: Oh, I like brisket.

    Hollis: Nice choice. Good choice. It would be nice if we could both have that after this interview. Anyway, I digress. So, basically, that’s – the point of that story is you know, I stuck to my guns and I didn’t eat until I was supposed to. I wound up winning the show and again, I just knew at a young age, just do what you need to do to fortify yourself. The bully had taken so much from me. I needed to do something to build myself back up and I just learned the mental keys if you will to make things happen. I was willing to go places that other people weren’t, go distances other people didn’t think they could to get things done.

    Now I know you want to get into emotional eating

    Lisa: Well I have to ask you about your grandfather first because, so I’m guessing that you didn’t engage in all the food and they were like why are you not eating? Or did you pull out your chicken and rice, is that what happened?

    Hollis: What happened was we are all sitting at a restaurant. I had nothing. I think I had water. That’s it. And then an hour and a half later, in the car, I remember I pulled out my yams and my chicken I think it was and I ate when I was supposed to. And I remember getting some looks, but I’ll tell you something, when you are at a body building show and you do well, in that case I won, and your father who was not only the most well versed with words, verbiage, cries. You know you did right. And that’s what happened.

    Lisa: That’s incredible. Well, I think – I mean it sounds like no matter what we are doing, we have to have that mindset and we have to stick with that even if other people are going to give us funny looks. But let’s talk a little bit about the emotional eating. What advice do you have for people, because that can be tough?

    Hollis: Sure. Well let’s define it. Emotional eating is when we use food to make ourselves feel better. And it is basically eating our feelings, or instant gratification and you know we do this because we live sometimes in a cold callous world and we want to feel. When we are stressed or anxious or tired or sad, we want to [inaudible][00:13:44] and let’s be honest, great food feels amazing. But only for a fleeting time. And then we are stuck with often guilt. I used to do a thing where I would cheat on my diet and there I’m using that word diet and that was when I thought back then being a diet and not a lifestyle and I would say – I would punish myself and I know some people do this. I would say okay Saturday night you are going to cheat, you are going to eat, you are not going out tonight. And I would like eat so much I would get myself an upset stomach and I would not allow myself to go out. And it is basically yo-yo syndrome, punishment. I was good all week, I was perfect all week and then punishment and I think to help people, we have to stop even now it’s brand new 2018, right. We have to set goals high, but we have to not over-expect things. We have to do 40 miles an hour from the start. We have to do things slow. It’s okay to wish and want, but I think to over project oneself is going to set one up for failure.

    So, what I like to do is to eat clean, whole foods, non-processed foods, most of the time and a couple of times a week; I will have a cheat meal. Cheat meals are quite big and that’s a whole other story in and of itself, but the point is, something really to look forward to. But what we want to get to is focusing with that and that is when we basically eat when we are hungry. We eat when we are supposed to, small meals throughout the day which drives us to do well through life, energy, so with that, you are burning fat and a big throwaway of conscious eating is obviously being aware is the first step but again, back to the mental acuity, is fortifying oneself. So, how long does it take to really after learning to cook rice in a rice cooker. I have a grill in the backyard. I throw chicken breasts on there, they are done in minutes. I microwave some vegetables. It may not be the healthiest way but look, we are all busy and it’s quick. It doesn’t take long to put clean foods together. That armed with the knowledge we talked about earlier about okay, you are at work, let’s say you didn’t bring food with you; there are always eateries around us and we can learn real quick about a healthy alternative in almost any kind of restaurant. So conscious eating is how we are supposed to eat, eating when we are hungry, when we are due and not rewarding ourselves with potentially damaging poisonous food for instant gratification. Two big differences in eating.

    Lisa: It is, and you mentioned the small meals. So, what do you recommend to people? Like how many meals a day?

    Hollis: I recommend to people and I always have an analogy because at first when I tell people they go really. A bridge is sturdiest not with two points but with four or five points pillars that support the bridge. So, four to five small meals throughout the day. Well that’s great Hollis, but I’m not a body builder and that’s a lot of food. If you are not hungry, you can always drink calories. So, if it’s breakfast and you are in the – you got to run, you have to take time for kids and get to work, you can always drink a protein shake if you just don’t have time or are not in the mood for eggs and traditional food. You must eat to lose and that’s where a lot of people go wrong. They will skip breakfast, or they will have a high glycemic, high sugar coffee beverage thing and maybe some kind of scone or something. All sugar basically or maybe even eat or not eat, have a light lunch, what happens at night. They eat everything. And if you by thinking ahead, by fortifying the bridge with a stone pillar in the morning and then eat less throughout the day, you eat evenly, and your energy will be up, so we must eat to lose and that’s huge.

    Lisa: Now do you recommend having like a healthy fat, some sort of healthy carb and healthy protein at each of those small meals?

    Hollis: Oh, yeah, I recommend at least a gram of protein per pound of body weight. So, if someone weighs 135 it should have in my opinion, 135 grams of protein a day, split throughout evenly each meal. So, what does that come out to? Thirty, thirty-five grams of protein something like that. But yeah, done slowly throughout the day. So anyway, to answer your question, I would have a protein at every meal, because protein is what we are. Everything else is energy. Everything else is movement. Fats and carbs are the other two big macronutrients are just energy. But protein be it vegetarian or animal, is what we are made out of. That’s our flesh. That’s our composition. So, therefore, we need to take protein in and again, I can’t say it enough, everything else is energy. So, I’ll have like a protein and then a complex carb for energy. So, say a rice, a quinoa, beans, brown rice or yams, something that is clean, non-processed, and will give us a sustained energy and of course I like to include in there yeah, the fat could be salmon or lean beef or sometimes I’ll put – sprinkle on some almonds on there and also have a fibrous carb, so broccoli, asparagus, lettuce, cauliflower, something like that that will help with digestion, you know fiber and digestion. And there you go. That’s really what a plate should look like.

    Lisa: Yeah. It makes a lot of sense. It definitely does, and I think it – you know you mentioned the rice cooker. I can tell you how to make four different types of grains in a rice cooker. You can buy frozen vegetables, you can have chicken breasts that you cook on Sunday and have – chop them up and have them in your fridge. You can get different recipes for different types of healthy sauces and put it over. I mean there are things you can do. I’m not saying it is super easy, but it takes a little effort, but once you prep and once you learn how to do that; you are not just going to go to those foods you used to go to because you are going to have something made in the house.

    Recently, my 13-year-old daughter, she’s always hungry. Constantly and this is endless. And so, the other day I felt bad I was sick all last week and so I usually have stuff all prepped in the fridge and I didn’t and she’s looking around and she’s like Mom, you have no – we have no real food, we just have these bars or these protein drinks and like where’s the real food. I was like, okay, okay, I’m sick, I’m doing my best. But I dragged my ass sick ass and went to the store and got some real food and did some cooking but it’s funny because I mean I should be happy I guess that she wants real food, right. But yeah, it can – things come up, it’s not always easy. But it’s definitely worth doing.

    Hollis: Well you know what, I can’t speak of that experience. I don’t have the blessing of having children yet. I hope one day, but my point is that that’s cool that you did that and I – you went that effort to do that. But I also think it’s important that also being realistic as well in another regard in that sometimes mommy just doesn’t want to go to the store and cook. But, one thing I get excited about is finding little spots. Where I just moved, they have a chain I never heard of it called Captain Yates, and I’m not trying to give them a commercial here but it’s a fish place and all this fried stuff that looks amazing, but they have a dish in there, it’s rice, green beans and tilapia and I always tell them that’s what I want. I don’t want oil or butter, or any butter spray and they do it for me and they put Cajun spice around there and it takes ten minutes. It’s like 9 bucks and it’s fast. So, my point is learn about food establishments around you when you don’t – when mommy doesn’t want to go to the store and cook, which was good of you, and learn to eat out because it will be a huge dividend in your corner in regards to nutrition. And that’s in the book.

    Lisa: Yeah that’s true, I mean there are times, yeah, everything is in this book. I mean this should be called like the complete book of health. You don’t need any others. Other than mine, which is coming out this year.

    Hollis: I like that.

    Lisa: Mine’s about clean eating for sexual health and also about connection, but that’s another story. Anyway, Hollis, we always have such a good time. The book is Complete Physique, Your Ultimate Body Transformation Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle. And you know I love having you on is I love how conversational it is and I feel like I kind of got off topic here and there but yet, I’m hoping that it’s fun for people to listen to because I’m having a blast and I just it feels natural. You are just so easy to talk to. So, tell us all the ways to find you.

    Hollis: Likewise, I feel exactly the same.

    Lisa: Good.

    Hollis: Holliswashere.com or hollisliebman.com will have everything about me. Holliswashere.com which people thought was a wash service at first, I don’t know why, but I’m here to help people with their physiques. Whatever, holliswashere.com has everything about me.

    Lisa: Awesome. Alright Hollis. Well you can find me if you go to healthmediagal1 on Twitter, you can find the show Talk Healthy 2day on Twitter, Talk Healthy Today podcast on Facebook. Itsyourhealthwithlisadavis.com has Talk Healthy Today and Talk Fitness Today which we are doing obviously, and I just want to mention those shows were created by AIM Media, they do Clean Eating Magazine, Vegetarian Times, Muscle and Performance, Yoga Journal and so much more. So, check them out as well. I want to thank everyone for listening and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 22:54
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis
Believe it or not, your weight is not purely a numbers game. Counting calories, footsteps and reps is just one small fraction of the formula.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft022.mp3
  • Featured Speaker JJ Flizanes, Empowerment Strategist
  • Book Title The Invisible Fitness Formula: 5 Secrets to Release Weight & End Body Shame
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/jflizanes/?ref=hl
  • Guest Twitter Account @jjflizanes
  • Guest Bio jj-flizanesJJ Flizanes is an Empowerment Strategist and Host of The Fit 2 Love Podcast Show. She is the Director of Invisible Fitness, an Amazon best-selling author of Fit 2 Love: How to Get Physically, Emotionally, and Spiritually Fit to Attract the Love of Your Life, and author of Knack Absolute Abs: Routines for a Fit and Firm Core, and was named Best Personal Trainer in Los Angeles by Elite Traveler Magazine

    Her newest book, The Invisible Fitness Formula: 5 Secrets to Release Weight & End Body Shame debuted at #2 on Amazon’s Best Seller List and New Hot Release for Women’s Health.

    JJ vividly reminds us that the word ‘fitness’ is not just about the state of one’s physical body, but also the factors which determine a person’s overall well being. And, for JJ, the key components in all these areas are ‘invisible’ — balanced support structures of nutrition, emotional centeredness and health.

    A video expert for About.com and regular contributor for The Daily Love, JJ has been featured in many national magazines such as Shape, Fitness, Muscle and Fitness HERS, Elegant Bride, and Women’s Health as well as appeared on NBC, CBS, Fox 11 and KTLA.

    For her clients & followers, JJ designs customized coaching programs and unique, versatile approaches that harmonize the emotional, the mental and the spiritual.
  • Transcription 5 Secrets to Long-Lasting Weight Loss

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. You know we often hear about weight loss, lasting weight loss, what it takes, what’s involved, but you know it’s not really purely a numbers game and here to talk about this and more and actually to shed light on the five secrets of long lasting weight loss is the fantastic JJ Flizanes. She’s an empowerment strategist and a host of the Fit 2 Love podcast show. She is the Director of Invisible Fitness and Amazon bestselling author of Fit 2 Love, How to Get Physically, Emotionally and Spiritually Fit to Attract Love of Your Life and author of Knack Absolute Abs Routines for a Fit and Firm Core. I could go on and on and the whole show could be taken up with all of her amazing accomplishments. But I’m going to bring her in instead. Hello JJ.

    JJ Flizanes (Guest): Hi Lisa. Thanks for having me.

    Lisa: It’s great to have you on. Alright so I had JJ on my show It’s Your Health many moons ago and I’m so happy to have you on here now. It’s been far too long. So, I mentioned in the beginning, a lot of people think well it’s just a numbers game or if you just eat less, move more; but it seems a little bit more complicated than that. There’s a lot of other things that go into it. So, I love this and I’m really excited, so, let’s jump into this. Let’s talk about these five secrets. So, first one is know and love your gut.

    JJ: Right. Digestion represents two things; how we digest our food and process nutrients and build our bodies and support our bodies. It also represents how we deal with life. When you are stressed out, or nervous or worried, your digestion is affected. And digestion is really where it is at in terms of nutrients and taking your food and utilizing it. We know our focus on calories, our focus maybe possibly what foods you eat or not to eat, yet if we are not looking at how our body is utilizing the foods and if it is working; which is what your digestion is going to tell you; though I missed the mark and people can be eating a lot of “diet food” and be gaining weight or keeping their bloat or not finding the results they want because they haven’t take the clue or the cue from the digestion which is telling them exactly what’s going on. And for instance, one of the ways that you can tell how your digestion is, is all the different symptoms people may or may not think are normal. The first one would be you know you have – if you are eating three meals a day, then technically you should be eliminating three meals a day. Yes, that would mean that you are having three eliminations and most people I think are lucky if they have one every couple of days or maybe have one and they think that’s normal. Well, it’s not normal. Well, it’s normal because it’s what you are used to, but it isn’t normal, it’s not an indicator of health.

    And I don’t think people understand that. So, that’s one of the very first things, you are constipated if you are only having one elimination a day. And most people don’t think that way they think oh one is good. Well did you eat one meal? No, you had three meals and some sex. Well then what happened to the rest of it? So, there’s a block in the pipe. There’s a problem with how you’re taking things in and so digestion is really what I would prefer people to focus on first and indicators of good digestion which might mean eliminating certain foods that disrupt your digestion. Other factors that people think are normal, which are not, they are indications of bad digestion which are gas, and bloating and constipation and diarrhea or loose stool, IBS, obviously that’s what that is and mucus from blowing your nose to having lots of phlegm in your throat, skin issues, itchiness, scratchiness. Those are all indications of bad digestion.

    Lisa: Yeah, I’m so glad that you mentioned all those. Because I think it’s true. I think because people are used to standard American diet, they are not going to eliminate as often. But we really need to be and if we are not, like you said that’s indicative that there is something going on there. Now would you recommend probiotics as well as something that is going to?

    JJ: Absolutely.

    Lisa: Because I have heard that can help yes.

    JJ: Yeah, absolutely. Somebody I had done a show yesterday that was live, and someone written in and asked and said she was told she had bad bacteria in her gut and what she should do about it and of course it’s multifaceted in terms of what that approach is. Because there’s obviously taking out some of the foods that irritate you, but it is also adding in things that are supportive and probiotics are one of them and for sure, I would recommend across the board; that everybody be taking one. The reason why people need to be taking one is because we don’t eat fermented foods everyday or even every week or every month that our ancestors did to combat and help us breakdown some of the higher fatty, higher protein things in our diet. So, probiotics – a good enterically coated dairy free, gluten free probiotic would be an awesome thing to add for everybody.

    Lisa: Now, I am dairy free, but talk to us a little bit about that, because why do you feel it is important to have a dairy free probiotic?

    JJ: So, dairy while people might think oh, you do health and you have a restrictive diet, which I do, but I don’t feel restricted at all. I’m all about replacement not restriction. But when it comes to what foods in our bodies work and don’t work; I was a cheeseaholic for a long time, so don’t think for a moment what I’m about to say means I don’t like cheese. Okay. But cheese it not meant for us. We are not cows. In fact, cows don’t drink milk. Milk is for the calf to fatten the calf. Past that, the calves eat grass or corn or whatever you are feeding them. But cows don’t drink milk. So, that breast milk of that animal isn’t supposed to go in our bodies. We do not match the biology of a cow. Most human mothers do not give their breast milk to cats and dogs. Why would we think that we can ingest the breast milk of another animal? Now, again, like I said, I love cheese. It tastes good. A lot of it tastes good. But it is not meant for us. And unfortunately, there are so many people who don’t realize that their symptoms are created because they are ingesting dairy.

    Lisa: Yeah, I’m glad you mentioned that, because I have been on that I should say the nondairy bandwagon for a long time and I’m not belittling it by calling it a bandwagon. It’s just it’s so frustrating when you talk to people. But milk is good for your bones. And milk is good for this, it’s like it’s kind of the dairy board pushing their agenda. It’s just really tough, right like how do you get this paradigm shift when there is so much that we have been indoctrinated with and it still makes me insane that kids are given milk at school every day. It’s just ridiculous. That’s a whole other subject.

    JJ: Yeah, we need a whole show just on dairy, but and about marketing and the inaccurate views and the current research that Western Medicine keeps lying to and not pay attention to. But that’s how it just takes a while and so, more people are sick and so more people have issues than people go oh maybe we shouldn’t put pesticides in our food. People are dying about eating a peanut. What’s the problem? But until it’s more of an epidemic, people won’t pay attention because they think oh that’s not true. I don’t believe that. Well alright. So, yeah, I agree with you on the dairy. Again, and there are even organic dairy, while there are some benefits, you just risk the fact that your body doesn’t, won’t break it down. Because that protein in that dairy which is why actually butter is okay, because there is no protein in butter. There’s protein in milk and in yogurt and kefir and things like that, it’s the protein that is too big for us to breakdown and that’s why I recommend the dairy free probiotics because if you have a dairy sensitivity you are not even aware of; I have taken probiotics with dairy and then that has constipated me. So, it doesn’t even work. Because I don’t eat dairy and I took a probiotic that had dairy in it and it wasn’t working and I was like why isn’t it working? Causing a block because my body doesn’t take well to dairy. Especially when you remove it.

    Lisa: Yeah. I definitely want to – I mean I would love to have you back a lot especially to talk about this dairy issue further. Alright, so the second one in the five secrets of long lasting weight loss is exercise smarter, not harder. Talk to us about this.

    JJ: It’s amazing to me, still, after twenty years of being a personal trainer; even though I do understand. What you focus on is what you pay attention to. And when it comes to exercise, too many people just think well just exercise. Just go to the gym. Just go to a class. Just do anything. Do anything, it will all work the same. I mean not that that’s what they think it will all work the same. But heh, if I’m exercising, I should be getting results. But people this is science. And I – you would not tell somebody or accept a diagnosis from somebody if I said to you Lisa go shopping. Like you would have like twenty follow-up questions about that. Like shopping for what? Like going clothes shopping, grocery shopping, house shopping like what am I’m buying? Right, but people just are told to exercise more. What the hell. Exercise more. And so, when it comes to one of the things that I – that really bugs me about like the Fitbit community there are positive and negatives. But here’s the big negative. Oh my God I have to get my 10,000 steps. That’s like your focus for the day to get your 10,000 steps. Guess what. Your 10,000 steps is not going to make a big difference in your physical health. You walk more, you will burn a little bit more calories, especially if you are going from like zero to ten, fine. But if you are someone who gets 10,000 steps in all the time, you are going to plateau. Ten thousand steps doesn’t build muscle. It doesn’t increase your cardiovascular output. It doesn’t create endurance. It doesn’t create any of that. And people are so focused on this random freakin number, because they think that it is good for their health, that they bypass not doing proper exercise.

    So, lots of people are doing the wrong exercises and then complaining that the exercise doesn’t work. And what’s really not working is that you have no idea what to do with exercise because there is a lot of science. And some exercises create and build muscle which creates your metabolism. And the higher your metabolism, the more calories you burn at rest. We want to be efficient with our time. I’m definitely not one who says go exercise more. I am going to say well what are you doing and is it working? Is it efficient? How do we best utilize your ten minutes to thirty minutes to 45 minutes, once, twice, three times a week to get the most bang for your buck? And it is a manipulation of science, not what class am I – you know someone asked me yesterday in an interview. What do you think people just find things that they like to do? And it is twofold. If you are someone who doesn’t exercise, who has got no habit, then yes, the first step is to create a habit and to find something that you enjoy doing, that you want to do. That’s very important. But be realistic about what you are going to get from it. Don’t go into a Pilates class that is on a reformer where you never get off like off of it and think you are going to lose 20 pounds. It’s not cardio. And it’s not even that much muscle building in Pilates either so you can’t go into a hatha yoga class expecting a transformation because that’s not what it’s designed to do.

    And so, you find something you like to do to create the habit and if you already have the habit; it doesn’t matter if you like to do it or not, it is whether it works. If you want it to work, there are certain things that need to happen like resistance training in order to build muscle, build bone, increase your metabolism and get leaner. I mean you are not going to get it any other way.

    Lisa: Yeah, that makes so much sense. So, it obviously, you need to do something with you are saying like either some kind of resistance, bands, weights, things like that. I was about to say, I love body weight.

    JJ: You can use body weight. But again, there is a science of when you are strong enough to handle all the different forms of body weight you are using then how do you make it harder to get to the next level? Because, your body will adapt and once you adapt, you need to change what you are doing if you want more results. You are not just going to do this thing over and over again and you are going to keep getting results. You are only going to get results to the next level. It’s like going through school. You are not going to repeat first grade 12 times. You are going to go to first grade and then you are going to go to second grade and then you are going to go to third grade and things get harder and you learn more and you do different things and that’s the same with your body. You are not just going to do the same routine for five days a week or two days a week for like ten years. It’s going to stop working after the first three months.

    Lisa: Oh wow. Yeah, that’s important to know.

    JJ: Yeah, it’s science and that’s why I have a job. Because people say oh yeah well exercise doesn’t work. Like yeah, because you are doing it wrong. You don’t understand science and a lot of trainers don’t even understand science because there are several things that work in there. There’s the muscle building part and the metabolism increasing part. There’s the cardiovascular part, that is calorie burning but I wouldn’t even say – consider it a short-term strategy versus a long-term strategy. What’s going to keep giving back to you year after year and make sure you do some of that now and then the cardio piece, that especially women do and women over 50 who go through menopause and wonder why they are not losing any weight because they are doing the wrong exercises. So, it hasn’t changed, twenty years, I have been saying this same thing. For twenty years. And it is only until people get there and get frustrated enough that they actually call me or find somebody else that actually tells them the same thing and changes what they do. So, that’s why I wrote this book. It’s twenty years of my work basically all rolled into five simple secrets that are proven to work to make real change.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s awesome. I like that. You know you just mentioned menopause, so I had my uterus taken out several months back because I had a ginormous fibroid and, so I went like just straight into menopause, but I was taking hormones a little bit and now I’m taking hormones, but it’s really important to balance and replenish your hormones. So, let’s talk about that.

    JJ: Yes, secret number three is about balancing or replenishing your hormones because your hormones are your building blocks for your body and they keep you young and vital and optimized and we sort of again, like that western mentality, western medicine mentality of like oh well, I’m going to age, I’m going to break down and I’m going to decline. Well, that’s a choice. You don’t have to do that. If you do nothing, yes, that’s what will happen. But, we have, I’m not a fan, I do not support synthetic hormones, so Premarin, Prem Pro, things like that, I do not support synthetic hormones because they are synthetic. But I do support bioidentical hormones and I do support all kinds of homeopathic, Chinese medicine, herbs and acupuncture. All kinds of other ways, naturopathic ways for you to increase your hormone production. Exercise will help increase your hormone production. Good resistance training will help increase your hormone production. So, making sure that you work with a functional medicine physician or if you can’t find one, you can pay for your own blood work. You don’t have to go through a physician, which most people don’t know. Places like Life Extension, and Everly Well have home tests that you can take, or you can order online exactly what you want, and I have got them all listed in the book and I have got a sheet on the website as well, you can download it. Take to your doctor or take to the lab to say these are the tests that I want, and it gives you a very comprehensive profile of your metabolism and of all the hormones that make up your metabolism, from your adrenals to your sex hormones to your thyroid to your iron, even in your vitamin C and are all really important and most people are just going to the doctor and letting the doctor lead them and say well let’s do. And they test things like TSH, the thyroid stimulating hormone and TSH is one of those tests that has such a large range that you can be – you can have a thyroid problem for years and it won’t be detected because that range is so large. It’s one of the most general tests out there and I definitely recommend not to rely on that. But you do need to work with a physician or at least the lab, to start getting some of these numbers and take control because what happens is you decline and then you go oops, now what, right and if you kind of get out ahead of it, you won’t decline, and you can actually just be optimal, maintain your vitality and be healthy, healthy, healthy, healthy then death versus healthy, decline, decrepit, decrepit, decrepit and then dead. It’s just a choice. And it’s a lot easier to maintain a better weight, more muscle, active tissue, strong bones, strong joints when you combine so far, all the things we talked about, cleaning up your digestion, adding in good resistance training and exercise that is specific and adding the hormones so your body can hold on to all that.

    Lisa: Yeah, I agree, and the book is the Invisible Fitness Formula, Five Secrets to Release Weight and End Body Shame. I want to definitely touch on the ending body shame after we go through these. The fourth one is to fully embrace and process your feelings. Oh my gosh, I’m always saying that to my daughter. It’s so important. We cannot just keep things in and just let it build up and not process our emotions.

    JJ: Yeah and so it works like this. We have a thought, or we observe something and immediately, we have an interpretation and that interpretation creates a feeling. And if it’s a negative feeling; that’s energy and somehow that energy needs to be like a calorie, utilized or stored. So, if it is not expressed; it is not released, it’s stored. So, between disease, poor digestion, repressed feelings and multitudes of addictions that we all have; that’s another reason that people face; especially with weight loss because if they are emotional eaters, or they don’t know that they are emotional eating, they tend to focus on calorie counting and exercise. And you are not going to win that game, when you are not underneath the hood of a car fixing the engine. The engine that’s the issue and we have to settle some of those emotional and mental issues, release them, transform them, transcend them, leverage them and let them go and be what they are supposed to be versus holding them, repressing them, and that’s really what happens. I talk a lot in that secret about the addictions that we all have.

    Most people when they think of addiction think of drugs, or alcohol, but truly and those are definitely hard addictions; we all like the most common addiction is control issues. Most people have control issues and that’s an addiction. And that can lead to emotional eating because you are trying to control how you feel and you feel uncomfortable when negative feelings come up so rather than express them or be with them; because it makes you uncomfortable to feel out of control; you eat, or you shop, or you sleep, or you work. Workaholism is another one, right this state that we are in it’s like oh I’ll just work. I won’t sit and feel my feelings, I’ll just distract myself with work, but I’ll tell myself oh but I’m making money. Oh, but I’m helping people. At what cost? The imbalance of a lot of how we handle this stuff is what creates this emotional need to numb and where we use, selectively use food. Even if you are not identifying yourself as an emotional eater, we all do it at some point, out of either boredom or I just feel uncomfortable or I’m just going to eat because – people think when they – when smokers give up smoking and then they gain weight, they want to say oh it’s an oral fixation. No, it’s not an oral fixation. Just because somebody quit the act of an addiction; whether it be drinking or smoking or some kind of harder drugs, unless you change the emotional energy underneath it; it’s just a habit. The habit doesn’t mean anything. It’s the impulse that’s the issue and so you are just going to replace it with something else. So, food usually ends up being what people replace giving up alcohol and smoking with.

    Lisa: Yeah, that makes so much sense. And again, I’m so impressed JJ with all the great work that you have done, and I love your matter-of-factness. And it is like you just tall it like it is which is very refreshing. Alright, the last one is get the courage to connect. I like that. Connection is really important.

    JJ: Well we think we’re connected because of technology and with that great and like you know I love – I have built a really a strong community through my podcasts and that feels awesome. But until it manifests in your life, and until you utilize it as accountability and true human connection; it’s kind of false. I mean it’s not false in that it’s not a real relationship; but we aren’t digital humans. We are physical flesh and blood vibrational beings who have an experience and so the courage to connect is twofold. The first one is about having the courage to actually connect with yourself to do this work. Because most people don’t want to which is why they say program after program, year after year, joining the gym, doing a diet, doing a cleanse every couple of months, doing a marathon. Oh my God. Do you know how many people are marathon addicts? And it’s because they want to lose weight. So, they just do marathons. Because they are like that’s how they maintain their weight, yet marathoners off-season, usually gain a lot of weight and they have no muscle because they don’t cross-train, most of them. Anyway, so oh they are a marathoner, they are an athlete. Okay. Maybe. But what do they do off-season? Are they healthy off-season? Do they pay attention? Do they do – or do they just use marathons to control their weight because during the off-season, or whenever they are not training; they are indulging or using food to know, which a lot of people do. The courage to connect is the first is to connect with yourself and to be honest and real about what is going on with me and what do I need and asking for support.

    The next step is about actually finding a community of people who will keep you accountable and be honest with you while loving you and supporting you. Most people surround themselves with their friends and family who tell them what they want to hear. Which keeps them exactly where they are. So, if they are like oh I have – you know it’s a blame game, the victim game. Oh, this person upset me. Oh yeah, they’re terrible. Like okay, so having – it’s hard to make change when you are the only one doing it in your area, in your family or your friend circle and so when – it’s really important to find a community of people who are doing what you are doing to support your growth; otherwise if you are just like looking and comparing yourself against people around you; A if you are out ahead trying to do something different, the likelihood is you are not being supported probably even threatened by that and then most likely you are going to quit or give up because you don’t feel like – you feel weird and different. Like you are the only person doing it.

    So, there are other people on the same path and finding them helps you actually realize what it is you need to do and realize your goals. And not just think about it and talk about it. You know, I’m doing a live event next weekend here in Los Angeles and I have got – I made it so people could come to the live event or by a virtual ticket. It is called Releasing What Weighs You Down and one of my clients asked me who is local, she said are you really going – I’ve been training her for years and she said are you going to say anything different at the event than something I have already heard. And she said it as I was leaving, and I really thought about that and I thought first of all, it’s not about what I’m going to say; because there all four of those speakers and this isn’t a workshop; this is about what you are going to do. Like this is about not an hour-long session. This is about a retreat about you taking a deep dive within yourself and creating the time and space to process, identify and release some of the stuff with tools and things that we are going to provide, other speakers and myself. But it’s not about what I’m saying. People can listen to words, read a book, listen to my podcast, listen to your show, and you are like oh, you have all this information. But are you doing anything with it? Are you actually creating the base to sit with yourself and express your feelings? Or are you just in the rat race and that momentum of crazy, right that we get in and then just thinking that oh, but I know that. Yeah, I get that. Alright, but are you doing it? So, to me, I created the event because people need to actually take the time to do it and if you don’t do an event, how many people are actually going to take a day or two days out of their life to sit with themselves and process their feelings and identify their blocks and really work on this stuff. Most people aren’t and even if you go to therapy or have a coach; you’re going to do what, an hour? Once a week, twice a week? I mean, it’s not the same. So, to finding a community, communing with the community, being accountable in the community is what is going to support the process from start to finish.

    Lisa: JJ, tell us how we can sign up. Like I want to do this. It sounds amazing.

    JJ: Well, you can go – so jjflizanes.com my website. The first time you are in there, I believe there will be a pop up that comes up about the event. But the event is called Releasing What Weighs You Down and literally that’s the URL. Releasingwhatweighsyoudown.com. There is no T in weighs, it is W-E-I-G-H-S, so releasingwhatweighsyoudown.com. Again, there is a virtual ticket for those that can’t make it to LA that will get it the week after, so you can do like a home study course. And the price will go up after next Friday once we start because it’s just the virtual ticket and I’m going to actually add things and make it into a different product which will be at the higher price point. So, if you are interested in coming, there are seats left. I would love for people to – I really just want the people who are like who get it, who are yeah, oh yeah, I totally have a block, like I know that every year I do the same thing, I gain the weight, I go to the gym, I go on a diet, and then three months later, it doesn’t work, and I’m frustrated again, I’m doing it again. Like you get it. You know there is a cycle and a pattern, and you understand that it’s deeper than just what goes in your mouth and if you are going to the gym or exercising.

    So, this will help release those blocks and I’ve got some amazing speakers; one of them Lisa, she’s a healer, energy healer. She actually clears inherited emotional DNA. Like it’s so cool. And she’s so powerful. She’s amazing. But we are going to do all kinds of fun stuff but regardless of whether people come to the event or get a virtual ticket; here’s the bottom line; is that weight loss and dieting and weight loss is not about food and exercise. It’s just really not. Yes, will it make a difference if you help fix your digestion and have your hormones tested and get that balanced and do proper exercise for your body that gets you the results you want? Absolutely. But there’s still the whole side of us that is emotional and that sometimes you use food or other things to numb or self-sabotage and that stuff needs to be cleaned up. And if you are not going to clean it up; you are going to be stuck in your patterns. So, clean it up. Find a way to commune.

    Lisa: JJ, you are so incredible. You know I did say that I wanted to touch briefly, we only have a couple of minutes left, but talk to us about the ending body shame which is so huge and so difficult to do and so prevalent, or I find it difficult to do, but tell us a little bit about that and what we will find in the book The Invisible Fitness Formula around this.

    JJ: So, all of it still has to do with ending body shame. Right, each piece so for instance digestion and the more you learn about your body, I created a five-month transformation program that goes with the book, it’s literally a five-month every week, you get a lesson and a video, and you go point by point through every one of the secrets we just talked about in the book. And I have some people on it and one of the people who – one of the ladies who signed up kind of right away, we had a call maybe a month after because she had some great feedback for me and I wanted to get her opinion about the program and I’m still tweaking it and making it better as I always do; and she said you know I have been on a lot of programs and the way that you explained it, the food part made it really easy to do. And that was really powerful for me to hear because easy for me to eat the way I eat and live the way I live because I understand the science about what things do to your body. And the more I think you understand; the more respect you have and it’s not a blind. So, that people that don’t have any relationship with food tend to abuse food. But the more you can respect food and understand what it does in your body, you make better choices. Same thing with the exercise and same thing with some of these emotional issues that I said that we also are going to be dealing with at the event.

    Body shame has to do with loving yourself and has a lot to do with ideas that are not yours that are projected onto you, ideas of society and the only way to sort of make peace with that is to kind of go within and do some of that work. But it does help to love and respect your body on a new level with information. Not saying information is going to make you feel all warm and fuzzy, but it will help you to make a deeper connection and that’s to me important for the ending body shame conversations that when you understand on a deeper level, you have respect and an awareness, and that awareness can help you to love yourself a little bit more.

    Lisa: JJ, I think you are fantastic. I’m so glad you came on this show. Again, the book is The Invisible Fitness Formula, Five Secrets to Release Weight and End Body Shame. Give us your website one more time, JJ and spell it for us as well.

    JJ: Yup jjflizanes.com. jj F-L-I-Z as in zebra A-N-E-S as in Sam, jjflizanes.com and if you are interested in the event, releasingwhatweighsyoudown.com.

    Lisa: Alright, everyone, thank you so much for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can find me @healthmediagal1 on Twitter and also @Talk Healthy 2 Fitness. Thank you so much for listening and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 30:22
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis
Working out in the winter months can be daunting. Even if you don't typically head outside for your fitness, the shortened daylight and cold temperatures may turn you into a hermit.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft021.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Sarah Walls
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/SAPTstrength
  • Guest Twitter Account @SAPTstrength
  • Guest Bio Sarah-WallsSarah Walls has over 15 years experience in coaching and personal training.

    Owner of SAPT Strength & Performance Training, Inc., founded in 2007, she offers coaching to develop athletes, adult programs, team training, and has an online coaching program.

    She is also the strength and conditioning coach for the WNBA’s Washington Mystics, and has over eight years of experience working as an NCAA D1 strength and conditioning coach and personal trainer.
  • Transcription 6 Winter Workout Tips with Sarah Walls

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. We always need some motivation, but when it is cold outside and let me tell you, lately it is so incredibly cold outside that we need some winter workout tips to help keep us motivated and here to share some great tips with us, is Sarah Walls. She has over 15 years of experience in coaching and personal training and she is the owner of SAPT Strength and Performance Training Inc. Founded in 2007. Heh Sarah, welcome to the show.

    Sarah Walls (Guest): Hi, thank you. Good to be here.

    Lisa: You know it is so nice to have you on. I moved from the west coast to the east coast. It is 18 years in a few months and when I first moved here, I thought I’m never going to workout outside. I’m going to be homebound all winter and my husband said look, you’re going to go nuts. Just get some long johns, get some good clothes and get your butt out the door. And let me tell you, it changed everything. And this winter, is extremely brutal. I mean we are having record lows, but for like the normal it’s 20 degrees, let’s go work out. When it’s below zero, let’s maybe not. But so right, it has been curbed a bit, but I think it’s so important that we don’t let the winter keep us indoors. So, Sarah, before I bring you in, tell us – to talk about this topic, tell us a little bit about yourself and when you first got interested in strength training and healthy living and all that good stuff.

    Sarah: Yeah, I mean I got interested gosh probably when I was like 14 or 15 years old. My step father had just kind of your regular commercial gym that he owned and I kind of worked there during summers and stuff and once I got into college, I went through a period of time where all of the sudden, like a lot of college students do where I sort of like woke up one morning and I was like okay, I don’t like how I feel, I don’t like how I look. I need to do something about this and, so I did and just kind of felt my way through it when I was in college and ended up just loving it so much, being so passionate about it and just having so much fun with exercise myself that I turned it into a career and kind of went back and got the education and the experience and moved forward with it. So, that’s sort of my story.

    Lisa: Well, that’s great. Well let’s jump into these six winter workout tips to keep you motivated. The first one is to enlist a workout partner.

    Sarah: Yeah. The workout partner is my number one. I put that there for a reason. Because I think it’s just, it’s such a difference maker when you have someone that is expecting to see you. And not only from the idea that you’re less likely to sort of just not show up when your friend or your spouse or whoever it is, is waiting for you at the gym or outside, wherever it might be. That’s a huge thing in and of itself, but you are also likely to kind of push a little bit harder. You can start to share ideas back and forth about what do we want to try, what have you seen, that type of a thing. And so, I think it’s just absolutely huge to have that kind of support and have somebody that’s just there for you. I mean even for myself, and the coaches that I work with; we all like to have training partners, because it’s just it’s again, just somebody that is pushing you forward. We are always trying to see improvements in ourselves, I think now matter what level we are at and the workout partner can pretty easily help get that done.

    Lisa: Yeah, I think so too. It makes a big difference. And like you said, when you know somebody is waiting for you, it’s a huge incentive to get your butt there.

    Sarah: Oh yeah, I mean and like you said, it’s so cold, at least on the east coast and where I’m sitting right now, that I think even a workout partner is going to help you get out and get to the gym on a day like today.

    Lisa: Yeah, I think so too. Alright, number two is stay focused on healthy eating. Because I mean we just had the holidays and I think with this extra, extra cold, I don’t eat a lot of junk and I didn’t, but I did eat more I noticed, because I was – I didn’t leave the house for like seven days. I mean my daughter had a cold, so I had to be home and then I didn’t really want to go out and workout outside like I usually do this time of year and, so I would just find myself snacking more and eating more and I just wanted to like curl up in a little cocoon and eat and go to sleep.

    Sarah: Yeah, it’s so easy to do – for all the reasons you just listed. We just got through the holidays, it’s freezing, we are likely to just be inside more, and boredom is a big trigger for going and snacking. The holidays and whatever it is that has been given to you or that you have made or whatever it is, you are surrounded by that is probably really delicious. You are going to want to eat that as well. And it’s great to indulge and to try little things here and there but I think sometimes with this idea of focus on healthy eating, it doesn’t have to be all or none. So, like maybe the last week for a lot of people hasn’t been ideal, but let’s course correct right now or next week or whenever we have the opportunity. So, I think again, it doesn’t have to be that all or none and when you are focusing on the healthy eating, dive into vegetables, colorful fruits, colorful vegetables, things that you are making at home. That old idea of shop around the parameter of the grocery store is super helpful if you are trying to make that more of a focus for yourself. And that is where you can kind of pick up those healthy foods.

    Lisa: Yeah, I agree. Alright number three is try something new and I love this. You talk about trying out a new class. You know I just started doing yoga again after not doing it for about 14 years and it’s been great. I mean I don’t – my body isn’t always enjoying it. I’m not the biggest fan of yoga, but I do it because I know I – I mean I feel better after but during I am like oh my gosh. But it is so nice when you can try something new. What other tips do you have around this?

    Sarah: Yeah, really anything that sort of you know, peaks your interest. I think give it a shot. A big thing for me right now is exploring different types of body weight exercises and really, really expanding because that’s an area for me that I think I could learn a lot more in because I’m very accustomed to using resistance training, bands, just some kind of a tool but a lot of people have the need, be it my athletes if we are on the court or something and we don’t have access to equipment, then I want to be able to provide them a good workout so those are things that I have been exploring that’s useful for me. But the idea of trying out a new class, there are all kinds of really cool options and people are constantly coming up with new ideas. I think now there is some- a provider that focuses on heart rate based training as you go through their circuits and treadmill type of cardiovascular training which I think is a fantastic option as well. And it doesn’t have to be sort of now you are sort of committing all of your exercise efforts just to this one thing but it’s just something to add in a little spice to what you may already be doing or just to freshen things up if you haven’t been exercising as much as you would like to.

    Lisa: Yeah, I think it always good to try new things. And I like the body weight exercises too. I notice that in yoga a lot I mean you are really when you are going down to that chaturanga when you are in a high plank and then you have to like lower yourself down. I’ve almost got it. And my arms are so sore after that.

    Sarah: Yeah, it’s unbelievable what you can do with your own body weight, just by exhibiting control; control over your core, control over sort of your tempo which would be the speed at which you are doing things. It’s really powerful and really unbelievable.

    Lisa: It is. Alright now number four. Define and track small goals. And I like that you said small goals. Because that is always the way to go when you are starting out. Talk to us about this.

    Sarah: Yeah, this is another really, really big one that I think is extremely powerful. And you can look to the success of defining goals really in any area of your life. Business of course is huge, just it’s like write that goal down and you are all of the sudden way more likely to accomplish it or get closer to accomplishing it. And when you start to then really break it down into these little bits and pieces, that are manageable to accomplish either on a daily basis, a weekly basis, a monthly basis, now you have really got some tangible momentum moving forward. So, I think it’s really, really powerful and it can be as small as well when I mentioned at the beginning starting to kind of get more fit when I was in college, it literally started with me just saying okay, I just need to get to the gym three days this week. And that was it. That was the small goal and I would accomplish that week after week and once I had sort of proven to myself heh I can handle these little ones, then I started giving myself more significant goals and kind of building on that. So, I think people can’t really – you can’t overestimate the value of defining these goals and there are all kinds of apps that help sort of automate that, so it doesn’t necessarily need to be that official either. You can write it down on a piece of paper, put it on your fridge, put it on your bathroom mirror. Just anything to keep that reminder in front of you about what that little goal is.

    Lisa: You know it can make it really fun. I tease my husband because he’s obsessed. I mean he has got the tracker that tracks every activity, everything, every step, every whatever and he just – it makes him happy and he is super athletic and moving around. I’m thinking you don’t need that. You are already know that you are like a super star but he still – I need it. That would really help me out. But it does. It’s nice when you see wow, I burned this many calories, this many steps, I did this, I think it helps that motivation.

    Sarah: Yeah absolutely. And I’m a huge fan of the tech products and the watches and all of that stuff because I think it – people have found a way to just hit those little triggers for us that kind of prompt us. Something as simple as when my watch tells me I have been sitting down for 15 minutes and I need to stand up. Okay great. It prompts me to stand up. And those little things, they do add up over time.

    Lisa: Is there one in particular that you recommend or that you really enjoy?

    Sarah: I’m a big fan of the My Fitness Pal line of apps. I think those are the easiest to use that I have come across.

    Lisa: Oh great, I’m going to try that out. Alright, moving along, the time goes by so fast. Number five, have a fallback plan.

    Sarah: Yeah, have a fallback plan so, for those days when it is just not going to happen like you said, a kid gets sick, right and you can’t go out. Do you have a backup plan for that if you had a workout scheduled for example? So, it might be something just as simple as pulling a video up on YouTube perhaps if you are scheduled to go to yoga class, well fallback plan is I’m going to be at home and I’m going to pull up a yoga class video online and do that for five minutes, ten minutes. Something like that. So, fallback plans like that can be pretty effective and again, just keep you moving forward and feeling less likely you have had a big setback.

    Lisa: Yeah, you know it’s nice and there are so many great ones. I found just by going to YouTube, I just did beginner yoga flow or intermediate hatha or whatever the class you like or whether it is yoga or something else. It’s all there and it’s free. It’s awesome.

    Sarah: Yeah. And there are some just really great resources out there like you said, for free. Everybody is producing tons and tons of free content and, so it may not give you kind of that coaching feedback, that you could use or would normally prefer to have; but you are at least getting access to some ideas to keep you moving.

    Lisa: Well, you know, it’s funny you mentioned the coaching feedback, because the last one of the six is try a virtual coach.

    Sarah: Yeah, virtual coaching is coming out real big now. Again, just because of how accessible all of the tech products have become for everybody. Apps have moved forward – just they are moving forward leaps and bounds almost minute by minute to make getting access to really experienced coaches just much easier. And you can probably find a coach or an instructor anywhere in the country, anywhere in the world at this point and get access to them, get some coaching feedback for a pretty affordable price. And so, virtual coaching can be anything from – they now have like live classes that are being offered through different gyms or different like spinning bike type of things. You can just get in and take a live class. You can also have access to a personal trainer or a coach that’s literally live watching your session, coaching you through that session just as if you were in their gym or they were in your home helping you through that session. So, it’s pretty incredible and it’s something that again, if that fits into your lifestyle, maybe you don’t have a lot of time to head to the gym and work with a personal trainer there. It might be a good option if you are working out at home and just sort of use them almost like a consultant even to get some ideas or get some feedback on your form and make sure that everything is moving forward effectively and safely.

    Lisa: Now Sarah, before I let you go, tell us a little bit about SAPT Strength and Performance Training. Am I saying that correctly?

    Sarah: Yeah, SAPT, Strength and Performance Training. I founded it about ten years ago, a little over ten years ago now. And at the time, I had been working individual in athletics as a strength coach and some of the athletes that I was seeing – so these were teenagers, but I had also been working as a personal trainer at this time as well; but the athletes that were coming in really didn’t have the basic safe kind of movement patterns that I would expect to see of a division one athlete. Meaning they just didn’t know how to do simple movement patterns that we all need as humans correctly and safely. So, it would be like a squat pattern, a hinging pattern, which is kind of the athletic position and, so I saw it as an opportunity to just teach people how to move correctly, how to have hopefully a good experience with exercise and with strength training because I know a lot of people have really poor experiences with them. They get hurt or they just kind of get in over their head maybe too soon and so my goal with founding the company was to become a resource for people and help them move into exercise in a way that’s positive and fun and that sort of thing.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s fantastic. Well Sarah, this has been so great. Tell us all the ways that we can find you and I would love to have you back.

    Sarah: Yeah, thank you. Yeah there are a couple ways to find me. My website is saptstrength.com. You can reach me through that. I would love it if anybody was interested to reach out to me on Instagram. My handle is @strengthboss and anybody that reaches out, if they would like to have a free program, they just need to let me know and I will happily send them off a sample.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s fantastic and are you on Twitter as well or just Instagram?

    Sarah: Yes, and same handle strengthboss.

    Lisa: Alright, I’m going to follow you. Writing that down, strengthboss. Well I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. I always have so much fun and I learn a ton from all these fantastic guests. If you want to learn more, you can go to RadioMD.com and go to programs. Click on Talk Fitness Today. We are also on iTunes, Stitcher, Tune In, iHeart. Please subscribe, rate and review on iTunes. It makes a big difference, brings more people to the show. You can follow me on Twitter @healthmediagal1. Thanks for listening everyone and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 16:35
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis
What does it really take to achieve a "complete physique"? It's more than just getting your reps in or eating celery all day.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft023.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Hollis Lance Liebman
  • Book Title Complete Physique Your Ultimate Body Transformation, Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/hollis.liebman
  • Guest Twitter Account @hllpac
  • Guest Bio Hollis-Lance-LiebmanHollis Lance Liebman has won national body building competitions, trained celebrities like Hugh Jackman and Jane Lynch, and worked as a fitness magazine editor and photographer.

    He has published twelve books on exercise and anatomy, including 1,500 STRETCHES: The Complete Guide to Flexibility and Movement.

    He lives in Los Angeles, California.
  • Transcription Achieving a Complete Physique with Hollis Lance Liebman

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today and I’m thrilled to have back on the show, the wonderful Hollis Lance Liebman. We’re going to talk about his latest book Complete Physique Your Ultimate Body Transformation, Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle. Hello there Hollis. Welcome back.

    Hollis Lance Liebman (Guest): Oh, thank you so much for having me. Happy New Year and really thanks for having me back. It’s really cool.

    Lisa: Well we had a great time and we talked all about stretching that incredible book the 1500 Stretches and now you have got this book and I meant to say in the title, Your Ultimate Body Transformation and it really is. I mean you don’t miss a thing. And I have to say, these photos are fabulous.

    Hollis: Thank you.

    Lisa: You are looking quite fit.

    Hollis: Well thank you, thank you. I think you know in life, if you get the opportunity to do projects you love, this is certainly one of them and for me at the very top of the list, even rarer does all the – do all the stars line up and for this book everything worked out just perfectly. I mean down to the publishing. They gave me my cover. I don’t know if listeners know this but unless you are Stephen King or a big-time author, I’m not there yet or there; you don’t get to choose your cover. So, the fact that I even got to – I begged and pleaded and cajoled and they gave me my cover said it’s just everything. Everything lined up perfectly. I’m very thankful to be in this spot to share this work with the world.

    Lisa: Oh, well I’m so glad. I can’t imagine them not wanting this cover. It’s you and this gorgeous woman standing on a beach and there’s this cool looking rock thing behind you and the water is blue and lovely and the foam of the waves and your bodies, I mean what’s not – what’s better than this?

    Hollis: Well, I’d say specifically we spent maybe an hour maybe an hour and a half on cover photos and a million degrees of them and I think a quick funny story I can share with you is the final cover is me in short which I thought was appropriate but we took some takes with me in like a bodybuilding, not a thong but posing trunks which are very skimpy and I had not worn such things in many years because I don’t compete anymore and when I put them on, let’s just say, it was a little chilly on the beach and for some reason, there were a lot of passerby’s and there were tourists and people taking photos and it was an interesting feeling and I put my shorts on rather quickly after that. I’ll just say that.

    Lisa: So, some people you don’t know out there have pictures of you in that little thing you are talking about.

    Hollis: Ah, yes. And somewhere out there and yeah there’s no. It was fun.

    Lisa: Well, it sounds like it was great. Okay so you know you actually did – I like to plan ahead and write questions and sometimes its like oh what should I ask and this and that. Well you in your chapter 2, my gosh, you have all these fantastic questions. I’m going to ask some of these, you have these myths, debunked and truisms. So, for example, one of them is shouldn’t I lose weight before I actually start weight training? And I thought that was interesting. Talk to us about that.

    Hollis: Well in my experience especially in my role as my other role is personal trainer; a lot of people are like Hollis I really want to start. I’m just going to lose weight first and I always try to say whether you start with me or not, because for some people it’s a financial thing and I try to get that out of there quickly. So, I go whether you start with me or not, or start on your own, if you lose weight first and I don’t like that word because it doesn’t tell us what we are losing, weight is a general term and we are losing water, muscle and fat, so basically by losing weight first, and then sort of building from there or going from there; it’s like we’re doing double the work. We are jettisoning precious muscle tissue which the body is going to use for fuel and it’s just doing a great disservice. I think what people are saying is I don’t know the gym, I’m uncomfortable there and I don’t know that world and I’m just going to do it in this sort of way, but what I’m trying to say in the book is that the gym is for everybody and this takes me to another story I was going to share, but I do want to answer your question.

    So, the best way to do it is from day one, is to have a sound structure of training as a leg, nutrition as a leg, recuperation as a leg, cardio as a leg. If all four legs are strong, you are complete. You are going to have everything working for you. By rolling in and saying I’m going to lose weight first is a great disservice. It’s making it in my opinion, harder on yourself in the long run.

    Lisa: That makes so much sense. Tell us the story that you just mentioned you wanted to share.

    Hollis: The story I’m going to mention this at the book signing in a few days at the Augusta Georgia Barnes and Noble for the premiere, but the story I’m going to mention is many years ago I was – I started training at 13, I’m 42 now and my mother and I happened to be at the YMCA on night and my mother was – I could talk hours about her, we are not here for that. But she was just a magical selfless person and she brought her son there to then feed my love of body building and bettering myself because I was former victim of a bullying and while my mother was in the pool area, I was working out and there was an older gentleman there and I saw my mother come through the hallway and this guy who didn’t know that was my mother or our relationship, made a derogatory comment about my mother’s weight. And I’m 13, this guy is much bigger than me. I remember I didn’t go along with it and I didn’t laugh but I felt really crappy inside and I swear to you from that moment on, at 13, I realized the gym is for everybody, how dare anybody make fun of anybody and it really pissed me off for lack of a better word. So, what I can tell you about theme of this book is it is a book for everybody. I don’t like when people don’t feel comfortable at the gym. They have as much right there as anybody else. To me, it is the great equalizer whether you are rich, poor, white, black, it doesn’t matter. The gym is – we are all there, it’s our classroom to get better and I learned that lesson that night at the YMCA those many years ago.

    Lisa: I am so glad. That must have been so hard, and I hope you didn’t beat yourself up too much because you were a kid, right and it’s hard to confront an adult like that and especially one that you don’t know and he’s bigger than you. But I think it’s great that it in terms of it helping shape that concrete idea that in your belief because I feel the same way and I feel like people do turn away from the gym if they aren’t in great shape, but the whole point is to get in shape is to go to the gym. So, it’s like that vicious circle where you feel like you’re not welcome there and there are some really funny commercials now. I can’t remember the gym but it’s basically it’s trying to say that message that here we don’t judge, just come and work out.

    Hollis: Yeah, it’s true and you know it is human nature to look. We are going to look at the person next to us and in front of us and compare ourselves whether conscious or unconsciously we do that. But I think that we have to look in the mirror and I say it all the time, but our competition is ourselves. For this book Complete Physique, my competition, I wanted to better my condition over the book previous to it and I did, and it didn’t matter to me about what anybody else looked like, it was just the war against myself and to me, that’s what this whole thing is about. Bettering ourselves. Now we do look at Instagram and social media for inspiration, but I think it can be very damaging when we see people up there and we think oh, I don’t have self-worth, I don’t look like that all the time.

    I’m going to tell your listeners right now. I myself am in an off-season sort of mode right now. I myself do not look as ripped or as complete if you will as the cover of my very book and you know what, that’s okay because this is a marathon, not a sprint and I know you have heard that. This is a lifestyle and we can’t always floor the pedal. We have to know in life when to let up on the gas a little bit. I’m just here to say this is for everybody, everybody can better themselves and to me body building just saved my life and also and I know I’m babbling, but body building should not be thought of as a four-letter word. Body building is what we all want. Who doesn’t want to lose body fat and gain lean muscle? I mean that’s what body building is and that’s what we are here to do. So, it’s a love affair that can be had by all.

    Lisa: Oh, I completely agree. You know I want to get into this title. Complete Physique Your Ultimate Body Transformation, Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle. I’d love for you to spend a few minutes on each of these. Eat clean, what that means to you, some of the highlights for burning fat and then some of tips for building lean muscle.

    Hollis: Sure. Eating clean to me basically denotes eating as close to the way food has been placed on this earth. It means little processed food. It means breads, pastas, cereals, things that are manmade should be jettisoned or lessened from I don’t even like the word diet; but from our nutritional intake. Clean fuel or least processed food will give us sustained energy throughout the day. To me, clean eating is about taking control. It’s about beyond thinking ahead and taking a few minutes each night to prepare food for work or school of what have you the next day. It’s about learning about the art of eating out food almost anywhere and get something healthy. You don’t have to succumb to peer pressure or to just saying oh I blew it, here we go again. It’s about taking control and just knowing that food is medicinal, but it is also fuel, and we have control. It should not control us. To me, that’s what eating clean is really about.

    Lisa: I love that.

    Hollis: The next thing was burning fat. Well burning fat is of course we have all heard, the more lean muscle mass we have, the more calories of fat we burn. So, it does it implore us to yield more lean muscle mass. Burning fat is basically taking in enough quality calories and it’s also about eating to lose. Most people think if I’m going to lose weight, if I’m going to burn fat, I’m going to have to eat less. Not necessarily. You can still eat quite a bit of volume of clean unprocessed food, you must eat to lose. If you eat good fats, i.e. avocadoes, nuts, ham and lean beef and things like that, your body will actually burn fat. So, burning fat is also the hybrid of resistance training, weight training, cardiovascular work, recuperation and of course eating clean.

    All of those things work together to power the machine that is you to burn fat. Everything works cohesively, when applied and then another quick, quick story, but when I auditioned the model, Sarah, who was just perfect for this book. I am so thankful to have worked with her. I remember I auditioned her, we met, I was wearing shorts and a t-shirt. She looked amazing. I booked her right there. And it was funny because I think it was six weeks after we met that we went to go shoot. So, as soon as we went to shoot the book, my shirt came off because I had to, and it was funny her reaction. She had said to me something to the effect of well I didn’t know you looked like that. And I just sort of smirked and I guess my point is a lot of times we don’t know what’s in front of us, we judge. When I get ready for these things, I get as lean as I can in a healthy way over the 12-week progression just like my book suggests and teaches and a lot of times, people will not know what they are looking at. I had someone come up to me and say you are looking very skinny. I said no, no, let me correct you. I’m looking lean. Skinny is emaciated. But lean is to me a healthy thing. And I think what I’m trying to say, and I had too much caffeine this morning, but I think we need to re-examine the vernacular we use, words we are saying because words have power. Diet is a terrible – I just don’t like that word of course it has die in it which means finite. I think we need to change the word skinny again to me is emaciated. We need to replace these words with lean and lifestyle and look at things a little bit differently.

    And then I think the third point of course of the triad of my book is build lean muscle. Well build lean muscle, which I might have already gone into but is again, the resistance training, is the catalyst if you will, the stimulus and as you know, we are in the gym, we are breaking down muscle tissue, we are causing microtears in the muscles and it’s where we eat and recuperate that we grow new tissue. To me it never made sense. Forget the “I want to have a big chest or big biceps or abs” type of thing. The aesthetics. To me it just never made sense to not lift weights and simply because it is like a car, you would not not service it and expect it to perform. To me – I saw what my parents went through and they both passed last year, and they gave everything to my brother and me, all of the opportunities, but they didn’t take care of themselves.

    And it never made sense to me to not invest in you and just go to the gym, just a little bit. You don’t have to go hours a day or even every day. And beyond the aesthetics, it’s the functionality which I am learning with age, is more important that the visuals of what we are doing here. And I just think it’s very important. A lot of people don’t know, how do I get started and I’m going to keep coming back to the book, we are talking about it. But this book, has everything that one would need in my opinion from a writing standpoint, I was a teenage body building champion standpoint, from all these unique standpoints of applicable knowledge and know how of saying you have as much right here as the rest of here is your instruction manual if you will. In fact, one more point if I may, I don’t know if you remember the show Greatest American Hero years ago.

    Lisa: Oh yeah, I do. Oh yeah.

    Hollis: Does that ring a bell?

    Lisa: Oh definitely, the guy with the blonde curly hair.

    Hollis: Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I’m glad we are talking about this and I actually would like to mention this at my signing. I will mention it now first with you. That show, this guy got this super suit, all the powers you would ever want but one problem, no instructions. And he would throw it for a time and bumbled his way through each jump, but my point is imagine he had those instructions what he really could have done. This book is that – those instructions. This book is what you can really do when you have you and you in your corner and the instructions. And that’s the point I tell you.

    Lisa: That is such a brilliant analogy and yeah, I liked that show. It’s true you have tons of great yeah, it was it was fun. You have so many fantastic workouts in here and in the last little bit of this interview, I would love to talk about the twelve-week program because you have got workouts, meal plans. Give us a little bit of information on those.

    Hollis: Sure. Twelve-week program I broke it down into three four-week phases simply because we must walk before we can run and I think especially with New Year’s resolutions here, people tend to overdo things. You must build up slowly. The car must do 45 before it does 75. And it’s a lot easier to say you know what, I could try this program on. I can do this for four weeks instead of saying 12 weeks. Twelve weeks to you and I is not a lot of time. But to a newby, a neophyte, somebody that’s not familiar with this, it can seem too long. So, therefore, it’s a progressive program. It doesn’t call for a lot of time in the gym. It’s maybe 45 minutes to an hour a day four days max of weights a week, cardio to be done after that and it basically is a progressive program and what I really love when people do is take a photo as unflattering as it might be from week one, for their eyes only. Have someone do a selfie of yourself of all four sides of your body or have someone you trust and put those photos away. Because I guarantee you when you go to week 12, you will be blown away. And I absolutely love posting before and after pics. Scales don’t tell us everything, but photos do. In my opinion. And that’s what – that in a nutshell is what the program is.

    It’s tailored for everybody; men and women of all skill sets and for everybody and it is you against you and another thing before I forget too. The program explains not just do this, but it tells us why and I don’t see this in a lot of books. Why excuse my French, the hell are we doing what you are telling us to do? My book Complete Physique, explains what the muscles do, the function for example the chest. The function of the chest is to draw the eye across you know, hence we do flies in the workout for chest. I don’t understand how you can tell somebody a workout to do if you are not explaining what the muscles do. And I think if the reader gets an appreciation of the form and the function of what their muscles do, then they are going to get it and I think they are going to get much more results out of it that way.

    Lisa: I think so too. On the cover of the book, it says vegan friendly and then you have this – you have a sample day for a vegetarian, and you have stuff for vegans and I think it’s good because a lot of people think well if you are going to eat clean, that means that you are eating grass fed meat and then people say oh what if you don’t eat meat then what am I going to eat if I’m supposed to stay away from carbs but in your plan you have got a little bit of quinoa, you have got some brown rice, talk to us about that. Because it seems like more and more we are hearing that you don’t want any grains.

    Hollis: Yeah, I thought it was vitally important in this book, the first of my – I said you really are going to put everything in a book with a complete title, you need to cover the vegan population because they are a legion and it’s definitely not a fad, it’s here to stay and what’s cool is history shows us that you can accrue large amounts if that’s your goal of muscle mass and be really lean. I can give you a famous body builder Bill Pearl from years ago, one of Arnold’s idols. Bill Pearl was a vegetarian and he got very big, very lean or hard rather with that kind of lifestyle. So, I thought if I’m going to put a traditional route here on the five meals a day and how you would get lean with being a carnivore, well let’s do it also for vegans through legumes, beans, and rice and quinoa and vegetables and all these wonderful non-processed, clean foods that are already here on the earth, and definitely I wanted to give vegans their due. They are a huge populace and I thought it was time at least in my literary work to include them. And to boldly put it on the cover too, I’m very proud of that chapter.

    Lisa: Yeah, I think so too. I mean I’m not a vegan, I do like my grass-fed meat. But I understand. I think it’s a thing of like well, you have to eat this certain way or now keto is a big thing and it’s very restrictive, so what’s your opinion about keto? I’m just curious.

    Hollis: Not a fan of low carb, everybody is different. They have many, many years [inaudible][00:18:37] this and that. I just – it never made sense to me to go keto or low carb rather. You don’t feel good when you are on low carbs in my opinion, you certainly can’t do it for long and the way I train, see I’m greedy in that when I do a photo shoot or when I used to compete, I didn’t want to give up muscle. I wanted to lose fat and I knew that I would need basically plenty of energy, plenty of carbs, and good fats to do so and I have seen many competitors and models go on the keto diet. It for some people, not for me, but they would have what I would call a flat stringy look to their physique rather than be full and hard as we say in the body building industry, they were flat and stringy, and it just doesn’t denote what in my opinion what we are trying to do. So, at best, in my opinion, now and I’m not a doctor, it could temporarily work, but what happens when we reintroduce those carbs? You often over-introduce and often wind up at a weight higher than that which you had. So, I’m not for keto. I don’t believe in tricks. I don’t believe in there is no shortcut.

    The only thing is in my book, it just has a plan all in one. And I will take a plan all in one any day that will save me time and effort because life is precious. It is going quickly, and it is already 2018, it was just 2000 the other day. I think I’m just over answering. But, I’m not a fan of keto or any of the components in my opinion.

    Lisa: Yeah, I mean I think and we are all different. I mention this a lot. My husband can eat tons of whole grain carbs and feel great. I eat carbs even whole grain carbs and I feel lousy. I just do better on a more Paleo type of diet for myself. I hate the word diet as well, but lifestyle I guess you would say. But he also exercises a lot more than me. I mean I do exercise, but he’s like a nut about it, in a positive way by the way. But anyway, like it blows me away, he will sit down and have this like bowl of whole wheat pasta and it’s like it could feed a family and I’m like how are you so lean and in good shape but it’s like he works out a lot you know. If I eat that, I would just be gigantic and tired.

    Hollis: Well, I don’t know about that, but as you know there are certainly different body types different genetics, so I don’t know your husband but he could be perhaps a little bit of ectomorph and that generally they can generally eat somewhat what they want and – I myself am more endo-meso so while I can get big and muscular, if I don’t watch it, I develop five rear ends so, your genetics has a lot to do with it as well with how you handle and process food.

    Lisa: Well Hollis, you are so great and by the way, you never babble. I love your stories. You make this show so fantastic, so it has just been super fun. Alright so Complete Physique Your Ultimate Body Transformation, Eat Clean, Burn Fat, Build Lean Muscle. Tell us all the ways we can get this amazing book.

    Hollis: Local bookstores, Barnes and Noble, Amazon, just really go online and if you just type Complete Physique Hollis Liebman, it is going to pop up somewhere, someway. I believe the digital version is coming out later this year, publisher wanted to put the hard copy out first and it is my 12th fitness book and I’m not just saying this to sell copies, I can never outdo this book. It took everything, every ounce of me it came out, I’m so proud and thankful and if I know this is a little morbid, but if one day when I’m not here anymore, if I could put one thing in the box it would be this. Because this book I want to help people and this book is my report on what I have seen in this industry for many, many years. Complete Physique. It’s my life. And I hope it helps everybody.

    Lisa: Oh, it is really, really incredible. I want to thank you so much. I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can check us out on social media on Twitter @talkfitness2day. Check me out healthmediagal1. You can also check out ItsyourhealthwithLisa Davis.com that will bring you to Talk Fitness Today and Talk Healthy Today as well. Thank everyone again. Stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 22:59
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis
Do you find that you're a slave to a strict diet yet not seeing the results you desire? Intermittent fasting (IF) might be a better option.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft020.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Drew Manning
  • Book Title Fit2Fat2Fit: The Unexpected Lessons from Gaining and Losing 75 lbs on Purpose
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/fit2fat2fit/
  • Guest Bio Drew-ManningDrew Manning is the NY Times Best Selling Author of the book, Fit2Fat2Fit and is best known for his Fit2Fat2Fit.com experiment that went viral online.

    He's been featured on shows like Dr. Oz, Good Morning America, The View and many more.

    His experiment has become a hit TV show, called Fit to Fat to Fit, airing on A&E.
  • Transcription Intermittent Fasting with Drew Manning

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. I’ve heard a lot about intermittent fasting. I have actually been told that I’m doing it and I didn’t even realize it when I was speaking with somebody about what time I go to bed and I stop eating at six p.m. and I don’t eat again until 8 or 9 in the morning or something like that, and I thought oh well this is good. So, today we are going to find out if this is actually is correct with the wonderful Drew Manning. We are going to be talking about intermittent fasting and approved fasting liquids. Heh Drew. Oh, Drew can you hear me?

    Drew Manning (Guest): Yeah, I’m here.

    Lisa: Heh, I’m going to start again. I didn’t like my intro. Blah, blah, blah. Okay here we go. I’m just going to bring you in. Skip all my dumb stories until later. Okay. You know I can’t help myself. So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. Today we are going to talk about how to intermittent fast and approved fasting liquids with the one and only Drew Manning. Heh Drew.

    Drew: Heh Lisa, how are you?

    Lisa: I’m good. I’m so blessed that you are on the show a lot. I just think you are so fantastic and I have learned a ton. If you missed the last interview, Drew and I talked about the top three mistakes of keto and how to avoid keto flu and much more. Today we are going to talk about intermittent fasting, approved fasting liquids like I mentioned. This seems to be the big thing right now Drew. When did you first get on this intermittent fasting train?

    Drew: Yeah, so I have been doing it for a few years now. I learned about it probably five or six years ago, it became really popular in the health and fitness community and at first, my mentality of what I had been taught was if you stop eating, your metabolism will slow down. And so, I was eating six, to seven meals a day, eating every two or three hours, thinking if I stopped eating I will lose all my gains, I’ll lose my muscle mass and that’s a big myth that lot of people in the fitness industry believe and I used to preach it; until I dived into the science behind it and looked at it and then actually tried it out for myself. And so, I became a huge believer in it and it’s been honestly a huge – it feels so much – you feel so much more free not being a slave to food, right meal prepping six or seven meals and bringing your food with you all the time is really, really hard for a lot of people to sustain. So, this is so much easier to go throughout your day not having to be a slave to food.

    Lisa: That sounds fantastic. Alright, so what is intermittent fasting?

    Drew: So, to keep it very basic, it’s just where you restrict your body from eating during a period of time and you eat your food within a certain window. So, for example, a very popular intermittent fasting protocol is 16 hours of fasting, followed by an eight-hour eating window. Right, so you eat all your meals within those eight hours and the theory behind it is it forces your body to burn fat for fuel during that fasting period. Because honestly, we all fast, right when we sleep, we fast for eight hours or so and so there’s a lot of health benefits to fasting and all we are doing is extending that period of fasting to a little bit longer to force our body to use up some stored fat so it is really effective at helping people lose fat, lose weight, but also feel great during the day and realizing that they don’t need to eat every two or three hours, like we have been taught.

    Lisa: So, I will usually eat dinner around 5:30 – between 5:30 and 6 and then I don’t eat anything after that. I think a lot of people end up making the mistake or the choice to eat after that, watching TV and usually it’s not the best choices, right. So, I think it’s good to give yourself a cutoff and say okay I’m going to stop eating at this time. So, I stop eating and I won’t eat past six and then I won’t maybe eat again, if I didn’t eat again until 9, I’m not good at math, is that enough hours?

    Drew: Yeah, that’s about that’s almost that’s what 14 or 15 hours. If you stopped eating at 6 p.m. right and you don’t eat until 9 that’s about 15 hours of fasting, right. So, that’s great, but a lot of people, they have a hard time with that at first because they have never gone that long. Like they eat until they go to sleep and then as soon as they wake up, they break the fast and eat breakfast, right away. So, this kind of forces you to keep those meals within a certain window if you will and just keeps you more strict with this regimen and it can really help you with your health goals. So, that’s why it has become so popular is you’re cutting out the eating the minute you wake up and eating until you go to sleep and kind of provides structure for you to say okay, it’s noon, I can eat my first meal. I can’t eat past 8 p.m. or whatever time frame you choose. It just kind of forces you to stick with that structure.

    Lisa: Now the intermittent fast, some of the benefits would you say weight loss or just maintaining the weight depending obviously on what you are eating and on your activity level. Because there are a lot of different factors that play into it. But would say the overall thing of it is feeling better and weight loss? Or what would you say?

    Drew: Okay, so there are a lot of physical but also mental and emotional benefits to fasting. So, first of all, yes, you can lose weight, you can lose fat by doing an intermittent fasting protocol. It just depends on what your goals are. So, for me, I use it not to lose weight, not to lose fat but like kind of to maintain my body composition and feel optimal during the day because my brain feels so much sharper when I don’t have like a heavy breakfast or a heavy lunch. I can get so much more done workwise during the day. And so, for me, my mental clarity and cognitive function is improved when my body is not using energy to digest the food. And so, that is more on the mental and emotional side. Also, there are a lot of health benefits to fasting like longevity, antiaging, better digestion, better nutrient absorption as well and that’s why fasting has been a protocol for thousands of years. Religions use fasting as well for spiritual reasons and so, there are a lot of health benefits other than the physical side to fasting. And so, that’s why I’m a huge fan of it. No matter what reason you use it for; you can actually gain lean muscle mass, put on muscle mass, while doing an intermittent fasting protocol because if you are working out on a fasted stomach, you are burning stored fat for fuel, but also your human growth hormone levels or HGH will increase, your testosterone will increase which will help you then build lean muscle mass if you are eating like the right amount of calories, right amount of macronutrients during those meals, not just if you eat crap. It depends on what your goals are. If you are looking to lose weight, lose fat, then obviously you need to tweak your meals to go with those types of goals. Does that make sense?

    Lisa: Oh, completely. You know it’s funny you mentioned the religious reasons, so I’m Jewish and we weren’t religious at all but, we would fast on Yom Kippur, nobody ever made me in my family, but I decided to once. I think I was twenty. It was like the hardest day of my life. I was just terrible at it. So, I have always been a little reluctant. You’ve done several day fasts. I follow you on social media and I know you did a three day fast. Let’s talk about that. When you want to take it a step further and then let’s touch on those approved fasting liquids as well. I have to get over my fear of fasting. I mean the intermittent fast I can seem to do okay, but when I think about not eating for a day or two, I’m like what. Give me my food.

    Drew: I know. Our generation, our parent’s generation has always had access to food pretty much on demand, right ever since we had grocery stores and surplus of food supplies here in America. We have always been able to eat three square meals a day for a couple of generations, but a couple of hundred years ago, three hundred years ago, we didn’t always have access to food. So, it’s very new for us humans to always have food whenever we wanted it. So, our bodies are adapted to go periods of time without food. That is just how humans were designed which is awesome, otherwise, if you didn’t eat for three or four days we would have died and we never would have evolved as a species, so our bodies were made to go periods of time without food and it’s actually healthy and it’s natural. So, I have had a lot of doctors on; Dr. Jason Fung is an expert on fasting and I have had him on my podcast, I have read his book called the Complete Guide to Fasting. So, once I understood the science behind it I’m like oh, there is actually some serious health benefits to extended fasting. So, my first fast was about a year ago. I did a seven day fast. Now you don’t want to just jump into fasting and say okay I’m going to stop eating for seven days, you could, if you are mentally strong, but if your body is not prepared, if you haven’t done any intermittent fasting or you have never done the ketogenic diet, it will be really hard to transition. If you just stuff your face with pizza and fries the day before and then try and fast for a day or two days or seven days, it would be really hard.

    So, I have done the seven day fast. But you still are drinking liquids which we will talk about approved liquids and you are taking in minerals and electrolytes, so you don’t feel too horrible, but after you get past day one and two, you actually feel euphoric and something you never experienced before. Your mind is just so much clearer because your body is not bogged down by having to use so much energy to digest food. We have been eating every single day, all day, for twenty, thirty, forty, fifty years of our life and we have never known what it’s like to go without food and actually is a great state of mind to be in, to be honest with you. There are lot of health benefits like I said antiaging, longevity, better digestion. There is a lot of anticancer properties to fasting, so fighting off cancer cells in our body and other diseases, strengthening your immune system, that’s why fasting has been kind of used as medicine for thousands of years. Like if you had a disease, they would have you fast and that was shown to be very beneficial in fighting off certain diseases. But with our modern society of always having access to food, that concept of going one day without food seems oh my God, how am I supposed to live? But I promise you, if someone put a gun to your head and said okay, you are not going to eat for three days, I promise you, you would survive.

    Lisa: Yes. And when you are talking about fasting liquids. You are thinking, I’m thinking bone broth or water or are there other things, or do you ever just do a water fast? Talk to us about the different types and why you would do one of them as maybe a green juice or yeah.

    Drew: There are different types of fasts. And all fasting has benefits. No matter what protocol you follow, whether it is a true fast, a fat fast, a water fast, there are benefits to all of it. So, find out what works best for you and try that out. Obviously, a water fast is probably the one you want to shoot for, but for me and my protocol that I put out there for people is that I do have approved liquids where I will drink water, black coffee, tea, apple cider vinegar a little bit, add a little bit of lemon to my water. I will add salt or maybe a cup of bone broth per day, so these really low-calorie drinks that really aren’t giving me a spike in insulin, they are not spiking my insulin at all, they are very low caloric and so it is still a fast in my opinion. But I’m getting in some micronutrients like if I do powdered greens which has 20 or 30 calories or if I do like kombucha, I’m okay with that at well or exogenous ketones, sometimes I will add those in to help during those day one and day two where I feel a little bit lethargic and a little bit of brain fog because I’m hungry those days. But it’s really a great euphoric feeling honestly, being able to go without food. So, there are a lot of great benefits to fasting and I recommend that everyone at least try it out. I mean growing up. I grew up Mormon and we had to fast for 24 hours once a month and it was horrible. Like I hated it. I didn’t know how to prepare for it. I didn’t know how to like I would stay up till midnight the night before eating as much as I could and then just being starving all day at church like horrible. I didn’t know how to properly fast and so now I do. I love it. So, I’ll do it once a quarter maybe for three to four days. I don’t think I will do a seven day fast again, that was kind of long for me. But going once a quarter, I think is great for your health, to be honest with you. It is one of the best cleanses or detoxes I have ever done.

    Lisa: Oh that’s great. I did do a soup cleanse it was through a company called Soupure, which I absolutely love. I have no affiliation with them, but they make the best flippin’ soups. Everything is organic. Everything is amazing, and you just ate soups for three days. I felt incredible. I know that’s different, because there are still chunks of vegetables and stuff, but it was – it was all vegan, it was really good. It was delicious soups. What about something like that if someone, just to do that first and then maybe do a liquid fast or what do you think about juice fasts? I’m assuming as long as the juices are not high sugar, obviously.

    Drew: The juice fasts still, like I said, any fast is still beneficial for your body. You just have to understand with juice fasts, you are still getting a spike in blood sugar levels by chugging the juice. Now if it is mostly vegetable juice; you probably won’t get as much of a spike in blood sugar levels. So, that’s the problem is you are going to kind of stimulate that hunger and you are going to want to eat, I think you will feel hungrier by doing the juice fast, but there is still a health benefit. You are flooding your body with like a ton of phytonutrients and vitamins and minerals, so I still think there are benefits to juice fasting. So, that might be somewhere where you start and then maybe try a 24-hour fast. The way I tell people to get started on these extended fasts is to start out with intermittent fasting and then extend that period from maybe 16 hours of fasting to 18 hours for a week or two and then bump it up to 20 hours and then try a 24 hour fast and see how you do. And then from there, schedule it out. Maybe like once a quarter you do a two day fast or a three day fast. There are still benefits to it. Do you research first. Look into the science behind it and see if it’s right for you and your lifestyle.

    Lisa: Now you have a great keto program. Do you have a great intermittent fasting program? Have people been asking you about that or is that something that’s on the horizon to kind of walk them through exactly what to do?

    Drew: No, I have a 21-day program that walks people through kind of baby steps them through the process of intermittent fasting. So, it’s a 21-day program, very detailed and structured with detailed meal plans and recipes and specific guidelines for you to follow. So, week one you are at a 12-12 protocol. So, twelve hours fasting, twelve hours of eating and then week two, we bump you up to 14 hours of fasting, 10 hour eating window and then week three, we bump you up to 16 hours of fasting, 8 hour eating window and people see great results in a short amount of time and it is not strict keto. It is more if a balanced approach, but you are still getting the benefits of being in a modified – or a minimal state of ketosis through the intermittent fasting period and so, it’s a beginner’s guide to intermittent fasting so that would be a great place to start before trying to do a 24 hour fast.

    Lisa: Okay, I have to. Oh sure.

    Drew: Oh shoot, I should have brought my popper thing. Okay, got ya.

    Lisa: Well Drew, I definitely want to get that because I want to do that program. Now what about if somebody wants to do keto and the intermittent fast program at the same time? Should you do one or the other? Would it be too much? Or unless you have already been doing keto for a while, right and that’s just the way you happen to eat?

    Drew: Now I think there is a synergistic effect with doing keto at the same time as doing intermittent fasting. They kind of go hand in hand in my opinion. But, with intermittent fasting, you don’t have to be as strict, but if you want to combine those two and you are willing to give it a try; that’s how I got started. I started doing an intermittent fasting protocol while doing keto and that’s why I noticed those benefits pretty quickly to be honest with you. Because the quickest way to get into ketosis is to fast, to be honest with you. Eating a ketogenic diet; you will still get into ketosis, but it takes a while longer. So, if you want to get into a state of ketosis really quick, you stop eating, right, so, that’s why I combined intermittent fasting with keto, but for some people, that are eating a standard American diet and want to jump into it; I would say maybe transition to the intermittent fasting program, so try my healthy 21-day jump start program first and then from there you can try out my 60-day keto program which will kind of take it to a whole other level; which the 60-day keto program is a type of intermittent fasting but you are having bullet proof coffee which technically will break the fast because you are getting a small bump in insulin from even from the fat, but it is not a – it is not like eating carbohydrates. Because you are eating pure fat, like it will not give you a big spike, it will give you a small bump in insulin but, so it is not a true fast, but it is a form of intermittent fasting in the keto program.

    Lisa: Now what’s been the feedback? I bet people are loving these programs.

    Drew: People love it because the flexibility. There have been huge results. I have a ton of transformations. If you go to my page, you will see great testimonials from people from all over the world, all different backgrounds. People that have both lost weight, lost fat, but have also put on lean muscle mass or people that have just gotten off their medications, their blood pressure medications or type two diabetes medications as well and they just feel so much healthier and here’s the thing. Like I’ll be honest with you. Keto might not be for everybody. Intermittent fasting might not be for everybody. But what is awesome is people are willing to give these programs a try to find out if it is optimal for them and maybe it is and maybe it isn’t but maybe it’s a version of it. Maybe it jump starts their health and from there they are like okay, I didn’t feel great on this, maybe if I tweak it a little bit and I do the 16- 8 protocol for intermittent fasting, I feel more optimal on that than I do these 24 hour fasts or these three day fasts. It depends like just – I tell people all the time, become your own self-experimentation and find what works best for you.

    Because me telling you what to eat or some other expert or guru or magazine or celebrity saying heh I eat this way to lose fat; doesn’t mean it is going to work for you. So, there are all these people pulling you in different directions which is why it gets confusing but be willing to try new things. be willing to do some experiments on your body and what I tell people, give it like a minimum of 21 days, right maybe 30 days minimum of consistency before you write it off and say you know I tried it for two days and I didn’t feel great so it’s not for me. It takes your body time to adjust to a new eating protocol, so I don’t care if you go vegan or vegetarian or paleo or keto; it doesn’t matter to me. Find what works best for you because the only person that knows what’s best for you is you, not your doctor, not some expert or guru online. You know what’s best for you. So, try different protocols for maybe 30 days and find what best suits you and your lifestyle and maybe what worked for you yesterday doesn’t work for you today and now that you are 20 years older, maybe that diet you did back in your 20s doesn’t work for you anymore because your hormones have changed. And so being open to upgrading your knowledge and your nutrition and your exercise even, is very important for us I think to continue to progress in our lives.

    Lisa: You know, I’m really glad you mentioned exercise. Do you exercise when you are fasting? Or does it depend on if this is something you have done before or are you supposed to rest?

    Drew: No, that’s a great question. At first, it is hard for people to exercise on an empty stomach. But after a while, like maybe a week or so; your body gets used to it and it starts learning how to use stored fat as energy which is why you are going to see a greater fat loss working out in a fasted state. Like I said, it is going to increase your HGH production as well as will help you build more lean muscle mass. The more lean muscle mass you have, the more fat you burn. So, don’t be afraid of lifting weights ladies, if you are listening. A lot of women are afraid that they will get big and bulky. I promise you, unless you are supplementing with testosterone; you are not going to put on a lot of muscle like you think you are. So, anyways, I work out in a fasted state almost every single day and I feel great, I feel optimal. I can do cross-fit type of workouts, I can do an endurance type of workout, I can lift. It depends on the person, but you just have to give your body time to adjust and adapt.

    Lisa: Alright, so that’s on the intermittent fast, right, so you haven’t eaten breakfast, let’s say you haven’t eaten 16 hours before you are going to go work out. What about if you are doing like a hard core three day fast? You are still working out or do you like maybe rest the first day?

    Drew: That’s a great question. So, I normally don’t do any kind of high intensity workouts when I fast, though this past three day fast which I just ended last night, to be honest with you; I went for a walk or a hike every day. So, yeah, nothing extreme. It wasn’t running, but I would go for like an hour long walk and hiking in the mountains, so you are hiking up hills, get that heartrate up a little bit and then I would come home and swim and nothing fast or intense but just nice slow easy pace and that’s pretty much all I did, but a lot of walking when I fast instead of lifting heavy weights or high intensity workouts, to be honest with you. But, I know people that have lifted heavy with really long breaks in between and really low amount of reps, so maybe three reps to five reps, not exhausting their body, but I now people that have done that on their extended fasts. It just depends on the person. But for me personally, long walks and light exercise.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s great and before I let you go; we have a couple more minutes. Give us the approved fasting drinks one more time or beverages.

    Drew: Yeah, so water, obviously. Water is totally fine. Coffee, tea, apple cider vinegar, powdered greens, bone broth, and exogenous ketones. You can also add in sparkling water like La Croix or those kinds of drinks to give yourself a little bit of flavor. Those are the approved liquids that I’m okay with on an extended fast or during your fasting window. Right, so just try not to add a lot of calories during that fasting window. Keep those calories to a minimum and worst case scenario, just do water, you will be fine, I promise.

    Lisa: Alright, so let’s say you have done a three day fast. Talk about breaking the fast. You don’t want to go hog wild and eat everything in sight, right?

    Drew: You think you can, but I promise you, really quickly, your stomach shrinks, you realize oh my gosh I ate way too much. So, I try and eat really clean with my first meal back and a lot of easily digestible foods. So, I won’t do like heavy carbs and fats together. Like I won’t do pizza, fries and cheeseburger with a bun. You will feel awful. I promise you. Right away. So, I try and stay really easy, so I will do like a few scrambled eggs with some coconut oil or butter, maybe like a grass-fed burger on the side with some avocado on top and then I really don’t do a ton of like vegetables right away because those are harder to digest. So, I start out with maybe some white potatoes or a little bit of rice, white rice or maybe some sweet potatoes. Because those are easy to digest, to be honest with you. And that is kind of like my first meal and I start out small. So, I definitely start out with like a smaller meal than I normally would eat and then the next day, I kind of up my calories a little bit more and have bigger portions and I start working out again and so you are back to normal pretty quickly.

    Lisa: Oh cool. Well Drew you are so awesome. I always love having you on. Tell us all the ways we can find you and I highly encourage people to do your programs. I’m going to do them in 2018, I have it all set and I’m not one of those – you know I set my goals and I don’t do them. So, I’m excited. I’m excited. I think I’m going to do the intermittent fasting first because I have already been doing that a bit and then do the keto. But anyway, tell us all the ways people can find them.

    Drew: Yeah, so the Healthy 21-day Jump Start Program is just healthy21jumpstart.com and that’s the 21-day intermittent fasting program and if you want to do keto it is keto.fit2fat2fit.com and that’s my 60-day keto course that a lot of people have done and then online you can find me at fit2fat2fit for my website, all my social media handles, my book, my podcasts and my TV show, which is coming out on January 8th, 2018, season two. It is going to be on Lifetime, so set your DVRs for January 8th, 2018 6 p.m. It will premiere season two. Super excited about that and that is called Fit To Fat To Fit, Fit To Fat To Fit. So, that is where I take other trainers on the fit to fat to fit journey. Put them through this the weight gaining process and then they have to lose the weight with their client together at the same time. It definitely humbles these trainers that think they know it all and think it’s easy. It’s a great TV show in my opinion.

    Lisa: Oh I love your show. Well next time you come on, you are coming back in January, we should talk about the show, because I am such a fan and I’m so excited and it is going to be on Lifetime. That is great. Well I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. I always learn so much. I love having Drew on. Again, you can check us out on social media at talkfitness2day, also you can me out at healthmediagal1, so everybody intermittent fast and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 26:12
  • Waiver Received No
  • Host Lisa Davis, MPH
Many keto novices think the diet is just about eating a lot of butter, bacon and cheese, but they don’t really understand the ins and outs of how the diet works.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft019.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Drew Manning
  • Book Title Fit2Fat2Fit: The Unexpected Lessons from Gaining and Losing 75 lbs on Purpose
  • Guest Facebook Account https://www.facebook.com/fit2fat2fit/
  • Guest Bio Drew-ManningDrew Manning is the NY Times Best Selling Author of the book, Fit2Fat2Fit and is best known for his Fit2Fat2Fit.com experiment that went viral online.

    He's been featured on shows like Dr. Oz, Good Morning America, The View and many more.

    His experiment has become a hit TV show, called Fit to Fat to Fit, airing on A&E.
  • Transcription Top 3 Mistakes of Keto & How to Avoid the Keto Flu with Drew Manning

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. The other day I was talking with my husband about keto and wanting to do keto and he said, yeah, you know I have thought about that too, but I don’t want to get that keto flu. I hear that for a couple of weeks you feel lousy and blah, blah, blah and I thought well, I know the guy to go to about this, my friend Drew Manning. He is a regular on all my shows, It’s Your Health, Talk Healthy Today, Talk Fitness Today. Drew I have to have you on Naturally Savvy and then you will be on all my shows. We are going to be talking about the top three mistakes of keto and how to avoid keto flu. Drew, welcome back.

    Drew Manning (Guest): Thanks Lisa. It’s a pleasure to be back on.

    Lisa: Alright, so Drew, first of all, for people who are like okay what is this keto thing. I’ve heard about it. Let’s jump into some of the basics and the mistakes and then let’s avoid that flu. Maybe I can get my husband to do it with me.

    Drew: Yeah, so first of all, people need to understand what keto is before they just jump into it. A lot of people think it’s just eating a lot of butter and bacon and cheese and then they are doing keto, but they don’t really understand what it means. So, basically, ketosis is a totally different metabolic state that your body enters into when there is no glucose available. So, basically, what that means is that is if you cut out carbohydrates, which turn into glucose in the body; your body is forced to produce these things called ketones to be used as energy. Right, so it is kind of our body’s backup system. So, if we stopped eating today, we wouldn’t die within a day, right. Our bodies can live a long time using our stored fat as energy. So, basically you are becoming a fat burner instead of a sugar burner, right, which come from carbohydrates so that we have to put in our body. But our bodies can last a long time living off of its own fat stores but to do that, you can get into ketosis one of two ways. One is either just stop eating, right which isn’t always fun for some people. So, I get that. Or you can hack that by eating a ketogenic diet which is really high fat, so about 70% of your calories coming from pure fat and then about 25% from protein. So, it’s only a moderate amount of protein, not a lot and then 5% or less of carbohydrates. So, it’s very low carb, but that forces your body to breakdown the fatty acids in your body and convert them into ketones and then ketones are used as energy instead of glucose for our brain, our muscles and our organs.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s nice. And this is something that you do, and you look like a million bucks and you sound like a million bucks, so I’m assuming you feel better? Because I know like a lot of people are going towards things for looks, but I want to look and feel better.

    Drew: Yeah, so, ketosis has a lot of applications other than just weight loss and fat loss. Now a lot of people use it for fat loss and weight loss, but I look at it as nutrition for your brain. So, for me, the big thing I noticed when I did it, when I first did it a few years ago, was that my mind felt so much clearer, so the improvement in cognitive function and mental clarity was like night and day compared to what it was before. And I wasn’t a slave to food all day. So, I didn’t have – I didn’t feel the need to eat every two or three hours like I usually did to “keep my metabolism going.” I could eat once or twice a day and feel fantastic and my brain was so much sharper and there were no crashes in energy throughout the day. I even just finished a three day fast recently, running off of ketones as an energy source and not feeling hungry. So, it just takes a while for your body to get used to it and get adapted to it. So, the number one thing I tell people, when they go keto, is to be patient with themselves and with their bodies.
    Lisa: Alright, that is good to know. Okay so, here’s one of the things for me and I know other people out there; I can’t do dairy. If I eat any dairy; I’m like I don’t want to be gross but like, but I’ll leave it at that. I mean there must have been butter in something I ate yesterday because I got it at Whole Foods and honestly, I was up last night like not able to sleep because I was just like so phlegmy, okay I’ll say the word. It’s horrible. So, I hear about the butter and the coffee and the butter and this and the butter and that and I think well what am I and even ghee I’m sensitive to and I know other people out there, whether it’s lactose intolerance or this sort of issue. What do we do? Because I’m nervous I’m going to run out of things to eat because I don’t eat cheese either. Right and isn’t that part of it or are there ways around this?

    Drew: Oh, there are totally ways around it. That’s the problem I think a lot of people if they can only eat too much dairy when they go keto, like I said they just think it’s a lot of cheese and butter and cream cheese. It can be that for some people that tolerate dairy, but most people have some type of allergy to dairy right and, so I used to be lactose intolerant, so you can do it dairy free for sure, so you are adding in a lot more plant based fats instead of animal based fats. So, avoiding the butters and the cheeses is definitely doable. You can use MCT oil instead of butter, right or you can use coconut oil instead of butter. So, there are a lot of different options out there. You don’t have to eat dairy especially if you are sensitive to it.

    Lisa: You know you brought up a good point with the MCT and the coconut oil which brings me to a question by the way, I eat both. My husband was asking me the other day, again he said you know here he comes and here you come this is great and you are going to help us out. He said, hon what should I be taking every day in my smoothie like a teaspoon of coconut oil or some MCT oil? And I said well, I’m going to ask Drew. Because I want to make sure I get the right answer. So, what do you use for what? Because I would just love for you to answer that because I think that is something that is kind of confusing, right because I kind of go back and forth.

    Drew: Yeah. So, first of all, coconut oil contains a lot of MCT oil, right, so coconut oil is comprised of about 60% MCT oil. MCTs are medium chained triglycerides, so it is a type of fat that is used very quickly and efficiently as energy inside of your body. So, MCT oil basically, they extracted that from the coconut oil and then you just get pure MCT oil. So, it’s concentrated. So, that’s the difference between those two things. The only problem is that for a lot of people, they have to be very careful at first with MCT oil because you have to build up your tolerance to it, so if you eat too much the first time, you will have disaster pains and you will be running to the bathroom. Yeah so, it’s not very fun. So, start out small and then build up from there but you will feel great adding MCT oil to your coffee, to your smoothies, you can cook with it. There are a lot of great options for it but the thing with keto is you have to be adding in these high-quality fats to get that 70% of your calories from fat.

    Lisa: Yeah, that’s true, but you don’t want to put too much. Now what about with the coconut oil? Why would someone take that over the MCT oil? Do you get more lauric acid? Do you get more of the other antiviral properties of the coconut oil if you just take the regular coconut oil versus the MCTs?

    Drew: Yeah, there is going to be more lauric acid and I like to mix it up to be honest with you. It’s not like one is better than the other, in my opinion, but I like to get my fat from a lot of different healthy sources. So, sometimes it’s grass fed butter, sometimes its ghee, sometimes coconut oil, sometimes its avocado oil or olive oil. I like to mix up my fats and get them from a lot of different sometimes plant based sources, but sometimes for me, animal based sources so fattier cuts of meat, sometimes are where I get a lot of my fat from as well.

    Lisa: So. Take us through like a breakfast, lunch and dinner, just so people can get an idea and try and if you can include some dairy free ones too that would be great.

    Drew: Yeah. So, I start off my day usually with some type of what is called bullet proof coffee which is some type of coffee with healthy fats added to it. You can do a tablespoon of grass fed butter, a tablespoon of coconut oil or MCT oil and then you add it into your coffee and you blend it up and, so you have a fatty coffee for breakfast and actually it is really filling, and it is pure fat, right. So, you don’t get a big insulin spike from this bullet proof coffee and you have great energy without like a hard crash later on like you would with a – it you add sugar to your coffee. And so, that’s my breakfast and I go work out and then honestly, I’m not hungry until around lunchtime. So, around lunchtime, is my first big meal of the day which will be comprised of probably maybe like four or five eggs, a couple of tablespoons of grass fed butter or coconut oil, a lot of spinach or broccoli sautéed in that as well. I’ll add in chicken sausage or pork sausage sometimes with the grease, I know that sounds weird, I add it in there as well and then that’s my lunch. And then I’m not hungry, honestly until dinnertime. So, this is where it’s nice, I don’t have to plan my meals and meal prep all day long, not having to eat every three hours, I’m not a slave to food. I can go throughout the day, my mind is clear, my stomach is full and I’m feeling great energy and then dinnertime; maybe I’ll have a couple of grass-fed burgers with bacon and avocado on top with a side of sautéed cauliflower and I’ll sauté the cauliflower in butter or coconut oil with a lot of salt on it and then that’s my dinner. And that’s like a typical day for me. So, like I said, I eat two main meals. I’ll have the bullet proof coffee every now and then and sometimes I will do one meal a day, one large meal and I feel great. So, that’s kind of like a typical day on keto.

    Lisa: Wow. Now what about a salad. Like I love a big salad with beets and celery and cabbages and cucumbers and tomatoes and I mean does that fit in at all. Because I do love that, those fresh vegetables.

    Drew: Totally. I have a great recipe called – I call it the keto man salad, but you can call it the keto woman salad too. It’s a huge portion. Right, it’s a huge portion and that’s why I call it the man salad, but take a huge salad bowl, and I’m talking like big and I put in all the vegies, so when I say vegies, I mean non-starchy nutrient dense vegetables like spinach, and kale and broccoli and Brussel sprouts and I cut them up really, really small, all these vegetables. I will throw in maybe almonds or brazil nuts every once in a while as well to bump up the fat and then I’ll add in my meat, right, whether it is like left over steak or even eggs or some type of fattier cut of meat that I like and I’ll add that, that’s my protein source and then I will drizzle like maybe a half cup of olive oil, I know it sounds like a lot, but like I said, you need to get in a lot of high quality fat and then I’ll cut up an avocado and add that in there with some olives and then I just toss it and that’s my go to meal. It takes me a good like thirty minutes to eat, to chew all that, but I love that.

    Lisa: I love that too. You know you really need to make sure you have enough time to. Sometimes I’ll make a huge salad and I’ll be like oh crap, I got to leave soon, and I still have this ginormous salad left. Alright, so now that we know the basics, let’s talk about what are the top three mistakes of keto?

    Drew: Yeah, so the first this is people don’t drink enough water initially. Because here’s the thing, when you eat a lot of carbohydrates, your body retains more water. But when you stop eating the carbohydrates, your body will push out a lot of that water so that’s why a lot of people lose a lot of water weight initially but at the same time, that can dehydrate you because it causes an imbalance of electrolytes, so you need to be supplementing with sodium, potassium and magnesium specifically to replenish those electrolytes and that’s why a lot of people experience the keto flu is because they are not drinking enough water one and then two, they are not adding enough salt to their food. So, you need to add – you need to have about five to ten grams of sodium per day from high quality sources. So, pink Himalayan or sea salt, these types of salts still have the minerals intact. The regular table salt that is like iodized, that is stripped of all its minerals, isn’t the type of sodium I’m talking about. You want real salt, so five to ten grams of that and then maybe sometimes you need to supplement with magnesium or potassium to make sure that your electrolytes are balanced. So, that would be like the two, that would be the top two mistakes that people make right there and then the third one honestly is not being patient.

    So, to go keto, you need to give it at least I would say sixty days minimum of consistency and keto is not one of the things you can just do for a few days and then stop and then do for a few days and then stop, because you never really get into a state of ketosis. So, you need to be consistent with your efforts for at least sixty days to train your body, give your body time to adjust to using ketones as a fuel source. If you think about it, you have been running off of glucose for thirty, forty, fifty plus years, for some people and now you are trying to say okay, no more glucose, let’s run off of ketones but your body has never used ketones as an energy source. It’s going to take a good two to four weeks to get adjusted and go through that transitionary period. So, at first, you might feel some symptoms of the keto flu, but like I said, if you drink enough water, you are supplementing your electrolytes are balanced, you won’t feel those keto flu symptoms nearly as much as if you just stop eating carbs one day and you just try to eat keto and for a lot of people, they experience keto flu.

    Lisa: Sounds like even if you are doing the right thing, you might feel it a little bit but, it does pass and what are some of the symptoms? Do you feel like you have like a regular flu?

    Drew: No, it’s not like a flu like symptoms, but it’s things like lack of energy, brain fog, dizziness sometimes, cramping in your muscles, lightheaded, those kinds of things. But those are usually caused by an imbalance of electrolytes so what I tell people to do if you experience any of those symptoms, you can do a couple things. One is take about a half teaspoon of salt, put it in the palm of your hand and just down it and then chug a bunch of water afterwards with it. Or just take a big gulp of pickle juice. That’s another hack that I do to help alleviate those symptoms if you are experiencing them and you want to get rid of them like right away. Another thing you can do nowadays that is really popular, is you can supplement with these things called exogenous ketones which are a supplement that you can take that essentially puts your body in a simulated version of ketosis, not true nutritional ketosis, but a simulated version within thirty to sixty minutes and they are really popular. They are available online nowadays and that can help alleviate the keto flu symptoms during that transitionary period.

    Lisa: Now what do you think about using those on your own. Somebody sent me some, I think it was Pruvit. Does that sound familiar?

    Drew: Yeah, that’s a popular company that makes them.

    Lisa: Okay, so I haven’t tried it yet because I wanted to talk to you first. So, how would I just even if I am not keto yet, someone could just take that and what’s the benefit of that and how often should they take that?

    Drew: Yeah, well it’s going to help out. It is going to help out if you are doing a nutritional ketogenic diet with taking a supplement. It just helps out during that transitionary phase but also, it gives you a big boost in brain power. So, Ketones are a very efficient fuel source for your brain so if you have a long day at work where you have, you don’t have time to eat for example; it is kind of like a meal replacement, because there is an appetite suppressant effect with taking exogenous ketones, so you don’t feel as hungry, but your brain feels mentally sharp and clear. So, I will use it if I have a long day of like travel or podcasting or speaking engagements or I will also use it as a pre-workout. So, take it 45 minutes pre-workout to fuel your body with ketones and your body starts to learn how to use those ketones a little bit quicker than waiting for your body to produce the ketones. There are also therapeutic applications. There is a neuroprotective benefit for your brain taking exogenous ketones and it helps to reduce inflammation as well. So, there are other therapeutic applications to taking the ketones. Are they necessary? Definitely not. Just like any other supplement. But they can give you a boost if you want to invest in it.

    Lisa: Yeah, Invest. They are expensive. Oh my gosh, when my husband saw me ordering it, he is like what the heck is that? What are you buying? He said just do the keto diet. They are really expensive.

    Drew: Yeah, they are. They are more affordable than they used to be. There are some other companies like Keto Logic is a good one, Perfect Ketones is a good one that is more affordable. Those ones are some really good ones that I have tried and tested before. And they work pretty good. And they taste really good. There are other ones that are more expensive, so yeah, it’s just a newer supplement. Over time, the demand will continue to rise, and the price will probably drop at some point.

    Lisa: Oh, that is good to know. Alright so Drew, so let’s say somebody is listening and they are like so I’m not ready to do keto yet, I want to – I want to get through the winter, whatever their reasoning is, should they start taking those ketones, that we just talked about? I mean is that something – and would they – and how often would you do that? Or would you just do it like you said, if you have a long day or you have a big workout or something like that?

    Drew: Yeah, so me, personally, I take them almost every day as a pre-workout or just like as a brain boost first thing in the morning, but then I can go a couple of weeks without them, just to make sure I don’t get dependent on them. But yeah, I would say if you are going to go keto; I would just use them effectively and use them when you actually do a keto diet so that the transitionary period is a lot easier taking the keto supplements to be honest with you.

    Lisa: Now you have a whole program. Tell us about it. Because I definitely feel like if you have guidance from an expert; it makes it so much easier than trying to Google it and figure it out yourself. I mean you can do that, but I feel like it is safer to work with someone like you. So, tell us about your program.

    Drew: Yeah, so I went on the Dr. Oz show a couple of years ago talking about the ketogenic diet, but I had no program in place and so, so many people reached out to me saying heh, I saw you on Dr. Oz, I want to do the keto diet, but I need some kind of program or guidelines and I’m like oh yeah, duh. I should have had that in place already. But, so I created after the demand of people asking me for it. So, what I did was created an intro to keto course first as a sixty-day program with detailed meal plans, detailed grocery lists, easy to make recipes that taste really good, with no weird ingredients that are really quick to prep and there is also sixty days of workouts included in there to maximize your results and if you just go to keto.fit2fat2fit.com, you can check it out. It’s a sixty-day eBook, really easy to follow, very basic for beginners to get started, but it has transformed thousands of people’s lives from all over the world and it’s a very popular, very effective program that a lot of people have used and seen great results on.

    Lisa: Yeah, it is on my list of things that I definitely want to do. One concern I have though is I’m happy with my weight; I definitely have some fat on me I would like to lose, but I do like my curves, so, I don’t want to lose too much weight, so what about somebody who is like, they are pretty happy where they are, but they want the brain boost, but they don’t want huge changes in their body? Will they lose too much weight? Or how do you deal with that?

    Drew: No, that’s a great question. I mean honestly, I don’t use keto for fat lose or weight loss at all. Like my body pretty much stayed pretty lean when I changed from traditional kind of more of a paleo diet to a keto diet. I didn’t lose weight, I didn’t lose fat, like to be honest with you, but for me, yeah, I haven’t I don’t use it for that. I use it for nutrition for my brain and longevity and antiaging, inflammation, decreased inflammation in the body; that’s why I use it. So, you are not going to lose a ton of weight if you go keto unless you are just eating not enough calories. So, it’s still comes down to how many calories you are burning, how many calories you are putting in. so, yeah, if you don’t want to lose weight, yeah, you just up your calories, up your protein a little bit and you are not going to just all of the sudden get rid of all of your fat in your body. That’s not how it works.

    Lisa: Now if you do want to lose weight, that’s going to happen too, right, I guess if you just have smaller portions of the things we are talking about?

    Drew: Yeah, but the cool think about it is that first of all, the food doesn’t taste like diet food. The food actually tastes good. You are adding high fat. You are adding like butter and salt and high fat cheeses and creams to your food and so the food is actually going to taste good, like you are going to think oh my gosh, this is keto? Yeah, the food is going to taste amazing. So, first of all, the food tastes really good and the second of all, you are not going to feel as hungry. So, the goal isn’t to starve yourself. The goal isn’t to feel hungry. The goal is to kind of listen to your body and when you are hungry, eat food, but when you are full, stop and you are going to notice that you are not hungry as often throughout the day, so that is why you probably drop to one to two meals per day and still feel fantastic and still feel optimal in the gym, at work, being a mom or a dad, whatever it is. You will be able to kill it.

    Lisa: Well, you know what, after this interview, I’m going to try those ketones I bought because I want to see how I feel. I’m excited. Drew you are always so awesome. Tell us all the ways we can find you on social media.

    Drew: Yeah, it’s really easy. My brand is called fit2fat2fit with the number 2 in between and that’s the name of my book, the name of my podcast, and my website, my Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, social media handles; all just fit2fat2fit. You can find me online pretty much everywhere.

    Lisa: That’s awesome. I also want to mention that Drew is in my book that is available now on Amazon Clean Eating, Dirty Sex. It’s not about dirty sex, it is about connecting with your partner, connecting with yourself and learning all the great foods and exercises and things you can do with your partner to have the best sex and best healthiest life, so, hope you will check that out. I want to thank everyone for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can check us out on Twitter at TalkFitness2day. I’m at HealthMediaGal1. Thanks so much for listening and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the country or head to Vitamin Shoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 21:43
  • Waiver Received No
  • Host Lisa Davis, MPH
Warrior Workouts is an awesome collection of workouts designed by a Navy SEAL for maximum fitness.

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft018.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Stewart Smith
  • Book Title Warrior Workouts
  • Guest Facebook Account http://www.facebook.com/stewsmithfitness
  • Guest Twitter Account @StewSmith
  • Guest Bio Stew-SmithStewart Smith is a former Navy SEAL and Military.com Fitness Contributor. 

    Certified by the National Strength and Conditioning Association as a Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS) and as military fitness trainer, Stew has trained thousands of students for Navy SEAL, Special Forces, SWAT, FBI, ERT and many other law enforcement professions.
  • Transcription Warrior Workouts with Stew Smith

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): So glad you are listening to Talk Fitness Today and have I got the book for you Warrior Workouts Volume 1; over 100 of the most challenging workouts ever created, includes strength, cardio, endurance. It is by Stewart Smith CSCS USN (SEAL). Stewart, welcome to the show. Thrilled to have you.

    Stewart Smith (Guest): Heh, thank you very much for having me on.

    Lisa: Well it is great to have you on. You know, I have to say, I am so impressed and I’m looking at these workouts going holy cow, these are really intense and are really made for people who want to get in really amazing shape. So, I would love for you to tell us a little bit about yourself. First of all, thank you for your service and tell us about when you knew that you wanted to be a Navy Seal?

    Stewart: Wow, well I guess that goes way back. We are talking a few decades now. But no, when I was a kid, I always knew I wanted to be a soldier and serve. I just didn’t know how and then I remember one day my granddad who was Army, both granddads were Army, and he wanted me to go to West Point. And so, I learned a little bit about the whole options with service academies. I wound up going to the Naval academy and I guess my options opened up a little bit differently than my grandfather would have preferred, but I got to learn about Navy pilots and Marine Corps and all that and all those were very intriguing to me, but then I met a Navy Seal and I was like okay, what is this all about. And I started that process. I started that journey and it was a long journey because I was a power lifting football player type athlete and it took a long time to transition into being a good Seal student. So, anyway, that’s where it all started, back in the Naval academy.

    Lisa: You know in the book, in the introduction, what I like is you talk about how your workouts can get stale and monotonous and you talk about if you do the same workout week after week, it does get stale and that you need to make changes and, so you mentioned classics like the BT pyramids and that you arrange them in new and different ways. Talk to us a little bit about that and why it’s so important to mix things up a bit.

    Stewart: Oh absolutely. Well, I would say probably say one of the staple workouts that I have probably done in the last thirty years would be a pyramid workout because if you think about it, it’s perfect. It’s a perfect workout. It ramps up progressively so it’s a warm up and it peaks so it’s a max out and then it – on the backside of the pyramid it is a nice easy cool down. So, it’s the perfect workout, if you ask me. And especially if you are doing more callisthenic based workouts for military fitness tests and that’s really what I write about. I write about people who are getting ready to serve in the military, law enforcement, firefighter and often in the special ops side of things.

    So, this is one of those classic workouts that can get rather monotonous. And if you don’t get creative with it, it can get really boring and you quit seeing improvement. So, you can add things every odd and even set. You could mix in some running in between every fifth set, things like that and then you can change the exercises too. You don’t always have to be pull up, pushups, sit ups. You can throw in squats and even throw in some weighted exercises in there as well.

    Lisa: I think that is so important. You know you have 100 stand alone workouts in the book. That’s incredible.

    Stewart: Well thanks. Normally I write work outs that are progressive in nature, pyritized training programs where every week you have something to do every day with a rest day thrown in there. But I got the idea of – because it seems like a lot of people like doing my workouts, but they also like throwing in some of the classics that they have done over the past or something that really resonates with them. And I think that’s great. I think you should go to the weight room because you like doing something, not just because someone has this written down and you go do it. So, this is kind of an ala carte version of a workout book, so you can kind of pick and choose what you need to do that day and kind of build your own program.

    Lisa: Now this book is for people who are, I would say already in pretty darned good shape. Is there room for modifications for people or to me like just the title Warrior Workouts and you mentioned it is for police officers, military, firefighters. These are men and women who are already in really good shape, but they want to take it the next level.

    Stewart: Yes, this is definitely not for beginners. I would definitely have a different program for a beginner and it would be relatively progressive in nature, so you could build up to this type of level. Now this one here, is a rather advanced workout, not impossible to do, in fact, I kind of got on to my publisher and editor a little bit and I said come on, these really aren’t the hardest workouts ever created; that is marketing. But I understand that for what they are trying to do. I have made harder workouts than these, but and I have done harder workouts than these. But they are a lot of fun and absolutely, they are easy ways to make changes and I recommend people, when you buy a fitness book; don’t just do the book, because it may be too much for you. It may be too easy for you. So, you might want to add things in there too. So, yeah, absolutely, whether it is decreasing the repetitions or decreasing the amount of sets or decreasing the weight or decreasing the mileage of running; all of those are great ways to kind of tailor this to your fitness level.

    Lisa: Well I like too that you have how to use the Warrior Workouts and you say some workouts are quick while others require at least an hour to complete and then you talk about here’s the five to six days of training and you break it down. Do upper body workouts Monday, Wednesday, Friday; add some legs on the days in between, progress to cardio workouts logically to several days per week. Because sometimes you just need a plan. And it is so nice to know like leg day, arm day, back day, this day, that day.

    Stewart: Yeah you know what, unfortunately there is this misconception out there and I have been writing about fitness for over twenty years now and I always get that question asked, can I do calisthenics every day and I say no. I mean you got to treat calisthenics the same way you would treat weight lifting. You don’t do bench presses every day, you don’t do squats every day. So, you need that extra day of recovery for that muscle group. So, typically we do an upper body, lower body split, and some days might be a full body day. You know have a full body workout in there but the following day it is just going to be a cardio day. So, you are actually resting those resistance exercises that you just did the day before.

    Lisa: Well, it’s funny, because I recently got back into yoga after not doing it for like 14 years, and I have been doing Pilates for about seven years, so I’m pretty advanced and it’s hard, I mean I am sore and then I – so I was doing yoga on Tuesdays and Thursdays and Pilates on Monday and Wednesday, but they were really hard, it was too much, like my shoulder was killing me, my legs and I thought I can’t do this. Like you think you could but when you are doing a lot of body weight exercises in both, it kind of builds up so now what I have been doing is one week I will do yoga Tuesday and Thursday, the next week I will do Pilates Monday and Wednesday and then I will do my cardio in between and it just works out better for me because again, I think of those as more like callisthenic type things or body weight exercises. Would you agree, or do you see what I’m saying?

    Stewart: Oh absolutely, absolutely. In fact, I just did a Pilates workout the other day and it crushed me. There were exercises that I have never done before and that’s the way you have got to look at these things. If you see an exercise that you have to go lookup to see how to do it; it is probably going to make you sore if you have never done that exercise before. That is completely typical with anybody. And I consider myself pretty advanced, but lifting my feet six inches off the ground and doing a half sit-up at the same time, holding myself up there in a V for a minute, that was excruciating.

    Lisa: Yeah, especially because I hadn’t done yoga for so long and the class is a little too advanced for me, but I just love the teacher; so, what I really need to do is I need to get more of a beginner, intermediate yoga and then stick with my Pilates, but then trade it off. And I also want to get back to lifting weights which is something I had been doing but then I was too sore from all the yoga and the Pilates. So, you have to make sure you are mixing it up well. And it also depends on what you want, right, people reading your book want to get super fit; I want to be like nicely toned. I would love to get to be able to do your workouts at some point. I think that would be super exciting, but you have to work with where you are and not get injured.

    Stewart: Yeah, absolutely and there are a lot of ways to get injured when you pick up a new program and the thing is, is you just have to be smart about it and I tell people all the time, no matter what you are trying to do, whether it’s a new fitness program or let’s say for you, for instance, you love yoga and Pilates, but now you are trying to get into weight lifting. Treat yourself like a beginner in weight lifting, right, just because you are physically, you are probably not a beginner, with cardiovascular and strength and flexibility and mobility; but maybe in the weight lifting exercises, that you are not used to; you got to treat yourself like a beginner and give yourself a good three to four weeks of treating yourself like a beginner, then you wont hate yourself after the first or second workout where you are just so sore you can’t even sit down or stand up.

    Lisa: Yes and how does that work in terms of if you think you are at the Warrior level, you try it out and then if feels like it’s too much, that’s when you have to pull back, right? Or if you are doing it and it feels like it’s not enough, you can add on. It’s like you have to listen to your body basically.

    Stewart: Oh absolutely. And the problem is, is that calisthenics are relatively easy, and you can get hundreds of repetitions before you really start to feel sore. Because that soreness will set in 24 hours later, especially on legs. I mean there are workouts in this book where you will do a couple hundred repetitions of squats and it’s not that hard to do the day you are doing it. But you will regret it if you are not used to doing 100 to 200 repetitions of squats in a workout the first time you do it. So, once again, it’s a progression. Maybe do 50 your first time or 75 your first time and progress each week to where you are not so sore you have to miss the next workout, because that does no good.

    Lisa: Exactly. Well in the book, you have the workouts, you have them divided up which is really helpful. So, if we are looking at upper body, you have got upper body calisthenics and cardio, running, rucking or swimming. What is rucking for people who aren’t familiar?

    Stewart: Well rucking is basically just walking with a backpack. So, it’s once again, it’s most firefighters, law enforcement guys, police officers, military guys are always carrying their gear with them. Sometimes that gear can get up to 30-50, 60 or more pounds so, once again, as with anything, it’s the progression and you want to be able to build up into that. One of the things that we use as a tool, to help people prepare for that load bearing exercise; is weight vests and we start off with 10-pound weight vests and build it up to 15 and 20 each week and gradually you can progress to be able to do those kinds of movements with weight.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s cool. I really like that. Well walk us through some of these the workouts. Let’s look at the upper body. There is the special USNA summer seminar workout. You have got stretching. You have got jumping jacks, you have got pushups, sit-ups, flutter kicks, squats, more pushups, a 1-mile easy run. I like that. For me that would be a walk.

    Stewart: Yeah, that one you know I have been blessed to workout with 800 high school going into their senior year at the naval academy through a program called the summer seminar. I’m just a guest PT’r and so every summer I see about 1200 kids, sometimes even more depending if they do three cycles of it and I will see probably 2400 kids that are preparing for the military of some sort. So, I consider myself their first introduction to military physical fitness. So, I take it very seriously. And I don’t want to hurt them, so where they don’t ever want to come back or consider doing this job, but at the same time; I don’t want to make it too easy to where they get overconfident in their abilities and, so I make it a good intermediate level style workout program for you and there is not much you can do when you have 800 kids on a football field and you standing on this podium. There’s jumping jacks, there’s pushups, there’s squats, there are a little bit of short runs that we do on the field and there is a lot of abdominal exercises you can do but other than that, that is what you are fairly limited to. And I guess the fun part with it is to create different, for lack of a better term, choreographies of those exercises to make them different, make them fun and make them challenging enough for the average high school kid who is considering military service.

    Lisa: Wow 800 kids at once?

    Stewart: Yes, it is so fun. I got some great pictures of that and it is just

    Lisa: Oh I would love to see that. I mean that must be some field.

    Stewart: Oh yeah, in fact it’s on my website, if you go to my website stewsmith.com, the very top picture I me working out with 800 high school kids.

    Lisa: When I’m looking through this book, these are – it seems like most of these are all body weight. I mean there are some, I’m looking at, there are some kettle bell swings and some other things. You have got like burpees and well there’s a box jump which involves some equipment, but there are a lot of things you can do without equipment which is really cool.

    Stewart: Oh yeah, I would say at least half of these exercises can be done on a playground with the monkey bars, right you just use the pull ups for the monkey bars. But the other ones might require some exercise equipment. Now, remember this is Warrior Workout Volume 1 and I do have a Volume 2 and a Volume 3 coming and the volume 2 is going to be a fun one. I’m going to arrange it into a pyritization program to where this is what we do in the spring. This is what we do in the summer. This is what we do in the winter. There will be weights involved with that. But then the third one I think is going to be my greatest hits. Like 100 workouts of my favorite workouts all together and I have 10 published books through the years and I’m just going to pull probably 10 workouts from each one of those books and make a greatest hits album.

    Lisa: Oh, that’s fantastic. Alright, I’m looking at number 78 Warrior Workouts Volume 1 full body calisthenics, resistance and cardio, hellacious 100s. Oh my goodness. Talk to us about that.

    Stewart: Yeah, it’s 100 repetitions of several different exercises. I don’t have the book in front of me right now but I know that one has probably pushups, and pullups and overhead press, things like that and the way you work through this workout is you do each one in a circuit and it is very light weight or no weight or at all and you just accumulate all these repetitions for each exercise and so you’re not going to get 100 in one set, you might get 20 in the first set and you move to the next exercise, you move to the next exercise and then you go through it again and when you start accumulating 100 repetitions of this one exercise; you don’t have to do it anymore. And you just keep rolling until you are done. Sometimes we will even throw in a run every cycle so you kind of get a break believe it or not from all the repetitions. You can what we call “rest with running” for these exercises so once again, if you are in the advanced level of fitness where you think resting is actually running; then yeah, this book is in that level.

    Lisa: Another one that caught my eye, number 82, death by pushups. Is that supposed to be funny because it made me laugh plus upper body PT cardio.

    Stewart: Yeah, it’s pretty funny.

    Lisa: I like death by chocolate better.

    Stewart: Yeah, death by pushups is basically, you are in a – and you will like this one as being a yoga person is you are in a 10-20-minute plank pose, but every minute, you do a set of pushups. And you can do this in many different ways. You can do it like a pyramid so every minute you increase by one repetition, so you start off with the first minute you do one pushup, the next minute you do two pushups, next minute you do three pushups, all the same time you just have to stay in that up pushup plank position the entire time. So, it can get pretty tough. I guess the better name for this one would be death by plank pose, because you are in a plank pose and that’s probably the hardest thing. The fifty pushups that you get in ten minutes aren’t that hard, it’s the 10-minute plank pose that’s the killer.

    Lisa: Oh my, I can’t even I mean I hold the plan for like a minute in yoga, like you will do that a few times and Pilates in between stop for yoga. But 10 minutes plank, I mean you must be just shaking and dripping with sweat.

    Stewart: I guess you know if it’s your first time trying it, yeah you would do that. But eventually, you get used to it. You know the world record for the Marines – I guess a Marine did a plank pose and the world record was like six hours. Six hours in a plank pose. I mean it was phenomenal. So, the body is incredible.

    Lisa: That – it really is isn’t it? Apparently, I need to push mine harder. That is amazing. I am really in awe with you Stew. I love the picture of you on the back of the book you are hanging from a rope probably a huge rope that you climb. Train like a true warrior. Everyone should pick this up for people in their lives that are hard core people who want to get to the peak for firefighters, police officers, military or if you are just in that kind of shape. Warrior Workouts Volume 1; over 100 of the most challenging workouts ever created. Alright, Stewart, tell us all the ways to learn more about you and all your fantastic books.

    Stewart: Well thank you. My name is Stew Smith and that’s S-T-E-W, and you can find me online. I write articles for military.com for years and my website is stewsmith.com. I also have another one stewsmithfitness.com and all over social media so you can find my videos on YouTube and Instagram, Facebook, Twitter. So, yeah, come find me. If you have got questions, please ask.

    Lisa: Awesome. Well this was so fun talking to you Stew. I’m really impressed. I want to encourage everyone to check out Stew Smith, again Warrior Workouts Volume 1. On the book it is Stewart Smith. And again, thank you for your service. You can check us out Talk Fitness Today on Radio MD, at Your Radio MD, at Twitter @Talk Fitness 2 day, also on Twitter and on Snap Chat as well, also on Instagram, Talk Fitness 2 Day and Facebook Talk Fitness Today. I’m healthmediagal1, check me out. Thanks for listening and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the county or head to vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 20:23
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis, MPH
Join guests Dr. Lori Shemek and Eric the Trainer to learn how to boost your fat-burning potential and why weight training is beneficial. 

Additional Info

  • Segment Number 1
  • Audio File talk_fitness/tft017.mp3
  • Featured Speaker Lori Shemek, PhD & Eric the Trainer
  • Guest Bio Lori-Shemek1Lori Shemek is well known as a pioneer in creating global awareness of low-level inflammation and how it is responsible for and the core cause of most illness, disease, faster aging and weight gain.. She has been sending out the message about inflammation long before it was a buzz word.

    Dr. Lori has uncovered the pathway to the core cause of weight: inflamed fat cells that not only promote unwanted excess weight gain and belly fat, but poor health as well.

    Lori Shemek is a Nutrition and Weight Loss expert, a best-selling author and specializes in weight loss resistance. She has helped many people to once and for all.. lose the weight and feel better fast. She shows people how to spot sneaky foods that create weight gain, to kick sugar addiction to the curb, and shift from eating the wrong foods to the exact foods that burn fat.

    Dr. Shemek is the author of How To Fight FATflammation! and the best-selling author of Fire-Up Your Fat Burn! She is a leading health and weight loss expert and also known as “The Inflammation Terminator.” She has made it her mission to help clients lose weight and educate the public on the toxic effects of certain foods and lifestyle choices and how they create inflammation in the body resulting in weight gain. She is a leading authority on inflammation and its role in weight loss, preventing disease and optimizing health.

    The Huffington Post has recognized Dr. Shemek twice as one of the Top 16 Health and Fitness Experts, alongside such names as Dr. Oz and David Zinczenko, author of Eat This, Not That. The Huffington Post has also recognized her as one of the Top 35 Diet and Nutrition Experts. Lori is a health contributor to Fox News; she is also a health expert for the ABC TV show, Good Morning Texas.

    Dr. Shemek holds a Doctorate in Psychology; she is a Certified Nutritional Consultant and a Certified Life Coach.

    She has been a featured guest on numerous radio talk shows as well as TV; she has been interviewed in CNN, Fox News, The Ricki Lake Show – Friends of Ricki, Dr. Oz’s Good Life Magazine, Ladies Home Journal, Shape Magazine, Woman’s Day Magazine, Health Magazine, Redbook Magazine and many others. Lori has authored numerous articles and is actively doing speaking engagements for events, organizations, large and small.

    Eric-TrainerEric Fleishman (aka Eric the Trainer) began his fitness career as a 98lb. weakling living in rural Maine on a farm with sheep, pigs, and even a donkey. He was elected President of the local 4H club dedicated to swine, the "Souie Souie Pig" club. At age ten his father, suspecting that his son would remain small throughout his teens, took Eric to his first martial arts class. This initiated a lifelong passion with martial arts that would eventually lead him to Hollywood, California. Due to his small size, Eric found himself taunted and teased by the local kids who's rough, lumberjack fathers encouraged their offspring to pursue careers in the woods, too.

    He was often found hanging on coat racks by his belt loops and was once even discovered cramped inside someone's locker. Dubbed "Squeaky " by his classmates for squeals of terror he made while being chased during a flag football game in gym class, Eric was the least likely student at Mt. Blue Jr. High school to pursue a career in physical fitness. At his senior prom, his diminished size made him look as if he was with his babysitter rather than his date. His growth spurt finally began during his second year of college. Realizing that he needed to fill out his lankly physique, Eric began a modest workout regiment at Gold's Gym in New Haven, CT. And as he noticed the increase in adoring looks from the local girls, he caught the fitness bug.

    After graduating, Eric moved to New York city and spent five years working as a personal trainer(certified through ACE and TSI) in Manhattan. It was here that he began to develop a gender specific workout regiment that would eventually become the Sleeping Beauty and Sleeping Giant programs. It was also here that Eric pinpointed the science of change through three major components: diet, exercise, and sleep.

    In 1996 Eric moved to Los Angeles. Upon his arrival, Eric set out to find and learn from the greatest bodybuilders of all time. He located former "Vince's Gym" trainers who had helped Arnold shape his legendary physique. He studied with Nick Kane, Frank Zane(Mr. Olympia), and Don Howorth, the “Duke of deltoids,” who's massive shoulders helped him win the Mr. America title in 1967. Eric's drive to be the best personal trainer on the planet became legendary and his services in demand. His methods have been utilized by Hollywood’s top celebrities and UFC fighters (Eric on the TV Guide Channel)(Eric on Tyra) both in front and behind the camera. He has appeared in major magazines and television programs, spreading the word on his unique health and fitness methods. Eric has been an instrumental part of some of the highest profile fitness stories of the past decade including Big Time Rush, Ethan Suplee, Kirstie Alley, Michelle Branch, Big John McCarthy, Max Martini, and Rachel Crow. In addition to training, Fleishman has a brisk fitness consulting business and is a frequent contributor to “Muscle and Fitness” magazine where he sits on their advisory board. He also hosts many of Muscle & Fitness’ online top videos.

    Eric is heavily involved with Muscle Beach in Venice, CA where he is also on the Muscle Beach Hall of Fame nominating committee. He hosted a show, "New Year, New You" for Warner Brother’s “WB.com” He has taught the Los Angeles Sheriff's Academy for the past seven years, and has also worked with the LAPD, CHP, and SWAT teams. As his 40th birthday approached, Eric wanted to do something special for the occasion. Eric decided that in the spirit of his hero, Jack Lalanne, 40,000 push ups for his favorite charities would be a great way to start. For the past two years Eric has been named to the Gold’s Gym fitness institute, where he serves as an expert and global spokesperson for the organization.
  • Transcription Boosting Fat Burn with Dr. Lori Shemek PLUS Benefits of Weight Training with Eric the Trainer

    This episode of Talk Fitness is in partnership with The Vitamin Shoppe, where knowledgeable health enthusiasts are standing by to help you thrive every day.

    Lisa Davis (Host): Hi, I’m Lisa Davis. So glad you’re listening to Talk Fitness Today. Today, I have got two very special interviews back to back. The first one is with Dr. Lori Shemek How to Fire Up Your Fat Burn and the second is with Eric the Trainer, all about weight training and gals making time for ourselves so we can get in the gym, get fit and feel great. So, enjoy these two interviews.

    So, glad today to have the wonderful Dr. Lori Shemek. She’s the author of Fire Up Your Fat Burn. We are going to be talking about getting rid of that unwanted fat and keeping it off. Hello there, Dr. Lori.

    Lori Shemek, PhD (Guest): Hello Lisa. Thank you for having me.

    Lisa: It is so great to have you on. I honestly, if somebody said to me when I was in high school and I was eating peanut butter sandwiches and bananas late at night and trying to gain weight that I would someday be like what’s going on with my thighs? I would have told them they were crazy. But now, I’m trying to lose some weight and I need your help just like you out there so, give us some tips and tell us a little bit about yourself.

    Dr. Lori: Sure. Yes, well that is what I do. I have clients and they are mostly weight loss clients and so, that’s my focus and I love it because I get to see really dramatic changes and big smiles on people’s faces. So, what you want to do, is understand just briefly that weight gain is really, really tied to low level inflammation. Okay, so we have got different types of inflammation. We all know what a sprained ankle looks like and feels like, right? And that’s acute inflammation. And we need that. It’s a necessary part of our immune system. It’s very important. It helps us heal. Without it, we are sitting ducks, really, we wouldn’t be around too long.

    And then we have got something called silent inflammation that we don’t necessarily feel right then and there, but it does rear its ugly head down the road. And then we have something I call fatflammation. And fatflammation is specifically tied to low level inflammation and weight gain because we have fat cells throughout our body and particularly in our mid-section, we have these fat cells that like to spew out inflammatory molecules. And when that happens, it slows down our metabolism and we put on weight and then we put out more of these inflammatory molecules, putting on more weight and it becomes a vicious cycle. So, instead of just having one health condition resulting from this low-level type of inflammation, such as heart disease; you will have a cluster of them down the road. Possibly diabetes, heart disease and high blood pressure all at the same time. And that’s why this is very important to know.

    Lisa: Yeah, it sounds like we need to lower our inflammation. So, what are some ways to do that?

    Dr. Lori: So, what you want to do, the very first thing I tell people to do is to reduce their carbohydrate intake, especially here in the United States. Because we have something what we call the SAD diet, the Standard American Diet, which is for the most part, most everybody is engaging in this type of eating, these eating choices. So, we have 68% of our population is overweight and part of the reason is because they are ingesting too much sugar for one, and too many carbohydrates. Even too many of the healthy carbohydrates. And what happens is when you do that, you spike your blood sugar super high and then it drops super-fast. And it is much like throwing a ball high up into the air and watching it fall rapidly to the ground. And that’s inflammation in action right there.

    And another thing you are doing, you’re triggering the hormone insulin and insulin is not just about diabetes, it also is equated to optimal health. So, when you are triggering insulin, you are doing it excessively, which most Americans are. That means that insulin is storing all that sugar that is circulating in your body which carbohydrates do turn into sugar in the body, glucose and it stores in the cells. Okay, for energy at a later time. But what happens is insulin which is like a little Pac Man likes to gobble up that sugar and store it. It is always knocking on the cell’s door saying let me in. But the cell becomes really irritated with this constant knocking and then eventually, ignores insulin’s knocks. Okay, so insulin just turns around, goes away and continues to circulate and so does sugar in your body. And it doesn’t only like to keep the fat there, it’s just more of an inflammatory reaction really in the end.

    Lisa: I see. So, you need to cut out the sugar or cut down as much as you can and the carbohydrates.

    Dr. Lori: Ideally avoid it.

    Lisa: Avoid it yes. I cut out sugar about seven weeks ago and I feel really good. I did lose some weight and I just feel so much better. I tend to eat a Paleo diet except I do like my quinoa and my beans, so I guess I’m not – real Paleo’s are going okay that doesn’t sound very Paleo. But what do you think of that, where you have got the grass-fed meat, the vegetables, little whole grains, just a little bit here and there, lots of fruits and vegetables?

    Dr. Lori: I actually, used to recommend grains, okay, but we now know grains create that surge of insulin again, so here I go, right, with the same old, same old. And so, it’s very important to – they are still healthy in moderation. There are healthier types of say wheat if you are not sensitive to wheat that you can opt for. There is a grain variety out there called einkorn and it doesn’t have the effect. It’s the traditional wheat that we used to eat back in the pioneer days back in grandma days, even before that actually, before industrialization came along and changed everything about the way we eat and the way we process our food. So, yes, sugar is one, carbohydrates, reduce them, okay.

    The next one you want to look at is water. Most people are mildly dehydrated and don’t even know it. So that’s another important.

    Lisa: Are there signs Dr. Lori that you can tell?

    Dr. Lori: Yes. If you are feeling tired all the time, you are always tired throughout the day, your joints ache, you are gaining weight, you’re hungry, your skin is dry. There are a lot of telltale signs that you are mildly dehydrated. Have you ever gone to the cupboard or the pantry or the refrigerator and opened it up and stood there and said what do I want to eat? I know I want something. I just don’t know what it is. That’s a sign you are mildly dehydrated, probably. Because the brain confuses thirst with hunger. And it’s very common. The majority of Americans are walking around mildly dehydrated and they don’t even know it. So, weight gain ensues because due to mild dehydration; because cellular function slows down when our cells are not optimally hydrated. And that means so does your metabolism.

    Lisa: Oh, that makes sense. So, I’m guessing in Fire Up Your Fat Burn you are addressing these issues of cutting out the sugar and lowering the carbs or cutting them out if you can, drinking more water. I’m assuming exercise plays into this equation?

    Dr. Lori: Yes. Exercise is very important, but I have to say, that nutrition is 80% of your weight loss. That is very important to know. Exercise in important as well, it is critical. It is that 20% and there is a form of exercise called high intensity interval training. Now don’t let this scare you off if you are not used to exercising. Because you can always work up to what I’m going to tell you to do. And a good example is – of high intensity interval training is to warm up for three minutes okay. Now I want your audience to know that it only takes 12 to 15 minutes and so what you want to do is go all out for thirty seconds, you want to go back to a slow to moderate pace for 90 seconds and do that eight times. And you are good to go, three to four times a week.

    Lisa: Be sure to check out Dr. Lori Shemek. That’s Dr. L-O-R-I S-H-E-M-E-K. You can check her out Dr. Lori Shemek.com, also on Twitter @lorishemek. I hope you enjoyed the interview with Dr. Lori Shemek. Joining me know is Eric the Trainer, so stay tuned.

    I have got Eric Trainer. He’s a Hollywood physique expert with over twenty years’ experience in celebrity physical transformation. Hello Eric.

    Eric Fleishman (aka Eric the Trainer) (Guest): Hi, I’m so happy to be on the show. Thank you so much.

    Lisa: It’s so nice to have you. I’m jealous. It is probably super warm, but you know Eric, we recently spoke, and I know that you train men and women differently talk to us about this and is this something that we should be doing and in what difference does it make to really focus on the sexes in a different way?

    Eric: Well first of all, I have to let you know that most of the women that I train are actresses and actresses needs and desires are very different than the needs and desires of the average woman. From a health perspective, an average woman can really benefit from using weights. It battles against osteoporosis. It builds lean muscle mass. It helps them with their daily activities and that’s phenomenal. With a lot of the women that we train, we actually train them without weights and challenge them using only their body. For many actresses, we use no balls, no bands, no machines, no weight and we challenge them in a very specific way using their body that really leads them to a sleek, beautiful physique, but it looks natural. The very hallmark of our female clientele here in Hollywood, is it looks like I have never met them. They look like they just fell out of the sky perfect. There is no excess muscle mass. They almost look like Jane from the Tarzan and Jane series and Jane doesn’t go to the gym, but she looks amazing in a fur bikini.

    Here in the World of Fitness, we measure your output, how hard you are trying during the workout by something called exertion and women specifically have the desire to work hard. Their pain tolerance is actually higher than men’s and so your willingness to give high levels of exertion is right there. And as a trainer I recognize that. However, sometimes using weights, especially excess weights and machines with women they have a tendency to hurt themselves because the bottom line is you don’t really have testosterone in your body to help supercharge your muscles that way that I do and perhaps their husband does. Instead, your muscles will never get to the point where they are oversized. And so, because women like to challenge themselves, the possibility for injury and the occurrence of injury with women that workout with weights and machines, because they work so hard, is higher than you would expect. Therefore, we developed a system very early on in my career, where women really can display the highest levels of exertion using only their body weight and it is virtually impossible to hurt yourself in this way.

    So, you can really go for it if you know what I mean. Meaning if you are on a mat, on all fours and you are sweeping your legs straight out to the side like you are karate kicking a bad guy that is next to you, even though that is challenging after the thirtieth rep, after the fortieth rep; because you want to work so hard and you so determined to look amazing in that dress when you go to your family get together. I allow you to display the highest levels of exertion without you worrying about hurting yourself and it really leads to a beautiful physique.

    But the second part of that question is how do women’ s bodies actually change? What’s the key to physical transformation when it comes to women? And the answer is, and this is after 23 years of experience working fulltime as a trainer; women that challenge themselves from below the chest to right above the knee, in that midsection, if I challenge you exclusively in that section, it actually creates a whole-body transformation. Meaning, if you say to me, heh I just got a role in a movie, I need to make my jawline a little bit sharper, I want my arms to be sleek, I need my clavicle, my collarbone to really show when I wear a dress; I would have you do leg kicks because that’s the key to full physical transformation in women.

    In men, it’s the opposite. Men need to challenge themselves higher on the body up near their pectoral region to create a full body change. And it is true that there are men that actually do bench presses and their whole body, including their legs get some small benefit because that’s the key to physical change in the men’s body.

    Remember, I’m a guy that works many times for four days, for seven days, for only 12 days with a person before they go shoot a movie, so my methods need to be spot on. I have no learning curves and I have to do my best because if these actors don’t change in that short period of time; I will never work for the producer again.

    Lisa: Oh wow, yeah, so it sounds like there is a lot of pressure. Now Eric, talk to us about some more examples of body weight exercises for women. You mentioned the kicking the leg out to the side. You also, when we spoke, you talked about when you do pushups, you are supposed to do them very slowly up and down. Is that correct?

    Eric: Right. You know the way that we train women and the way that we train men is almost the polar opposite of each other meaning if men want to build their pectoral regions and be strong. I have them do old fashioned pushups where they come down and they power up. Just like you would see Jack LaLanne back in the day do the pushups. For women, we want their arms to be sleek and beautiful but we want – but we don’t want them to be overly muscular, so we do the opposite. We actually have women start on all fours on their knees and their hands and slowly lower their bodies, their torsos down towards the mat very slowly. The process of going from straight arm to touching their chest and belt buckle on the floor sometimes takes up to 12 seconds. So, they are lowering themselves down in a slow and focused manner with their elbows tucked in as opposed to men who shoot their elbows out to the side. And so, we focus on what they call the decline or the negative aspect of a pushup for women and what that yields is a small, sleek, beautiful arm.

    You need to make time for yourself. I find that women as a gender are selfless and I mean that as a huge compliment. Your concerns involve children, husbands, boyfriends, extended family. You are very giving, and you are very intelligent but sometimes you put yourself last on the priority list and ultimately, it is really a losing proposition. So, I encourage women to actually increase their standing on the priority list for themselves and all we need to do is three simple things. We just need to align your exercise, your diet, and your sleep in the right way and magic happens. I have seen many, many women come in to see me, they have got short haircuts. They are kind of chubby. They have given up on looking amazing and I say to them listen, give me one chance, one chance to reclaim that glory that you had. I remember what you looked like back in the day. And believe me, in a very short period of time, sometimes in a month or two, they start looking like they are the babysitters not the moms and it is really cool to see.

    Lisa: If you would like to learn more about Eric the Trainer, you can go to www.ericthetrainer.com . Thank you so much for listening to Talk Fitness Today. You can find us on social media at TalkFitness2 day on Twitter and Snap Chat. You can also find us at Talk Fitness Today podcasts on Facebook and find me at healthmediagal1. Thanks for listening and stay well.

    This episode of Talk Fitness was produced by The Vitamin Shoppe where trusted health enthusiasts help you thrive every day. Visit one of 800 stores across the county or head to vitaminshoppe.com for all your wellness needs.
  • Length (mins) 15:46
  • Waiver Received Yes
  • Host Lisa Davis
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