Maximum Muscle
MAXIMUM MUSCLE
THE NO-BS TRUTH ABOUT GETTING BIGGER, LEANER, AND STRONGER
Michael Matthews
Copyright © 2012 Waterbury Publishers, Inc.
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This eBook is solely for information and educational
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Specific results mentioned in this book should be considered
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www.waterburypublishers.com Visit the author’s website:
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OTHER BOOKS BY MICHAEL MATTHEWS
Bigger Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the
Ultimate Male Body
If you want to be muscular, lean, and strong as quickly as
possible, without steroids, good genetics, or wasting ridiculous amounts of
time in the gym, and money on supplements...then you want to read this book.
Click here to view this book
Muscle Myths: 50 Health & Fitness Mistakes You Don’t
Know You’re Making
If you’ve ever felt lost in the sea of contradictory
training and diet advice out there and you just want to know once and for all
what works and what doesn’t— what’s scientifically true and what’s false—when
it comes to building muscle and getting ripped, then you need to read this
book.
Click here to view
this book
Cardio Sucks! The Simple Science of Burning Fat Fast and
Getting in Shape
If you're short on time and sick of the same old boring
cardio routine and want to kick your fat loss into high gear by working out
less and...heaven forbid...actually have some fun...then you want to read this
new book. Click here to view this
book
The Shredded Chef: 115 Recipes for Building Muscle, Getting
Lean, and Staying Healthy
If you want to know how to forever escape the dreadful
experience of “dieting” and learn how to cook nutritious, delicious meals that
make building muscle and burning fat easy and enjoyable, then you need to read
this book.
Click here to view
this book
Thinner Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the
Ultimate Female Body
If you want to be toned, lean, and strong as quickly as
possible without crash dieting,
“good genetics,” or wasting ridiculous amounts of time in
the gym and money on supplements...regardless of your age... then you want to
read this book.
Click here to view this book
CHAPTER 1
What You Need to Know About the Health & Fitness
Industry
Here’s what the kings of the multi-billion dollar fitness
industry don’t want you to know.
CHAPTER 2
The 6 Biggest Muscle Building Myths & Mistakes
Here’s why most guys you see in the gym are stuck in a rut
of making little or no gains.
CHAPTER 3
The Real Science of Muscle Growth
Building bigger, stronger muscles is much easier than you’ve
been led to believe.
CHAPTER 4
The 5 Biggest Fat Loss Myths & Mistakes
Getting shredded is impossible if you’ve fallen into these
traps.
CHAPTER 5
The Real Science of Healthy Fat Loss
All effective fat loss methods rely on these three simple
rules.
CHAPTER 6
Finally! The Simple Science of Building a Thin, Lean,
Strong, and Healthy Body that You Love!
The search is over. Getting into incredible shape really is
this simple.
BONUS REPORT
12 Health & Fitness Mistakes You Don’t Know You’re
Making
If you want to learn the truth about 12 myths and mistakes
that ruin people's efforts to get fit, get this free report.
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to ask...
OTHER BOOKS BY MICHAEL MATTHEWS
More practical health and fitness advice to help you get
into the best shape of your life.
1
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE HEALTH & FITNESS
INDUSTRY
I’m going to tell you something that the kings of the
multi-billion dollar health and fitness industry don’t want you to know: You
don’t need any of their crap to get ripped and to look better than you ever
have before.
• You don’t
need to spend hundreds of dollars per month on the worthless supplements that
steroid freaks shill in advertisements.
• You don’t
need to constantly change up your exercise routines to “confuse” your muscles.
I’m pretty sure that muscles lack cognitive abilities, so this approach is a
good way to just confuse you instead.
• You don’t
need to burn through buckets of protein powder every month, stuffing down
enough protein each day to feed a third-world village.
• You don’t
need to toil away in the gym for a couple of hours per day doing tons of sets,
supersets, drop sets, giant sets, etc. (As a matter of fact, this is a great
way to stunt gains and get nowhere.)
• You don’t
need to grind out hours and hours of boring cardio to shed ugly belly fat and
love handles and get a shredded six-pack. (How many flabby treadmillers have
you come across over the years?)
• You don’t
need to completely abstain from “cheat” foods while getting down to
single-digit body fat percentages. If you plan cheat meals correctly, you can
actually speed your metabolism up and accelerate fat loss.
These are just a small sampling of the harmful fallacies
commonly believed by many, and they will bury you in a rut of frustration that
inevitably leads to you quitting because of little or no real results.
That was actually my motivation for creating Bigger Leaner
Stronger. For many years now, I’ve had friends, family, acquaintances, and
co-workers approach me for fitness advice, and they were almost always
convinced of many strange, unworkable ideas about diet and exercise.
By educating them in the same way as I do in my books, I’ve
helped people melt away fat, build lean, attractive muscle, and not only look
great but feel great too. And, while helping friends, friends of friends, and
family is fulfilling, I want to be able to help thousands (or tens or even
hundreds of thousands!).
Now, where did the many fitness and nutrition myths come
from? Well, I don’t want to waste your time with the boring history of the
world of weightlifting, supplements, and information resources, but the long
story short is simply this:
When people are willing to spend big amounts of money on certain
types of products or to solve specific problems, there will never be a scarcity
of new, “cutting edge” things for them to empty their wallets on, and there
will always be scores of brilliant marketers inventing new schemes to keep
people spending.
It’s pretty simple, really. All we have to do is look where
most people get their training and nutritional advice from. Almost everyone
gets it from one or more of these three sources: magazines, personal trainers,
or friends…and you’ll almost never learn anything useful from any of them.
How can I make such bold claims, you wonder? Because I’ve
seen it all, tried it all, and while I don’t know it all, I do know what works
and what doesn’t.
Every Time You Read a Bodybuilding Magazine, You’re Getting
Slapped in the Face
Last time I looked, close to a dozen bodybuilding magazines
were waiting on the shelves of Barnes and Noble, all shiny and ready to lure in
victims like Venus flytraps. Simply put, every time you buy one of the big
bodybuilding magazines, you’re paying to be lied to.
Here’s a fun fact that you probably didn’t know: MuscleMag,
IronMan, Flex, Muscular Development, Muscle & Fitness, Muscle Media, and
the rest of the mainstream bodybuilding magazines are owned by supplement
companies and are used simply as mouthpieces for their products. Yup. MuscleMag
is controlled by MuscleTech; IronMan is controlled by MuscleLink; Muscular
Development is Twinlab’s shill piece; Muscle & Fitness and Flex are owned
by Joe Weider and are thus promotion catalogues for his companies, such as
Weider, Metaform, MuscleTribe, and several others; and MuscleMedia is the EAS
cheerleader.
The primary goal of these magazines is to sell supplements
for the companies controlling them, and they work damn well. The magazines push
products in various ways. They have pretty advertisements all over the place,
they regularly run “advertorials” (advertisements disguised as informative
articles), and they balance the lot of sales pitches with some actual articles
that provide workout and nutrition advice (which also, in many cases, end with
product recommendations of some kind).
So, this is the first blow that magazines deal to you: They
give you a lot of “advice” that is geared first and foremost to selling you
products, not helping you achieve your goals.
The supplement companies know that if they can just keep
getting these magazines into people’s hands, they will keep selling products.
So, how do they ensure that you will keep buying? By coming up with a constant
flow of new advice and ideas, of course.
And this is the second, probably more harmful, blow: They
inundate you with all kinds of false ideas about what it takes to get into
great shape. If they told the simple truth every month, they would have maybe
20 articles or so that they could re-print over and over. Instead, they get
quite creative with all kinds of sophisticated (but useless) workout routines,
“tricks,” and diets (that include certain supplements to really MAXIMIZE the
effectiveness, of course).
The bottom line is that you can’t trust these types of
magazines. They are all either owned by or financially dependent upon
supplement companies, and what I outlined above is the game they play.
Most Personal Trainers Are Just a Waste of Money…End of Story
Most personal trainers are a waste of time and money.
Every week I see trainers who either have no clue what
they’re doing or who just don’t care about their clients. These poor people are
paying $50 – 75 per hour to do silly, ineffective workout routines that usually
consist of the wrong exercises done with bad form (and they make little or no
gains).
And, let’s not forget that most personal trainers aren’t
even in good shape themselves, which always confuses me. How can you honestly
sell yourself as a fitness expert when you’re flabby and out of shape? Who
could possibly believe you? Well, for some reason, these types of trainers get
business all the time, and their clients almost always stay flabby and out of
shape themselves.
To compound the disservice, most trainers don’t even bother
giving their clients nutritional plans, which really ensures lackluster gains.
The fact is that 70 – 80% of how you look is a reflection of how you eat. Fat,
skinny, ripped, whatever—working out is only 20 – 30% of the equation. Eat
wrong, and you will stay fat no matter how much cardio you do; eat wrong, and
you will stay skinny and weak no matter how much you struggle with weights. Eat
right, however, and you can unlock the maximum potential gains from working
out: rapid, long-term fat loss and muscle gains that will turn heads and get
your friends and family talking.
You might be wondering why these trainers know so little as
certified professionals. Well, I have several good friends who are trainers,
and they’ve all told me the same thing, which is that passing the certification
test does not make you an expert—it means that you can memorize some basic
information about nutrition and exercise… that’s about it.
While some people are happy to pay a trainer just to force
themselves to show up every day, trainers are usually in a similar boat as the
magazines. They have to constantly justify their existence, and they do it by
changing up routines and talking about “sophisticated” workout principles (that
they read about in the magazines)… and when it’s all said and done, their
clients waste thousands of dollars to make poor gains.
That said, there absolutely are great trainers out there who
are in awesome shape themselves, who do know how to quickly and effectively get
others into shape, and who do really care. If you’re one of them and you’re
reading this book, I applaud you because you’re carrying the weight of the
profession on your shoulders. The Bottom Line
I don’t know about you, but I don’t train to have fun or
hang out with the boys—I train to look and feel better, and I want to get the
most from my efforts. If I can get better results by working out half as long
as the other guy, that’s what I want to do. If my options are to pack on ten
pounds of lean mass in a month by doing the same exercises every week (done
with correct form, intensity, and weight progression) or to squeak out two
pounds by doing the latest dynamic inertia muscle confusion routine, I’ll
choose the former.
So, give this book a read, and if you like what I have to
say, pick up Bigger Leaner Stronger, follow the program, and I think you’ll be
amazed at how simple getting into incredible shape really is.
2
THE 6 BIGGEST MYTHS OF BUILDING MUSCLE
Nine out of ten guys you see in the gym don’t train correctly.
In many cases, I wouldn’t even bother getting out of bed in the morning to do
their training routines.
They’re usually following programs they found in magazines
or on the internet, or maybe they got them from friends or trainers. They are
stuck in a rut of no gains or eking out slow, stubborn gains.
Most guys also compound their training mistakes by eating
incorrectly—they’re eating too much, eating too little, eating on a bad
schedule, not getting the right amounts and types of macronutrients, and are
making other various muscle-robbing mistakes. Eating for maximum muscle gain or
fat loss means little more than meeting precise nutritional requirements on a
precise schedule (and there’s nothing hard about doing it—it just requires
exactness).
So, I’d like to take a moment here to address the six most
common myths and mistakes of building lean muscle, because chances are good
that you have fallen victim to one or more of them at some point in the past
(and if you haven’t, it’s probably because you’re brand new, which actually
gives you a great advantage: You get to do it right from day one!).
MYTH & MISTAKE #1:
More Sets = More Growth
I don’t know about you, but I hate long workouts. Who wants
to spend two hours in a gym every day? Only the over-zealous newbies who think
that the grueling seventeenth set is where the growth occurs, or the obsessed
‘roid-heads who like to squat until their noses bleed and deadlift until they
puke (yes, these guys are out there).
The fact is, too many sets can actually lead to
overtraining, which not only robs you of muscle growth and makes you feel
run-down and lethargic, but can actually cause you to lose muscle. Yes, that’s
right—two hours of intense lifting can actually make you shrink and get weaker.
You are simply breaking down the muscle too much for your body to repair
optimally. Of course you don’t want to under-train either by doing too little,
which is why Bigger Leaner Stronger weight workouts are built to achieve the
maximum muscle overload and stimulation that your body can efficiently repair.
More sets also means more time spent working out, of course,
and this too can become detrimental. As you exercise, your body releases
hormones such as testosterone, growth hormone, and insulin, all conducive to
muscle growth. In response to the physical stress, however, your body also
releases a hormone called cortisol. This hormone helps increase blood sugar
levels and fight inflammation, but it also interferes with your body’s ability
to use protein correctly and stops muscle growth. One of the best ways to
control cortisol is to keep your training sessions short.
Scientific studies such as the one done by the University of
Natal have shown that weight training sessions between 45 – 60 minutes allow for proper muscle stimulation
while maximizing testosterone production and minimizing cortisol production.
Cardio sessions between 30 – 45 minutes
were found to be the best for the same reasons. Post-workout nutrition is a
huge part of managing cortisol too, but we’ll get to that later.
The bottom line is that if your lifting program is built
correctly, you can achieve stunning muscle gains by weight training for no
longer than 45 – 60 minutes per day.
MYTH & MISTAKE #2:
You Have to “Feel the Burn” to Grow
How many times have you heard training partners yelling for
each other to “Make it burn!” and “Get another three reps!”? They think that
pumping out reps until the stinging pain is unbearable causes maximum growth.
“No pain, no gain,” right? Wrong. This is probably one of the worst fallacies
out there. Muscle “burn” and pump are not paramount in achieving muscle growth.
When your muscles are burning, what you’re actually feeling
is a buildup of lactic acid in the muscle, which builds as you contract your
muscles again and again. Lactic acid does trigger what’s known as the “anabolic
cascade,” which is a cocktail of growthinducing hormones, but when lactic acid
levels become too elevated, studies have shown that it actually impairs growth
and causes tissues to be broken down.
So, for yet another reason, when guys spend a couple of
hours in the gym pounding away with drop sets, burnout sets, supersets, and so
forth, they’re doing much more harm than good.
So what does cause maximum muscle growth, then? The short
answer is overload, which we’ll go over in more detail soon.
MYTH & MISTAKE #3:
Wasting Time with the Wrong Exercises
In case you didn’t know, most of what your gym has to offer
in terms of workout machines and contraptions is worthless. Why? Because they
just don’t stimulate the muscles like free weights do. (Free weights, by the
way, are objects like dumbbells, barbells, adjustable pulleys, and lat
pull-down setups that can be moved in threedimensional space.)
There’s something oddly effective about forcing the body to
freely manipulate weight, unaided, against the pull of gravity. Nobody ever
built a great chest by just pounding away on the Pec Deck and Machine
Press—they used barbells and dumbbells.
More specifically, the most effective muscle-building
exercises are known as compound exercises. They’re called compound exercises
because they involve multiple muscle groups. Examples of compound exercises are
the Squat, Deadlift, and Bench Press. The opposite of a compound exercise is an
isolation exercise, which involves one muscle group only. Examples of isolation
exercises are the Cable Flye, Dumbbell Curl, and Leg Extension.
Numerous scientific studies have confirmed the benefits of
compound exercises over isolation exercises. One such study was conducted at
Ball State University in 2000, and it went like this:
Two groups of men trained with weights for ten weeks. Group
one did four compound upper-body exercises, while group two did the same plus
bicep curls and triceps extensions (isolation exercises).
After the training period, both groups increased strength
and size, but which do you think had bigger arms? The answer is neither. The
additional isolation training performed by group two produced no additional
effect on arm strength or circumference. The takeaway is that by overloading
your entire system, you cause everything to grow.
Charles Poliquin, trainer to world-class athletes like
Olympians and professional sports players, is fond of saying that in order to
gain an inch on your arms, you have to gain ten pounds of muscle. His point is
the most effective way to build a big, strong body is with systemic overload, not
localized training. If your weight training program isn’t built around heavy,
compound training, you’re only making a fraction of the gains possible.
Now, I’m not saying that bicep curls and triceps extensions
are entirely worthless.
I’ve found that certain isolation exercises, if incorporated
into a routine properly (using the right amount of weight and volume—the total
number of sets—per workout), do help with strength and growth. So you will find a few isolation exercises in
my program, but they are hardly the focus.
Guys that make the mistake of doing ineffective exercises
often believe another myth, which is the lie that you have to constantly change
up your routine to make gains. This is complete nonsense peddled by the garbage
workout mags. You’re in the gym to get bigger and stronger, and that requires
three simple things: lift progressively heavier weights, eat correctly, and
give your body sufficient rest.
Regularly changing exercises simply isn’t necessary because
your goals limit the exercises that you should be doing. If you’re looking to
build an overall solid foundation of muscle, you should be doing the same types
of exercises every week, and they will include things like Squats, Deadlifts,
Bench Presses, Dumbbell Presses, Military Presses, and others. If you’re doing
these exercises correctly, your strength will skyrocket, and you will gain
muscle faster than you ever imagined possible.
If you’re a veteran lifter that is looking to sculpt little
bits and pieces for competitive or aesthetic purposes, then you’d do a
different training routine, but again the variables would only be weight and
reps, not exercises.
MYTH & MISTAKE #4:
Lifting Like an Idiot
One of the most painful sights in gyms is the hordes of ego
lifters spastically throwing around weights with reckless abandon. I cringe not
only out of pity but out of the anticipation of injuries that could strike at
any moment.
While it might seem like another shocking generality, it’s
true nonetheless. Most guys don’t have a clue as to the proper form of
exercises. This ignorance stunts their gains, causes unnecessary wear and tear
on ligaments, tendons, and joints, and
opens the door to debilitating injuries (especially as weights get heavy on
things like the shoulders, elbows, knees, and lower back).
Some of these guys just don’t know any better, and some are
more interested in looking cool than in making real gains. You’re not going to
fall into this trap. You’re going to do your exercises with perfect form, and
while your weights may be lighter than Mr. Huff and Puff, he’ll be secretly
wondering why you look so much better.
MYTH & MISTAKE #5:
Lifting Like a Wussy
Building a great body is a pain in the butt. It takes
considerable time, effort, discipline, and dedication. I don’t care what anybody
tells you—it doesn’t come easy.
Quite frankly, most guys train like wussies. They don’t want
to push themselves. They don’t want to exert too much effort. And of course,
their bodies don’t change much. They come in each day an exact duplicate of the
last. Eventually, they quit out of despair and frustration.
Well, they are giving in to one of our most primal
instincts. We humans instinctively avoid pain and discomfort and seek pleasure
and ease in life. But, if we let that inclination color our workouts, we’re
doomed.
Working out correctly is a bit counter-intuitive. It’s
intense and uncomfortable. Sometimes you just don’t want to do that final
exercise. Sometimes you dread that next set of squats. Muscle soreness can be
annoying. Sometimes joints and tendons can ache.
But, these things are all just a part of the game, and if
you push through them and resolve that your body IS going to meet the goals you
set for it, then you’re going to make great gains—period.
MYTH & MISTAKE #6:
Eating to Stay Small or Get Fat
As you’ve probably heard, you grow outside of the gym, and
that requires sufficient rest and proper nutrition. Many guys get both
wrong—they overtrain and don’t eat enough calories (or eat way too many), don’t
get enough protein (or way too much), eat bad carbs and fats, and don’t
schedule and proportion their meals correctly.
If you don’t eat enough calories and get enough protein,
carbs, and fats throughout the day, you simply don’t grow. It doesn’t matter
how hard you lift—if you don’t eat enough, you won’t gain any muscle to speak
of. On the other hand, if you eat too many calories, eat too many bad carbs and
fats, and don’t know how to size your meals properly, you can gain muscle, but
it will be hidden underneath an ugly sheath of unnecessary fat.
When you know how to eat properly, however, you can gain
eye-popping amounts of muscle while staying lean, and you can lose layers of
fat while maintaining if not increasing muscle mass.
THE BOTTOM LINE
You’ve just learned the path to muscle-building misery:
Grind away for hours in the gym, do tons of “burn out” sets, do the wrong
exercises with bad form, don’t push yourself too hard, and eat incorrectly.
These mistakes are responsible for untold frustration,
discouragement, confusion, and lack of results. They are the prime reasons why
guys make little or no gains and quit.
So, if that’s how to do it wrong, how do you correctly go
about building muscle? Continue to find out.
3
THE REAL SCIENCE OF MUSCLE GROWTH
The laws of muscle growth are as certain, observable, and
irrefutable as those of physics.
When you throw a ball in the air, it comes down. When you
take the correct actions inside and outside the gym, your muscles grow. It’s
really that simple, and these laws apply regardless of how much of a
“hardgainer” you think you are.
These principles have been known and followed for decades by
people who built some of the greatest physiques we’ve ever seen. Some of these
laws will be in direct contradiction to things you’ve read or heard, but
fortunately, they require no leaps of faith or reflection. They are practical.
Follow them, and you get immediate results. Once these rules have worked for
you, you will know they’re true.
THE FIRST LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow Only
if They’re Forced to
This law may seem obvious and not worth stating, but trust
me, most people just don’t get it. By lifting weights, you are actually causing
tiny tears (known as “microtears”) in the muscle fibers, which the body then
repairs, adapting the muscles to better handle the stimulus that caused the
damage. This is the process by which muscles grow (scientifically termed
hypertrophy).
If a workout causes too few micro-tears in the fibers, then
little muscle growth will occur as a result because the body figures it doesn’t
need to grow the muscle to deal with such a minor stimulus again. If a workout
causes too many micro-tears, then the body will fail to fully repair the
muscles, and muscle growth will be stunted. If a workout causes substantial
micro-tearing but the body isn’t supplied with sufficient nutrition or rest,
muscle growth can’t occur.
For optimal muscle growth, you must lift in such a way that
causes optimal microtearing and then you must feed your body what it needs to
grow and give it the proper amount of rest.
THE SECOND LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow
from Overload , Not Fatigue or “Pump”
While many guys think a burning sensation in their muscles
is indicative of an intense,
“growth-inducing” workout, it’s actually not an indicator of
an optimum workout. The “burn” you feel is simply an infusion of lactic acid in
the muscle, which is produced as a muscle burns its energy stores. Lactic acid
tells the body to start producing anabolic hormones, but too much impairs
muscle growth and causes tissues to break down.
Muscle pump is also not a good indicator of future muscle
growth. The pump you feel when training is a result of blood being “trapped” in
the muscles, and while it’s a good psychological boost and studies have shown
that it can help with protein synthesis (the process in which cells build
proteins), it’s not a primary driver of growth.
What triggers muscle growth, then? Overload. Muscles must be
given a clear reason to grow, and overload is the best reason. That means heavy
weights, and short, intense sets of relatively low reps. This type of training
causes optimal micro-tearing for strength and growth gains, and forces the body
to adapt.
Drop sets, giant sets, and supersets are for the
magazine-reading crowd and druggers. Such training techniques flood the muscles
with lactic acid and are often done with isolation exercises, further limiting
their effectiveness. They simply do NOT stimulate growth like heavy sets of
compound exercises do.
THE THIRD LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow Outside
the Gym
Many training programs have you do too many sets per
workout, and some have you train the same body parts too often. They play into
the common misconception that building muscle is simply a matter of lifting
excessively. People who have fallen into this bad habit need to realize that if
they did less of the right thing, they would get more.
If you do too many sets in a workout, you can cause more
micro-tears than your body can properly repair, and you can spend too much time
working out, which drastically elevates cortisol levels and hinders growth.
If you wait too few days before training a muscle group
again, you’re overloading a muscle that hasn’t fully repaired from the last
training session, and you can actually lose strength and muscle size. If you
allow your muscles enough recuperation time
(and eat correctly), however, you will experience maximum
strength and size gains.
Studies have shown that, depending on the intensity of your
training and your level of fitness, it takes the body 2 – 5 days to fully
repair muscles subjected to weight training. You experience this by feeling the
reduction of muscle soreness, inflammation, and weakness that follows your
training.
Another aspect of rest is sleep, of course. The amount of
sleep that you get plays a crucial role in gaining muscle. While your body
produces growth hormone on a 24-hour cycle, the majority of it is produced during
sleep, and this is a major anabolic substance.
Good general advice is to get enough sleep each night that
you wake up feeling rested and aren’t tired throughout the day. For most
people, this means 6 – 12 hours of sleep each night.
THE FOURTH LAW OF MUSCLE GROWTH:
Muscles Grow Only
if They’re Properly Fed
How important is nutrition? Nutrition is nearly everything.
Simply put, your diet determines about 70 – 80% of how you look (muscular or
scrawny, ripped or flabby). You could do the perfect workouts and give your
muscles the perfect amount of rest, but if you don’t eat correctly, you won’t
grow—period.
Sure, we all know to eat protein, but how much? How many
times per day? Which kinds? What about carbs—which kinds are best? How much?
When should they be eaten to maximize gains? And fats…are they important? How
much do you need, and what are the best ways to get them? Last but not least,
how many calories should you be eating every day?
Bigger Leaner Stronger is going to give you the definitive
answers to all of these questions and more so that you never make a diet
mistake again.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Packing on slabs of rock-solid lean mass is, in essence,
just a matter of following these four laws religiously: lift hard, lift heavy,
get sufficient rest, and feed your body correctly. That’s how you build a
strong, healthy, ripped body. It’s much simpler than the marketing departments
of supplement companies and their magazines want you to think.
The workouts you will be doing as a part of Bigger Leaner Stronger
are built on these four principles, and if you set aside any doubts or other
ideas that you may have and give these methods an honest try, you’ll be amazed
at how quickly your body will change.
4
THE 5 BIGGEST MYTHS & MISTAKES OF GETTING RIPPED
For thousands of years now, a lean, muscular body has been
the holy grail of the male physique. It was a hallmark of the ancient heroes
and gods, and it has remained a revered quality, idolized in pop culture,
achieved by few but coveted by many.
With obesity rates over 33% here in America (and steadily
rising), it would appear that getting shredded and becoming one of the
“physically elite” must require a level of knowledge, discipline, and sacrifice
beyond what most humans are capable of.
Well, this simply isn’t true. The knowledge is easy enough
to understand (in fact, you’re learning everything you need to know in this
book). Sure, it requires discipline and some “sacrifice” in that no, you can’t
eat three pizzas a week and have a six pack, but here’s the kicker: When you’re
training and dieting correctly, you will enjoy the lifestyle. You will look
forward to the gym each day. You won’t mind the weeks of cutting. You won’t
feel compelled to eat junk food or desserts (even though you will be able to
have them).
You will look and feel better than you ever have before—and
this will continue to improve every month—and you will find it infinitely more
pleasurable and valuable than being lazy, fat, and addicted to ice cream and
potato chips. When you can get into this “zone,” you can do whatever you want
with your body—the results are inevitable, it’s just a matter of time.
But, most people never find this sweet spot. Why? Well, the
most practical answer to that question is twofold: 1) They don’t have a strong
enough desire to get there (they don’t have their “inner game” sorted out), and
2) they lack the know-how required to make it happen, which leads to poor
results, which kills discipline and makes sacrifices no longer worthwhile.
In this chapter, I want to address the five most common
myths and mistakes of getting ripped. Like those of building muscle, these
fallacies and errors have snuck into our heads via magazines, advertising,
trainers, friends, etc. Let’s dispel them once and for all so that they can’t block
your path to having the ripped body that you desire.
MYTH & MISTAKE #1:
Counting Calories is Unnecessary
I don’t know how many people I’ve consulted who wanted to
lose weight but didn’t want to have to count calories. This statement is about
as logical as saying that they want to drive across the country but don’t want
to have to pay attention to their gas tank.
Now, I won’t be too hard on them because they didn’t even
know what a calorie was, and they just didn’t want to be bothered with having
to count something. Well, whether you want to call it “counting” calories or
whatever else, in order to lose weight, you have to regulate food intake.
In order to lose fat, you must keep your body burning more
energy than you’re feeding it, and the energy potential of food is measured in
calories. Eat too many calories—give your body more potential energy than it
needs—and it has no incentive to burn fat.
What people are actually objecting to with counting calories
is trying to figure out what to eat while on the run every day or what to buy
when rushing through the grocery store. When they have a 30-minute window for
lunch and run to the nearest restaurant, they don’t want to have to analyze the
menu to figure out calories. They just order something that sounds healthy and
hope for the best. But, little do they know that their quick, “healthy” meal
has hundreds of more calories than they should’ve eaten. Repeat that for
dinner, and a day of weight loss progress is totally lost.
Well, that’s the problem—not “having to counting calories.”
They are making it unnecessarily hard by failing to plan and prepare meals. It
might seem easier to just heat up a big plate of leftovers or grab Chipotle for
lunch and carry on with your day, but that convenience comes with a price:
little or no weight loss.
MYTH & MISTAKE #2:
Do Cardio = Lose Weight
Every day I see overweight people grinding away on the
cardio machines. And, week after week goes by with them looking fatter than
ever.
They are under the false impression that idly going through
the motions on an elliptical machine or stationary bike will somehow flip a
magical fat loss switch in the body. Well, that’s not how it works.
You already know how to lose fat (make your body burn more
energy than it gets from food), and cardio can enhance fat loss in two ways: 1)
by burning calories and 2) by speeding up your metabolic rate.
To clarify point #2, your body burns a certain number of
calories regardless of any physical activity, and this is called your basal
metabolic rate. Your total caloric expenditure for a day would be your BMR plus
the energy expended during any physical activities.
When your metabolism is said to “speed up” or “slow down,”
what this means is that your basal metabolic rate has gone up or down. That is,
your body is burning more calories while at rest (allowing you to eat more
calories without putting on fat) or burning less (making it easier to eat too
much and gain fat).
But here’s the thing with cardio: If you don’t eat
correctly, that nightly run or bike ride won’t necessarily save you.
Let’s say you’re trying to lose weight and are unwittingly
eating six hundred calories more than your body burns during the day. You go
jogging for thirty minutes at night, which burns about three hundred calories.
That leaves you with a daily excess of three hundred calories, and the small
jump in your metabolic rate from the cardio won’t be enough to burn that up
plus burn fat stores.
You could continue like this for years and never get lean.
As a matter of fact, you’ll probably slowly put on weight instead.
MYTH & MISTAKE #3:
Chasing the Fads
The Atkins Diet. The South Beach Diet. The Paleo Diet. The
HCG Diet (this one really makes me cringe). The Hollywood Diet. The Body Type
Diet. It seems like a new one pops up every month or two. I can’t keep up these
days.
While not all “latest and greatest” diets are bad (Paleo is
quite healthy, actually), the sheer abundance of fad diets being touted by
ripped actors is making people pretty confused as to what the “right way” to
lose weight is (and understandably so).
The result is that many people jump from diet to diet,
failing to get the results they desire. And, they buy into some pretty stupid
stuff simply because they don’t understand the physiology of metabolism and fat
loss. The rules are the rules, and no fancy names or snake oil supplements will
help you get around them.
In this book, you’re going to learn how simple getting
ripped really is. Once you understand the basic principles of why the body
stores fat and how to coax it into shedding it, you’ll see how asinine many of
the fad diets taking gyms by storm really are.
MYTH & MISTAKE #4:
Doing Low Weight and High Reps Gets You Toned
This myth goes like this: If you want that lean, toned look,
you want to do a BUNCH of reps with low weight. This is just plain wrong.
To be honest, I can’t think of a reason why anyone would
want to do a routine based on low weight and high reps. While there’s a
never-ending debate as to what rep ranges are best for hypertrophy (muscle
growth), many studies agree that doing more than fifteen reps causes
little–to-no improvements in muscle strength or size due to insufficient
overload.
Being shredded is a matter of having low body fat. Nothing else.
Building muscle mass is a matter of overloading the muscles and letting them
repair. Nothing more.
Light weights don’t overload the muscles no matter how many
reps you do (remember that fatigue doesn’t trigger growth). No overload = no
growth.
Heavy weights, however, do overload the muscles and force
them to adapt. Optimum overload and proper nutrition and rest = fast,
noticeable growth.
So, even if you don’t want to gain too much muscle
mass—let’s say fifteen pounds— the fastest route to that goal is heavy weight.
Once you’re there, you can simply maintain what you have (more on that later).
How heavy should you be going, though? How many exercises,
sets, and reps should you do? You’ll find out soon!
MYTH & MISTAKE #5:
Spot Reduction
How many guys have you seen doing crunches “to get a six
pack”? How many girls try to target their butts and thighs to “burn away the
fat”?
Well, that’s not how it works. You can’t reduce fat in any
particular area of your body by targeting it with exercises. You can reduce fat
by proper dieting, and your body will decide how it comes off (which areas will
become lean first and which will be stubborn). Our bodies are all genetically
programmed differently, and there’s nothing we can do to change that. We all
have our “fat spots” that annoy us to no end, and that’s just genetics for you.
Some guys I know store every last pound in their hips while others are
fortunate to have their fat accumulate more in their chest, shoulders, and arms
more so than their waistline.
Rest assured, however, that you can lose as much fat all
over your body as you want, and you can get as shredded as you want; you’ll
just have to be patient and let your body lean out in the way it’s programmed
to.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Like building muscle, many people approach fat loss
completely wrong and thus fail to achieve their weight goals. But, just like
building muscle, the laws of fat loss are actually very simple and incredibly
effective. Carry on to learn the laws and how to put them to work for you.
5
THE REAL SCIENCE OF HEALTHY FAT LOSS
Before getting into the laws of fat loss, I want to share
some insight into how your body views fat versus muscle. Your body views fat as
an asset and muscle as a liability. Why?
Because evolution has taught the body that having fat means
being able to survive the times when food is scarce. Many thousands of years
ago, when our ancestors were roaming the wilderness, they sometimes journeyed
for days without food, and their bodies lived off fat stores. Starving, they would
finally kill an animal and feast, and their bodies knew to prepare for the next
bout of starvation by storing fat. Having fat was literally a matter of life
and death.
This genetic programming is still in us, ready to be used.
If you starve your body, it will burn fat to stay alive, but it will also slow
down its metabolic rate to conserve energy, becoming fully prepared to store
fat once you start feeding it higher quantities of food again.
Muscle, on the other hand, is viewed as a liability because
it costs energy to maintain. While there is much debate as to the exact numbers
in terms of calories, a pound of muscle on your body burns more energy than
carrying a pound of fat. Thus, your body doesn’t want to carry more muscle than
it has to because it knows that it has to keep it properly fed, and this
requires calories that it may or may not get.
So, what does this mean for fat loss? Well, it means that
you have to show your body that it has no reason to store excess fat and, in a
sense, coax it to the level that you desire. Same goes for building
muscle. If you don’t provide your body
with the perfect building conditions (proper training, proper nutrition, and
proper rest), it will be inclined to simply not grow its muscles.
All right, let’s dive into to the fundamental laws of fat
loss.
THE FIRST LAW OF FAT LOSS:
Eat Less Than You Expend = Lose Weight
Fat loss is just a science of numbers, much like gaining
muscle. No matter what anyone tells you, getting ripped boils down to nothing
more than manipulating a simple mathematical formula: energy consumed versus
energy expended. As you would expect, this has been determined beyond the
shadow of a doubt by many studies, including the definitive study conducted by
the University of Lausanne.
When you give your body more calories (potential energy)
than it burns off, it stores fat (unless your metabolism is very fast, in which
case you may not store fat but won’t lose it either). When you give your body
less calories than it burns throughout the day, it must make up for that
deficit by burning its own energy stores (fat), leading to the ultimate goal,
fat loss. It doesn’t even matter what you eat—if your calories are right,
you’ll lose weight. Don’t believe me?
Professor Mark Haub, from Kansas State University, conducted
a weight loss study on himself in 2010. He started the study at 211 pounds and
33.4% body fat (overweight). He calculated that he would need to eat about
1,800 calories per day to lose weight without starving himself. He followed
this protocol for two months and lost 27 pounds, but here’s the kicker: while
he did have one protein shake and a couple servings of vegetables each day,
two-thirds of his daily caories came from Twinkies, Little Debbies, Doritos,
sugary cereals, and Oreos—a “convenience store diet,” as he called it. And he
not only lost the weight, but his “bad” cholesterol, or LDL, dropped 20 percent
and his “good” cholesterol, or HDL, increased 20 percent.
Now, Haub doesn’t recommend this diet, of course, but he was
doing it to prove a point. When it comes to fat loss, calories are king.
Healthy fat loss isn’t as simple as drastically cutting
calories, however. If you eat too little, your body will go into “starvation
mode” and sure, it will lose fat, but you will also lose muscle. Plus, worst of
all, your metabolic rate will slow down, and once you start eating more, you’ll
quickly gain the fat back (and sometimes even more than you lost). This is what
leads to yo-yo dieting.
So yes, you will need to watch your calories. Yes, you will
get used to feeling a little hungry (at least for the first week or two of
cutting). Yes, you will have to stay disciplined and skip the daily desserts.
But, if you do it right, you can get absolutely shredded without losing
muscle…or even while gaining muscle (yes, this can be done— more on that
later).
THE SECOND LAW OF FAT LOSS:
Eat Small, Frequent Meals
Most people have heard this advice before, but they don’t
understand why it helps.
The most common reason given for increasing meal frequency
is that it increases metabolism. It makes logical sense—by putting food in our
bodies every few hours, it has to constantly work to break it down, which
should speed up our metabolism, right?
Well, the jury is still out on this one. Studies contradict
each other left and right. Some have found that several smaller meals per day
increased metabolic rates in subjects, while others found that it didn’t.
What has been conclusively proven, however, is that people
who consume smaller, more frequent meals each day have more success losing
weight than those who eat larger, fewer meals.
Why?
Because when people ate only 2 – 3 meals per day, they found
it very hard to control their calories due to hunger, which led to overeating.
By eating 4 – 6 meals per day, however, people found it much easier to stick to
their diet plans because they never felt famished.
So, while some people have figured out how to make 2 – 3
large meals per day work in terms of fat loss and muscle growth, I’ve found
that method of dieting significantly harder to stick to than 4 – 6 smaller
meals per day.
THE THIRD LAW OF FAT LOSS:
Use Cardio to Help Burn Fat
As you know, doing cardio doesn’t equal burning fat. It can
accelerate fat loss by burning calories and by speeding up your metabolic rate,
but whether you actually lose fat or not will be determined by your daily
caloric intake and expenditure.
Now, with that being said, most guys find cardio necessary
in order to get into the “super lean” category (10% body fat and under) because
you can only cut your calories so much before you start to lose strength and
muscle mass. Some, however, don’t need to bother—they simply regulate their
calories and get as lean as they want. This is really just a matter of genetics
and individual physiology.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Believe it or not, easy fat loss depends on these three laws
and no others. The U.S. weight loss market generates over $60 billion per year,
and, drugs and invasive surgeries aside, any and all workable weight loss
methods rely on the three simple rules you just read to achieve results.
Sure, you can get fancy and count “points” instead of
calories, can come up with all kinds of creative recipes, can have your
miniature desserts, and so on. Regardless, the fundamentals of fat loss don’t
need a fancy name or marketing campaign. They really are this simple.
FINALLY! THE SIMPLE SCIENCE OF BUILDING A BIG, STRONG, AND
HEALTHY BODY THAT YOU LOVE!
If you liked this book, then you’ll love Bigger Leaner
Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the Ultimate Male Body, because that’s
where this information came from!
Bigger Leaner Stronger reveals things like...
• How to
get a lean, cut physique that you love (and that girls drool over) by spending
no more than 5 percent of your time each day.
• How to
develop a lightning-fast metabolism that burns up fat quickly and leaves you
feeling full of energy all day long.
• The
carefully-selected exercises that deliver MAXIMUM results for your efforts,
helping you build a big, full chest, a wide, tapered back, and bulging biceps.
• A no-BS
guide to supplements that will save you hundreds if not THOUSANDS of dollars
each year that you would’ve wasted on products that are nothing more than bunk
science and marketing hype.
• How to
get shredded while still indulging in the "cheat" foods that you love
every week like pasta, pizza, and ice cream.
• And a
whole lot more!
In this book you’re going to learn something most guys will
never know: The exact formula of exercise and eating that makes putting on 10
to 15 pounds of quality lean mass a breeze…and it only takes 8-12 weeks.
Click here to view this book
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I have a small favor to ask. Would you mind taking a minute
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Also, if you have any friends or family that might enjoy
this book, spread the love and lend it to them!
Now, I don’t just want to sell you books—I want to see you
use what you’ve learned to build the body of your dreams.
As you work toward your goals, however, you’ll probably have
questions or run into some difficulties. I’d like to be able to help you with
these, so let’s connect up! I don’t charge for the help, of course, and I
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Here’s how we can connect:
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is mike@buildhealthymuscle.com.
Thanks again, I hope to hear from you, and I wish you the
best!
Mike
P.S. Turn to the next page to check out other books of mine
that you might like!
BONUS REPORT
12 HEALTH AND FITNESS MISTAKES YOU DON’T KNOW YOU’RE MAKING
Do you believe that your genetics are preventing you from
making great gains in the gym?
Do you do certain exercises because they're supposed to
"shape" your muscles?
Do you stretch before lifting weights to prevent injury or
increase strength?
When doing cardio, do you shoot for a "target"
heart rate zone to burn the most fat possible?
If you answered "yes" to any of those questions,
you're in good company as most people do the same.
But here's the kicker: There's NO science behind any of
it.
Quite to the contrary, however, science actually disproves
these things.
If you want to learn the truth about these myths and 8
others that ruin people's efforts to get fit, click the link below to download
a free bonus report that I put together for you called 12 Health & Fitness
Mistakes You Don't Know You're Making.
Visit http://bit.ly/12-mistakes-bonus to get this report
now!
OTHER BOOKS BY MICHAEL MATTHEWS
Bigger Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the
Ultimate Male Body
If you want to be muscular, lean, and strong as quickly as
possible, without steroids, good genetics, or wasting ridiculous amounts of
time in the gym, and money on supplements...then you want to read this book.
Click here to view this book
Muscle Myths: 50 Health & Fitness Mistakes You Don’t
Know You’re Making
If you’ve ever felt lost in the sea of contradictory
training and diet advice out there and you just want to know once and for all
what works and what doesn’t— what’s scientifically true and what’s false—when
it comes to building muscle and getting ripped, then you need to read this
book.
Click here to view
this book
Cardio Sucks! The Simple Science of Burning Fat Fast and
Getting in Shape
If you're short on time and sick of the same old boring
cardio routine and want to kick your fat loss into high gear by working out
less and...heaven forbid...actually have some fun...then you want to read this
new book. Click here to view this
book
The Shredded Chef: 115 Recipes for Building Muscle, Getting
Lean, and Staying Healthy
If you want to know how to forever escape the dreadful
experience of “dieting” and learn how to cook nutritious, delicious meals that
make building muscle and burning fat easy and enjoyable, then you need to read
this book.
Click here to view
this book
Thinner Leaner Stronger: The Simple Science of Building the
Ultimate Female Body
If you want to be toned, lean, and strong as quickly as
possible without crash dieting,
“good genetics,” or wasting ridiculous amounts of time in
the gym and money on supplements...regardless of your age... then you want to
read this book.
Click here to view this book
