John Meadows Interview Part 1
Hey Guys,
Today I want to share with you the first part of an interview I did with John Meadows.
John is a brilliant Bodybuilding and Nutrition coach working with all types of athletes from all over the world and he is a guy that I really look up to in the industry (even through our fields are slightly different). He has competed many times himself, each time stepping on stage with amazing condition that has become his trade mark for himself and his clients.
I had chance to chat with him on a whole range of topics from his own career to health, workout nutrition and loads of other topics.
You can find more about John on his website HERE.
Here is what he had to say.
Today I want to share with you the first part of an interview I did with John Meadows.
John is a brilliant Bodybuilding and Nutrition coach working with all types of athletes from all over the world and he is a guy that I really look up to in the industry (even through our fields are slightly different). He has competed many times himself, each time stepping on stage with amazing condition that has become his trade mark for himself and his clients.
I had chance to chat with him on a whole range of topics from his own career to health, workout nutrition and loads of other topics.
You can find more about John on his website HERE.
Here is what he had to say.
Mike: Hi John, can just tell people a
bit about yourself really if they are not familiar on your work on T-Nation.com
and with the website itself mountaindog.com. Tell us a bit about yourself and
your unique approach to nutrition where a lot of people differ with being more
health-based.
John: I’ve been around a long time and
I had a corporate job for a long time. I left that job a couple of years ago.
People have really just started to hear about me in the last four to five years
outside of hardcore bodybuilding but the truth is, I’ve been around since the
90’s from a high level competitive perspective. I was just one of those guys
that would compete once a year and then I would disappear just because of my
work responsibilities. I didn’t really have time for much else. I started in
this industry when I was back early in my teenage years. I actually started
competing when I was 13 years old, which is pretty silly when I think back
about it. I see these kids now that are 13 years old and I think wow, I was in
a body-building show when I was that age. That just seems crazy.
Mike: Yeah, you were a kid yourself.
John: I used to be just a super sponge
with this stuff. I remember when I was 13 years old, I remember watching the
1985 Mr. Olympia and I could tell you the placings. It was Haney, Beckles,
Gaspari, Makkawy, Mike Christian, Barry de May, Tom Platz, Sergio Oliva, Bob
Parris and Frank Richard. That was the top ten. I remember I watched them on my
VHS player. I recorded it. Obviously, I watched it over and over and over and I
was really inspired. I wanted to look like those guys. I didn’t really know
what it took. I would just save up money and if I didn’t have the money, I
would go to the store and sit on the floor in the aisle and read the magazines.
I really enjoyed it.
I kept training. I was
in a lot of sports in high school. I ran track. I played football. I was in
wrestling up to a certain point. I gave that up because I didn’t like rolling
around on the mat with another sweaty guy. It just lost its appeal to me after
a while. I continued into my teenage years. I went to college. I continued to
compete. When I was 19 years old, I won my first really good title. I’ll never
forget that. I was in college and I didn’t have any money. The guy that was
helping me worked for John Parillo. I’m not sure if you are familiar with John
Parillo. He was a really, really big name. He is still around. He was a really
big name back then in the industry. He is the guy that really brought on the
whole fascia stretching stuff. Whether you agree with it or not, he’s the guy
that brought that up.
John’s guy had a
connection with a food market, so he would bring me boxes of tuna and essentially
what I ate for my first contest was tuna, bags of lettuce and an occasional
sweet potato.
Mike: Well balanced…
John: (Laughs) Yeah, well balanced.
I’m lucky I didn’t die! It was brutal. It was the worst contest diet. It was
absolutely brutal. I remember in between every single class at college I went
to sleep. I would just go back to my room and sleep. I was so tired. I ended up
winning the show and I was ridiculously lean but not having money made those
choices pretty simple for me. I didn’t have the luxury of having filets or all
the other things I eat now. I had to keep it really, really simple. Then, of
course, when the show was over, I made the classic mistake that everybody else
makes. I remember saving some money and going down fast food row here and going
from burger joint to burger joint to pizza joint. I don’t even know if I saved
money for it. I probably used my credit card. I probably maxed out my credit
card in one night.
I remember gaining 30-35
pounds in two days, which is just a ridiculously stupid thing. A lot of the
things that I do now are a result of the mistakes that I’ve made along the way.
I look at all of the mistakes I’ve made and I try to learn from them and I try
to incorporate that into my plans so that other people don’t make those same,
dumb mistakes. I continued to complete through my 20’s and here I am. I am 41
now. The last three contests I’ve done, I’ve gotten second place on all three
of them. I keep just barely just missing that pro card. That’s okay, it just
pushes you to get better.
Here I am now. Like I
said three or four years ago I really started getting my views out there. I
started thinking a lot more about my philosophies and trying to tie it
together. In terms of nutrition, I was in a situation where I got really sick
in 2005 and I almost died from a vascular disease I had in my large intestine
and that forced me to take a really deep look at the digestive system. I had
some time in the hospital and then when I got out of the hospital, it was six
months actually before I ended up going back to work because of various issues
I kept having. I spent a lot of time just going back to the drawing board and
trying to re-learn nutrition. Were my methods good, bad or whatever? I found a
lot of holes in my way of thinking. I tried to educate myself.
I was one of those guys
that wouldn’t eat fat. I thought cholesterol and an egg yolk was bad for you. I
was exactly one of those guys. I’m embarrassed to say it but I was. I also probably
had a superman complex where I felt I could go out and pig out on fast food,
eat a ton, and really the way to get big was to just shove as many calories in
you as you could at no regard for digestion. I do agree that sometimes you have
to go on calorie overload and your metabolism wants that. That was just my
philosophy in general. I just wanted to shove hamburgers and French fries down
and have caloric excess and then grow. That might have something to do to with
digestive stress (laughs).
In terms of training,
training is what I really, really enjoy. It’s the same story. I’ve made a lot
of mistakes. I’ve trained in a lot of different techniques. I’ve trained under
some extremely smart people. I’ve had some great coaches. The things that I
think work really well now, a lot of them are not typical. You take training
sequence, sequence of your exercises. I never hear anybody talk about that. In
my opinion, that should be one of the biggest cornerstones or foundations of
your training routine. There are certain exercises that you could do at certain
points of time that are advantageous and the big thing is I look at this now,
now that I’m in my 40’s from a longevity perspective. How am I going to be able
to train hard for a long period of time without injuring myself? It’s a big
deal. I can tell you that if I go into the gym and I do what a lot of these
people say, which is to bench press first, squat first, then lift first, I can
tell you that I start pulling things and I start suffering injuries.
It’s not a matter of
training scared. It’s a matter of training intelligently. If you are a power
lifter, you are concerned about getting the weight from point A to point B, if
you are a bodybuilder, you are concerned about placing tension on a muscle
period. I find that for example, if you do a bench press second or third,
you’re not going to be as strong because you are going to be a little fatigued,
but your muscles are going to get the tension. Your tendon and ligaments aren’t
going to take the beating. I have a lot of people, they hear about my routines
and how hard they are and how brutal they are but then they tell me, “Oh, my
God, my joints feel better than they have ever felt. My joints feel awesome.”
That’s music to my ears
because that’s one of my goals is to keep people healthy. There are a lot of
things about training too I just really enjoy, I really like talking about.
That’s just one example. I know that’s a very long-winded answer to your question.
Mike: No, no it leads us really next to
some more stuff. One of the reasons I really wanted to talk to you, obviously,
the majority of the people who read this site are combat athletes mostly. They
are just grapplers, wrestlers etc. One of the things that is very neglected I
think in the sport overall is health. You mentioned before, I know you are very
big on getting your blood checked regularly, your cholesterol, triglycerides
and everything like that. Many people ignore it completely in combat sports as
a whole. I was hoping to get a bit of your uptake on what is the minimum that
people should be looking at, say every six months, every 12 months to be
getting checked so they are keeping within that healthy bracket? They love the
sport, exactly the same as body builders and want to be doing it for as long as
possible and this is the thing that no one is getting checked. It’s one of the
things I think is really going to come around and bite them in the ass later on.
I was hoping to get a bit of your view on the minimum people should be keeping
an eye on this as they are going through the training.
John: Absolutely, I typically like to
have people get their labs done every six months. Some of the things we are
looking for, when I hear the term cholesterol, let me just give you my
perspective on cholesterol. I will put a disclaimer out here and say that I’m
not a doctor, I’m not an expert but I am entitled to my opinion so here is my
opinion. My opinion is that the total cholesterol is a pretty meaningless
number. I followed a lot of Uffe Ravnskov’s work. He wrote The Cholesterol Myths and I have followed some other people too,
Malcolm Kendrick and some other pretty smart people but based on what I’ve read
with people with an IQ that is 10,000 times higher than mine, that total
cholesterol number doesn’t seem to mean a whole lot.
People get worried about
anything that goes over 200. There is actually a lot of data out there that
shows “lower total cholesterol” people have a higher mortality rate than people
with higher cholesterol, particularly with older women. There is a direct
correlation as their cholesterol numbers lower, they are at more risk. Anyway,
I don’t really put too much into that. Then you get into HDL and LDL,
lipoproteins. That’s another really, really gray area right now. The
traditional thinking has always been that a high HDL is good and I think there
probably is something to that, if you look at what it is measuring. LDL is the
one that is really, really tricky because we have heard a lot of different
things. We have heard that really you have to look at the particle size, these
small particles are more dangerous and can get lodged in your arteries and the
larger, more buoyant, fluffy particles are like beach balls. They just bounce
around. They don’t really do any damage.
There is a school of
thought that says particle size is very important and you can get that checked
in your labs. Not every lab place will do that but it’s very easy to get done
here. I have all my people get it done. Then you’ve got another part of this,
another school of thought that is the LDL oxidized or not? You can check
somebody’s antioxidant status and you want somebody’s antioxidant status to be
good because they are probably going to oxidize less cholesterol. There are
actually some pretty cool studies out there with vitamin E. A couple of years
ago, I heard about Red Palm Oil. It’s one of these tropical oils, like Coconut
Oil that people were really scared of for a while, “Oh my God, all the
saturated fat” but Red Palm Oil has a really unique blend of vitamin E. It has
all the tocotrienol, tocopherol and it has all those things. If you go out to
Pub Med and you type in Red Palm Oil and LDL oxidation, you will see some real
cool studies that show a reduction in oxidation.
There is a lot of gray
area. I’m not sure that I would worry too much about LDL still at this point.
The thing that I have always been taught was that the ratios I look at are a
little different than most people. What I have always been taught is that your
HDL needs to be high and your triglycerides need to be low. Those are the two
factors that you really want to look at. Triglycerides, to me, seem like a
really big deal. The nice thing about triglycerides is you can control it very
easily with your diet, specifically with your carbohydrate intake. You lower
your carbs a little bit, clean them up and you will see your triglycerides will
lower.
Of course, you’ve always
got genetic issues where no matter what people do they are going to be at risk.
I’m not addressing that but generally speaking what I like to see is lower
triglycerides and higher HDL. If you get those two things in order, I’m not
going to promise you that you will live to be 100 but seems like the odds stack
up in your favor in terms of longevity. I also tell people to not freak out and
worry about this stuff constantly because you know what the worst thing in life
is in terms of killing you? Stress. It really is.
We’re built to handle
bouts of stress. We’ve got this fight or flight thing that we have that handles
that pretty well, but what we are not meant to handle is these constant
low-grade levels of stress. Does my wife love me anymore? Am I going to be able
to make my house payment this weekend? Should I go bail my kid out of
jail?
To me, that’s what does
more damage to people than anything. The number one thing I tell people is if
you want to improve your health, first of all let’s start figuring out ways to
reduce your stress. As silly as that sounds, it makes a big difference to me.
Mike: Talking about stress and things
like that, which management is a big thing, again, it’s a neglected thing for
everybody I think when reducing stress and just relaxing really and not taking
ourselves too seriously. One of the things I read about or it was on one of
your podcasts back when you were lowering your own cholesterol and taking a closer
look at your own blood is about how much you improved your own blood work. One
of the things you talked about was how previously you had a very low fat diet
but then now you have a good quality fat at the right time in your client’s
diet and your own. One of the things I would like to talk about that obviously
is how it helps reduce inflammation in the body that you brought up previously.
You mentioned briefly exercise selection and sequence, which helped me. I
recently had shoulder surgery, so any kind of overhead pressing but when I
sequenced it, it helps me out tremendously, so thank you.
Everyone in the UK is still scared
of high fats. We are not quite scared of carbs yet. We are still scared of high
fat. I’m sure that’s coming over not being scared of carbs next year maybe. At
the moment, we are still scared of fat. Can you give us a brief overview of why
that’s a bad thing? Why shouldn’t people be scared of fat, especially people
who put high loads on their joints and tendons and a lot of injury and strain,
how that’s going to help them out?
John: The first thing I would say is
that any extreme diet is silly. Any diet that doesn’t let you eat any carbs or
any fat is silly. Eventually it will lead to long-term issues for most people.
In terms of fat, people have this idea that I am eating tons and tons of fat. I
wouldn’t say this is necessarily true. I’m just not scared of it. I don’t avoid
it. I eat an egg. I don’t eat an egg white, you know? If you look at an egg
yolk and all the nutrition that is in an egg yolk, why would you ever throw
that away? I think there is a tie in here with fat and cholesterol because a
lot of foods that are high in cholesterol like an egg yolk also have more fat.
People lump those together.
Here is what I would
say. We had this movement toward polyunsaturated fats and to get rid of all
other fats. It did not help long term health at all. People had just as much
cancer. They had just as many issues as they did before. It helped none. I
think I saw recently where even margarine they were going to stop making it
here or something.
Years back it was like, “Don’t
eat butter, eat margarine”, which is silly that you would think that butter is
bad. Anyway, in terms of the facts, if you look at a cell membrane, a cell
membrane needs a balance of saturated fat and polyunsaturated fat. You have
signals going in and out of your cell that if there is too much saturated fat
and the cell is too rigid. The signals have a harder time making it through.
Think of it this way, if you are eating too much saturated fat; this is a very
simplistic explanation but I think it’s kind of funny. If you had too much, you
would be stuck. You would be like rigamortis. You just would be stuck, right?
Mike: Yeah.
John: On the other end of that, if you
don’t eat any saturated fat and it’s all polyunsaturated, your cell membranes
are probably too fluid and then you would be like the blob. Remember the blob?
Mike: (laughs) Yeah.
John: Mushy everywhere. You need a
blend, first of all, just at the cellular level for signals to go in and out
appropriately. Then you look at your joints. Your joints have a lot of
saturated fat in them. People say, “Oh well, your body can make saturated fat
out of carbohydrates.” That’s true but it’s never a good idea to just power
down carbohydrates, in the hopes that your body is going to make the right
amount of saturated fat. It’s kind of like people say, “Well, I’m not going to
eat any cholesterol. If my body needs it, it will make cholesterol. My liver
will produce a little more cholesterol.” That’s true up to a point, but there’s
nothing wrong with giving your body the raw material it needs instead of
pushing it into some kind of self-protective mechanism where it has to
compensate for it.
In terms of fat,
saturated fats, there are a lot of good folks out there that have written a lot
of good things about saturated fat. I really like, there is a lady named Mary
Enig. She was writing for the Weston A. Price Foundation. She wrote a book
called Know Your Fats. I thought for
your listeners out there, they might want to grab that book. That was my
introduction to fats and I really liked it. I really liked it. To me, it seemed
non-biased. It was a very, very good reading. She is a sweet little old lady
but in terms of who I like, she is probably the person I like to read the most
when it comes to facts.
Can you overdo saturated
fats? Yeah, of course you can. You can probably worsen your insulin sensitivity
if you go overboard with it but to be scared of fat when it has so many basic
functions. I didn’t even talk about the hormonal piece of this. Cholesterol is
the backbone of many different hormones. We have this tie with cholesterol and
fat usually in food. I see a lot of people on these low fat diets that have
hormonal issues, particularly women. It’s very common. You are not giving your
body what it needs. I would also say I think you mentioned inflammation. When
all these polyunsaturated fats started hitting their peak in popularity, corn
oil, soy bean oil and all this stuff, people’s inflammation levels started
rising just because of the high Omega Six concentration in all those oils.
Your body needs a
balance of Omega Three and Omega Six and if it gets out of balance, if you take
the raw material for Omega Six and Omega Three, for instance Omega Three, flax
seed oil for instance and alpha Linolenic acid, it needs to go through a
conversion process. Omega Six is the same way. It needs to go through a
conversion process before it reaches its end stage. There is an enzyme that
helps with that process. Omega Three and Omega Six share the same enzyme to
help this process. It’s early on in the process. If you monopolize it and you
have a ton of Omega Six in your body, which has been pretty standard in our
diets, you compromise the body’s ability to keep this in balance.
If you do blood work on
these people, you will see a high C-reactive protein level that detects
inflammation. That’s another good one; by the way, to have looked at every six
months is your C-reactive protein levels. The right kind of fats can keep that
in balance. You get fish oil. I tell people just to get fish oil so they are
getting the end product. As you get older, your body isn’t quite as good at
converting the raw material to the end product. In terms of saturated fat, man
saturated fat; I like Coconut Oil and people are like, “Oh, that’s all
saturated fat.” I think it’s about 92% saturated fat but it has a ton of medium
chain triglycerides in it. It has a fat in it called lauric acid, which is
extremely powerful. It is very good for your immune system. It is actually in
mother’s breast milk. It is one of the reasons why when babies drink their
mother’s breast milk, it’s why their immune systems are strengthened.
That’s one of the things
that helps anyway. Years ago and I haven’t looked at this lately but years ago,
they were looking at it anyway to treat HIV. It’s very antiviral, very
antimicrobial, very good fat and people say, “You don’t want that, its empty
calories.” Its empty calories, do you understand the health benefit of this?
When somebody says that I just write them off as being even more silly than I
am. Monounsaturated fats, we talked about HDL triglyceride ratio. There seems
to be a relationship with monounsaturated fats and your HDL, avocado and things
like that. I think you need all those things. In terms of percentage of fat in
your diet, it probably varies but anywhere from 20-40% I think on training days
when for example, your athletes are training really hard and your guy is
training really hard, they need more carbohydrates for energy, in my opinion.
They want carbohydrates that are going to turn into fuel and just drive you.
You can only have so
many calories. In those days, I might have a little lower fat, maybe 25% of
their calories will come from fat because a high percentage are coming from
carbs to drive activity, but on days they are not training, they don’t need as
many carbs, that’s when I would drive their fat up. You are determining what
they eat on their activity levels and not just some random percentage or random
numbers. It’s based on what they are actually doing. You are supporting their
body and you are keeping it healthy at the same time. Can you imagine your guys
trying to have good workouts on no carbs?
Mike: You wouldn’t believe how many
people try!
John: How long do you think they can
make it into a high-intensity workout?
Mike: Not long but it’s crazy how many
people are still trying it to keep the weight down, especially the fat count
and things like that. They are trying to cut weight and coming to me with low
carb diet and saying ‘I’m training and it feels terrible, I’m feeling run down,
I can’t sleep’. Look how many carbs you are taking it. It’s ridiculous. It
still happens unfortunately.
John: Yeah and what’s crazy is to be
the best at what you do, be the best football player, to be the best track and
field athlete, MMA fighter, you have to be able to train hard. If you are not
training hard, you are not going to fight or play to your potential. You can’t
take your body; think about those old Rocky movies. You can’t take your body to
a whole other level when you don’t feel good, when you feel like crap. You
know? You just can’t push yourself to that level. I believe in never
compromising your training. I believe your training should always be as best
possible and you need to support it with nutrition. If you’re trying to lose
weight, look at other times of the day. If you are training in the afternoon,
yeah, maybe go lower carb earlier in the day. If you are training in the
morning, maybe go a little bit lower carb in the evenings.
Don’t sacrifice the
quality of your training. I’ve never seen an athlete reach their full potential
when they just can’t train worth a crap, unless they are just a completely
genetic freak, which I don’t think we should ever use as an example to
determine what we are doing.
That's it from John for the first part of the interview!
The second half will be posted next week!
Don't forget you can read more about John on his SITE.
Stay healthy,