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Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth

Sal Di Stefano, Adam Schafer, Justin Andrews, Doug Egge

The Importance of Strategic Planning

From 2872: Why Going Off Your Diet Can Actually Help You Lose More FatJun 4, 2026

Excerpt from Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth

2872: Why Going Off Your Diet Can Actually Help You Lose More FatJun 4, 2026 — starts at 0:00

Your package says deliver. but delivered where exactly The hallway, the lobby, your neighbor's apartment? Instead of playing detective with your deliveries, get a mailbox at the UPS store. We'll sign for your packages. Text you when they arrive. And keep your deliveries low key. Under locking key, get three months free mailbox services with a new annual agreement at the UPS store For full details and to get your coupons Visit the UPSore d. com slash offer If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go. Mind pump, Mind pump with your hosts. Sal D Stefanao, Adam Schafer, and Justin Andrews. You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entterertainment podcast. This is Mind Pump T todayod's episode. we talk about diet breaks the science, how they work and why everybody should do these if they're on a fat loss plan. Also, we have coaches here that can organize this for you They can put it all together, set you up with your macros, your calories, which includes reverse dieting, which includes diet breaks It's fifty percent off Right now, go to minepumpnutrition. com, use the code POD fifty, pod fifty for the discount. This episode is brought to you by a sponsor seed. This is literally the world's best probotics. So the benefits of probbotics as shown by data Of course, improved gut health, reduced inflammation better skin health Energy less anxiety. There's even studies now that show enhanced fat loss because you have a healthier microbiome If you want to take a probbiotic because of all those Pven benefits, go with seed. Go to seed d. com forward slash mine pump, use the code two five mine pump get twenty five percent off. Also right now, every maps workout program, every maps bundle, everything, forty percent off, it's the summer sale. forty percent off. Go to maps Fitness productroducts d. com usese the code summer forty for the forty percent off discount. All right, real quick. If you love us like we love you, why not show up by rocking one of our shirts, hats, mugs or training gear over at mindpumpstore d. com I' talking right now, hit pause, head on over to mypumpstore. com. That's it. enjoy the rest of the show Diet breaks, this is a process by which you increase your calories or your food intake to take a short break And then get back to normal diet Are they beneficial? Do they help with fat loss? Do they help preserve muscle Should you have diet breaks or should you just stay consistent on your diet? We're going to break down the science And the reasons why we think it's probably a good idea. Let's get to it. This's a really good topic. We I mean, we I think we get this pretty frequent. We just had this recently on one of our questions and one of our quws about you know, should is is three months on a diet too long. Yeah And obviously, context matters and it's a bit nuanced and I think we will talk about all the nuance. But generally speaking, I think we all agree that we wouldn't keep most people on a straight three month diet. Yeah. So just to kind of break it down a little bit. So a diet break, just to explain it is not when you go off your diet in the sense that I'm trying to eat in a particular way to lose weight. so that's what we're referring to with a diet. and I just go off and then do whatever and then come back to it. That's not what a diet break is. A diet break is a planned scheduled either meal or day or week or weeks where you intentionally get off the Diet that you were on, increase your energy intake. so increase your calories and fats, carbs proteins, whatever in order to have a better result Like the idea is to have a better result through this process. And this is a popular strategy with coaches, trainers, Especially stage presentation athletes like bodybuilders and physique competitors and bikini competitors, they use this quite often Sometimes referred to as cheap meals. It's been a bit I'm glad you went that way because it's been a bit bastardized into Cheat weeks, cheat days, cheap meals one indulgence and and I don't I think that what we're trying to communicate and articulate here looks different than that. And that's why I like the term diet break over cheap meal or cheap day because I think that insinuates that you're going off the rails, we could have whatever you want. And when we would do you know, strategic diet breaks with clients, it wasn't that. It wasn't I told my client like, oh, here's a diet break. go eat whatever the hell you wanted. It was very strategic it was very methodical. It was like, okay, for these days, I want you to increase these calories or add this to your diet. Yeah no. And there's a few benefits to doing this. And by the way, these are backed by studies. There's actual studies on Diet breaks versus continual dieting And does it actually make a difference? okay? Does it help with more fat loss? Does it help with any of the parameters that we try to measure with these studies? So we'll start one first with what's called metabolic adaptation. Metabolic adaptation is just your for lack of a better term, it's very complex It's the term that describes how your metabolism adapts to the new energy intake. Okay. So if my body is burning three thousand calories a day through both exercise activity and just my resting metabolic rate, the amount of calories that I need and energy I need just to maintain myself. If it's three thousand hours a day. And I intake two thousand calorers a day. so I'm not eating as many calories as my body is burning Obviously the goal is to lose body fat, so my body would find make up the difference by burning body fat. But what ends up happening over time and not a long period of time, by the way, is that my body learns how to survive off of two thousand calories This is called metabolic adaptation. This is a good thing, by the way. This is we need this. othertherwise we wouldn't be here. Humans wouldn't have survived our our metabolic rates didn't adapt. Now it's quite complex how this happens, but one of the ways it does this is by pairing muscle down There's also just improving energy efficiency U maybe encouraging less movement, you know, they see this in studies as well And so metabolic adaptation sucks You know, you've experienced this. If you've ever been on a diet to lose a certain amount of weight Typically over ten pounds. you'll see this. So you want to lose twenty pounds, thirty pounds or more You probably experienced this where you went on a diet You increasase your activity, you saw some initial weight loss, and then suddenly what you're doing stops working. Now it's like, okay, I want to lose thirty pounds. I've lost fifteen. I've got fifteen more to go I haven't changed my diet. I'm eating the same amount I that I ate to lose the first fifteen pounds And now it stopped working. What happened Your metabolism adapted Here's what the studies show on diet breaks for metabolic adaptation. It seems to reduce this effect So if I'm on a continual caloric deficit I have more of a metabolic adaptation. where it's going downwards, then if I interrupted that period of time. let's say it was two months or three months with the occasional week. of increased calories. And we see this in the data. that the metabolic rate stays higher because your body gets more energy intake at planned periods of time. And this is a good thing This was For me, not the number one reason why I did diet breaks. We'll get to my number one reason, but this was probably my number two reason This was one of the top reasons why I did this with clients is because It helped prevent those plateaus. Now aren't there studies to support too that One of the most beneficial ways too is to actually undulate them throughout even the week, right? whereere it's like One day you might have a maintenance or surplus day. Another day you have a stronger deficit. like so we've seen studies on that also, right? But your weekly average is always on a deficit. There's not a ton of studies on that. More studies are done on you know, people being on sixteen weeks And they'll every few weeks they'll have like a week at maintenance. So let's say somebody's eating fifteen hundred calories, which has them lose weight. And they do that for four, five, six weeks. Th thenen they'll do a week of bringing up to what would be called maintenance. Let's, two thousand cers. That's typically what the studies look like And in those studies Now I agree with you, Adam, because that's how I did it with my clients. I did it where I would have more diet breaks or undulating calories throughout the week. But in the studies where they're doing it the way I just described you have less metabolic adaptation. In other words put it plainly, your metabism doesn't slow down as much. Yeah. That's a big thing because metabolic adaptation is a a really difficult thing to contend with when you're trying to lose especially a substantial amount of weight because it really sucks. It sucks to be in a position to eat so low calories and move a lot and still have twenty pounds to go And then you're left with this like where do I go? Do I double down from here? Do I intensify the amount of calories that burn? Yeah, it's pretty tough place to go. Well, anybody who's watched a full season of Biggest loser has seen multiple examples of this Many times all the studies afterwards that manyany times you would see some of these competitors show up to their wayigh in and have lost no weight. Sometimes even a little bit of fluctuation up, you know Yet they're in a very strict Calorie deficit and exercise routines Tons of activities. And so, you know, when we think about like well, wait a second, I thought we just need to be in this calorie deficit to lose weight, there's more to it than just that. And I think this is an example of that is like where their body is adapting to all the stress that's that they're putting them through. It's like you're training me so hard. You're only giving me fif five hundred calories. Maybe the first week or two I saw great results from that But sooner the body starts to stall out and go like, okay, this is too much. I'm going to hold on to everything I can, which is that metabolic adaptation happening. And if again, if you've watched the show, You've seen this happen to people and anybody's just trained enough clients long enough as also seen this firsthand when you're training a client. You will always lose weight in a deficit But here's the problem. Y body closes that deficit by slowing its metabolism down Okay. So that's what metabolic adaptation is. and the studies support our experiences coaches whichich is when you introduce diet breaks, you get less of that metabolic adaptation. Another reason why diet breaks are beneficial is because they contribute to better workout recovery and energy Here's what sucks When you're in a calie deficit, your workouts Yeah. You're not as strong You don't have as much energy. And you have less nutrients, okay, both macro and micro, but mostly macro nonutrients, carbohydrates, fats and protes. to recover from your workouts So a workout that might be appropriate. suddenly becomes one that overtrains you because your calories are so low And it sucks. It doesn't feel good. So this was for me, another reason why I like diet breaks is I would see my clients in a deficit Four five weeks in their energy is't great when we're working out. I'm like, All right, here's we're going do for the next two weeks I'm going to bump your calorars and like clockwork within days Their strength goes up. they feel better. Worouts are fun again And everything's moving in a better direction from that standpoint. Wh I think this point and another one you have to come to come are the reasons that led us to doing the undulating the calories even within the week. Totally is because we found that like If I could get a high calorie day for that client, like it would not only sustain them for that day, but ten even the next day for their workout. and it would be the next two or three days that we went low that they might have it. So at least every week we get a couple really good workouts versus if I was in a deficit with a client for five weeks We were just dragging ass We felt weak, We felt tired, We felt unmotivated to come to the gym. Really tough to like power through that. one hundred percent. and here's the other side of it is that when your energy is up Your recovery is better you actually work out harder and you actually burn more calories. And you and again, combined with the less of the metabolic adaptation, this is a wonderful place to be in comparison to where you could be if you were just in this continual calorie deficit without a break U, third, You keep more muscle. So here's what the data shows, okay Diet breaks don't necessarily cause more weight loss but they cause less muscle loss. That's a great thing. Like if you could lose more pure body fat and keep more muscle That's a big win Losing muscle is metabolic suicide. Like losing muscle is a great way to get your metabolism to move in a direction that you're not going to want or like So okay. So this is like the big struggle. this is one of the big struggles, right? One of the big challenges with going on a diet is Can I do this and lose just fat? Or probably more accurately, can I lose as little muscle as possible? It's very difficult not to lose muscle and a calorie deficit Can I lose? almost no muscle or as little muscle as possible. Now, in my experience, if you do this right, you lose no muscle If you're a beginner or new, sometimes we build a little muscle, which is kind of interesting. We had a gentleman that We had on the show recently who was actually a listener who lost a ton of weight lost very little muscle because he was smart with this and his strength streing. We had another gentleman who called in once who used the GLP to lose weight and lost very little muscle. And the data will show with GLP which really kills your appetite Oftentimes thirty five to forty percent of the weight lost this muscle. and I don't know if you guys remember that guy. I do. But he lost No muscle. How can I forget? his before and after pictures were crazy. Yes. Yeah. he looked phenomenal. So dire breaks in the data help quite a bit with muscle preservation. you had to explain that a little deeper, Tucsw what's going on when we are in a sustained deficit over time because the old theory or myth that we believed was, oh, your body's eating muscle. it's burning muscle. Yeah for energy. Yeah, for energy. And it's like, that wasn't case what's happening is what's happening is your body's actually pairing it down because it needs to be more efficient and that's a really expensive tissue. That's right. so it's not that actually to actually burn muscle for energy really takes you to starve a long time. So what's really happening is your body, this is through the first point, which is metabolic adaptation. An effective way your body slows its own metabolic rate down is by reducing your muscle mass. It's expensive tissue. It burns a lot of calories at movement requires more nutrients than body fat does. U So, hey, let's pair this down so that we can become more efficient. We can become a more efficient calorie storing machine and so you end up losing muscle. Diet breaks tellell your body, hey I know we were in a deficit for a little while, but here's some more calories. and you pair that with greater workout recovery, and better workouts because now you feel better And you see better muscles. It's almost like it gives the body an excuse to keep that muscle for a little bit longer. Okay we're gonna be okay like's necessaryily, Yeah, do. Yeah.'s Heres some extra calories. We're not going to stay in this crazy deficit forever. Okaykay. I don't have to worry. Totally. Now the fourth point, which is my this is the number one reason why I use it because when you're looking at a long term diet for weight loss The Definitely fat loss is the challenge. likeike, okay, we're doing this to lose body fat Big challenge is consistency. Can we maintain this afterwards? Be that's where everybody fails. So losing weights hard Keeping it off is way harder. and you can see this in the data. So a certain percentage of people lose weight, almost everybody gains it back afterwards. So what's going on here? Well, what's going on is that people have a tough time staying consistent for a lot of different reasons. And one of the reasons why I like diet breaks is it helps with the mental fatigue of being in a deficit Being in a deficit means necessarily you're hungrier Like your body's going to send you a hunger signal. L B the way, when people say Oh, have no, don't have any increase in hunger when you on a diet. Like they're lying like partart of being in a deficit is going to be that your appetite's probably going to go up a little bit because your bodys sensing, it needs more calories. So it's trying to get you motivated to eat more. Diet breaks are great mental fatigue. I mean, if you've been on a calorie deficit for two weeks And then you know, oh, I got a couple days coming up where I can bump my calories by eight hundred Yeah It feels good. It's your spirit. Yeah. because I mean otherwise you're walking around cranky all the time. and it's frustrating too because like it changes the way that you're motivated to get up and move and do things, especially your workout suffer for sure. The hardest part about talking about this one because I agree too. this is probably the number one reason why I would do it. is how individualized this is. This is where coaching becomes so unique and special to the client is because every client I ever had would determine a different time frrame because I'm sure the listener right now is like, Okay, cool. Diet break. Well, so at what week do you do that? Do you do that week threeree weeks in a diet and then you do this or do do' toler is? Yeah, when is it? And it really determines the client and how they feel or what the feedback that I'm getting, the results that we're seeing. I mean, most clients, when they're seeing a difference in the mr or the scale or strength in the gym They're very motivated to stay the course of what you're doing. But a lot of times we have weeks where we have this kind of stalled progress where the mental fatigue really. why am I doing that? Exactly. Th then the mental fatigue will kick in. And even if you know, ' like there's times where like I wan to stay in the deficit. and I know we just had a rough week, either not the best of sleep or the body kind of stalled a little bit. it's like, I'd like to push another week of staying in this deficit, but I can feel for my client that they're fatigued from doing this and they're frustrated. pull them out, even though I wanted to keep going for another week. And so the opposite is true also in a reverse diet. like you know, I'm reverse dieting somebody right now. I want to keep going. likeike come on, keep pushing the calories. If I get this, o, I feel stuffed and bloated and I don't feel good all the time it' like o there's a part gonna die breaking the other way. That's right. And I really want to keep going because I'm like, we gott to keep going. We're doing good, but I can hear in their voice or the way they're responding to me like their fatigue from pushing the calories so much. I'll go, hey, okay, let's this week let's go back down to a maintenance or let's go to a minor cut and then we'll go back to other direction. Yes. And so here's the challenge with diet breaks. People are very tend to be very black and white when it comes to a diet. This is part of the problem with diets But this is just part of human psychology. It's like I'm either on the diet or I'm off the diet. And so when people attempt to do a diet break on their own, what tends to happen Is they just go off? Yeah. So it's like cool, I've been avoiding Pizza or I've been avoiding cookies, or I've been avoiding, you know, drinking wine. and next week I'm off, you know, next week's my diet break. And what it turns into is this crazy bulk of crazy calories. This is look at, look it. you know this,. You've probably experienced this where You know you're going to go off your diet or you go off your diet And you don't have a slice of pizza, you end up eating a whole pizza, or you have a sleeve of Oreos instead of a couple Oreo cookies U And so this is where planning it is so important. just like the diet you know, diets are are better this isn't everything, but part of the success of a diet is that it's planned and scheduled under some structure This also has to happen for the diet break Otherwise it's on off Vversus a diet break is still on. I'm still on this plan. This is just a scheduled break, but what really it is is a schedued increase in calories. And I have it planned and I'm not going off the rails. I know I'm eating six hundred more calories or whatever, and it's planned out. and I have it structured and there's way more success in doing it this way. Well the other reason why I think the plann strategy is a much better strategy too is the average person doesn't do a really good job of reading the signals of whether they should or they shouldn't like their idea of what, o, I mean I'm too hungry or I'm not hungry enough or oh, I look likem I'm gaining weight or it's not looking right like A lot of times people course correct when things are actually going really well. For example, I could have somebody in that Goldilock zone and it's perfect and I see what I want to see as a coach. I'm like, oh, this is right where we want to be. And they're like, this is not working. And I'm like, oh, no, it's working. We're I see strength gains happening right now. We're not seeing a lot of movement on the scale right now, but that's okay. We're actually in this really sweet spot where I don't have you in a major deficit. So we're still seeing strength gains in the gym And yet, you're l you're leaning out. And so That's the hardest part of this is if you as the average person who's trying to figure this out on your own is like going through this and reading the mirror or the scale or what's happening, you tend to make the decision to make this diet break at maybe not the best for the right time. And so having it planned or organized is so important. On the other side of that coin, Adam, oftentimes I would have to convince a client to go on a diet break because they're losing weight on the scale. They think they're moving in the right direction. and as far as they're concerned, they are But I'm training them and I see their energy. And I see their movement And I see what's going on. and I'm talking about their day and their life. and I'm like, this person needs we need to bump their calories. And I'd have to convince them. Listen, I know you're losing weight. I know you're really motivated right now, but you're twenty pounds less on your squat You're not as strong on your presses. I'm noticing we have to rest longer in between sets. You were just telling me about how your energy was really low this last week This tells me we need to go we need to increase our calories for a week or two and no, I don't want to. I'm los whaalle scale. L like listen, trust me, you're going to feel so much better and sure enough, you know, if I did a good job and convince them, we put a scheduled diet break where we increase their calories. they'd come back, feel much better, much more energy, go back to what we were doing before, much better results. But oftentimes I have to convince them to do it because for them If they see the scale moving down, they don't care Or maybe they don't even notice necessarily they feel like. Well, no, that goes right back to my point of like this is where I think so many people are such bad judges. like they see the scales down ten, fifteen pounds. and so they're like, oh my God, we're going the right way. Forget that my strength is tanking right now, my energy, I don't look good. It's like that number is going down. So I think this is going great when you as a coach, you're going like, I think we need a course correct for a little bit. Let's increase calories. I've been in the same boat. We're trying to convince that person that we need to and tell them when they're like, no, we're heading the right direction. It's like, yeah, but we're heading too fast in the direction. it's so important though because yeah, you can get in that position where you're just have your blinders on. It's easy at a certain point where you convince yourself, okay, I'm going to go in this deficit and I'm all in. But in order to then, you know, step out of that and then come back, you know, that that that sort of ripping off and coming back in is really hard for people to. It is and I mean, a lot we have coaches that work here that do a phenomenal job But one of the things that they do is they help coach people through this process of knowing when to go up, when to go down, when to switch things up They hear and listen to the client. they look at the cues. They know what to look for and then they have it and it's planned and scheduled and it doesn't look like I'm going way up, I'm going way down, you know, I'malling going way off the jumping off the wagon or whatever. And so what a coach will do is take you through this process of deficit increasing calories for a short period of time, mayaybe a reverse diet, which is even more is actually putting you in a surplus to boost metabolic rate, build a little muscle. So we can get back in the fat loss process. Look, if you want a coach to walk you through this We offer coaching and because of this episode, it's fifty percent off right now. You get fifty percent off a nutrition call with a coach where they can kind of schedule this out and map it out for you. So if you're interested, you want a coach to map the whole thing out for you, go to mindpumpnutrition. com use the code pod fifty. That's P OD fifty for the fifty percent off. You can also find us on Instagram. It's Mindpump Media. We' see you there. Thank you for listening to Mindpumper. If your goal is to build and shape your body, dramatically improve your health and energy, and maximize your overall performance, check out our discounted RGB superbundle at mindpumpMedia. com

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