
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Is your traditional bathroom scale actually sabotaging your health progress by hiding your muscle gains?
I’m answering your biggest questions about why muscle matters so much for metabolism, fat loss, bone health, blood sugar, and aging powerfully. I’ll walk you through how to measure muscle at home, how to know whether your workouts are working, and what to do if you’re postmenopausal, under-muscled, recovering from injury, or starting from scratch. My goal is to help you stop chasing the scale and start building the strength, body composition, and metabolic health that keep you built to last.
What you’ll learn:
(01:25) Muscle acts as metabolic Spanx, a sugar sponge, and a multitasking messenger for your whole body.
(02:54) Bioimpedance scales can help you track fat mass and fat-free mass trends instead of relying on weight alone.
(04:44) Grip strength, squat tests, and pushup tests can give you a clearer picture of muscle quality and functional strength.
(07:16) Gaining muscle later in life requires enough protein, resistance training, recovery, and the right support tools.
(10:40) Muscle growth usually takes months, and your workouts need to be challenging enough to force adaptation.
(13:17) Weighted vests may help during fat loss by replacing some of the load your body no longer carries.
(17:03) A muscle-first approach to fat loss starts with building strength, eating protein first, and improving insulin sensitivity.
(40:16) Daily movement, consistent steps, and short bursts of activity can support metabolism, blood sugar, and brain function.
Love the podcast? Here’s what to do:
Subscribe to the podcast.
Leave a review.
Text a screenshot to me at 813-565-2627 and wait for a personal reply because your voice is so important to me.
Full show notes (including all links mentioned): https://jjvirgin.com/musclematters
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By JJ Virgin4.5
972972 ratings
Is your traditional bathroom scale actually sabotaging your health progress by hiding your muscle gains?
I’m answering your biggest questions about why muscle matters so much for metabolism, fat loss, bone health, blood sugar, and aging powerfully. I’ll walk you through how to measure muscle at home, how to know whether your workouts are working, and what to do if you’re postmenopausal, under-muscled, recovering from injury, or starting from scratch. My goal is to help you stop chasing the scale and start building the strength, body composition, and metabolic health that keep you built to last.
What you’ll learn:
(01:25) Muscle acts as metabolic Spanx, a sugar sponge, and a multitasking messenger for your whole body.
(02:54) Bioimpedance scales can help you track fat mass and fat-free mass trends instead of relying on weight alone.
(04:44) Grip strength, squat tests, and pushup tests can give you a clearer picture of muscle quality and functional strength.
(07:16) Gaining muscle later in life requires enough protein, resistance training, recovery, and the right support tools.
(10:40) Muscle growth usually takes months, and your workouts need to be challenging enough to force adaptation.
(13:17) Weighted vests may help during fat loss by replacing some of the load your body no longer carries.
(17:03) A muscle-first approach to fat loss starts with building strength, eating protein first, and improving insulin sensitivity.
(40:16) Daily movement, consistent steps, and short bursts of activity can support metabolism, blood sugar, and brain function.
Love the podcast? Here’s what to do:
Subscribe to the podcast.
Leave a review.
Text a screenshot to me at 813-565-2627 and wait for a personal reply because your voice is so important to me.
Full show notes (including all links mentioned): https://jjvirgin.com/musclematters
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

7,293 Listeners

788 Listeners

995 Listeners

4,946 Listeners

3,470 Listeners

9,194 Listeners

642 Listeners

342 Listeners

150 Listeners

624 Listeners

847 Listeners

521 Listeners

300 Listeners

1,685 Listeners

1,246 Listeners