Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1145: Ben Greenfield on Putting on Several Pounds of Muscle, Living a Long & High Quality Life, Ways to Slow Aging, Unschooling His Sons & MORE
Episode Date: October 21, 2019In this episode, Sal, Adam and Justin speak to Ben Greenfield about unschooling his kids, nootropics, putting on several pounds of muscle in just a few months, The Game Changers documentary, aging and... more. Discussing a woman’s proper place in the home. (2:10) Ben’s ultimate pesto recipe from plants in your backyard. (4:52) Unschooling his sons: Free thinking, creating creative workers, identifying what you’re passionate about & MORE. (7:28) The importance of being an example to your kids and creating an environment that allows them to cultivate creativity. (15:07) What challenges has he faced so far? (18:03) Fostering resilience and his son's rite of passage. (20:03) How has he incorporated plant medicine into his life? (23:12) Open relationships: Their connection to plant medicines, his take & MORE. (26:07) Why he believes everything was put on the planet for a purpose. (35:17) How Ben got JACKED! (39:50) The guys talk the Game Changers documentary, veganism vs carnivore, figuring out the right diet for you & MORE. (46:24) The overlooked psychological elements of food. (57:00) The proper balance of living a long & high quality of life and acknowledging one's mortality. (1:04:26) What excites him most in the field of anti-aging? (1:08:00) His six variables for mitochondria he addresses with everyone he works with. (1:14:37) Has he ever had something go wrong with any of his bio hacks? (1:17:36) Are his days as an endurance athlete numbered? (1:19:15) Featured Guest/People Mentioned Ben Greenfield Fitness (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Website Steven Kotler (@kotler.steven) Instagram Paul Saladino, MD (@carnivoremd) Instagram Dr. Joseph Mercola (@mercola) Instagram/Twitter David Sinclair (@davidsinclairphd) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned October Promotion: MAPS Anabolic ½ off!! **Code “RED50” at checkout** Visit Kion for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump10” at checkout for the discount.** Go Greenfields | a podcast for your palate 21 Lessons for the 21st Century - Book by Yuval Noah Harari Stealing Fire: How Silicon Valley, the Navy SEALs, and Maverick Scientists Are Revolutionizing the Way We Live and Work - Book by Jamie Wheal and Steven Kotler Mind Pump 760: Paleo f(x) Wrap-Up with the Mind Pump Crew The Truth About The Carnivore Diet: Everything You Need To Know About Dangers, Benefits, Mistakes & Hacks For Eating Only Meat. The Game Changers Official Film Website | Documentary What Can We Learn from the Kitavans? Lifespan: Why We Age—and Why We Don't Have To - Book by David Sinclair Earthing: The Most Important Health Discovery Ever – Book by Clinton Ober
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, op, mite, op with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Always a good time when Ben Greenfield comes and visits us.
I always don't know what he's going to say though.
You never know.
I actually really enjoyed this conversation.
I couldn't wait to talk to him since he announced that he
would be unschooling his kids. I didn't even know what unschooling meant until him. I didn't
know this was an option where parents can take kids through a non-curriculum format of
taking their kids through school. I thought that was...
He explained it pretty well.
Yeah, extremely fascinating.
And I couldn't even picture what that would look like
until we'd discuss this with him.
And so I really enjoyed that part of the conversation.
He's one of the smartest people in the fitness space.
He's a little weird.
He's a little out there.
Very, very smart dude.
A lot of integrity.
Good friend of ours.
So every time we have it,
this is probably what our maybe our fifth interview with Ben, I think we always have a good time with the guys. He's a great guy. So we think we're
gonna love this episode. You can find him on Instagram at Ben Greenfield Fitness. His website is
Ben Greenfield Fitness.com. He has a podcast called the Ben Greenfield Fitness Podcast. He's
actually, he put us on his podcast years ago
when we first got started
and actually gave us our first big boost.
So we'll always be grateful for that one.
So a lot of you guys listening to our podcast,
I know you heard us through the Ben Greenfield podcast.
And Ben now has a supplement company.
He sells coffee through another types of supplements.
And because of that, we got you guys a discount.
So if you're a mind pump listeners,
here's like his supplements, here's your discount code.
You can go to getkeon.com,
KeonAspelthKIN, forward slash mind pump.
Use the code, mind pump, you'll get,
excuse me, use the code, mind pump 10.
And you'll get 10% off your whole purchase.
Before the episode starts,
I wanna let everybody know that maps and a ballac
are most popular workout program is 50% off.
It's a phenomenal program for strength building,
body sculpting and metabolism boosting.
Here's how you get the 50% off discount.
Go to mapsred.com and use the code red50,
RED50, no space for the discount.
So I wanna nanny and, or a manny, whatever, right?
I just want, I want another human in the house that's just kind of helping support.
It's so nice.
And we've had like, so my sister right now, she comes down and she spends a whole week with us.
And it's amazing because she comes right behind us.
Like she walks the dogs.
If I need her to, she does the dishes. She kind she comes right behind us. Like she walks the dogs if I need her to,
she does the dishes, she kind of prepares meals for us.
She'll take the baby for a little bit
if Katrina needs a nap.
And it's just the relief that each of us need.
And then it also takes the pressure off of me
if I've had a crazy long day,
and I know she's had a long day and I'm out there,
I don't want to relieve her.
She just needs some relief.
So I've been trying to push it,
but she's kind of stubborn right now.
She really is, I wanna try and figure this out.
She's got that going on right now
where she feels like she wants to try
and figure it out for herself before she decide.
Like almost like she's giving up,
and I'm like, you're not giving up.
Yeah.
It's not like you're, like, I know you can do it,
but it's like, why not?
If we're in a position where we can do something like that,
why not, you know?
I think the ideal feeling that a woman should have in the home is that she's just the
freaking queen, like the matriarch. And ideally, she doesn't have to lift a finger to do
the dishes and to clean up after the boys or do the laundry. I mean, I realized that some
people might be sitting there thinking, do what a bunch of rich at first talking about, you know, the, you know,
the woman of the household just sitting around a bathtub.
Yeah.
And wine.
Hey, it's all about what you spend your money on.
You're not a guy that's rolling around in a $150,000 whip.
You're not out, you know, making it rain.
It places like that.
You'd rather invest money and things like that.
I think there's nothing wrong with that.
I want somebody to walk down the driveway,
quarter mile and get the packages and come back up while I'm downstairs podcasting.
So that's not too much to ask. And I don't want my wife to have to work so hard that she's
stressed out at the end of the day. Yeah, no. Well, you guys have a lot of money. She's
don't hire five people. I don't want to be married to an alcoholic. Yeah. Well, you got,
I mean, you also your home takes a lot of things to take a lot of effort to take care of. You have
a lot of animals and there's a lot of things. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There's a lot of things to takes a lot of effort to take care of you have a lot of animals and there's a lot of things
Yeah, yeah, there's a lot of like fitness equipment. That's got to be upcaps and little
Hydrogen water generating machines that have to be cleaned out that I'll come with their little instructions and every time a new
Toy comes it's like the IKEA for fitness. Somebody's got put all that shit together
And I kind of like doing some of that stuff myself, but it's not my best purpose to be dinkin' around
with a screwdriver on some infrared light panel.
Are you guys still foraging around your property
and getting plants and stuff to cook with?
Yes, yes.
I found an amazing recipe,
because I like to make pesto, I'm on a pesto kick.
Salad probably did.
Oh, yes.
Oh, it's so good. Like a ribeye steak, like slatted with pesto. Salad probably did. Oh, yes. Oh, it's so good.
Like a ribeye steak, like slatted with pesto.
Pesto goes good on everything.
Oh my gosh, it's so good.
And the thing is, like a lot of these wild plants,
you can make a really nice pesto out of.
Like, you know, dandelion, which is wonderful for the liver
and nettle, all the deer on our property feed on nettle.
And it grows these deer in huge white tails
because it's so high in amino acids and fatty acids.
So we've got this stinging nettle and we have wild mint, so you get some of that minty flavor.
And then we grow little herbs in our garden like rose, marie and thyme.
Another one that I harvest is plantain, which actually grows near the nettle, which is
kind of cool because a lot of times
things that hurt you in nature have something
that grow near by them to fix that hurt.
So if you put it this and this is true,
it's not a myth at the same time.
No, I say else.
Like in the case of stinging nettle, right?
Because your hands kind of get stung
by the backside of the nettle,
because it'll thorns on it,
but you rub some of that plantine leave on your hand
and it just goes away.
But the plantain is also very soothing to the stomach. So I put a little bit of that in there too. So I'll come back home with
this big bag of all these wild greens just from around our property. And then what I was doing
was I put them in the food processor and then of course use your pine nuts or walnuts work very
well just a shit ton of olive oil, like a really good spicy, dark,
you know, rich olive oil, a little bit of salt,
a little bit of pepper, and then you just,
it blended on the food processor.
It's crazy easy, 90 seconds, you know,
pesto, and normally you'd add parmesan cheese to that as well.
And even though parmesan cheese doesn't have
the lactose sugars in it, I still don't do that well with dairy,
but the parmesan cheese is what gives it that nice,
umami, you know, a kind of salty flavor.
And so it's lacking something,
pesto without the Parmesan.
So what I figured out is that you can actually ferment
the nettle.
So if you have like some old pickles
and you know, like an old pickle jar in your fridge,
you save that brine and you go and harvest all your plants
and everything, and you just shove them into a glass mason jar,
and then you dump the brine over that,
you put a lid on it, and then you just set it
on the kitchen counter for about two weeks,
and it actually ferments, and it gives you
the same nice rich umami flavor as if you had a parmesan cheese.
Then you put that in the food processor
with your nuts and your olive oil and everything,
and dude, it's next level. Now, then you put that in the food processor with your nuts and your olive oil and everything and do it, it's next level.
Now, are you incorporating a lot of this
in like the way you're teaching your boys?
Because I know now that you've pulled the boys completely
out of school, you're 100% homeschooling them right now.
Are you incorporating stuff like this?
No, mostly they're responsible for killing animals.
They kill and fill dress animals.
It's wonderful knives. They're like a captain fantastic. They kill and fill dress animals. They just wander around little knives.
They're like a captain fantastic.
I get that comment a lot.
People are like, oh, you guys live out in the sticks.
Like captain fantastic.
Kids are covered in mud with daggers and their teeth.
Yeah, jump it out and slit in the next.
Like, there's a lot of flies out there, huh?
No, they do a lot of this stuff with me for two reasons.
Number one, it's a very good way for them to go out
and learn and immerse themselves in nature.
And of course, as you guys know,
there's tons of benefits to that for kids
from their biome to free play to nature immersion.
But they also, of course, have podcasts themselves.
They have a food podcast.
Right, so.
I don't know this.
No way.
Anytime, yeah, they've had it for a year and a half.
Anytime I'm prepping food, you know, I'm including them.
And then they have, like they have chefs visiting the house now
and taking them through these complex Italian multi-course meals.
They go out to different restaurants in town and do reviews.
They have all these different recipes that they create.
They do a two podcast a month.
They have a VA, they pay $400 a month to is their brand
manager. So she takes care of all their social media accounts that are editing
the publishing. And then they they go find the recipes they want to create or
the chefs they want to interview. And they started as an audio podcast. Now it's a
video podcast. They've got five sponsors like Wild Planet Sardines and Butcher Box
and a lot of these food sponsors.
How much of this did you orchestrate and how much of this have they done on the road?
They have their Amazon affiliate account, link to their bank account.
I mean, that like, they're off to the mountains.
Yeah, love it.
And plus Washington State, and most states require that any children who are homeschooled
or unschooled take a core curriculum in Washington State.
There's 12 subjects, you know, math, history, reading, writing.
One of those subjects is occupational studies.
So anytime they're doing the podcast, they keep a diary every day of what they've done
so that should we ever be audited about their curriculum, we can turn around and say,
yeah, they were cooking.
That's chemistry, that's science.
They have been building a tree fort for the past three months.
I hired a contractor to come up and work with them
on this tree fort design they drew up
and that's their math curriculum for the summer,
just building this massive tree fort.
And then they're, of course, doing their podcast,
that's a science and chemistry of food,
but then it's also occupational studies.
It's math as they're doing their banking
and learning about how the affiliate sponsorships work. And, what are your theories on doing it this way versus a traditional way?
Let your kid go through school. Like, what are your theories? And what do you see already happening?
And what do you expect to happen by schooling them this way?
Well, in the book, 21 Lessons for the 21st century,
Yavol, was it Yavol Nohan Harari?
Probably is butchered his name. He has no of the cat I'm talking about.
I don't.
Yeah, okay, it's a good book, but the author's name is difficult to pronounce or remember.
He dictates that the employee or the worker of the future
is not going to be the factory worker that the post-industrial
era and the agriculture revolution kind of centered education around, right? We want people to be
able to work in factories, we want people to be able to put square pegs and square holes,
we want people to be able to think inside the box and follow the rules. yes, Doug just pulled it up. You've all know a harari.
You've all know a harari.
And instead, we need free thinking,
resilient creative workers
who are able to adapt to new jobs on the flies,
things like artificial intelligence and automation
replace certain positions.
And because of that,
if a child is learning in a classroom situation at the same pace as
everyone else, taking the subjects that the states or the government has dictated is going
to be the exact subjects that they should choose, whether or not they're passionate about
those subjects, if they're not allowed to engage in a great deal of creativity and free
play, similar to the way that the Finland school system is built with plenty of time outdoors,
with plenty of time in unpredictable situations, then they're likely not going to be positioned to adapt
to this rapidly changing work structure that we're now immersed in.
And it's changing faster and faster.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, truckers are a perfect example, right?
And we're going through that right now
with artificial intelligence and automation
potentially disrupting the trucking industry, right?
And in an ideal situation,
the people who are most positioned to not be affected by that
are the people who can go out and do something even more
creative.
A better example might be a surgeon
who is likely going to be replaced by a robot
in the next decade, right?
Robotic surgery can be far more precise and lesseronious
than a human physician doing surgery.
And a human physician who has been educated
to think outside the box and move on
and be creative might go on to find the care for cancer
or might go on to develop an even better
robotic surgery tool.
All right, so the idea is that by
unschooling, which is essentially self-directed education,
it involves
identifying what a child is passionate about,
what it is that really turns them on.
And that's gonna change from year to year and even from month to month. And then surrounding them with as many toys, books,
items, technologies, tools, people, etc. That allow them to pursue that passion and take a deep
dive into that passion. And then you just step back and let entropy emerge, right? Let the children do what they want.
And your only job is to surround them
with what they need to get that done.
So tell me how this is unfolded for you then.
Like, did you, when you first decided to unschool them,
did you go right into it with the curriculum idea
or did you like let them almost guide and direct
where you were gonna go?
Like how did that look?
No curriculum.
We started off with about two weeks of, of almost like a storyboarding where they had these
giant posters and they were writing down all the things they were interested, all the
places they want to visit, all the cultures they want to explore, the cuisines that they
want to learn to cook, the subjects like American history, for example, as one subject that they're just very interested in.
And then I go out and I go to Amazon
and I buy all the books and all the Lego toys
and all the kits.
So a few examples would be they were interested in drones.
So I got them access to a drone course online.
I bought them a drone to build.
I bought them all the accessories for the drone.
And the drone just went down into the closet.
And once they finished fifth grade, and we're just done with school, they started to delve
into the closet and go and pull out all these different items and just began on their own
volition to play with and to build these.
And I came home one day and they'd built a drone.
And another day they'd programmed a Lego robot.
Like I mentioned, they've built an entire tree fort
over the summer, just with wood.
And I have a guy coming over a couple of times a week
to teach him some things and they have a tree fort now.
But the idea is there is no structured curriculum.
It's simply get the things that they need
to be able to delve into their passions
and step back and let them play with it.
Now, what are the biggest challenges with this strategy?
Because I can imagine parents right now, or like, my kid just wants to play video games
or watch TV all day, or my kid doesn't know what they like or whatever.
Like, what are some of the challenges you've encountered with this?
Well, I think we've talked about this before on previous podcasts.
But there's no rules in the Greenfield household, right?
There's no, like, you can't have gluten.
There's no screen time rules.
There's no, you know, this is a good snack.
There's the bad snack rules.
You can't have that.
Like, there are no forbidden fruits in our home.
Instead, we educate them about the consequences of a decision
such as, you know, neural inflammation
or gut inflammation from gluten consumption
or the effects on their sleep cycles
from, you know, watching TV light into the night, and then we let them sit with the consequences
of any decision that they might make, like stomach upset
or not being able to get through the day
because of poor sleep, et cetera.
But I think the biggest thing when it comes to,
is my child gonna sit around and play video games all day?
Are they gonna be tied to their screen all day?
Is that the adults that they're surrounded with must provide the example?
Or like in our house, if there's downtime, dad is reading or playing the guitar.
Right?
That TV is rarely on.
It's just not a thing.
It's not the norm in our house for if there's downtime to go and turn on the TV.
There aren't any video games in our house.
It's not something we do.
We don't play video games and they downloaded like a chess program to their computer, but
it's more fun for them to sit with that for 45 minutes before dinner and play chess
across the table.
You know, we're joking and listening to music.
And so a big thing is that if you structure your house and the parents are a living, breathing example
of the way that things like video games and food
and snacks and however else you spend your downtime
should be treated, then generally the kids
will move towards that, even with supplementation.
Like I've had the kids' genomes sequenced
and have identified, like they don't have the gene that can assist
them with making vitamin D from sunlight.
They only have 50% of the glutathione genes.
They have lower levels of BDNF and a variety of factors that dictate that they could engage
in better living through science and supplement.
So I've bought all those supplements.
They're all in the fridge.
I don't tell my kids,
go take your supplements. But when I go to the fridge and I take whatever glutathione, I'll be like,
I'm going to take my glutathione now. This is, hmm, that's damn good glutathione. Hey guys,
this is good glutathione. And then a lot of times, they'll rush down and they'll grab their
supplements because they remember because that's taking his. And so it's all about being an example
and also making sure that the living environment is equipped with things that allow them to
engage in productivity and support that versus the house just being littered with screens
in video games. Now, have you encountered any challenges that you could tell us? Have there
been any situations where you've had some sticking points and kind of had to
figure out your way around them or navigate them?
You know, it's been really smooth.
It's been really smooth so far.
I think the only thing that you've been setting the table for many years for this to be
smooth.
Like, I would imagine if you try to make this transition and you were a household where
Mama, dad stared at the TV for four hours a night like that would be a challenge
But because you've kind of already set the table for this way of living
It seems kind of already natural right?
Right the only the only thing I've run into is that let's say they do want to be a physician or an astronaut and go to college
Well, they they need to know how to take a standardized test
They need to take a yearly standardized test through the state of Washington Oh,, so they're required to take that? They'll need to take their
college entrance exams. And so just that idea of going from unschooling to actually needing to whip
out a book and sit at the kitchen table to prepare for a standardized test, that I think is going
to be the hardest thing. We've still got four more months to where we'll start digging into how
we'll tackle that piece, but that's really the thing I'm most apprehensive about is going from just
pure creative free play in a child's dream situation.
Should being required to test, you know, take a test by the government. How are you going
to discuss that with them?
Exactly. Come on inside, put down your bows and arrows. You guys got to learn pre-calc now
at the kitchen table. And the only reason why is because you have to take a test.
Yeah.
And why dad?
Yeah, why dad?
Why am I being forced?
Yeah, you're punished.
You're just thinking, well, honestly, what I tell them
is you guys might think differently when you're 17 or 18.
You might want to go to college.
You don't want to go to college now.
But if that changes, the last thing is I want,
is for my kids to think to dad
totally screwed me over.
Right.
And I'm gonna f'd up now because I can't go to university because I had no idea when
I was 12 that I need to be taking these tests and dad didn't tell me and dad didn't encourage
me to.
So now I can't go to college.
You know, I don't want that scenario.
No, smart.
You're thinking about that already.
What about socializing the kids?
What do you do right now for them to interact with other kids?
Yeah, that's a common question in homeschooling and unschooling.
And it's a complete moot point because they're in Jiu-Jitsu.
They're in, they're in, I mean, think about summer camp, right?
When you got to summer and you had, like, you could go to theater camp
and you could go to horseback riding camp
and you could go to, you and you could go to horseback riding camp and you could go to
to you know like some nature camp, wilderness survival, basketball camp, soccer camp, whatever.
It's like that, but all year long.
Like there, there are in so many camps and classes and clinics and all with other kids.
They're constantly interacting with other kids.
Yeah, exactly. So it, I mean,
there's not a day that goes by that they're not competing against or with or in the same room as or socializing with other kids.
So.
Do they find time away from each other? Like, is there, like, when they do hang out with other kids, do they separate or they stay close together?
They stay very close together. They're very close. And I think that's going to be kind of difficult for them when they need to cut ties with one another because of very close. As a matter of fact, one of my biggest
fears, and this is a nightmare of how to few times, is that one of them dies.
All right. Yeah. That one of them dies because they're just like they're joined at the
hip. And I will, you know, when they're 13 and that's only two years away, and they'll
go through a ride of passage, you know, they've been training with the wilderness survival
instructor for years now, like the
same camp for four years in a row, going and learning their bow drill and wilderness tracking
and fire making and learning how to survive primitive weaponry, everything like that, so
that they're resilient enough to be able to survive in the wilderness.
And so when they're 13, they'll have a week, you know, with a wool blanket and a backpack
and a knife out in the wilderness, but each on their own, right?
Not together.
And then they'll come out of that and then we'll have their coming of age ceremony.
They'll go through their first foray into plant medicine, they'll journey, they'll dissolve
their ego, then they'll pass in a manhood.
And we'll have like an official kind of cutting of the cord ceremony where they're responsible
to help pitch in for food for the Greenfield household,
help to support themselves,
use more of the money that they're making from this podcast
to buy their own things,
but they'll be identified as men at that point,
that crossing of the threshold,
but that will be done with them alone, not together.
That's gonna be tough, yeah.
That's gonna be tough,
you said dissolve the ego, how?
Plant medicine.
Oh, wow.
And how does that work with a 13 year old?
There are people doing it.
And there are many cultures that do this as well.
But it is not dissimilar to what you'd experienced
as an adult, right?
Ego dissolution, the ability to be able to see yourself in a different light, to embrace greatness,
or to embrace perhaps something different about yourself than you would have perceived
had your ego been on full alert. And, you know, typically those are with things like psilocybin
or eye wasca or other Amazonian plant medicines. And I, I've already identified a very responsible facilitator who will oversee that whole thing.
Now this is something that's relatively new to you even, right?
Because I think when we first met you, you hadn't done any plant medicine, you hadn't gone
into that.
And that was, so what, three years ago?
No, when you met me, I had.
You had, okay.
I had to.
I had journeyed with.
We weren't on that level yet.
I journeyed with psilocybin and went with. I had journeyed with. We weren't on that level yet.
I journeyed with psilocybin and with ayahuasca and with fight me out.
And now that's something that I'm doing on a quarterly basis.
And my wife has joined me with that as well as a sort of like couples journey.
And I think that as Stephen Kotler and Jamie Will outline in stealing fire, it certainly
is something relatively hedonistic.
We know that depletes 5HTP and you get some pretty significant serotonin imbalances and
there's just some neurochemical reasons not to do something like that frequently.
In addition to the idea that it can become an escape, many people don't integrate afterwards,
many people don't journal afterwards, many people don't.
This is what I see a lot of.
Yeah, I see that's more common right now,
is that it's, especially in our space,
the 20 years that I've been in fitness,
I've never seen so many people in the fitness space
talk about Iohaska, DMT, Silasai, Ben, LSD,
all this stuff is coming, surfacing like no other.
And I feel like very few people are like you.
And I always get asked
about you every time you come into town, like, what is he's been fucking weird at guys crazy
this and I honestly, if there was anybody that I would want to talk to about all these
fringe ideas and things, it's you because I feel like you you have learned to discipline yourself
really well. I can't say that about a lot of other people that are talking about the same things
that you're talking about right now because when I see what they're doing
It looks like just a big party to me. It is in many cases
It's because it let's face it. It is kind of fun to lay back and just let your mind wander and forget life and
You know and go to a happy place full of you know, sparkles and rainbows and kaleidoscope imagery and
of, you know, sparkles and rainbows and kaleidoscope imagery and you wake up, you're like, I found myself, I saw God.
And then a week later, you're just back at the grind,
stressed out, you know, existential angst and lost
because you don't have an intention going in
and or you don't actually have some type
of integration practice planned coming out.
I mean, my wife and I have,
we have those back jack chairs in our bedroom now
and we sit facing each other,
gazing into each other's eyes for 15 minutes every night.
I mean, 9.15, the kids are on bed.
By 9.30, we're sitting in bed, legs intertwined,
facing each other just.
Insilent.
Insilent.
No, talking.
Oh, talking.
It's a, it's a,
and as is a practice that came from one of your journey. Yes, okay. And we've journeyed like that too. Oh, talking. Yeah, it's a, it's a, it's a, and as is a practice that came from one of your journey.
Yes, okay.
And we've journeyed like that too.
Oh, I completely, you know, complete no judgment zone.
When you journey, you're sitting there for four or five hours,
facing each other, right?
And it, which is a crazy, crazy experience.
To be with your partner, your lover,
both of you, you go as fully dissolved,
staring at each other,
staring at each other's eyes,
you know, seeing each other as spirits.
What are things a lot start? Yeah. What, what. What are some of the things that you notice about that?
I've experienced this myself too, but I want to hear you talk about it.
What is it about that with your partner?
We're seeing that this is a Colorado that already legal right now.
Decriminalized.
I'm not sure where it was.
It might have been Colorado.
Decriminalized cells have been. It where it was. It might have been Colorado Dekriminalized
on seven.
And it's probably gonna be a,
you know,
John Topkins just launched their new research arm,
which Tim Ferris kind of popularized that entire press release
and was one of the benefactors for that entire arm.
I had dinner last night with Dr. Victoria Hale,
who is work with Maps Foundation and is responsible
for a lot of the additional research
into Iowaska and also Solosyben.
In Canada, there are gonna be rolling out
a series of different medical clinics designed
for therapeutic administration of these.
There are folks like Dr. Dan Engel,
who has a clinic in Boulder,
and we'll be opening up another clinic in Austin
with the use of plant medicines for concussion, for TBI, for trauma-based therapy.
There are people, though, it's not legal currently, but there are still many facilitators
overseeing things like high-dose MDMA sessions within the U.S. for therapy.
And this is something that people are becoming increasingly aware of, the benefits of these type of medicines when you use an therapeutic, responsible manner.
I'm glad you said that because I see a lot of frivolous use, and these are powerful, powerful substances,
just as they can benefit you.
They can also cause a lot of problems.
Yeah, and don't get me wrong.
I mean, fucking take 300 milligrams of like eboga, South African Bush extract before
a workout, and you're like one of those African warriors, you know, when you're at the gym,
you microdose with a little psilocybin and niacin and lion's mane before a hard cognitive
day of work.
And I mean, that's one of the best new tropic stacks ever.
And so in small amounts, these things can be amazing just for general productivity and
making life better.
I think it's, you know,
when you get to the larger amounts, you know, that we'll see, you know, we'll see
psilocybin rinsed wash and repeated in the same way that CBD and THC were, right?
Recreational use, you know, people flying off the wheels, you know, going on crazy trips,
I think it's going to be a little bit weird and kind of wild, wild westy over the next
five to 10 years.
I agree.
And mark my words, there's going to be some people making serious money. There's going to be some pharmaceutical companies making some serious money off of these
compounds, including replications of like Iowaska and DMT and psilocybin.
Like synthetic versions of them. Yeah, I think the psychiatric applications are going to be,
in my opinion, I think we're going to see breakthroughs in psychiatry that we can't even comprehend. Curing mental disorders and ailments that were before, uncurable and just treatable with
numbing agents.
It's my personal belief, but I also see the potential negatives of people abusing these
things.
One thing that seems to go hand in hand, and maybe this is just what I see in social media,
it seems like people, the use of these substances goes hand in hand
with the adoption of an open relationship lifestyle.
Do you think there's any connection
or do you think that's just part of the whole frivolous
like, oh, we're parting and this is just kind of part of it?
I think that a big part of that is the disinhibition,
that some of this stuff can create.
I mean, you know, very simple example,
but my wife and I use ketamine
and oxytocin for sex, and it's amazing. I mean, like, like, intranasal ketamine and oxytocin
that makes for a fantastic date night. And it removes a lot of inhibitions. And you have
a crazy good time and it's a lot of fun. Guys sometimes get a little droopy dick from
the ketamine, but that's nothing little, you know, microdose of sildana phil or whatever else can't fix.
But then you put other people into a scenario like that,
you know, and you've got almost like a burning manesque
scenario, right, where there's like orgies
and couples surfing and, you know, and I think
that part of it is the dis-inhibition that occurs.
I think part of it is just the kind of like the free love type of
personality, you know, the 60s hippies type of mentality that's still the type of person that's
largely associated with a lot of these plant medicines, like the person who's just willing to do
that tends to be a little bit more free, free spirited and independent.
A little bit of a self-selection bias.
Yeah, and we talked about this when we podcasted
in Austin from PaleoFX, I think about a year and a half ago.
And I'm sure we can link to this in the show notes,
but we talked a lot about how,
I mean, that stuff is just so fucking attractive and fun and tempting,
but you have to choose whether your goal is short-term pleasure or long-term legacy.
There's very few societies that I know of that have been built successfully upon a polygamist's open relationship type of culture,
because monogamy,
contractual relationships, if you want to call them that,
long-term relationships with children
and a stable, nuclear family home seem to allow
for some amount of societal stability
that can't be replicated when a village is raising a child.
Or when there is no clear man or clear woman
as a head or a leader of a household.
And so I feel like I just couldn't build
a greenfield legacy.
I couldn't have my children feel stable.
And I couldn't just manage the household logistically
if I had multiple partners or open relationships. I just feel like
long-term it would be un... it wouldn't allow for me to be able to affect the impact and the change
that I want the Greenfield family to go on. I feel like it's a base way to act and as you elevate
you start to figure out what really works and committing to one person I think is a more evolved way.
It requires more growth and development and it really does. No different than committing to one person, I think, is a more evolved way. It requires more growth and development.
It really does.
No different than committing to a life of surrounded
by cupcakes and candy and saying,
I'm gonna eat the stuff that's healthy for me and good for me.
What about the mind molding effects in the sense of,
do you think that these substances can be used
to brainwash people or to change them? There's a lot of conspiracies around the CAA experimenting with these substances to control
people's minds or what's his name, Manson, how he used LSD to turn a bunch of some of
our kids into murderers.
Do you think there's some things we need to fear in that sense?
I have no idea, but they say the same thing about fluoride, right?
And calcification of the penny-o gland and what you... But that would be the opposite, right?
Because if you calcify the penny-o gland and are not longer producing DMT, what they're saying is
that you are more... What was the word you used? Multiple? Yeah, you're more manipulable. Sure.
Pindipulatable. So I don't know.
I'm not quite sure what would affect the neurochemistry
and manipulation more, less DMT or more DMT,
but that is one conspiracy theory, right?
That's why we have fluoride in the water.
So that we're good little factory workers in the lab.
I don't know if that's true,
but the one last thing that comes to mind for me
with this whole open relationship and
plant medicine type of thing is that I think it can be used in the opposite manner too.
And this is what I've experienced.
My wife and I, you know, for 14 years were very emotionally and sexually connected, but
not spiritually connected, not intertwined as spirits and souls, not looking into each other's eyes as unique sparks
meant to be for each other from the beginning of the universe, you know, as these two angelic
beings who have this very special spiritual relationship.
And now that we've connected spiritually on that deep, deep level, I mean, we can feel
each other from afar.
We know when we're dreaming about each other. We know when we're dreaming about each other.
We know when we're thinking about each other. Like, it's freaky on it. And I'm sure that comes down to kind of like a quantum physics,
you know, proton particle type of thing where, you know, and I'm a believer that, you know, there is this fourth dimension that we've had yet to fully uncover.
And that we actually, you know, are pretty deep when it comes to being spirits and souls.
And really, that's the most special part of us that nobody can take away. But then when you
connect with your lover on that level and you see them as this incredibly unique spirit,
it's cool for two reasons. Number one, you're just so fucking connected. You look into your lover's eyes and you see them as
literally like, you know, something like a goddess or an angel. And then, you know, the other part of it
is that you treat everybody differently, I feel like.
Like that love and relationship that you experience with one person, you begin to see everybody
as a spirit or a soul or a very unique being.
So it kind of changes the way that you judge people or the way that you treat other people.
Now how do you wrap using plant medicines and going on these journeys and with that rigid
sort of structure of your spiritual
beliefs.
And how does that all inner twine and sort of help either to explain a deeper meaning that
you're getting from, let's say the Bible as your Christian or how to kind of explain
how that can enhance the experience even more.
You know, I think that everything was put on the planet.
You know, for me, as a creationist,
as a believer that a higher power created everything around us,
I think everything was put there for a purpose.
From wine and weed to Iowoscan, Silasiba, and the hundreds
of plant medicines we have yet to even discover, you know, in South America or the Amazon, for example.
And I think that because of that, anything can be used for good or for evil, right? We,
I mean, something as simple as wheat, right? You can go out into a
wheat field and pick wheat and just chew it right there off of the off of the
off of the you know with the with the chaff and the brand and the kernel and
everything else and all that concentrate a gluten and fuck up your gut and you
can you can grab a wonderful lovely you know biodynamic wine and drink to
excess and and develop liver psoriasis. You can smoke yourself into
oblivion. Or you can have a glass of wine at the end of the day or at a wedding and go dancing and
just feel that slight release of GABA, that inhibitory neurotransmitter and feel wonderful. You can
of GABA, that inhibitory neurotransmitter, and feel wonderful. And you can use a little bit of weed to relax at the end of the day, or a little bit of
CBD to enhance your sleep.
You can use a little bit of psilocybin to increase your cognition, or you can use a lot of it
to dissolve the ego and to actually grow closer to God and experience God in a completely different way when your ego is
dissolved. And I think that many people use this stuff irresponsibly or they don't understand or go
in with the right kind of intention. But I think that everything that is on this planet can
but I think that everything that is on this planet can be a blessing or curse,
to pay on how you use it.
And so I have no issues as a Christian
with saying that everything on this planet is a blessing.
It just depends on how you use it.
All right.
Why do you think it hasn't traditionally been a part
of that tradition?
Do you think of the, because of the fears of abuse
and if people not using things? Did Moses really see a burning bush or something? I don't know that it hasn't been. I don't know
that it hasn't been, you know, and I haven't dealt too deeply into the history, but I think that there
is, there, there is evidence of plant medicine usage amongst a lot of historical Christian sex.
Christian sex. I think that at the same time there is kind of especially in America the puritanical version of Christianity that dictates that you never want to
you know whatever lose control of your senses and dissolve your ego and you
know we're just hard work in you know blue collar you know go to church
every Sunday singing your songs.
But I mean, these are the many cases.
I'm probably going to fence the people.
These are the same type of people eating twinkies and Doritos at the church potluck.
And then their bodies go to crap and not really delving deeply into caring for themselves
or developing a relationship with the bodies that they've been given, with the temples
that they've been given, with the temples that they've been given. So I think a big part of it is just kind of like this,
this puritanical form of Christianity
that has developed, especially in America,
that's held a lot of Christians back from that.
And also because what's facet,
like there is a deep history of like shamanism
and satanic worship and demonic activity and all
that stuff that's associated with any of these things because once you enter into the spirit
world, there's a lot of that, right?
But there's not just demons, right?
There's also angels, there's not just Satan, there's also God, right?
So there's two elements of the spirit world, right?
There's light and dark, there's the good force and there's the bad force or whatever it
is in Star Wars.
Just to get excited right now.
Let's change gears a little bit.
Yeah, let's change gears a little bit.
Recently, you look like you put on, I don't know how many pounds of muscle would you do?
You change your training?
Was it Adam's challenge?
It was Adam's swimming challenge.
No.
You would have like put on like 15 pounds of muscle.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I, I've gave.
A big part of it was, you know,
I interviewed Dr. Paul Saladino and as with anything,
I like to try out a lot of the stuff
that I talk about on podcast.
So I adopted a largely nose to tail,
carnivore based diet.
I put the muscle on it.
I threw in some other things too.
I was doing like colostrum.
I was doing like a lot of kefir, ton of liver, organ meats, just eating a lot more food
in general.
I was gonna say you bumped your calories significantly
in the last few months.
No, I was eating about 5,000, 6,000 calories a day
from a lot of protein sources,
taking a lot of digestive enzymes.
To 5,000 calories on a carnivore diet,
which is what I used to do when I was bodybuilding too.
Yeah, but I tried to do that.
I had a really hard time doing that.
I also had tubers, tubers, raw honey and berries,
ton of bone broth, a lot of collagen.
I also made dessert, which was like a collagen ice cream.
And I made that, and this was not carnivore,
but I just made this to get my calories in at night.
So coconut milk with collagen, with stevia,
with nut butter, almost like one of those fat
bombs that has a lot of collagen in it that you have at night.
So eating a lot of food, I was lifting a lot more, doing like four days a week full body
lifting, a lot less endurance.
And put on a decent amount of muscle and then I went to that damn like Swiss clinic healing
retreat thing over the summer where it was like colonics
and animas every day and like,
oh my God.
Dude, they could come up for breakfast after you've had
all the poo and everything else,
just sucked out of your insides and you're starved
and you want to like chew off a real arm,
not even a salad, like a smoothie,
but their definition of a smoothie
is like the six ounce glass cup
with like the spinach floating in it.
No, like my idea of a smoothie is it's like 40 grams
of way pro tea with some collagen and coconut milk
and bone broth and peanut butter.
Yeah, and in a like a giant big gulp,
you know, 36 ounce air, but no, these tiny little smoothies.
So I lost, and there's no gym there,
and I was doing some BFR band training
just to kind of try to keep a little bit of muscle on.
So I lost it, so now I'm trying to put muscle back on,
and I'm not doing a strict carnivore diet anymore,
but it was mostly just lifting more and eating a lot more.
Now, how do you feel when you're bigger
versus when you're smaller?
Which one do you like more?
What are the differences for you?
I kinda like to be bigger.
Through you.
How come?
I just like.
Feels good to me.
Feels good to feel.
I'm just your...
My libido is higher.
Sure.
I like, honestly, I like to lift and I like to eat.
Right?
And so it's fun when you can just eat
and turn into muscle.
And yeah, I don't know, maybe I'm vain,
but I just, I like to keep some meat on my bones.
You know, I think from a longevity standpoint,
the more meat you have on your bones,
healthy functional muscle going into your later years of life,
you know, we know that there are correlations
between things like grip strength
and deadlift weight and longevity. So I think part of it is just being more resilient overall.
Are you measuring your hormones when you're doing this to see if there's any changes in testosterone?
Yeah.
And all that? Yeah. And there is an increase in testosterone, increase in free testosterone.
You know, in this concerns a lot of people also an increase in IGF1, an increase in insulin,
an increase in hemoglobin A1C and some of those parameters that you could argue are
deleterious for longevity.
But I didn't see a steep rise in those, but a slight bump in some of these parameters
that suggest enhanced M-tore activation, enhanced substrate availability.
Well, context matters, doesn't it?
Because I think in the context of an inflammatory pro-cancer state,
probably bad, but in the context of a healthy body,
those are just anabolic compounds
are just making a build muscle.
I think a big part of it.
And I was talking with Dr. Mercola about this,
you know, the whole concept of autophagy paired with mTOR.
And I think that you can kind of sort of have
the best of both worlds.
And I was trying to do this as much as possible
and still am when eating a large number of calories.
12 to 16 hour intermittent fast.
And then taking agents that mimic autophagy
or induce autophagy at night.
So while you're at sleep, you're getting a little bit
less emtore activation and a little bit more autophagy.
So what were you taking?
Caracetin, chamomile, Garcinia,
Paudiarcho, and glycine.
All you can buy them in like organic,
raw powdered bags on Amazon.
And you can just stir that into hot water
before you go to bed at night and all of those will induce autophagy.
So it's almost like you're press-pulled cycling, right?
So you wake up, you're in your 12 to 16 hour fast,
you've engaged in autophagy,
and then you have that compressed feeding window
during the day, you know,
so I'll eat until about 8 p.m.,
get a lot of food in the system,
stay very anabolic,
have a lifting session in that window
or an exercise session in that window,
and then you go back into autophagy in the evening.
And so the amino acid glycine, that's strange.
So that induces autophagy, how is that?
I think probably because it balances out
the high amounts of methionine that you're getting
from a lot of the protein sources, particularly meat.
So really what it's doing is kind of nullifying the amtore,
if anything.
That's one of the common complaints made
against something like a carnivore diet
that's based on just like rib-eye steaks,
is that you're not getting enough glycine
unless you're eating those to tail
and getting some organ meats and some bone broth
and things like that.
So just adding in a little bit more glycine in the evening.
Any changes in inflammatory markers
because some people say,
it's tons more inflammation when you're eating a lot of meat.
No, no.
I actually had less inflammation
and I think it was probably because I was consuming
a lot less, well, it's a very basic diet really.
When you look at it,
tubers, berries, honey, bone broth, nose to tail,
organ meat.
Right.
And so there's a lot fewer of those plant defense compounds.
There's a lot fewer things, you know, like soy or legumes or things that may induce
an inflammatory response, even dairy, for example.
So I didn't see an increase in inflammation.
We just watched the documentary,
the one produced by Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Yeah, Game Changers.
I wanna hear your guys' opinion on this,
because I walked in here,
and I'm not too plugged into what's going on
in the documentary scene, but you told me,
you asked me if I watched this new documentary,
so what's going on with Arnold?
Well, he co-produced this documentary.
And it's really pushing this plant based or and they don't even use the word vegan or vegetarian too much. They say plant
based quite a bit. But they're they're pushing this agenda of
getting people off me. And the entire documentary did a damn
good job. And they produced it very, very well at demonizing
the consumption of of animal products. And they demonized all of it,
including high quality grass fed meats, organ meats. And it was very, I mean, in my opinion,
it was very misleading. They used lots of studies that were very misleading. For example,
they talked about B12 and how you can't get B12 from vegetable sources, but you can't really get
them great from animals either, they said. And so therefore, everybody should take B12 from vegetable sources, but you can't really get them great from animals either,
they said, and so therefore everybody should take B12s.
That's how they, exactly.
That's how they made that case right there,
or they used a comparison that I thought was silly,
where they said, they talked about antioxidants,
and they said, I had a lettuce has way more antioxidants
than a piece of salmon, which is a silly comparison
because a had a, salmon has lots of omega-3 fatty acids
and proteins that are the nutrients.
Not to mention lettuce is a bioremediate nature's filter.
Yeah, so in a different way,
people say liver is nature's filter,
but in the liver phase one and phase two,
pathways just excrete all the toxins
into the urine and the stool and the sweat.
Let us keep sitting.
Let us just keep sitting there.
So when you eat lettuce,
unless you know the exact place that lettuce was grown
and the farm you got it from,
you're essentially eating a filter that filtered out.
Same as true for other toxins, herbicides.
They did a lot of slide of hand moves.
They present some information that was true,
but then they would go left and like,
and this is why doing this is bad.
You know, it was like,
well, wait a second, those are already be connected.
Yeah. So, it was a lot of that.
And it feels like there's a, especially recently,
there's this really strong vegan push.
And for the first time, as far as I can recall,
a diet has been politicized because now it's being
connected to the environment and how not eating meat
is also better for the environment.
And it's your duty and it's a good thing to do.
The thing that worries me is this, Ben, in my experiences of training, and I'd love your
opinion on this, in my experiences of training hundreds or maybe thousands of people by proxy
because I had trainers that worked for me, your trainer of the clients, the Ivo was always
I'm always blown away by the individual variants that you see with people.
I mean, metabolism's are very complex.
Your microbiome was like a fingerprint.
Then you have, if you throw in your psychology
and your experiences with food and all that stuff,
to say that one diet is better for everybody,
I don't care what the diet is, that's terrible advice.
Because I've trained clients who genuinely were healthier
on a largely vegan diet. And I have also trained clients who genuinely were healthier on a largely vegan diet.
And I have also trained clients who ate a lot of meat,
mostly meat, and who also had improvements in health.
So for me, that's the big problem.
The big problem is that there's a huge individual variance
there that nobody's taking a account for.
And this goes for all diets that talk about being
the best diet ever.
The second part is this, and I'd also like your opinion
on this, is that when
you eat mostly vegetables or vegan diets, now luckily we live in modern times where I
could go to Whole Foods and I have access to an incredibly wide variety of plants based
foods that normally I would never have access to. You got stuff from South America.
Okay, Othra.
It's coated in chocolate.
Everything.
And that kind of stuff. And that kind of stuff. Just like nature.
But I have like food from South America, food from stuff
that's growing all the time.
You would never have that nature.
But it takes a lot of planning and nutrient deficiencies.
Studies show this.
This is not my opinion.
This is real documented studies.
Show that that vegans tend to suffer
from more nutrient deficiencies because they require,
they just require more planning.
And so if we're going to talk all these people out of eating meat, what they'll end up doing
is taking the one unprocessed food out of their diet, which is a steak and replace it with processed
something that's not a possible burger. Yeah, or some crap like that. So I'd like your opinion
on that kind of stuff. And we'll start with the individual variance. What's your opinion on that?
I'd like your opinion on that kind of stuff. And we'll start with the individual variants.
What's your opinion on that?
My opinion on the individual variants is that
we could say the same thing about a ketogenic diet.
Absolutely.
There are many people with familial hypercholesteremia
or with what's called PPR gene issues
or even gallbladder and liver,
like actual anatomical issues
who respond very poorly to a high fat diet,
particularly a diet that's high in saturated fats
versus the monoinsaturates and smaller amounts
of the polyinsaturates.
So you can create an inflammatory fire storm
in people who are not genetically adapted
to a ketogenic diet.
And who in that scenario, such as familial hypercholesteremia, would
respond much better to a diet rich in plant fibers, some amounts of coconut, large amounts
of fish, and many Mediterranean fats, or what would even be referred to as, if people
want to look this up, a Katavan Islander diet, where many of the inhabitants of that island carry the gene for familial hypercholesteremia
and no cardiovascular disease manifests
because their diet is structured in such a way
that cholesterol does not become atherosclerotic.
You know, it paused there for a second
because it makes perfect sense that people
who evolve there would develop a genetic capability
to produce tremendous amounts of cholesterol because their diets
included very little saturated fats and very little
dietary cholesterol.
And cholesterol is essential for the body.
It's why your body makes it.
So it makes sense for them that their bodies were produced
a tremendous amount of cholesterol in that environment.
That's what keeps them alive.
You move them to a ketogenic diet, and now it's, you know, too much.
It's, you know, five times five.
It's 25 now, and they've got things multiplying, and I've seen people who've gone ketogenic
and have cholesterol levels get like 400 who have hypercholestemia.
So I'm glad you brought that up.
Or you move them out of their environment.
And in many cases, the diet that they've developed
in the environment that they live in
is a diet that they've developed
because they have discovered over thousands of years
that that's what helps to protect them
against either their built-in genetic propensity
to a certain disease or the environment's impact
on their propensity for certain conditions.
So what I mean by that is you look at the Icelandic population who actually should have a very
high rate of seasonal effective disorder and depression, and they do not, because primarily
of the rich amount of omega-3 fatty acids in DHA that are found in the traditional Icelandic
diet, reindeer and fish, for example.
And you uproot that person and you take them out of that dietary context and into the
same dark scenario in let's say Seattle, Washington and you see the Icelandic population there,
actually manifesting seasonal effect of disorder and depression.
Or you look at Cameroon, Africa, where they have a gene that would normally predispose
them to high rates of colon cancer,
but that is an extremely fiber-rich diet
that they consume over there.
And you take that same population
and you put them in, say, like Southeast United States,
and you have many people of African descent
dying of colon cancer in Southeast United States,
because they no longer have adopted the diet
that would have protected them
in their ancestral context
from that disease manifesting.
Final example would be Mexico, right?
The Tomahara Indian tribe, they carry many of the genes
that would predispose them to higher rates of diabetes,
but the way that they cook and prepare their legumes
and their corn and their squash,
those are lower glycemic index foods than say like the refried beans and the flour tortillas
and the chips and the soda and the sweet drinks that they'd be consuming and say like a
Tex-Mex diet or a Southern California scenario.
And you see diabetes manifest in that population once they're in that scenario.
So big part of this when we're looking at
should I eat a plant-based diet, should I eat a meat-based diet,
should I eat a mix thereof,
is what did my ancestors eat,
and what am I genetically predisposed to thrive on?
That's one big part of it.
And then another part of it is actually doing...
Was it accidents?
Yeah, customization of the diet.
I mean, everybody, everybody I coach,
they get a Cyrex food allergy panel.
And we take a deep dive into their true immunoglobulin reaction
to a variety of different foods to ensure
that they're not eating things that they're not predisposed
to be able to handle it.
They have a true allergic reaction towards.
Everybody gets a Neutrival panel,
which is a micronutrient analysis,
fatty acids, amino acids, all down the range,
so that we can identify any holes
that need to be filled in via supplementation.
Because some people need to take vitamin D,
and for others, they're getting vitamin D toxicity
and calcification of the arteries
from taking vitamin D because their levels are topped off,
just fine.
Everybody gets a gut test for yeast, fungus, parasites,
so that we know what they need to be taking
or what they don't need to be taking to address their gut.
So we can use a blend of ancestral wisdom
by looking at what your ancestors ate
and what you genetically predisposed to do well on,
combined with modern science and blood testing,
urine testing and stool testing,
to determine whether you need to fill in gaps
with supplementation, what kind of diet you might be best
predisposed towards from a food allergy,
a food elimination standpoint,
and then you can figure out the exact diet that's right for you.
And that's one of my big problems is if we make this blanket,
this is the diet that's best for everybody.
And demonize, not just say this is a good diet,
but also demonize an entire category of food
that humans have eaten forever,
we could be setting up a lot of people
for some bad health and some bad times.
And then on the environmental sense,
nothing's worse for the environment
than unhealthy humans.
Unhealthy humans are terrible from the environment.
Everything from the medicine that needs to be reproduced to their
unproductivity to their attitudes about life.
That will poison the earth faster than almost anything I can think of.
And this is the conversation that I've been having around this.
There's also one other part of this band, which is the
psychological component of food.
You talked about the genetics, their blood,
you talked about their microbiome,
these are all physiological aspects of a human
and how they may react and respond to food.
But we completely negate,
and we don't even talk about the psychological piece
that there is to food, which in my experience is a trainer.
I've trained mostly everyday regular people.
And the part that I had to focus on and
talk about and speak to most was a psychological component. And you know what? Sometimes foods
may not necessarily work for you great physiologically, but psychologically, they, they, this is something
that you enjoy. And there's a, there, that is a part of health. You know, studies show that, for example,
people who have lots of bad relationships in their lives,
if that's as big of a risk factor for poor health
is smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
So if I, you know, if my mom makes homemade pasta
and I haven't seen my mom for a while
and I get this wonderful feeling when I eat that pasta
with my family, but maybe my genes show that I probably
shouldn't eat a lot of carbs because physiologically,
but so what?
Sometimes it may be, you're doing a little balancing thing.
And when we're making these broad general statements
and this huge push for eating a particular way,
some people are gonna do great.
A lot of people are not gonna do so great.
Yeah, I've got two thoughts about that.
First, there is a dangerous slippery slope
when you get down to the psychological aspects of food
because you get into this scenario
that I see a lot of people getting into,
especially parents who grew up,
and I grew up on all this too, comfort foods.
Oh yeah.
Rich, creamy, craft, macaroni, and cheese,
and pop tarts
and a peanut butter, captain crunch, hot pockets,
taken bake pizza.
I feel like I should be smoking weed right now.
What's happening exactly?
Belvita cheese, chicken biscuit crackers, right?
And the parents say, just, just order.
Kid, you're growing up in America.
You got, you got to have some of the foods that I grew up on.
Sure.
Big, big ones.
So, there can be a slippery slope.
And that's actually where I think there was a great business opportunity for a lot of,
of companies in the health and fitness sector to develop, you know, similar to what Marxist
and did with mayonnaise, healthy versions of a lot of these comfort foods, right?
And then, could you make a craft macaroni and cheese
and use like a turmeric to get that nice yellow color
and maybe use like a rice or a quinoa pasta
that you've engineered to get that same mouth feel,
but you have the same shape of the noodles
and a similar kind of box size that it comes in.
And so I think that we can overcome that issue
by simply creating healthy versions
of a lot of these comfort foods
that many of us still crave.
The second part of this I've completely forgotten. I totally derailed myself.
Now I remember I was going to say the second part of this is, and this is an issue that I have
with the carnivore diet and experience with the carnivore diet. When you look at the carnivore diet and experience with the carnivore diet, right? When you look at the carnivore diet, one of the proponents of its vocal proponent of late
is Dr. Paul Saladino.
Bless his heart, super smart guy, very passionate
about the diet, very well educated,
and each of this knows the tale,
organ consumption, and if he's gonna have a stake,
it's just like blanched with some salt on it
and everything is brown and red and a little bit whitish on the table
in front of him.
I've invited him out to dinner and he'll show up with his little ziplock bag with a
cheap testicle and some kidney, suet and tallow.
When I try to do this at home, and my wife bakes the lovely slow fermented sourdough cinnamon rolls on a
Saturday morning, you know, with like an organic, raw dairy cream cheese frosting, you
know, with coconut sugar and takes out the heirloom tomatoes with some basil and some fresh
mozzarella, just old and olive oil.
And she makes her wonderful, you know, kale and bok choy and Swiss charred salad from fresh from the
garden and dress with this lovely citrus of an agrette.
And I sit down at the table and all I've gotten in front of me is a ribeye.
And is she testicle?
Like sure.
Like sure.
I do agree with Paul that a lot of these plant foods are poor people's food, right?
They're survival foods that we turn to when we couldn't get access to meat and realize that, you know, we got to figure out how to eat plants for survival and deactivate
these natural built-in plant defense mechanisms and, you know, and make a salad out in the wilderness.
But over thousands of years, these same plant foods have progressed to be beautiful, lovely,
vibrant parts of tradition and culture, you know, marinara with spaghetti and cinnamon rolls and, you know,
in Japan, you know, fermented natto with rice and seaweed.
And for us to simply shovel that aside and say,
we're going to biopically eat just one food because all we're
worried about is health. Really, that's another part of the
psychological aspects is, you know, we need to consider some of these myopic diets that eliminate a great deal of foods.
They're stripping us of some of the enjoyment of simply being able to gather around a
Thanksgiving table and have, you know, 12 different items there and we can eat them all
because it's just part of tradition and happiness.
Totally.
100% agree with you.
What's Paul's angle?
What is it?
We haven't had him on the show.
I know that his team has reached out to us multiple times.
And we've just, once we did the whole Keto talk enough time
and Carnivore talk enough time,
I was kind of like over the,
because we have no,
and the fight him and see deficiency.
Like how did he explain that?
You mean the lack of vitamin C that you'd have
on a carnivore diet?
I think that he showed data that you can get by available vitamin C from meat.
For more than properly.
Yeah, and a well-structured nose to tail, carnivore diet does indeed give you just about
everything that you need except electrolytes, which is why he throws in salt.
He's very smart and he's very well researched and he makes a wonderful case that I agree with that a well structured nose to tail
Carnivore diet can indeed give you everything that you need to sustain life while
Not presenting your gut with a lot of the built-in natural plant defense mechanisms that can screw some people over
But it's it can be a pretty damn restrictive and boring diet
And I think it's just an elimination diet that someone could follow for a certain period of time.
That's how I look at it.
But it's not for life.
The dude's a bachelor, right?
Doesn't have it.
For a reason.
Yeah, and so I think it'd be very easy to do
if you were living on your own and eating wherever you wanted to eat.
But when I gather on the table,
at the Greenfield House, this kind of returns
back to structuring your environment.
Like, when dinner rolls around, and we kind of eat late, because so everything's out
of the way, right, by the time we get to dinner.
And we're dragging out table topics, or boggle, or quidler, or boulder dash, or chess, or,
you know, exploding kittens, or unstable unicorns, you know, any of these card games.
And we sit around the table for like an hour and a half,
and we laugh, and we play,
and we eat all these foods, and we drink wine,
and then we go upstairs, and we play some guitar,
ukulele, or piano, and the boys fall asleep reading,
and mom and I go in, and we integrate,
and face each other, and chat,
and that's how we end our day,
and I just can't do that in front of a sheep testicle.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I got a question for you Ben.
There's a heavy, heavy science side to you,
but there's also a heavy spiritual side to you.
And looking at current research when it comes to longevity,
I've read some articles saying how aging
is a disease that can be cured at some point.
Scientifically speaking, sounds great. Let's solve this problem. saying how aging is a disease that can be cured at some point.
Scientifically speaking, sounds great. Let's solve this problem.
We don't have the age.
We won't have any problems with that.
The spiritual side of me, though, thinks
that might not be such a good idea
because I think there's a lot we can learn
from realizing our own mortality.
Where do you stand on that?
I'm trying to live as long as I can with the exception that I don't want to live
as long as I can, cold and libido, less and hungry and weak because all I'm doing is maximizing
autophagy and fasting and taking a cold bath every day. But the reason that I'm trying
to live a long time with good quality of life and good energy is because I believe
that every single one of us was put upon this planet with a unique purpose in life, a unique
change that we can affect in the world, and the longer that we're around, the greater
impact that we're able to make, and the greater we're able to achieve that purpose.
The more we take care of our bodies and try to keep ourselves here as long as we can,
learning and building upon the learning that we've done,
the more use that we can be to the world
and the greater impact that we're gonna make.
I mean, when I look at guys like Graham Hancock
and their philosophy or their theories
that we at one point as society were incredibly evolved,
that maybe there was some great disaster,
like a flood that struck at one time,
but prior to that, we had freaking like computers
and we weren't walking around like Togas and bath robes
like humankind, you know, even before we built
the pyramids and everything else
that seemed to have taken a great deal of engineering,
it's possible that we were very, very well advanced,
you know, having had
the ability to advance for thousands and thousands and thousands of years and some would
save in millions of years before some great disaster struck and we had to kind of start
out again at ground zero. But there's also a lot of evidence that humans lived for a
pretty long period of time too.
And it keeps popping up, right?
It keeps finding archaeological finds that predates all the history. pretty long period of time too. And it keeps popping up right? They keep finding archeological finds
that predates all the history.
Yeah, biblically, you know, they've got like,
Matthews, Liz, 969 years old,
or let's even say 800 years old.
Guys, think about this.
Like, if you were ancient man or woman
and you're like 50, hopefully you've figured out
how to make a fire by that time. And then you have 750
fricking more years to make this world a better place. And maybe by age 100 you figure
out how to make a wheel, right? And I would imagine by about 150, 175 you're thinking a
little bit about electricity. And maybe by the time you're 200 you're thinking about,
you know, how to get something else to do some thinking for you like a computer chip or binary coding
By the time you're 500 you probably would invent a lot of cool shit, right?
And so I think about it that way to a certain extent too. I'm like geez if I've learned a shit ton about health and fitness and nutrition and spirituality and happiness and longevity
By the time I'm 90 and I've somehow built my life
So I've still got 40 more years at that point.
Think about all the other cool shit I could do to help people.
Sure, fair.
Yeah, the living forever part is the part that I'm like,
I don't know about that.
It's almost like exponential wisdom
that can build over time if you keep yourself around for a while.
Yeah, maybe.
Yeah, you've had people on your show
that talk a lot about longevity and living a long time.
Like, what have you learned from them that's significant?
A lot.
That is a huge topic.
And we could talk for hours about longevity and anti-aging,
but I would say some of the more exciting fields
right now in the anti-aging front,
because people are talking about,
optimize your relationships, caloric restriction,
minimize glycemic variability, minimize inflammation,
low-level physical activity every day, get out in nature.
A lot of the blue zones concepts,
but when we dig into the more exciting science, some of the things that I think are with a real frontier of anti-aging medicine,
one would be the use of NAD. We know that NAD levels dramatically decline with age,
and by keeping those levels elevated, we can really increase mitochondrial health in a very dramatic way even with age. So the use of NAD IVs, NAD patches, which I use very frequently, or even NAD, or similarly
two other molecules that are similar to NAD NR, which is nicotinamide riboside and NMN,
which is nicotinamide mononucleotide.
These can be used as oral supplementation to keep NAD levels
elevated. NAD is one big one.
Is NAD or NAD patches, are those commercially available or do you have to get them?
They, you can purchase them. I buy them from the NAD clinic in San Diego.
Okay. Yeah, and I wear one too.
These are to help you get off cigarettes too, is that right?
They can be used.
Oh, really?
Oh, I was just bullshitting.
Very common treatment for addiction and opioid therapy.
No shit.
Exactly.
Hiredose, NAD, IVs, especially, that's what that clinic specializes in actually.
And they successfully treat a lot of patients.
No kidding.
So NAD, that's one.
Peptides are another.
There's a lot of Russian research and even Russian human research on decrease of all
cause mortality with two 10-day cycles of a peptide called epitelon.
And they've gotten similar results with the peptide called motsi.
There's another one that staves off all the immune system degradation that can occur with age
called thymus and alpha-1. And there are companies like Taylor made compounding and Kentucky
who have these amino acid sequencers and they can
precisely target
any type of cellular activity such as mitochondrial proliferation or production of killer T cells
or anything like that with peptides, which are usually administered subcutaneously with
an insulin syringe, but you know, some are topical.
I'm wearing one right now.
It's a GHK CU copper peptide, transdermal delivery,
it'll banded right there on my abs,
and that increases stem cell mobilization.
So it increases the movement of stem cells
from my bone marrow into my bloodstreams.
They can be mobilized for better recovery,
healing of injuries, et cetera.
So peptides are a really, really cool field right now
in anti-aging.
Probably one of the last ones that I think is based off of research being conducted right now by
Dr. David Sinclair, and he has a new book called Life Span about this, the use of virus that you'd actually be given at an early age
that would activate your immune system.
But the virus is actually deactivated.
They figure out how to deliver it in a manner
to where it stays in your system completely deactivated
and then when you're at a later age, like 45 or 50,
you can activate the virus and it will do things
and then they've studied this in rodent models so far
like get rid of gray hair, decrease wrinkles, reverse aging, and they measure this thing called the aging clock
which is actually not like telomere length, but it's the RNA and what's called the nucleolye of the cell,
and they've shown that with this type of treatment, you can almost like reverse aging
with they call it cellular
reprogramming.
Or turn into a zombie.
I feel like every zombie movie starts off like that.
Exactly.
They're studying that and it's out there in rodent models right now.
And they've achieved something similar.
New study came out two weeks ago and all they did was stack.
You know, and they're, they're using a lot of off label pharmaceuticals now for anti-aging,
but in this particular study, they showed a two and a half year reversal of aging
by measuring a lot of these DNA markers of aging
with the use of methformin,
which is an off-label drug that's commonly used for diabetes.
I don't like it, I think there's better alternatives.
DHA and growth hormone.
And so they used those three and saw profound results
from an anti-aging standpoint.
Now, all of all these things that you're listing off, how many of them actually have
carry a lot of weight in comparison to things that we know, like good relationships,
lowering stress, strength exercise, you know, the big rocks, like how did I mean, if you're
missing, if you're sleeping two, three hours a night, you have a high stress job, and then you're using all these things.
Yeah, it's worth anything, really.
They're in lies the rub.
And I'm going to have them on a podcast because I want to throw this question at them,
but like David Sinclair, that researcher that I mentioned, right?
He's on Metformin and Statton's, and he's not exercising, and he's traveling all over the globe.
And I don't think he's sleeping that well.
And, you know, I don't want to put words in his mouth or pain him in a poor light, but
I think that many of these anti-aging researchers or biohackers or whatever, they don't have
the basic foundational principles.
Yeah, it's the way I defend you always.
Because everybody that harps on biohacking people and if they try and lump you in that category,
I'm like, you know,
Ben really is somebody who I personally can say,
does all the big things first, you know,
say it's not like you're doing all this.
Yeah, you must have the foundation
and a reporter asked me this question last week,
he said, so what are the best biohacks?
Where do I start?
And I said, I don't know you.
I don't know if you need to increase your deep sleep versus your REM sleep. I don't know if for you it's hormonal optimization,
or if the hormones are just fine and we need to address, you know, white blood cell count.
I don't know if you've got rampant inflammation or if inflammation is just fine and we instead
need to focus on physical activity. But I did tell him that other than what we already know
that you've alluded to from the Blue Zones atom,
like relationships and not smoking
and properly structured diet and some elements of fasting, et cetera,
I always start with the foundation of mitochondria.
I think mitochondria are the most important thing
to take care of if you wanna be healthy or live a long time.
And there are six things that I address with everybody I work with. important thing to take care of if you want to be healthy or live a long time.
And there are six things that I address with everybody I work with.
Everybody I work with, there's six variables from Out of Condra.
Number one is Earthing or grounding, but actually getting in touch with the planet, walking
outside barefoot camping, swimming in the ocean, jumping in the sea, walking on the beach,
getting exposed to all these negative ions that the
planet emits because when we're up on jets, when we're getting bombarded by Wi-Fi, EMF,
et cetera, the electrochemical gradient across the cell drops to about negative 20 millivolts
and it should be closer to about negative 60 or so.
And getting absorbed or getting negative ions absorbed by the planet, there's a whole
book about this called Irthing by Clint Ober. That goes into the profound impact
just being in touch with our planet has in our body,
not to mention the beneficial effects of nature in general.
That's one, number two is light.
UVA, UVB, infrared, near infrared, and red light,
preferably from sunlight, being out in the sun
every single day.
And if you can't get out in the sun,
you buy these fancy biohacking red light
panels or red light producing devices and you simulate that but I really started interrupting
you at that. To that point I predict that to be a huge market in the future just because we seem
to be more indoors today than we ever were before on computers in the course. Do you think so too?
Do you think red light is going to continue just to explode?
Yeah, I think not only red light, but full spectrum light.
Light that will produce UVA, UVB, near red far.
Like lights that get as close to simulating what the sun does
is possible.
Number three would be, number three and four
would be heat and cold.
Like actual mild amounts of hormesis, which also stimulate mitochondria.
So like a regular sauna practice and a regular cold practice,
and exercising and getting hot counts as heat as well.
But you know, we know from Finland that
regular sauna practice has massive impact on longevity,
and we know that jumping in a cold bath,
cold lake, taking cold showers,
we know that that's also very helpful for mitochondria.
And then the last two, if we're thinking of the human body as a battery, and we're thinking
about this millivolt potential, which heat, cold, earthing, grounding, and light, all affect
water and minerals, like good, clean water.
And there's a lot going on in the water sector right now, like hydrogen water and deterium
depleted water and structured water.
And if you find all that confusing, just start with pure filtered spring water as close as you
can get to nature and minerals.
I put in a pitch of sea salt, taking some electrolytes using any of these type of full-spectrum minerals
that you can get.
I start with those six bases, earthing, grounding, light, heat, cold water and minerals, and
screw the fancy peptides and stem cells
and injectable viruses, like if you start with that stuff,
and then you throw in what you were talking about,
all the blue zones, practices,
you've got a really solid foundation.
Of all the things that you've,
because you've tried so many different things,
you've experimented on yourself quite a bit,
you ever have it, something go wrong,
where you try to set them down, you're like,
oh, this fuck me up a little
Why the fuck I always get asked that question people people always want to know it's fun, man
We want to know I was get disappointed
Well, that's because I feel like you he's just such a nerd. He does all the research
What about when you want to go for a plant and then you had a negative reaction?
I remember your wife told me that story. Yeah, that's not biohacking. That's like that's like
Mess enough shit when you're cooking.
Yeah, that's another thing to guess.
We were like putting butter in your tea or coffee
or whatever, that's not biohacking.
I feel like you approach most things pretty skeptical
and do a lot of research before you decide
to shove it in your own dick.
I mean, I don't think a person that would do something
like that would hope so.
Till you already have.
Yeah, I mean, there's times when I thought maybe, you know,
something was gonna happen.
Like when I got the stem cells injected in my dick,
like it turned black and blue for a couple days,
and I wondered if I actually had like, you know,
what's a broken tissue necrosis?
Oh, I got word for you Adam, it's not a bone,
you can't break it.
I don't think I told you that.
But I wondered if I got like tissue necrosis.
Oh, if it doesn't work, bro, it's broken. I don't give a fuck how you do. Yeah,'t break it, I don't think I told you that. But I wonder if I got like, T-shirt and the crock.
Oh, if it doesn't work, bro, it's broken.
I don't give a fuck how you do that.
I'm a fucking worthy.
Yeah.
So yeah, I thought that might do somebody,
it was fine.
And no, like, I don't have any sexy thing.
It's happened to me, like, honestly.
Now I've done stupider shit and messed myself up more like, you know,
training for Iron Man or, sure, you know,
or doing the death race or whatever
that I have, you know, with, with, with,
with biohacking.
Are you running Tahoe this year?
Are you going to Tahoe?
Yeah, you are.
Yeah, I'll be racing.
You're gonna race?
Yeah, okay.
Yeah, I'm still training pretty hard
and then I'm thinking about hanging up the hat after that.
Oh, are you?
Yeah, just kind of.
I think you're gonna move away
from a lot of the endurance stuff?
I think big time.
Yeah.
Where do you move more towards the way?
I'm just the fire in my belly.
Really?
Just playing mixed doubles tennis with my wife
and I'll start doing a little bit more
to get to your role with my kids
and filling out those medium shirts.
I mean, you know what?
I love to crush it at the gym.
Like I just love to go out and work out hard.
And I'm to the point now where I cannot be signed up
for any race or any competition.
And I just still crave just going out and crushing it.
Oh yeah.
Like something, I just feel great when I'm doing that.
So I don't really need, you know,
I used to think I needed that motivation
to be in signed up for a race or whatever,
bodybuilding competition or some type of event. But I've realized as I've grown older, like I'm just motivation to be signed up for a race or whatever, bodybuilding competition or some type of event.
But I've realized as I've grown older,
like I'm just wired to move.
Yeah, and as long as I'm moving, I'm happy.
I don't have to be toe on the starting line of a race.
Excellent, well it's always a good time with you, Ben.
Yeah, it's too.
Yeah, it's a good time.
Good to see you again.
I love you guys.
Thank you, Tim Miller.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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 Mind Pump Media.com.
The RGB Superbundle includes MAPS and Ebola,
MAPS Performance, and MAPS Esthetic,
nine months of phasedased expert exercise programming designed
by Sal Adam and Justin to systematically transform the way your body looks, feels, and performs.
With detailed workout blueprints in over 200 videos, the RGB Superbundle is like having
Sal Adam and Justin as your own personal trainers, but at a fraction of the price. The RGB Superbundle has a full 30-day money-back guarantee,
and you can get it now plus other valuable free resources
at MindPumpMedia.com.
If you enjoy this show, please share the love
by leaving us a five-star rating and review on iTunes
and by introducing MindPump to your friends and family.
We thank you for your support, and until next time, this is Mind Pump!