Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1837: Manage Your Blood Sugar & Lose Body Fat With Kelly LeVeque
Episode Date: June 16, 20221837: Manage Your Blood Sugar & Lose Body Fat With Kelly LeVeque Kelly’s background in the space and how she started her practice. (2:37) Turning your side hustle into an impactful career. (3:43) T...eaching people how to support their blood sugar through the foods they are eating. (6:38) What are hunger hormones and how do they affect our behaviors? (8:39) Why it is normal to crave processed foods. (18:02) How does she address the IIFYM crowd? (20:27) Why she prefers teaching people how to fish, rather than handing them the fish. (27:14) The theory behind why protein is so satiating. (30:37) The delicate balance of teaching your kids about how food affects them. (35:26) The differences between men and women when it comes to managing blood sugar. (38:09) Why putting on muscle is the BEST way to support blood sugar balance. (40:26) The science of how we perceive sweetness and palatability. (47:33) The downstream effects of artificial sweeteners. (50:52) The importance of the first 1,000 days. (53:46) The foods she recommends eating while pregnant. (55:37) The value of cholesterol. (1:00:58) How does your nutrition change pre, during, and post-pregnancy? (1:03:53) Related Links/Products Mentioned Visit Seed for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code MINDPUMP at checkout for 20% off your first month’s supply of Seed’s DS-01 Daily Synbiotic** Father’s Day Special: Free Shipping on all apparel and equipment for $150.00 or more 6/10-6/24 June Promotion: Shredded Summer Bundle or MAPS HIIT 50% off! **Promo code JUNE50 at checkout** Podcast — Kelly LeVeque Body Love Every Day: Choose Your Life-Changing 21-Day Path to Food Freedom – Book by Kelly LeVeque What We Know About Eli Lilly's Experimental Weight-Loss Drug Stanford researchers explore how the human mind shapes reality NIH study finds heavily processed foods cause overeating and weight gain Protein and satiety - ScienceDirect Is diet soda better for you than regular soda? The first 1,000 days of life: The brain's window of opportunity Force of Nature Meats Prenatal Vitamins for Him + Her | WeNatal Visit Drink LMNT for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Why Do Cows Lick Salt? (6 Common Reasons) - Informed Farmers Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Kelly LeVeque (@bewellbykelly) on Instagram Max Lugavere (@maxlugavere) on Instagram Alia J. Crum, PhD (@AliaCrum) on Twitter Robb Wolf (@dasrobbwolf) on Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump. All right, we got a great episode for you here today.
We brought on Kelly LeVec. Love her. She's one of the leading people in the
wellness industry. She's very good about talking about things like blood sugar, how to fix your
hunger, how to fix your cravings and mood. She's working with people for a long time. She's
very well known. You can find her on Instagram at B-Well by Kelly. She's got a great podcast,
by the way. I was on it actually a couple months ago. It's called Be Well by Kelly.
One of our favorite people, and in this episode she talked a lot about how to control blood
sugar and why that makes you hungry and why it's so important to control.
And we talked about many more things.
In fact, we actually talked about microbiome and that's effects on your cravings and health
as well.
She's a wealth of knowledge, real fun to talk to.
So I know you're're gonna enjoy this episode.
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use the code June 50 for that discount. All right, here comes the show. Kelly, thanks for coming on
the show. If you, it's some of our audience may not know who you are. If you give us kind of a
brief background kind of how you started and because when I got on with you,
I was on your show.
I was super familiar,
but I was super impressed with our conversation.
You're good friends with Max,
Luke of Ir, who we love,
and he just couldn't stop braving about you.
So if you could give us a little bit
about kind of how you started in the space, your background,
and then get on with the conversation.
Sure.
So I actually had a career in cancer and genetics
for about eight years.
And then went back to school for nutrition and did my postgraduate work at Berkeley and
UCLA.
I focused on blood sugar balance and hunger hormones.
And I started my private practice, be well by Kelly as a side hustle.
And so that was in 2012.
And in 2015, I took the business full time, seeing private clients in Los Angeles.
And then in 2016, I wrote my first book, Body Love, which talked all about how to eat
real-whole foods to balance your blood sugar, regulate your hunger hormones, and feel your
best.
Awesome.
Now, when you started as a side hustle was the intent for it to be a side hustle because
you had other plans to do something else, and then you eventually, like, how did that
happen?
I was just so passionate about the science of nutrition
and blood sugar.
I was that girl at parties talking about it.
I was the girl with my friends,
like, rallying people to go for a hike.
And then I was talking about, you know,
intermittent fasting and bee pollen.
And people didn't know what bulletproof coffee was at the time.
I mean, this is way back in the day when in LA,
the thing was juice cleanses and smoothies.
That when I looked at these smoothies were open,
anna, a day granola, orange juice blended up,
and they put some kind of sprinkly super food on top of that.
And I'm going, wait a second.
Nobody understands the nutrition here,
or the macronutrient profile,
what's gonna do to their blood sugar, what it's going to do to their insulin, what's going to do to
their cravings.
And so, yeah, so I felt like I was beating a different drum at the time when it was really
a liquid, like the popular thing was a liquid-based, plant-based diet.
And some type of restrictive cleanse.
And so, yeah, it's just kept talking about about it one of my best friends was like, what are
you doing?
Go back to school.
You know how to read PubMed research part of my job, my first career, and I'm thankful
for the twists and turns of my career because I learned how to read PubMed research.
I learned how to look for a significant p-value to look at study design, to look for conflicts
of interest, and not to be scared
by headlines that are like, how can hood oil is going to kill you?
Red meat is going to make you die.
I got to take a minute.
I'd love to health and nutrition.
I read all the diet books.
When I was younger, I subscribed to Women's Health and Shape magazine when my friends were
reading Cosmo and doing quizzes. So I feel like it was in me for a long time, but ultimately went back and started the side
hustle thinking, I'm just so passionate about this, I want to help people.
On the first half, it doesn't, people that I worked with were, you know, my friend
of mine from college just dad who had a heart condition.
And one of our best friends who was getting married, I helped her get ready for her wedding.
And it just kind of went from there.
Like I worked with people for those first half
it has in people for free and had some amazing
transformations and just felt really positive about it.
Like I do it for free and I do it on the weekends
and early I get up at five and work out with my friend
who was training for her wedding and help her
shop at Whole Foods.
And here we are.
I look at it now and that was 2012 and we're almost 10 years later and from her wedding
and she's still around the same size as two little girls and being active and eating healthy
is a daily practice in that life, in their life for her family.
And it's just I'm like humbled and thankful that I got to impact their life in that life, in their life for her family. And it's just, I'm like humbled and thankful
that I got to impact their life in that way.
When did you write your first book?
In 2016.
In 2016.
And that one was remind me.
Body love.
OK.
Yeah.
So we talked about it being food freedom.
There were some other working titles.
But it's all about blood sugar balance.
I wanted to teach people how to support their blood sugar through the foods that they
were eating.
And I was explaining in this book that there are certain foods that regulate your hunger
hormones, that elongate your blood sugar curve that slow down your digestion.
So think about protein.
Protein digested a slower rate than carbohydrates.
Now liquid carbohydrates are going to digest the fastest.
Like an apple juice versus apple versus a steak. Like a steak is going to digest the fastest. Like an apple juice versus
apple versus a steak. Like a steak is going to digest at a slower rate. It's going to be real,
those amino acids are released into the bloodstream at a slower rate. When you start to mix macronutrients,
when you add fat, fiber rich fat, like avocado to a meal, that's going to slow down the digestion.
And even when you eat protein and then fat and then your carbohydrates say something
like rice, you're going to blunt that glucose response. And when you're eating a carbohydrate that
is cellular in nature versus acelulars, so cellular meaning you're having a sweet potato or you're
having rice versus rice flour crackers. The minute you have acelular carbohydrates, these are
flour-based carbohydrates, carbohydrates in which the
starch or sugar has been obliterated out of the fiber cell.
It actually digests a lot faster.
If you think about it, it makes perfect sense.
Throw rice in a glass of water, rice flour crackers in a glass of water, and you're going
to see that the rice flour crackers are already turning into that emulsification, that kind
that our body produces
when it breaks down our food with acid.
It's pre-digested, essentially.
Exactly.
We don't have the fiber to slow it down,
and fiber is so beautiful.
I think nature's amazing at supporting our blood sugar
balance when we're eating whole foods.
All of the sugar in starch is wrapped up in that fiber cell.
You have to chew through it, you have to digest through it,
and then it's being released,
passed through the epithelial lining, elevating glucose,
and then insulin is bringing it back down.
Now, when people here control blood sugar insulin, they think diabetes, which is definitely
true, right?
There's a connection there.
But with my experience, the most important piece of that is really working with people's
behaviors, because it's behaviors that can lead to
overeating or eating the wrong foods
or not having the energy to be active,
which then eventually leads to diabetes.
So talk about this a little bit.
You mentioned hunger hormones, what are they?
And how do they affect our behavior?
And then what does that mean?
Well, first you have to understand how blood glucose works
and how blood sugar balance works because hunger hormones can either create satiety in our body,
they can be satisfying hormones or they can be appetite stimulating hormones. And so when we think
about the food that we eat, we don't want to stimulate appetite. We want to stimulate, we want to
feel satiety. We want to feel satisfied by the meals that we eat.
And so in my first book, I talk about the fab four protein, fat, fiber, and leafy greens.
And these four things are critical for supporting blood sugar balance because amino acids aren't going to break down to glucose in the way that a carbohydrate does.
Fat is not going to have that effect. It's going to slow down the digestion of that meal. And then fiber-rich veggies and fruits and leafy greens, vegetables, deep-in-color.
These aren't really breaking down to much glucose at all. So you're seeing that elongation of a blood sugar curve.
Now, if you're having, say, something like a piece of toast.
Yeah, but a piece of toast in the morning, nothing on it. It's a processed acyl-acarbohydrate.
It's going to drive up your blood glucose.
Insulin is going to be released.
Insulin brings blood sugar down.
And if there's an excess amount of insulin
and blood glucose goes plummeting, cravings are induced.
So we feel an increase in cravings when we go on these major excursions
in blood glucose.
And so if we can get that blood sugar elongated,
and we can start to eat the foods that regulate our hunger hormones,
like protein, like fat, like fiber,
we actually feel satisfied and we can go four to six hours between meals
without thinking about food.
And you're rolling into your next meal instead of crashing into your next meal,
and that allows you to make those healthy choices easier. So things like, for example, colicist to kinene.
Colicist to kinene was looked at.
That's a satiety hormone.
It's released in the presence of fat.
So omega-3s, conjugate a little leag acid, and proteins like algolutamine.
So if you're eating a protein of fat-rich meal,
if you're having salmon, for example,
or a grass-fed steak, or shrimp,
or pick your favorite protein and fat,
like even if you are taking your omega-3s
and then sitting down and having some chicken,
like it's gonna have that effect.
And Colossus to Kinine, I like to tell my clients
is like a blanket, like if you're just having boring, dry,
chicken and veggies
and you don't have any like satiety piece,
the fat piece that really regulates
and releases colostastichyenain,
it's like putting a blanket around you,
like ooh, that meal was so good,
it was so satisfying and it's lasting longer.
So not only is it slowing down the digestion
and elongating your blood sugar curve,
your body's now releasing colostus to chynaine.
And a lot of these hunger hormones and say, tiety hormones are looked at by pharmaceutical
companies as potential ways to create a drug to regulate hunger.
Yeah, is there a drug called somatic light or something like that, that injectable one?
So there are drugs like metformin and trulicity.
What's interesting is the most promising,
the absolutely the most promising drugs
when it comes to weight loss.
And there's one in phase three clinical trials
for Eli Lilly, which is like a trulicity
or diabetes drugs.
There are diabetes drugs that have a side effect of weight loss.
Like the phase three trial Eli Lilly drug
is a once-week injectable drug,
and it's in phase three,
people are losing 22% of their body fat.
And it's massive,
and it's like the best results we've seen,
and it's working on glucagon like peptide one, GLP one.
And GLP one is something that stops glucagon.
So now your liver is not taking stored sugar and dumping it in your bloodstream.
So it's bringing your blood sugar down.
It's also an incretin hormone, which means it tells your body to release more insulin,
which also supports blood sugar balance.
So it's interesting to me, but also a little bit frustrating that we're looking for all
these quick fixes, these drugs that are acting on our hunger
hormones, that are when we eat whole foods, when we eat fiber rich foods, when we eat the
foods that provide our body with the essential amino acids that we need, the essential fatty
acids that we need, and we aren't using ultra-process foods.
We elongate that blood sugar curve.
We naturally have high levels of GLP1 from the foods that
we're eating. We don't need to be injecting like GLP1 pharmaceuticals to have that happen.
And I wonder what the potential long term effect would be with injecting that and still eating
you know a quickly digesting-digested carbohydrate or sugar.
I wonder if, because the body reacts to those foods in a particular way because it's
supposed to, right?
It's an adaptation.
So now we're blending that response and we're still eating it in a particular way.
We might end up with some weight loss in the short term, but what does that potentially
mean in the long term is what I would wonder.
Right.
And I love functional MDs.
I work with a lot of them.
I have clients who I have amazing amount of just blood work
on and they are all like lab rats.
It's interesting, but whenever I work with a functional MD,
I love that they're looking for the root cause.
We're looking for the root cause of the problem.
And when you see people have low production of GLP1,
a lot of times they have chronic inflammation in the body. And that points to the fact that they're probably
eating a highly processed food diet. They are, you know, and there's no quick fix. All
of these quick fixes that we've seen in the past end up having side effects and problems.
And so for me, I am looking for the, I'm looking at the science, like one of my favorite classes in my post-clinical work was
food mood and behavior at Audit UCLA by Michelle Vargas and she was a dietician for
for a soccer team in Europe and just really an amazing teacher. But what was interesting is people
will take bits and pieces of like chocolate makes you feel good and that is releases dopamine and that's going
to make you feel satisfied. But what was so interesting was we looked at all of them. Like
colicestic chynaine is one hunger hormone and makes you feel satisfied. Glucogon like peptide
one that we just talked about GLP one, that is going to help support blood sugar balance.
And then you look at something like leptin and And leptin, right, is a hormone that's released from your fat cells that's supposed to tell your brain, hey, we're fat
cells and we're full, right? But when we have insulin resistance, when we have chronic inflammation,
we also have leptin resistance. And when we look at that as like a drug target, they did it,
they used it with animal models. It worked in animal models to supplement a leptin like pharmaceutical and the animals
got the signal, hey, okay, we're full, we don't need to eat anymore, we feel satisfied,
but it's broken in human models.
Like we are so complex and not only is it hunger hormones, but you also have to look at what's
the social setting because and when are we normally eating?
Because there are hunger hormones that are related to your normal eating times, like
grelan.
If you get up and eat at 6am every single morning, and then you try to get up and not eat
at 6am in the morning, your body is producing grelan, and grelan is the highest before you
eat and the lowest an hour after you eat.
So, the physical stretching of your stomach is what
calms Grellen. And in chronically inflamed and in research in obese patients, that Grellen's
never calming down. You know, so it is really interesting to start to understand these hunger
hormones and know like, hey, what's mental versus what's physical. And the Grellen piece is interesting
because whenever I have clients come to me and say,
hey, I really wanna start fasting now,
fasting super popular.
I'm gonna wait and I'm not gonna eat until 2 p.m.
But right now, there are a mom of three
and they wake up and eat at seven in the morning every day.
It's a good look at that.
Yeah, like it's just not gonna happen.
And it, you may, knowing that it's mental,
knowing that growing is, growing is really just sort of in your head a little bit, and
that we work to move that, move that time back. But we don't force it overnight.
And we don't say, two p.m.s going to be the best time for you to eat. I may
say, Hey, you want the benefits of intermittent fasting? Let's eat like my
grandma. Can you eat breakfast at 9am instead of at 7am?
And can you finish dinner by 5 or 6pm and just eat in the daylight hours?
But to get from 7 to 9, I may push it back 30 minutes every single day and have them
know mentally.
It's almost like sleep training a baby or like pushing yourself for something that just
a little bit of time every day,
like everyone can do 30 minutes, just push back 30 minutes.
Then eat, just push back 30 minutes.
Yeah, you know, I also, because people eat because they have cravings and hunger, but
they also eat because they have bad feelings.
I see this all the time with clients.
So irritability or I just don't feel good or whatever.
Stress.
Do these highs and lows with blood sugar
and do these other hunger hormones
besides causing cravings.
Can they also just make you feel crappy?
Because I see this all the time with clients.
It's like, I see this one myself.
This happens to be when I'm bored, I want to eat.
What about how they make you feel aside from the cravings?
Well, you have to remember that any type of highly palatable food that has carbohydrates, sugar,
fat, all wrapped into one is going to release dopamine.
It's going to make us feel good.
So it is absolutely normal, and I tell my clients, I empathize with them.
I'm like, I get it.
Like, you're having a bad day.
You're stressed, you're bored.
You're looking for a way to distract yourself.
Like, it is normal to want to have processed foods.
Now, if you've had processed foods,
you've gone up that roller coaster
on average, your blood sugar's going up for 90 minutes
and since being released and you're dropping down
for 90 minutes, that crash can make us feel irritable.
It can impede our ability to concentrate and learn.
So we even see this in the research with children,
which is why I'm so adamant that parents learn how to support blood sugar balance in their kids
to serve up protein rich meals, to serve up nutrient dense meals to really watch
sugar and process foods like before the
Today's podcast we were talking about it. You know when you have kids
It's you don't want to make them feel left out, but you also you are responsible
You need to be in the adult in the room to help support their blood sugar balance because they love sugar, right? And that crash is absolutely going to impact their
ability to learn and retain the information that they're learning. And it also, unfortunately,
causes attention deficit disorder like behaviors. And that can be a misdiagnosis based on blood sugar
dysregulation. So it impacts everything.
You know, you know, a frustrating it was to,
you know, obviously being in the space,
I've been in the space for over two decades,
and to hear doctors say,
or even studies, oh sugar doesn't cause kids to act crazy
or whatever.
I'm a parent, I'm like, yeah, it does.
See you immediately.
Oh yeah, I see my kids if they eat a bunch of sugar
about an hour later, an hour and a half later,
I don't wanna be around them.
Or, you know, on the drive home from the birthday party
and they're having total meltdowns,
it was really frustrating to hear medical professionals
say, no, that doesn't, that's not-
Well, you're alluding to something I wanted to ask her
about, because when I went through all your content,
one of the things I really enjoyed was,
I love the way that you communicate a lot of the science,
very similar to what we've been communicating
on this podcast for a long time.
I don't know, it was like maybe six years,
six or seven years ago, when we came out,
we had shirts made that said,
I-I-F-WM sucks.
And we stirred up a lot of controversy about that,
because at that time it was getting really popular.
And this is kind of some of the stuff
that we were talking about that we didn't like about it.
And one of the challenges is there are a lot of PhDs
on the other side that wanna make this argument
about a calorie as a calorie and as long as your calories
are controlled and weight loss or building muscle,
we can do all that.
And we are always trying to communicate to our people,
yeah, okay, yes, that's true.
But then there's the behavior side in these cravings
and all these other things that are happening,
how you feel that, why would you make it
that much more difficult on yourself
if there is a natural holistic way
to make it easier for yourself by just making better choices?
So how do you handle that conversation?
Cause I'm sure that you get some skepticism and criticism
in that direction when you say blood sugar and insulin, you get those people that I roll and be like,
oh god, calories and calories, as long as I eat my 17-monoros, yeah, I hit my macros,
I'm fine.
Yeah.
You know what's really interesting is that there are some studies that I lean on and I explained
to my clients.
There was one study, Alia Crum, out of Stanford.
She is a tenured professor.
She is a clinical psychologist,
and she did a study, and it's about what you believe, it's your belief system,
and the belief response.
And she gave two groups smoothies, and she's told one that it was nutrient dense and satisfying,
and really good for them, and that the told the other group that it was, you know,
gluttonous, highly caloric, and not nutrient dense.
And what actually happened was the belief system actually affected the physiology of the bodies.
Wow.
And what they were able to show is that the return of
Grellen for the people who believed that, or the increase in Grellen for the people that believed that it was nutrient dense and satisfying,
was actually further out in time based on fascinating.
And so when you look at stuff like that or like, you know, there was a study that took macro
nutrients.
It was, it was published just about a year and a half ago and it was looking at ultra-process
food versus whole foods and it was controlled.
So it was in hospital set, in hospital setting, controlled for fat, protein, fiber, and calories.
And it was ultra-processed versus whole food-based. And what they looked at was feeding behaviors.
And so exactly what you're talking about, the ultra-processed food eating community,
and I'm sure you've seen this study, they ate 500 calories more.
Exactly, I'm going to talk about this one.
More a day. And when you look at that,
that the natural satiety that happens,
it's this amazing orchestra in our bodies
of multitude of hormones.
And so when you talk about grill
and the physical stretching of the stomach,
a protein bar versus a piece of protein on some veggies,
with a starch, if you have a starch, if you're lean low carburetid,
and you don't have a starch, fine.
Like, I don't really care.
What I'm looking for is nutrient-dense whole foods
that are full of fiber and water that are going to physically
stretch your stomach so that growing calms down
versus something that's processed and small or low in calories.
But there is some interesting
research around belief system too.
When someone believes that their diet is going to work for them, so say the guys that maybe
troll me on the internet about calories and calories out, your belief system, again,
Alia Krum is showing through her research that it plays a big role and how
your body responds to the foods you eat.
And so if you believe, and this is so key in follow through for my clients, if you believe
that something is going to work for you or that you can do it, your follow through, your
commitment and your consistency will always prevail.
And that is going to outpace any fat diet that you do.
So I always tell people like calories don't count, they backfire.
But like, you know, I'm not discrediting the science, but what I'm looking at is human behavior.
I'm looking at the fact that like someone can calorie count, but if they start their day with a highly processed bowl of sugary cereal,
what if they can accrate 90 minutes later? They're going to start that crash cycle and they're going to start craving highly processed bowl of sugary cereal, what if they can accrave 90 minutes later?
They're gonna start that crash cycle
and they're gonna start craving highly processed foods
or they're gonna crave more sugar.
And then it's gonna be hard for them,
they're gonna white knuckle it,
they're gonna try really hard not to eat,
and then they're gonna cave.
And it's like my whole job is to get people
out of their own way to have them stop thinking about food,
to have them feel satisfied and relaxed,
to roll into a party
where there's a buffet in front of them and to say like, I feel good.
And not because mentally they're really good at control, because those people aren't
having any fun at that party.
They're focused on controlling their food choices.
I want you to be physically satisfied, and I want those hunger hormones to be calm and I want the satiety
hormones to be flammable.
I think what people need to understand is that our environment doesn't match our body.
What I mean by that is we evolved in a particular way and then relatively short period of time
our environment changed radically, including our food.
And when we design food, we have a market-based system.
What people pick food based off of is its palatability.
How enjoyable it is to eat.
By the way, this is true for all categories of food,
including health foods.
You're gonna top five foods and wellness
and health categories,
and it's the most palatable of all those foods,
not the healthiest necessarily.
And so it's just they've created, with no understanding at first, maybe now they do know,
but really no understanding of how it impacts these ancient bodies that really were never exposed
to these types of things. And so we're just mismatched as what's happening. And there's this belief that
humans evolved to just eat whatever's in front
of them because food was so scarce.
Over eating 10,000 years ago was just as bad for you as it is today.
And obviously it was much more difficult.
But if you gorge yourself with food, you could hurt yourself, you could actually die,
you could cause digestive issues, back then just like now.
And so these signals of satiety exist for a reason, but we have completely hijacked them and made them
like haywire, right?
So of course, you're gonna walk around
and you're gonna, things are gonna be screwed up for you
because your body's telling you to do something
and you're trying to discipline your way out of it,
which you know, that doesn't last very long.
At some point, you give in and you just like forget it
because this sucks.
And then you pay the, you know, you pay the price.
I wanted to ask you about the individual variances.
And I know that now we have technology,
like continuing glucose monitors
and to be able to really like get more insight
into those variances, but also like when you're first
starting out and you had clients
and maybe weren't using this technology yet,
how did you teach them how to navigate through that process
and really see how the body reacted to certain foods and how do they navigate and make better choices
through that?
Yeah, definitely.
Well, I love like teaching people how to fish instead of handing them fish.
I like them to understand the science.
One of my favorite classes at USC in my undergrad was Nature of Human Health and Disease, where
I wrote a paper. My thesis, the end end of that class was on type two diabetes and I thought it was so fascinating
because it really opened my eyes to blood sugar balance. And so for me teaching my clients to
manage their blood sugar with their food choices was really important. And so a lot of it started
without technology in 2012, right? It was, hey, when do you feel hungry?
So anytime I sit down with a client, I ask the question,
like, put me, I want to live in your body, like, put me
in your body.
What does it look like?
How do you, what is it like when you wake up in the morning?
Are you energized?
Are you tired?
Do you need caffeine?
When do you feel hungry?
When you eat, what do you eat?
How full do you feel when you're done eating?
Was your energy level look like 90 minutes later,
three hours later, when are you craving snacks?
Are you able to make it from breakfast to lunch
without snacking?
And are you focused?
When are you, what times in the day do you feel the most focused?
So all of those questions are probing to understand
how they're digesting their food.
Is it giving them energy?
Are they feeling full and satisfied?
Are they feeling bloated?
You know?
And so a lot of times, especially in the clients
that I work with, which are primarily 25 to 55-year-old females,
and I have a lot of women who are, I just found myself working
in living in LA where I was helping people get ready
for movie roles or red carpets.
And there's this, there's in this space, there's a real push for deprivation, calorie counting,
juice cleansing, and things of that nature. So for me, it was the goal, the goal was food freedom
and for them to feel their best. So it's really asking those questions around how do you feel? Because if you're eating a meal
and after you're done eating, you still are sort of thinking about food. I may probe and question,
well, how much protein did you eat in that meal? That is actually the most satisfying macro nutrient
from a scientific standpoint in regards to its ability to regulate the majority of your hunger hormones.
You have a hunger hormone called neuropeptide-Y and I always joke, it's like, why don't you
just eat more?
Because it's from the top down.
It's a hormone that makes you crave more sugar and carbohydrates.
So if you finish the meal, and this hunger hormone is still raging in your body, you might
not have eaten enough protein because protein is something that calms that hormone.
So I'm always looking for low-hanging fruit of, are you going to send yourself up and down
a blood sugar roller coaster with this meal?
Are you suboptimal when it comes to protein intake?
Or are you having a hard time digesting your food, for example?
It really, I mean, everyone is different, but I'm looking for the easiest points of entry to get
the biggest bang for my buck.
What's the theory behind why protein is create so much satiety versus let's say carbohydrates?
Is it because in nature, protein containing foods tend to also come along with lots of nutrients
and carbohydrate containing foods in nature tend to, you need to eat more of them to get the same amount of nutrients.
Is that the prevailing theaters or something else?
Well, there's a lot there. So when you look at glucagon like peptide one,
GLP one, when you look at
when you look at grellen, when you look at leptin, when you look at neuropeptide-Y,
when you look at glucose-ptide Y, when you look at glucose response to eating protein
and insulin, a normal insulin response,
it regulates the majority of those hunger hormones.
It also is interesting because you have nerves
that innervate your gut that are scavenging
for essential amino acids,
and they're scavenging for essential fatty acids.
So there's a protein say,
tie-ity theory of you guys talked about that on the show.
There's a belief that we will stop eating as humans
when we have gotten the amino acids
from the food that we're eating
and that we feel the most satisfied by that.
That's why protein diets are so effective
at helping with calories.
Exactly.
There's no way around the fact whether you're raw vegan to paleo, somewhere in between, that you have to get essential amino acids from your food and you have to
get essential fatty acids from your food. You cannot synthesize these or produce these in the
body. They make everything from our muscle cells to cellular repair, neurotransmitters, hormones,
everything.
And so, I, you know, when I, and also when I look at blood sugar balance, starting your
day with protein or breaking your fast with protein, does the best job at keeping hunger
hormones and check the whole rest of the day.
So under eating protein at breakfast and eating a highly carbohydrate-based
breakfast actually increases late night eating. It increases the three to four o'clock window
where you crave caffeine and sugar and it makes you have more obsessive thoughts about
food throughout the entire day. Wait, so eating a high protein breakfast
they've shown affects the rest of the day regardless. Exactly. So when you think about
that, when you have a savory
or a high protein breakfast, or if you have a protein shake,
let's make sure it's not just like a fruple,
right, blended fruple.
What that does is it's gonna regulate those hunger hormones,
but it also is going to support blood sugar balance
the rest of the day.
So instead of starting with say something
that is highly processed, that is dense
and carbohydrates, that spike and crash, that is dense and carbohydrates,
that spike and crash, it's almost like you don't recover.
That first meal of the day, especially coming off of a fast, they've been able to show
when people fast and go into a high glycemic meal, they actually have higher glucose excursions,
they have more inflammation in their luchin six, C reactive protein is higher, and then when someone has a protein-based breakfast,
or breaks their fast with protein.
So when someone says, I'm intermittent fasting
so that I can roll into John and Vinnie's
and have a huge pizza, I think to myself,
you would have been better off to get up,
work out, lift, have an eggs, cramble,
and then go have that pizza because
you actually would have done a better job of regulating your blood sugar than if you
would have fasted and rolled into that pizza.
So fasting is not a free ticket to a high glycemic meal.
It's actually more detrimental to your body when you do that.
So how you break the fast is very important.
So critical. Interesting. And that first you break the fast is very important. So critical.
And that first meal of the day can be everything.
So even if I don't have control over, say for example,
my kids meals at school or what they're eating at a birthday
party, you better believe Sebastian and Toshin
are having a protein shake or they're having eggs
or they're, I mean, like whatever it takes,
like it's a bacon, it's the sausage, it is,
I am, it is leftovers, they can have salmon from the night
before, I don't care if they want a chicken wing.
Like, I just, yeah, like sending your kids to school
or sending them to, and my kids are like protein points,
plant points, not to say that we've like totally gamified it, but
Spassion's three and a half, you know, I talked to him and like to educate him on what
is in his food, even if it's a little bit over his head, because he, I mean, like most humans
we feel good accomplishing something, and I'd rather, even from my toddlers to my clients,
I want people to feel really motivated
to put something on their plate
than to try and use all this willpower to keep something off.
The minute you say, you can't have this,
you can't have that, you can't have this.
We talk about this all the time.
All you want are those things, off limit things.
I've heard you actually talk about how you explain
this to your kids, and we do the same thing.
My wife's really good at this about
carrots good for your eyes, and proteins good for the muscles, My wife's really good at this about like, care, it's good for your eyes and, you know,
proteins, good for muscles and like,
there's that association so they know like to seek those
types of foods to build up their body.
And I think that's like a great way to kind of connect
all those choices to them.
Thanks.
Yeah, same right back at you.
Like being a parent is tough.
You want your kids to feel motivated to,
I'm sorry, yes.
The problem.
I was gonna cough my way through that, but.
Oh, it's alright.
It gets me emotional too.
And I do this to every guest.
Yeah.
Woo.
Not for Clint.
Yeah.
No, Ray Packatu, I think being a parent is tough, right?
You like-
Definitely.
You don't want to demonize foods.
You don't want to label foods, because you don't want kids to seek those out
or think that, you know, I don't know,
you just, there is some psychology around
off-limit foods and we have it as adults.
So most of the time, let's say we do have those
like meltdowns on the way home from a birthday party.
I empathize.
I'm like, oh, those cookies are so good, right?
They make us feel really excited and really energized
because it's a really fast energy.
But then sometimes it's like we climb up the slide
really fast and then we're sliding down
and we're like, whoa, feeling tired,
I'm feeling a little out of control.
That's normal, but I know it makes you feel better,
a little bit of protein.
So I may have a beef stick or I may have like a nut pack for my kids. And I like to teach them to eat their way through it
with nourishing things. And it isn't an atonement for their sins. And I talk to my clients about this
because there is that thing like, oh, I'm going to, if I'm going to eat that pizza, like, I'm going
to go work out or make up for it. It's a really hard, it's a sticky space, right?
Because you're like, no, I want someone to be like,
I'll have fun at brunch, but then,
yeah, I'm gonna get a workout in.
It's not, I don't think I have the mindset of like,
yeah, you don't want it to be a complex.
You don't want to like make up for it,
but you also want to say like, how do I keep my pendulum?
Like if you think of a ball on a pendulum,
I always say, I have a client who is hardcore cleansing
There is gonna be a minute where she's gonna swing to the other side and binge and I'd rather get her in a place where
She can have the cookie and then not miss the workout and then decide to go the farmers market and make some healthy food
And you're bouncing off the midnight you're never gonna be perfect the ball is not gonna stop
So like this attainment of'm going to have the perfect day, really throws people
off because the minute they have shame or guilt or belief system around something that
they've eaten and it's bad, then the whole day's off.
Yeah, now you're speaking our language for sure.
Now, what about the difference between men and women?
Because we're talking about hormones and although we're far more similar than we are different,
men and women are different when it comes to hormone profiles.
Obviously, men, everybody knows higher testosterone,
much more consistent, whereas women have estrogen
and progesterone, higher, and those alternate
throughout the month, and they sometimes
ones higher than the other.
What about the difference between men and women
and cravings in food?
Have you found big differences, or are those not really?
Well, I would say gender wise when we're just
making generalizations and what I've seen in my clients,
women are definitely a little more emotional
when it comes to food and we're more sensitive to food.
We also, we want to maintain our administration
and so we need to have a specific amount of fat
to do that on our body and on our frame.
When it comes to men, you have high levels of testosterone. You have higher, a larger muscle mass,
which means you have more ability to manage glucose. You have, you're going to have more mitochondria
that can create more ATP that can burn more glucose and, um, and create and break down and burn fat substrates.
So there is more of an ability for my male clients
to fast easily, for example,
and wait until 2 p.m. to eat
or set their mind on not eating a specific thing
and maybe feeling less emotional about it.
So I think context matters.
I also think, and this is my belief system, that women are a little bit more people pleasing
and when it comes to making sure that everyone else is okay and not trying to be the best
at something or to achieve something, whereas certain men don't feel bad.
If they're like, I'm going to eat this.
I don't care
if everybody at the party isn't eating what I'm eating, whereas women might be more inclined to
eat what everyone else is eating to not make someone feel left out or to, so it maybe not isn't
hormone related, more like social behavioral generalities, but yeah, most often I would just say, like men, for men, it's a lot easier
for them to balance blood sugar if they have higher levels of testosterone and if they
have higher muscle mass.
Yeah, the muscle mass ones are interesting one.
So when I read about this, one of the best ways that I've seen in this literature to
help with insulin and blood sugar is just to build muscle.
There was once they I read where they took obesity individuals,
had them lose no weight, they just built some muscle,
and you saw these really significant improvements
in blood sugar regulation.
So maybe we could talk about that a little bit.
Oh yeah.
Well, when you think about glucose or blood sugar,
you eat a carbohydrate, you digest it and it breaks down, it passes
through your epithelial lining of your intestines, it becomes blood sugar, your blood sugar goes
up. Well, where is it going to go when it's coming down? Insulin is released, its job is
to pick up that glucose and put it away. Think about your tanks, you have your liver tank,
that's going to suck up some of the sugar, and then you have your muscles. And your muscles
are, I think these are the active
tanks that suck up sugar. So how do we bring blood sugar down? Well, we don't eat things
that break down to blood sugar or we put muscle on and that's tank. Right. You cannot change
the size of your liver and if it's getting bigger, like, not probably great. You bigger
or fatty, not really great for your health, right?
But when it comes to muscles, that is your metabolism.
That is, those are the tanks in which you store sugar.
So I always say, if it's not going in the gas tanks, your liver and your muscles, it's
going in the trunk, right?
It's being converted to your triglyceride.
It's getting the trunk.
And it's storing as fat, right?
And so what we can do is put more lean muscle mass on.
And for a long time, I think women were really afraid
of putting muscle mass on, but I will tell you,
time and time again, the clients that have
the most flexibility in eating that don't have
to think about their food as much.
They have lean insulin-sensitive muscles
that suck up sugar and allow them to decide
to have that rice crispy treat at the party or make a more, I mean, a high glycemic or
processed food choice without impact on their body composition.
Speaking of muscle metabolism, there's a lot of controversy around exactly how many calories,
a pound of muscle burns
more in your body.
And this is something that we've battled with even on the show because I think early
on, I think I remember hearing estimates as high as like 40 to 50 calories for every pound.
And then I've seen other research that said, oh, it's more like four.
Now in my experience, if I could take a male or a female client and add 10 to 15 pounds
of muscle in their body,
we have dramatically changed the amount of calories it can eat.
And it doesn't line up with what I've read.
And so we've had the chance, can you explain that or what are your thoughts on that?
Well, I think you have to look at the entire experience there, right?
So you're putting on muscle mass, you're raising your metabolic
rate, you're also raising the, you're increasing the amount of glucose that that person can eat,
you're clearing glucose faster, right? And you're balancing blood sugar in a more effective way,
which is also going to support those hunger hormones that we talked about. When we have elevated
levels of glucose and blood sugar constantly in the body. Not only does it increase cravings,
it increases insulin, it increases the chances of metabolic and chronic lifestyle diseases,
type 2 diabetes, polycystic ovarian syndrome. It's going to impact fertility. It's going to,
I mean, everything. So when we just say, oh, putting on a little bit of muscle is just going to have
us burn more calories, it's a whole change in our how you feel, how you feel, our energy levels, our ability,
like to perform in our job and and be the best version of ourselves.
So, you know, I'm not one to fight when it comes to the calories burned for a pound of fat,
three to five or pound of muscle, 40 to 50.
I look at that and I say,
you've increased someone's metabolic health
and longevity, not only that,
but every single time that they are activating those muscles,
they're releasing myocins,
which are, you know, those are anti-inflammatory chemicals
that are released from the muscle
after three minutes of muscle contraction
that are amazing from the muscle after three minutes of muscle contraction that are amazing for the body.
So we think about that.
It's counteracting these cytokines or these inflammatory chemicals that are all in the body.
So I think, I mean, there, it, no doubt in my mind that putting on muscle is one of the
best ways to support blood sugar balance.
And we also know that movement after a meal,
even movement before a meal or after a meal,
if you wanna have a glucose excursion,
is one of the fastest and best ways
to bring glucose down.
That go for a walk after eating.
Yeah, tag it to store as energy
and to store as glycogen in the muscle
versus having that blood sugar elevated for the long haul
overnight, whatever the case may be, causing inflammation, waking up with that blood sugar elevated for the long haul overnight, whatever the
case may be, causing inflammation, waking up with elevated blood sugar.
Now you have cravings.
Now you're setting yourself up for potentially having all these chronic lifestyle diseases.
And most doctors aren't talking, especially to women.
And when you're fasting blood sugar is in the 90s, you're doubling your chances for Alzheimer's.
And Max and I talk about that.
You know, we talked about that on his podcast a lot
because it's when we're focused on cardio-based activity
as a female and we are not focused
on holding on to lean muscle mass,
you are constantly gonna fight the scale
and what are you gonna do?
Oh, I just eat less.
We're got more cardio, less food.
And then they get to a place where it's unsustainable.
Yeah, and Alzheimer's, some people refer where it's unsustainable. Yeah.
Yeah, and Alzheimer's, some people refer to it as type three diabetes.
Exactly right.
And strength training is actually the only thing that's been shown to halt the progression
of the beta amyloid plaques from a non-medical intervention standpoint.
And as far as the calories are concerned, I've read literature.
You know what's interesting is that you have a range of calories you could burn with the
same lean body mass.
So if you're sending the signal
that you need to build muscle, even if you don't, your body becomes less efficient with calories,
or more efficient depending on your activity and how you feed yourself. So it's not as easy as
saying a pound is- Right. Well, I think Kelly did a good job of touching on some of the other
factors that these controlled studies don't bring in, right? So it's like a controlled study of
just measuring- Doesn't give you the whole picture. And I've talked, I've shared on the podcast many times
some behavior or a part that I've noticed about weight
training for myself. When I am consistent with my lifting,
my knee actually increases because I just, I feel better.
I come home and instead of feeling lethargic from not working
out and I'm tired, I want to come home and just sit down
and not do anything versus I come home
and I'm in this mood where I want to help my wife
out around the house, like, cup clean, I do more dishes,
like I'm just a better partner because I got my lift in.
And so that's not going to translate in a study
that's measuring just my muscle and how many calories it's burning,
but that's getting, that's counting towards me
burning more calories for the day,
which is going to help with overall.
So yeah, we talk about, in our experience, when we can add 5, 10, 15 pounds of muscle,
somebody, it dramatically changes their ability to lose body fat.
And I know that doesn't line up with some of the studies that people tout out there.
That's always a challenge.
The long term, the long term, their success rate goes to the roof.
What about how our bodies or brains adapt to
the lack of a term, the sensation of hyperpallotability or sweetness? I notice when I avoid highly
palatable foods that whole foods become more flavorful. If I don't need any candy, for
example, or no sugar, fruit tastes much better.
If I eat a lot of candy, fruit starts to taste more bland.
Like what about the science on that
and how we perceive sweetness
and how we perceive palatability
and how it affects us down the road
in terms of how we start to perceive the foods that we eat?
Yeah, well, what we can point to is dopamine, right?
So when we eat highly palatable foods, dopamine is released.
And dopamine can be released in any type of addiction behavior.
So smoking and sex and whatever it is that you're like, yes.
So eating highly palatable foods, you have the release of dopamine.
Access dopamine causes down regulation of dopamine receptors.
So then you need more of that food to get that same high.
And so when you take a break from any type of these, any of these types of behaviors and
you allow for that regulation system to recalibrate and then you're eating naturally sweet foods,
they're going to taste better and you're going to enjoy them in a whole new way.
And so there is something to be said about abstaining.
And I always tell my clients,
if you are going to say, for example,
try to white-nuglet, let's say you do love ice cream
or you love cookies and you buy them
once at the grocery store and then they're in your cabinet.
You are gonna need to say no,
every single time you open that door
and versus just once at the store.
No, at the store is better than no every time you open that.
Good point.
Open that cabinet.
So if you don't have to abstain forever, but having those breaks and creating a system,
it's one thing to talk about it.
Oh, just don't eat that food.
Oh, just say no.
But have a system for it.
We have a system around screen time.
We have a system around sugar in our
house with our kids. And that comes down to having on the weekends. And it is something where we
might get a small pint of vetter's ice cream, which is an awesome little local place down where I live.
And we'll get that. And it's made with dates and really awesome, so shout out to them.
But we'll have it and if it's done,
we don't keep it around so that
we bash can open, spashtion we call them bash,
open the freezer drawer and go like,
I want this on a Monday morning, right?
Like, don't put it in front of yourself
to naturally create those breaks in time
so that you can experience the joys of
whole foods.
I'm talking about.
And this is the real value of my opinion of fasting.
I think the real value of fasting is the lack of a fundamental spiritual aspect of
abstaining, giving yourself time to deal with how you feel, to deal with these cravings.
Then you get these receptors to up-regulate again.
Then you can, of course, this is, I also talk about this, how you break the fast is very important.
Then you find all the sudden foods that maybe were more bland
or more enjoyable, you have less cravings for those super sweet types.
In fact, I found after a long fast that really sweet foods are overwhelmingly sweet.
Well, I'll eat it and get almost nauseous from it because my brain is changed itself.
Speaking to the overwhelmingly sweet,
in terms of artificial sweeteners
and maybe some downstream effects of behaviorally,
if people think that they're not really getting the calories
necessarily from these artificial sweeteners,
have you noticed any behavioral,
like sort of red flags as a result of maybe incorporating that in your diet?
Yeah. We haven't seen it in research when it comes to natural sweeteners, like stevia,
unmunk fruit. But we haven't studied it in the same way as we've studied artificial sweeteners,
like Asper team with diet soda. So there was some study, there was a study done looking at soda,
diet soda versus regular soda,
and they gave people a diet soda or a regular soda,
and then they gave them a burger and fries,
and they watched the behavior of the quantity of foods
that they ate after a diet soda versus a regular soda,
and they were eating almost a third more of the meal
when they had a diet soda.
So I think what we think is, you know, your brain is waiting for the payoff, right?
You taste these sweet foods, you're waiting for the payoff, it's not coming.
And then we end up overeating or almost looking for those foods, looking for that sweetness
or looking for those calories in the food that we're eating after.
So like I said earlier, there's no quick fix, right?
If you need something sweeter, you want to enjoy something sweet.
If you can fruit natural canned, nature's candy,
that's a cellular carbohydrate.
It's locking up the sugar.
You have to chew through it.
Through that fiber, you're getting all the phytochemicals
and antioxidants present there, the polyphenols,
amazing research coming out on how that is supportive of our gut health, like really cool stuff there.
But I get it if like you need a cookie sometimes. It's just, there, I think there's this mindset
that people have that they should be able to just have a box of cookies in their cabinet and be
superhuman, never think about it, never eat it, and it'll just be there
for their kids when their kids want it, but they're going to be able to control themselves,
because that just is, I think it's unfair.
Like you wouldn't tell an alcoholic who potentially is looking to be sober to go have a soda,
soda water, you know, topochico perier, you would have, go have it at the bar that you used to drink at.
Like, that's really unfair, you know?
And why spend that mental energy there
when it could be spent doing amazing things
for your career, doing amazing things with your kid,
like productive energy versus, I think it's,
it's just energy being used in the wrong space.
You know, the problem is that when we do that,
we're in a motivated state of mind,
oh, I'll totally be able to say no
with the cookies in my cupboard.
And then you're not always gonna feel that strongly
about your discipline and you're gonna end up giving
and that's why I don't have potato chips,
for example, in my house,
because that's my food,
that's the one that I can't say no to.
Now, what about, so the brain models itself a little bit
when you expose it to a lot of dopamine.
But as you, when you're an adult,
your brain isn't quite as plastic as when you're it to a lot of dopamine. But when you're an adult, your brain isn't quite as plastic
as when you're a child.
Do we have any research showing how there may be some
like bigger or more permanent changes to a child's brain
when they're exposed to lots of these foods versus an adult?
Like, are there anything that,
do we see anything from, you eat a lot of sugar as a kid
versus just when you eat it as an adult?
Well, it is really interesting that most parents will say,
my kids can handle a lot of sugar.
But what they're thinking of there,
what they're looking at is that their child can eat sugar
without metabolic impact, without gaining weight.
Right.
But they're not looking at their ability
to learn, retain information.
They're not looking at their microbiome development.
A child's
microbiome, there's something called the first 1000 days. And this is the most critical time
from when a child is growing in utero through the first, you know, from literally egg and
sperm coming together to create embryo in the from there to the first 1000 days, how critical
it is for that child, whether it's
still growing in the mom or out in the world to have access to the most nutrient dense
foods and to be protected from endocondisrupting chemicals, from pharmaceuticals, like antibiotics,
and obviously antibiotics are lifesaving when needed, but it is such a critical developmental period
of the brain and the microbiome and the body in general
that we wanna protect that as much as possible.
So steering clear of things that break down the body
and really focusing on the most nutrient dense
brain building and body building foods is critical.
Yeah, so when my wife was pregnant with my son, we, she ate a lot of egg yolks.
She ate salmon row, a lot.
We had organ meats.
Were we on the right track?
Are these, are these a lot of the good foods?
You're making me so happy, right?
Okay.
Great.
Yes.
Yes.
Any other foods that you recommend for somebody who's, we're pregnant now.
By the way, this one's much, thank you.
I'm very challenging those times
because the first trimester, she was like,
really nauseous, like terribly, couldn't hold anything down.
So this is a little more challenging.
But what are the foods can we add to that list
if someone's listening, they're gonna have a baby
or they're planning on it?
What are like some of the best foods that you can eat?
Right, so you wanna look for mineral dense,
iron rich, vitamin D rich, omega-3 rich
foods, right?
And so those are primarily going to be in animal protein.
So you're mentioning things like organ meats.
And Forcive Nature is an awesome company.
They do meat blend with organ and liver.
So other, so heart and liver.
And so 10 to 20% of that
ground is going to, it's 100% pasture raise. So it's ground, it's ground beef with,
it looks like it looks like a pound of ground beef. And they've already mixed in the organs
and the liver for you. I have never, bring out that flavor a little bit. I have never,
it's not too gamey. I have never once been so consistent with organ meat. Like, I know,
I know how healthy it is. And that should be motivation enough, but I'll get a liver
and try to eat it, chop it up, and when it's frozen and try to swallow it frozen, I'll
try to grind it myself into some ground beef.
It's just, this is the first time I've ever been consistent with my family eating it,
and not taking it as a desiccated liver capsule. So what you're going to get from that is vitamin A. You're also
going to get iron. You're going to get copper, all the minerals. So anything that has
selenium zinc, and that is truly in things like your organ meats that you're talking about.
When you talk about egg yolks, egg yolks, that is the multivitamin of the egg, right? So that's your B vitamins, that's colon, that's vitamin D. If you can get
a pasture raised egg, it's going to be higher in vitamin D and omega-3s. So we're talking
about omega-3s, not short chain, plant-based seeds. We're talking about long chain omega-3s.
Those are the only ones that have been shown EPA and DHA to have IQ and brain development cognitive benefits.
Let's pause there for a second.
So the short chain ones, you're talking about when people will take plant-based omega-3s
or whatever, or plant-based fatty acids.
I think where you need to be careful is the short chain fatty acids from plants like
flaxseeds or chia seeds.
There you go.
You're going to see it on the side or anything that uses canola oil, right? That you're gonna see rich, you know,
like I'm thinking of Helmann's mayonnaise,
it's gonna say rich in omega-3s.
And you're like, that's short chain omega-3s.
Your body needs to take those
and needs to convert them to a long chain omega-3.
And we do a really poor job of doing that.
Only of all those short chain omega-3s that we ingest
were really on average, depending on
it changes between a male and a female, but on average, it's like 5 to 10% of those are being
converted to long-chano-mega-3s. So if someone is 100% plant-based, I absolutely recommend they're
taking an algae-based omega-3. That's the only plant-based long-chano-mega-3. It has to be taken
in supplement form. Good not know. Now when it comes to long chain omega-3s, these are, what's so cool is chickens, they eat
those flaxseeds, they're pretty good at converting that short chain to a long chain.
So their egg yolks are going to be rich in those long chain omega-3s, right?
And the same goes for most of the animals that you're eating, whether like you can think
about a pasture raised cow, like the omega-3s in there are gonna be long chain and in fish salmon,
salmon row, really dense in those.
So those are amazing sources of long chain Omega 3s.
Now you could take a fish oil, you could take krill oil
and all of that and those are gonna be the long chain Omega 3s.
But just do not get sold if you're at a grocery store
and you see like flax oil and you're like,
I'm gonna add that to the top of my oatmeal
or in my smith, that's not.
That's like 5% of that's gonna take you.
That's not, that's a waste of your money
or just pour it down the drain.
Speaking of the Omega 3s and pouring it down the drain,
I've heard that if, like, let's say you have like
a really poor diet, fast food, process foods like crazy,
and then you take these Omega 3s
that the 6s and 9s out compete the 3s
and you don't even get the benefits of the threes.
Is that true?
Well, when you look at what it's supposed to be on a cellular level, I'm sure you guys
have talked about this.
You want a one-to-one ratio omega-3 to omega-6.
And when you look, when we start to look at human studies, it's really like one omega-3,
25 omega-6, 75 omega-9, like the comparison and the quantity ratios are really, really off.
So I always recommend in omega three, it's really hard to out compete.
Those fried foods, those industrial seed oils, all the things that are your fast food restaurants
are frying up.
There, I don't say, I wouldn't say that we haven't seen a decrease in inflammation levels and we haven't seen
an adjustment in the ratio when you take omega-3s, that's not like throwing it down the drain.
I still think people should be taking those.
Also because when you think about colicestic kind in that we talked about earlier, that
satiety hormone that makes us feel...
Still affects that.
It's going to affect that.
So if you aren't getting any source of omega-3, it's...
So still value in that.
There's value there, absolutely.
Okay.
Now, one other thing that eggs contained, which was demonized for a long time, but now we're
realizing it's not so bad, is dietary cholesterol.
And I know that's like one of the building blocks of hormones, and it's super, super dense
in the brain.
And so this is one of the other reasons why my wife would eat lots of egg yolks while
she's pregnant is because we're developing a brain.
Like what about that?
Is that something important to you want to consume, especially during pregnancy?
Absolutely.
I mean, when you're thinking about things like colon, cholesterol, omega-3s, like these
these are critical for the body.
And cholesterol is really interesting in that it does support hormone production.
And when is a critical time to think about hormone balance?
Yeah.
Fertility and pregnancy.
And also, I think it's being demonized
because we're not recycling our cholesterol.
When you think about getting rid of old cholesterol,
the old cholesterol that is corrosive,
that is being demonized, like,
if we're going to the bathroom every single day, the job of your body is to recycle old
cholesterol and to poop it out and to get rid of it.
If we're not going to the bathroom because we're having a highly processed food diet,
and we are, and you also want to think about how cholesterol works.
If you look at someone's triglyceride levels and their cholesterol ratio, a lot of times their triglyceride levels are a reflection
of what the last 72 hours of eating looked like. Did it look like a highly processed, high
fructose added sugar, three day binge? If it did, you're probably going to have elevated
triglycerides because your body is trying to manage all of that elevated glucose.
It's looking for places to store.
It's gonna put it in your liver,
it's gonna put it in your muscles,
there's no space left.
It's gotta package it up as a triglyceride,
kick it out into your bloodstream,
and then cholesterol is the uber vehicle
that drives that triglyceride around.
So a lot of that cholesterol
is not gonna be recycled in the right way.
And it then becomes corrosive.
But when we're eating a really whole food forward diet, we're eating a high amount of fiber.
I mean, there's really interesting, there's some really interesting research and I have
to give credit to seed, which is a probiotic company.
We work with them, love them.
We're even all, plug in all our companies.
That's the best.
We didn't know this going into this.
I've never used a probiotic so effective as that one, by the way. I love them all. Plug in all our companies. That's the best. That's where we didn't know this going into this.
I've never used a probiotic so effective as that one, by the way.
It's an incredible.
Well, they have some amazing research showing that it, and that they are in trials to show
that it improves cholesterol ratios.
So it is, we have to remember that our microbiome is playing a critical role in, in keeping
balance when it comes to cholesterol and that we can't just
think of these chemicals or I want to call them like blood markers as bad for you or good
for you.
Okay, okay, interesting.
Now, maybe a bit of a left turn, but...
Wait, wait, wait, don't think left turn, yeah, I want to keep going.
Yeah, I want to stay where you're at right now because you're...
So, okay, we're actually in the't think left turn, yeah, then. I want to keep going. Yeah, I want to see where you're at right now, because you're, so, okay, we're actually
in the middle of trying to have another baby right now.
I wanted to know from you,
how does your nutrition change from trying to get pregnant,
being pregnant, and then post-prainency?
Is it consistently the same or does it change?
Well, you always want to focus on blood sugar balance
and nutrient density.
That said, prenatal nutrition is, it's really important to focus on, I don and nutrient density. That said, prenatal nutrition is
it's really important to focus on I don't always like to say focus on the things you want
to remove, but when you when you think about trying to get pregnant, the development or
for your sperm, for example, it takes 72 days to develop sperm. And people think, oh,
I just I'm going to eat healthy for a week and then we're going to go for it.
Oh, so it's what he ate seven or two days ago.
It's the, yeah, so we call it trimester zero or the prime
ester. It's three months leading up to conception.
It's critical for egg development and sperm development.
And so what you want to do in this period of time is you want to focus on antioxidants.
So there's an amazing company called Wee Nadel and it has a prenatal for men and a prenatal
for women.
And what that's going to do is make sure that you're nutrient density.
So you have your vitamin D, vitamin A, vitamin C, but that they also are going to give you
some antioxidants like coq 10, right?
And what that's going to do is it's going to give you the nutrition or the nutrients
you need to fight oxidative stress.
So oxidative stress is what, you know, breaks down cells.
It also breaks down eggs and it breaks down sperm.
So if you have the antioxidants or the phytochemicals to fight reactive oxygen species or, you know,
the things that break our body down, it's almost like armor.
You're protecting your sperm and your wife is going to protect her eggs by loading up on
this.
Now, as you move into the first trimester, you don't want to be taking loads of antioxidants
because that is their active in nature.
You really want to focus on nutrient density.
You want to focus on blood sugar balance because once your wife gets pregnant, then in
the beginning, first trimester, you could feel nauseous,
right?
And nausea is exacerbated by glucose excursions.
So even though you have, someone might have food versions, they don't want to eat animal
protein, they all they want are crackers or bread, they go to reach for those things.
Those fast acelular carbohydrates take them on a blood sugar roller coaster and that
crash doubles down on their nausea.
So I always say, is there a way I get it?
I wrote a whole pregnancy course on this because I think it's important for people to understand
how to focus on nutrient density, first how to protect their fertility and the quality of
egg and sperm in their body, depending if they're male or female.
Then it's like, how do we get through trimester one?
Also knowing that a lot of it has to do with how she ate
in trimester zero or in the primeester because your body
is relying on those nutrient stores in your body.
And so in the first trimester,
we don't, you may not feel like eating loads of veggies
and antioxidant rich foods and
grounding foods may feel better.
So I always say, can we find a way to have a little bit of protein?
Maybe it's an egg taco.
It's scrambled eggs and a Ceté tortilla.
It's a little bit more of a low-guysemic kit.
Or if you're having triple fermented sourdough or a paleo style almond flour toast, can
you slather on some avocado, throw an egg on top?
There's no egg.
Okay, how are we getting protein in or bland proteins?
This is where I might lean on dairy,
or I might not use dairy a lot with clients.
The, it's amazing for vitamin D calcium and minerals too.
So you may use a bland cold cottage cheese or a plain Greek yogurt as a way
to get a good quality protein in to support that blood sugar balance so that we're not writing
that roller coaster, even when we maybe don't feel like everything kind of sounds gross.
Yeah, we did that. We led into, I mean, well, we weren't necessarily trying, but we knew
we would eventually. And so my wife ate a particular way leading into,
and then we had this first trimester,
which was just, she's just throwing up all the time.
But I think we protected ourselves
a little bit with the leading into.
Actually, this isn't a left turn anymore.
You brought up fertility and sperm.
Crateen is a supplement that people in fitness
have been taking for a long time.
It was for building muscle.
Now we're seeing it's got health benefits.
If fuels mitochondria, it improves sperm motility.
Like, what do you, are you up to date
with any of the new research
or do you recommend it to people to use as well?
You know, I have male clients that have used creatine
in the past and are currently using it.
I'm not, I'm not at a speed on sperm motility
with creatine use.
I'd have to look into that research.
But we do know that even having just critical, like a baseline levels of vitamin D and antioxidants
like coq10 and vitamin C to promote testosterone, anything that's going to promote testosterone
levels is going to improve sperm quality and motility.
Okay.
So good testosterone, good fertility, typically, what we're looking at.
So now what about when we lead into post and breastfeeding and things like that?
I would imagine there's things that you might kick up.
I remember we had success with the sodium, like increasing, like we used.
Oh yeah, that's Jessica too.
She would drink the element tea.
Yeah.
And she was producing more milk. Well, what's so interesting. So that is a company that I invested in.
I've been friends with Robble for a long time and this is co-founder James. And I just,
it's such a beautiful product because they think in the market where you have things like
Gatorade or other powdered electrolytes that are loaded with glucose levels.
Most of us don't realize that we have suboptimal levels
of sodium and that we are dehydrated.
And women think, and I think men too,
like I'll just drink 120 ounces of water today,
but they don't have the electrolytes
to hold that hydration in their cells
and hold it in their cells and hold
it in their body.
And one of the number one reasons that a woman is sent to be induced in her third trimester
is low amniotic fluid.
And low amniotic fluid can be prevented with proper hydration.
And so for me, I drink element in my pregnancy, and especially towards the end, and it really
helped with fluid retention.
You think that it would cause you to have cancels or retain so much fluid, but it made me
feel amazing.
And it plummeted my cravings, and any time I got an ultrasound in my third trimester,
and the women who've been in my pregnancy course feel the same way is my amniotic fluid levels were great.
Oh wow.
And so that's where your baby is floating around in amniotic fluid.
And then in postpartum when we think about when you think about a milk production, right,
it's going to be...
That's how we used it.
So I didn't know that.
Oh yeah, I'm still breastfeeding and I'm still drinking it.
So and I actually forgot at this morning and was like, oh.
We have some here. Are you going to get some before I go then. I literally shook some salt
into my water at the airport because that's how much I notice a difference in everything
from the way that I feel to my ability to focus and feel my best, like energetically.
Yeah, what about the, like, because when you're pregnant, you have increased blood volume,
which would make me think you probably need more, even more sodium, kind of offset that
a little bit.
Is that true?
Or am I just making that up?
Well, I think what you want is you have increased blood volume.
You want to maintain that increased blood volume.
And you also don't want to be dehydrated.
What I think people don't realize is when you think of it, I always say, like, if you
have balsamic vinegar and then you have balsamic reduction, what's happened there?
You've just evaporated some of the water.
Yeah.
And that, you can think about that like blood sugar.
If you're not properly hydrated, your milligram per desolate of blood sugar is actually higher.
Oh, wait a minute.
So dehydration, you have worse blood sugar than, as an insult.
Yes.
Wow, that makes total sense.
Exactly.
So for me, one, properly, someone is properly hydrated and Exactly. So, for me, one, someone is properly hydrated
and they have the electrolytes that they need,
they have the sodium that they need.
They're gonna have less cravings for sugar
and they're gonna feel more energetic.
Then when you think about blood sugar in the body,
like in your body that needs to be regulated,
you're actually, technically,
you're decreasing milligrams per desolate because you're increasing the amount of desolate or subblood that you have in your body that needs to be regulated, you're actually, technically, you're decreasing milligrams per desolate
because you're increasing the amount of desolate
or so blood that you have in your body.
Wow.
Interesting.
Wow, that's fascinating.
Do we see that with CGMs or someone's dehydrated
and they hydrate and you see better responses
without changing diet?
Oh, yeah.
And you know what's so interesting is that
anytime you have any type of hormesis, right?
You work out really hard, you get in your sauna,
people will see their blood sugar go crazy.
And I get in my infrared sauna and I drink element
and I can pretty much regulate that response.
Wow, okay, so literally what's happening is,
when you measure blood sugar,
it's a percentage of the overall fluid.
If the fluid is down or you have less water in there,
now it's automatically a higher percentage.
I had no idea, but that makes perfect sense.
Yeah, my wife feels way better with element in her water now as pregnant.
And so we started using it when she was breastfeeding with my son because she was having trouble with milk production.
And it was actually Rob that told me that.
Yeah.
And we started putting in her water and she was producing so much more milk as a result.
Well, what's so interesting too
is the only research we have on this is on dairy cows.
And when they add salt to their diet,
the production of milk goes up.
Wow, that's fascinating.
I should've known that.
I know, right?
We had the salt mix for that.
You milk cows for the next one.
And we would use one of those.
It's one of those salt mix
so they would produce more milk.
That's great.
Well, this has been amazing.
This is really fun.
Yeah, thank you so much.
So it won't be the last time.
We'll do this again for you.
Yeah, I'd love to have you back on.
I think you've communicated very, very well.
And I think you brought us some knowledge.
I just want people to have fun, balance their blood sugar,
protect their kids.
You do a really good job of how you communicate that,
because I actually, and I think what you're communicating,
it can be challenging.
I think that it gets challenged a lot on the other side
that I was alluded to earlier with the, you know,
I, if I am crowd and the calories in, calories out crowd,
they don't wanna talk about blood sugar and insulin.
They just wanna say, oh, if me,
your calories are all the same, we're fine.
With the anti-animal product crowd.
Anything coming from animals bad for you, which is totally...
But we always try and bring it back to behaviors.
I feel like that's so important.
It's like, I mean, if you, if, why make it harder for yourself, if there's a way to, to,
to make it easier, right?
So, really...
That's the key.
Yeah.
Excellent.
Thanks for coming on.
It's a pleasure.
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