Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2120: Signs Your Hormones are Out of Balance With Dr. Jolene Brighten
Episode Date: July 17, 2023What motivated her to write her new book? (3:07) Do your hormones have anything to do with your libido? (8:25) All drugs do NOT affect women and men the same. (11:02) The difference between co...mmon and normal. (14:45) Why are hormone issues more common today? (19:01) Does the dose make the poison? (23:01) Describing what healthy hormones SHOULD look like in women. (28:39) What is happening on a hormonal level with make-up sex? (40:06) Biohacking the menstrual cycle. (45:34) What can we do to detox and balance out these endocrine disruptors? (50:15) The top five offenders of our hormones. (57:01) The perspective she is taking with her own kid's education on hormones. (1:02:05) The effect of muscle on hormones. (1:09:40) Be a troublemaker in your doctor's office! (1:20:21) Related Links/Products Mentioned TRANSCEND your goals! Telehealth Provider • Physician Directed GET YOUR PERSONALIZED TREATMENT PLAN! Hormone Replacement Therapy, Cognitive Function, Sleep & Fatigue, Athletic Performance and MORE. Their online process and medical experts make it simple to find out what’s right for you. The Nutritional Coaching Institute (NCI) has decided to give away their Rapid Cash Masterclass for FREE! Starting Monday, July 17th @ 7 pm EST, NCI is hosting a live training where they will break down EXACTLY how to utilize the Rapid Cash Masterclass in each phase of your business! Sign up for the training HERE! July Promotion: MAPS Starter | MAPS Starter Bundle 50% off! **Code JULY50 at checkout** Is This Normal?: Judgment-Free Straight Talk about Your Body – Book by Dr. Jolene Brighten Beyond the Pill: A 30-Day Program to Balance Your Hormones, Reclaim Your Body, and Reverse the Dangerous Side Effects of the Birth Control Pill – Book by Jolene Brighten Complications and challenges associated with polycystic ovary syndrome: current perspectives Female sexual response: the role of drugs in the management of sexual dysfunction ADHD and Hormones - Dr. Jolene Brighten Balance - Women's Hormone Support - Dr. Jolene Brighten The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest Jolene Brighten (@drjolenebrighten) Instagram Website Â
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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 most downloaded fitness health entertainment podcast in history.
This is Mind Pump, right?
Today's episode, we had Dr. Joline Brighton, author of the new book, is this normal.
So she's obviously a doctor and expert on women's health.
And in today's episode, we talk about women's health.
Hormones, what is normal?
What isn't normal?
Symptoms of things like PMS, skin issues, energy issues,
how to balance out your hormones.
What's causing some of the problems that are so common
that we think are normal, but they're not normal.
She breaks all of this down and more in today's episode.
By the way, if you're looking for some hormone tests for yourself, just to see if you're
within range and essentially healthy, you can go to mphoromounds.com.
And also, Dr. Jolene Brighton can be found on Instagram at Dr. SoDR Jolene JOL
and then Brighton is B R I G H T E N. Now this episode was brought to you by one of our
sponsors NCI's certification course for trainers and coaches that teaches them how to
build their business and right now they're, okay, they're giving it away.
They're rapid cash master class.
Literally, this course is designed to teach someone
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Anyway, go check it out and get yourself free access.
Go to nciminepump.com forward slash rcm.
Now we're also bringing a sale right now
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and then use the code July 50 50 for the 50% off discount.
All right, here comes the show.
Dr. Jolene Brighton, welcome back to the show.
One of our favorite guests.
Always a pleasure.
Oh my God, well this is one of my favorite podcasts
and like I was saying, I'm super sad that we're not in person.
Look at your studio, I'm just still like, look at your studio.
I've been that long since you were here.
You at least, were you here in the big, the big blue changes. The big blue chairs,. I've been that long since you were here. Were you here in the big,
the big blue chairs?
Were you here?
Is that when they were here last?
I believe so.
They were the type of chairs that gobbled up someone
my size.
Like I think I'm really big.
And then I end up in like this like oversized chair.
And then I realize I'm child size.
So still you're still to this day.
One of our most talked about interviews, lots of people love your information.
The last book that you wrote was incredible.
I have family members reading it and my wife loved it.
And we're having you back on because you have a new book that I think is equally, if
not more interesting, and it's called, is this normal?
Let's talk about this for a second.
What motivated you to write this book?
What was that spurred you to create this?
Are you guys Star Wars fans?
Oh, are you kidding me?
Yeah.
Okay, no, you don't know how many podcasts I do,
and then I talk about Star Wars,
and the host their eyes just glaze over,
and they're like, I guess you're a super nerd.
And I was like, are you not following me?
You didn't know.
So I think about how like Star Wars, like we got the core Star Wars.
And it was like so good.
And like who didn't love it.
And if you don't love it, that's okay.
We'll still be friends.
And then, you know, they came out with like the prequel of like, now you really
understand in depth what's going on.
That's a lot of how I think about me on the pill. Like Like I handed people like you don't always have to do the pill. There's a root cause
solution. If you want to do the pill, let's support you so you don't have side effects. But I wanted
people to understand their body and what they could do to take charge of their health other than just
getting the same old same old from doctors, which is like you got hormone problems. Just take the
pill. Then what came were all of these questions that made me realize we needed the
prequel. Like is this normal as what everybody needed to know before going into
beyond the pill. And this book is really born out of all of the questions I get
from patients, all of the questions that I get from people online. And in the
time of the pandemic, I actually pursued my training in sex counseling.
So certified sex counselor as well
to help answer these questions even more.
So this is really born out of what everybody was asking for.
And I'm like, let's just make the book
that we all should have gotten
before we ever got our periods.
Wow, why do you think that something,
because I think this is necessary,
I think this is definitely necessary,
especially for women, I have two girls,
one of them a teenager,
and I'm shocked that in today's modern world,
that this is a question that women have to ask,
like they don't know what normal is,
why do you think that is
why is it that this is a book that's got such a such a high demand.
Medical gaslighting is a big one. I see so many providers that take to social media and they're like,
oh, you know, we hate these social media influencers, we hate people sharing their story,
we hate, hey, hey, hey, hey, and I'm like, I don't think you understand that you are the problem. You created the problem that brought people to the internet to seek solutions and you're
not being part of the solution whatsoever.
So we are told that our period cramps are normal.
This is a big reason why women with endometriosis fail to get the diagnosis that they need.
They can go decades without getting the diagnosis.
We are told things that having acne or regular periods
is just normal.
And now women with PCOS are having to see
two to three providers before they get the diagnosis.
We are told so many things are normal.
And then Gaslit, when we tell a provider,
this is not normal for me.
Like I'm telling you, I live in this body.
And then that's when their provider's like,
well don't mistake your Google search
for like all of my years of expertise. I hate that because I'm like, look, studies are great,
but studies are not all encompassing. They have issues. They have selection bias. They have funding
issues. Who funded it? That I don't tell you everything about what the outcomes of that study will
say. And at the same time, there are just, you know, problems with
a lot of the way that we haven't even tested drugs on women. I mean, I could go on and on about
the problems in medicine that make it to where the provider doesn't believe a woman's story about
living in her body. So that's a big issue. The other thing is our sex education sucks in the United
States. We, you guys remember from your sex education?
Oh, God.
The banana.
Yeah, I remember.
The banana.
The question box.
I remember inappropriate.
Put the condom on a banana.
That's the only thing I remember from our sex ed.
Yeah.
Seriously, that's the only thing that stuck out to me.
Yeah, I remember asking my older cousins.
That was how I got my education.
Yeah, I mean, and this is like, you know, talking to three men.
Like this is a big problem as well of like men asking men about women's bodies to like learn about women's bodies to learn about women's pleasure.
And it's why, you know, in the orgasm chapter of my book, I talk about how people are always like, oh, you know, making jokes about how men can't find the clitoris, men or so body illiterate when it comes to evolve them and female pleasure.
And I'm like, they don't want to be. But sex that doesn't teach about female pleasure. Sexist,
barely teaches about female reproductive health. They're like, here's your baby making container
and it'll bleed monthly and that's going to suck. And hey, this canal here, babies come out,
penises go in and there's a banana in a condom. And that's about it. We don't get the education about like, well, why are your hormones cycling?
And what are they doing? And what are they telling you about your body? We just don't get all of that
data that we need about our own body. And we're in it not understanding what's going on. And so
that's another big reason. We've got the medical problems and we've got the societal problems. And to anyone who's like, well, people have to take responsibility
and go educate themselves. And or their parents should have taught them, sure, but who taught
their parents? And also, who do you trust on the internet? Because writing this book,
I can tell you there's some seedy scandalous, scary stuff on the internet that is not trustworthy.
How often do you see somebody's hormone imbalances and their health affecting their sex life?
Oh, absolutely, all the time.
So there's a lot of experts in the field of sexual health, and there are many who are brilliant
psychologists, they are sex educators, and they'll say, your hormones don't have anything
to do with your libido, and it's barely ever your hormones.
And I'm like, how is that possible?
I think how is that possible
when you just think about that?
So, you know, there's the cyclical hormones, right?
So estrogen, progesterone, and even testosterone cycles
in women, for anybody who's listening,
we think about women being like the moon, right?
We know the moon has phases, the moon cycles,
there's a full moon, there's a new moon.
And we think about men being like this time.
It's up and it's down and it's the same thing,
day in and day out.
So with those cyclical hormones,
you're like, we know.
We know, we cohabitate with women, we're aware of this.
So with those cyclical hormones,
there are natural, normal changes that happen in your desire.
So what people think of as libido,
your ability to self lubricate, your ability to become aroused.
How much you think about sex?
How much you, you know, are running fantasies in your mind?
These are affected by natural cycling hormones.
And I detail this in the book.
There's even a 28 day program in the book
to help you understand your normal,
but also fine tune and problem solves
those hormone imbalances that may be causing havoc
on your mood, your metabolism, your skin, or your sex life.
So they absolutely play a role
and something that is completely overlooked
and I think this is an audience who will get it
is metabolic health and metabolic hormones
impacting our sex life.
Yeah, so I love the way how you said it plays a role
because I think one of the challenges
with this conversation is that lots of other things affect libido
as well, like confidence, the relationship with your partner, maybe something happened
today at work or you were stuck in traffic.
And so this sometimes people use this to discredit the hormone conversation.
I'm like, oh, I know my libido is supposed to go up during this time, but last month I
was really in the mood here.
But there's lots of things that affect this, and hormones simply play a role and saying
that they don't, I think, is totally silly.
In fact, it's extremely well studied.
And in fact, if a woman changes a hormone, she'll notice a change in a mood just like
men will.
One thing I want to go back to that you had said
that I think is important, that you kind of glazed over,
that people don't realize, is you mentioned drug testing
and women.
A lot of people don't know this, but oftentimes,
when they run trials on drugs,
they're done on a particular demographic,
a particular age group, and all drugs don't affect
men and women the same.
Is that accurate?
Absolutely.
Oh, absolutely.
We absolutely know that to be true and in addition to that, what people don't understand
is that sometimes when trials are being done, they'll actually put women on the pill to
basically correct for the menstrual cycle or try to control.
So this is the way they think they can control for the menstrual cycle or try to control. So this is the way they think they can control for the menstrual cycle. As we know hormonal birth control can
result in moods, adverse mood symptoms for some women. Some women may develop acne,
they may develop gut dysbiosis, they may have more inflammation, they may have cardiometabolic
changes that are unfavorable or they may see tons of benefits just by being on the pill.
So maybe their acne does clear up or maybe they find that their mood is a lot more even.
And so that's important to understand is that they think like the menstrual cycle is a
confounding variable when in fact, adding an additional medication, one that also depletes
nutrients is more problematic.
So sometimes we see that in studies as well.
And so you're absolutely right.
Drugs do not always affect the ovaries
and the testes the same way,
or people that own those.
And in addition to that,
a lot of research will be done on men
because it's a lot easier.
But let's not negate the fact
that who signs up for these trials?
A lot of times you will find they are young college students who are poor, like I was
poor in college.
And so you're getting a certain population, the real drug trial starts when you introduce
this into the general population.
And we all know that to be true.
Some providers, I don't know, they just like, missed that memo, or they don't care, or they're not staying up on the facts
that like, just because a study showed that there isn't this side effect when they did
the study, once it gets into the general population, now we truly start to understand.
This is why it's so important to believe the patient's story. When we look at a normal
distribution, a normal distribution,
a bell curve, I actually almost put this in my book and my editor was like, this is
a little dry and boring. But I think it's just important to understand in terms of statistics,
when we say normal, we have a normal distribution. So it's going to be a bell curve. And in the
center is going to be the average, except there are always standard deviations of people who fall outside of that.
And that is normal to fall outside of that to a degree.
And so that is all just to say that if you are having experience that doesn't match what
the research study says or what your provider says is the only possibility that doesn't mean
you're lying, that doesn't mean you don't know your body and that doesn't mean it's not
true.
And that's just really important
that we always ask the question,
what is true for me and what is my experience?
Okay, so.
That's okay.
Okay, so this is interesting because,
to give an example for someone,
you said the college aged, you know,
you know, I guess sample size.
Imagine just for people listening,
this is a great example, I think.
Imagine if we tested the effects of alcohol
on a bunch of college aged individuals
and then use that to explain how alcohol affects everyone.
Now everybody listening knows alcohol feels very different
when you're 21 or 22 versus when you're 41 or 42.
So that would be very unrepresented
of how that may affect you.
So I think that kind of illustrates what you're talking about.
The other thing I'm gonna ask you is the difference
between common and normal.
In other words, I used to get this with clients all the time
where they're like, oh my back hurts, my knee hurts.
And they say, but that's normal because I'm 45.
Well, okay, just because lots of people have back pain
and he pain, doesn't mean that that's normal.
It's common because so many people don't exercise
and so many people are overweight.
So let's talk about the difference between normal and common
and why we need to look at normal, not necessarily common
in a unhealthy population, for example.
Who goes to the doctor?
People who need help.
People who have symptoms, people who have problems.
If you're going to your doctor and you've got period problems, fill in the blank, any period
problem or hormone related problem, odds are your doctor is going to say, this is normal.
That's because this is what they're seeing day in and day out.
So from their perspective, they're like, this must be normal because everyone has this.
No, sir, or ma'am, or whatever.
No, these are people who are coming to you.
And so it is very common by some estimates upwards
of 90% of women have struggled with hormone issues
at some point in their life.
And when you take a look at our environment,
that's not surprising whatsoever.
So to your average doctor, they're gonna be like,
well, because period cramps are so common
that people complain of because PMS is so
common, and it is.
I mean, 75% of women are estimated to struggle with PMS.
They chalk that up to normal.
That's not normal.
That's not a normal state of being miserable, pain, not living your life to a full extent.
That should not be considered normal, and it is that dismissal and that mistake
that providers make of calling what is common normal that leads to the underdiagnosis of
very real and life-threatening conditions sometimes. And if not life-threatening, they at
least are hijacking your life and making it so that you can't bring your gifts to your
towns, this world, and get what you came for. But at the same time, we have to also recognize
that these, these mindset of what is common is normal is also told to us via commercials
on TV, uh, Cosmo magazine, not to call out Cosmo, but like many magazines, you know, have indoctrinated
us with this. And even our own mothers, aunts, teachers have told us,
like, that's just normal.
Like, you get your period and it's painful
and you're fatigued and you're breaking out
and you feel horrible and your doctor or your mom
or maybe your sister is just like,
welcome to being a woman, it sucks.
We need to change that narrative
because that is absolutely not true.
And to your point about libido, I'm curious if you like read my book and that's how you're
so in the know or if you made observations in your life like is completely
possible for any man to do that libido is so much more complex than just
hormones. And yet hormones absolutely play a role in all of this because I
wanted to go back to that and shout out that you even said that because a lot of people miss just how complex it can be.
And at the same time, when we talk about this common versus normal, it's often told to
men and it's propagated that it's completely normal for women to never be in the moon
for women not to be able to orgasm for it be impossible like finding a unicorn
forest you know is going to be easier than making a woman come. These kinds of things are
also propagated and there are women who also internalize this and believe this to be
true about themselves as well of like oh well I'm just not that into it because I'm a
woman. That's not true either. These are more of that common scenarios
that are playing out, but not it just to be accepted
as normal.
Yeah, I think part of that is the potential,
because we see this in our space too,
is that the potential shame that comes from being like,
oh, this is something that I can work on.
Maybe this isn't necessarily healthy or normal.
Like you don't have to feel shame around it,
but actually look at and say, okay,
how can I make this better?
And I think that that kind of fuels a little bit, right?
Like a man may be like, well, that's normal.
You know, that happens to all women
to make himself feel better,
or maybe a woman says that
because she doesn't want to feel ashamed associated
with some of that.
Are hormone issues more common now,
or are we just more aware?
In other words, it has the world
and our lifestyle changed so much that
they're just super common.
Or is it that people just,
they read about it and report it more now?
I think it's both,
but I do think it's a lot more common now.
So we are paying attention a lot more to our bodies.
I mean, take it back to like the 1950s and doctors were like,
let me just like medicate your that you just can like,
you know, numb out to the world
and we don't have to listen to you.
And so I do think that we are, we've got the internet,
we are much more body literate than we used to be.
We still have a long way to come.
And yet it is a lot more common to see hormone imbalances
because we do live in the most toxic
environment that humans have existed in.
So endocrine disruptors.
These are exactly what they sound like.
So endocrine means hormone for anyone listening who's like, what's that word?
Endocrine is hormone.
So I'm not sure about the endocrinologist.
I am a hormone doctor.
Endocrine disruptors exactly what they sound like.
These are chemicals that exist in our environment.
They might be lining your to go cup in your coffee container.
I hate that.
That's the worst.
I love my coffee.
Why you sabotaging me?
They may be found in your personal care products.
And they are also just found in the air that we breathe.
They are everywhere and they have the capacity to cause issues
with your hormone system.
So not just having, you know, more issues in terms of PMS and mood symptoms and waking,
but also things like increasing your risk of cancer, fibroids.
We certainly see that a lot of the common products that are women are using, especially
in the BIPOC community.
So I have straight hair right now, but I usually
have curly hair. These kinds of products that are targeted to Latinos and to black women,
they are very problematic and we have studies showing the increased incidences of cancer.
We also have studies showing a correlation. We can't quite say causation yet of these endocrine disruptors and women
starting their period much younger. So these are certainly contributors. We also live in a society
at least in the United States. That is like hustle culture, grind, have babies, but do it without
support because you're supposed to be a super mom. Go to work all day, run a household, and that's a lot of stress.
The nuclear family, as it is, has a lot of stress, and we are more fragmented than we have
been in the past.
So, I can keep going.
I detail all kinds of things in this normal that are leading to our disruption and our
hormones.
And another big one that I would just mention is our food supply.
I mean, that's another source of endocrine disruptors, you know, people that argument always comes of
like organic food is not healthier than non-organic food. And I'm like, look at the health of the
field workers. And I call bullshit because people who are working in the field, they're
dying at a younger age. They're getting more of these reproductive related cancers. Like,
these are the people that are being exposed to this, and then you're being exposed to
it day in and day out.
And so if you want to just take the argument of like, well, it's such a little exposure
to me, then how would you think about the people who are out there laboring to collect your
food and to make it so affordable for you?
Because these chemicals are having an impact.
And so that's that food piece, but there's also, and again, this
comes back to the metabolic health, the way that a lot of people are not taught, but then
find themselves eating as health food or better choices or even the anti-diaculture that's
just like just eat anything. And it's fine. We see people are eating nutrient-devoid diets, and that is what's highly problematic is the highly processed
food-like
Items I don't even like to call it food because it's not if it doesn't deliver nutrients
If it doesn't signal the microbiome in a positive way if it's not loving up your body is not really food
Yeah, Jolene you mentioned these endocrine disruptors and
Yeah. Jolene, you mentioned these endocrine disruptors.
And okay, let's just, let's just, because I know some of them are already even tested.
So let's just forget that for a second.
Let's just imagine that each one of these is individually tested and approved by the FDA.
They don't test potential cumulative effects of combining multiple chemicals.
In other words, your face cream may have a chemical that is a potential
disruptor, but it's under the allowable limit with the face cream. But that face cream
testing doesn't go with the hairspray, the makeup, the lotion, the deodorant, you know,
even your hygiene products, all of that, those cumulative, there's no testing for that,
right?
No, there's not.
And there is no research going like,
well, what happens when a girl starts wearing makeup
at like 13 years old and then we get her at like 63 years old
and she's been because we tend to be brand loyal
that entire time and applying that day in and day out.
We don't have those studies.
And so whenever people are like, the dose makes the poison,
so this one product is fine, I'm linked.
But you don't know where that person lives.
Do they live, so you guys are in California,
do they live in the Central Valley,
where there's a huge ag, that is exposing them
to other endocrine disruptors and carcinogenic chemicals.
So you can't just say like, oh, the dose makes the poison
and there's no other considerations
because this really has to be very individualized.
So what's their family history?
What's their personal history?
Like what are their genetics and their detox capability?
We do all have the capability to detox these hormones,
but we do know from the research
we have to end the overwhelm and not be loaded up
on these things.
And allow me to step into my privilege for a moment, but because I get paid to go overseas and
speak on stages, I get to go to Europe annually, and I will make a trip to Paris, and I will load up
at the French pharmacies, if people have seen this on TikTok, because the EU can be trusted more than the FDA.
And what the FDA is approving isn't often tested to the extent it needs to be. In the United States,
we have a habit of going, well, is there anything showing harm? No, okay, well, until there is
significant harm, like people are dying or like in the case of DDT, all the animals are dying,
like just put them out there, just put it out there,
and then we'll just let it roll.
We'll just see what happens.
And now in the case of forever chemicals,
like you know, that's like,
we have tested the hypothesis and found out,
which is the more academic way of saying,
we fucked around and found out that that was a really bad thing.
And now we've got forever chemicals in our environment that we're never going to get rid
of. And they're always going to be impacting our species and every species on this planet.
So I think it's really important for people to understand that it is really lame. The burden
falls on you and the United States to have to do all of your due diligence
what it does. And you can take action not only to support your detox pathways, but to minimize.
You cannot eliminate all exposure. That is not even the goal. Listen, I've gone to bed crying a lot of times
and having anxiety because I read these studies and I'm like, oh my god, like what about me? What about my kids?
I don't want people to go into that spiral
because there's so many things you can do
in your own home to take action.
And we know that is the most impactful thing.
Switching out your plastics for glass,
not drinking out of plastic as often as possible,
opening up your windows once a week,
trying to get rid of flame retardants.
If you can't, You are vacuuming every single
week in your house, if not more frequently, to clean those up. Just for people to understand
flame retardants, I don't think this gets enough play. It doesn't get talked about enough
in my opinion. We knew decades ago that this was impacting our animals, our pets. Dogs
were getting autoimmune hypothyroidism, Hashimoto's, most common autoimmune disease in women.
Cats were getting graves disease, hyperthyroidism. Vets knew this. They knew the flame retardants in the bed.
Was it their pet beds were a problem? They knew that what was dropping out of our mattresses and out of
the couch was a problem. And so those have to be cleaned up. You think about babies, they spend as much time
on the floor as pets, at least if your mom like me. And these are impacting our thyroid significantly.
They also may be impacting our fertility. And this is really important to understand, because
men have about half the sperm that their grandfather's once did. Nail fertility is declining.
We know things like BPA and flame retardants are disrupting the ovaries' capacity to create
hormones.
So even if you don't want a baby, understand you can't have optimal hormones if these
chemicals are messing with your ovaries.
And in addition to that, they're causing oxidative stress.
Anyone on a fertility journey understands that oxidative stress is killing your eggs.
Like it is, and I say this is a woman going through IVF, that I'm like taking supplements
and doing everything I can safeguard against the oxidative stress.
There's natural oxidative stress that's good, but the oxidative stress created by BPA in
the ovaries.
And we are just getting more and more research to understand that.
And I think it's really important for people to understand.
We've had BPA for decades that we've been exposed to.
And we're now starting to understand
how significant the impact is on our fertility.
Julian, I want to go back to when you and Sal
were talking about normal and common.
And I want you to help
describe what healthy hormones should feel and look like and the reason why I want to do this is because in our feet we actually used to joke about the solid time like off air when we talked to somebody who'd be like
Oh, yeah, I feel fine. I feel normal. I feel good and that and they think they feel good because they never have felt
Optimal before they don't know what good sleep, good diet,
good exercise feels like and it's not until we get them
to do those things and they go, holy shit, I feel so good.
And it's like, yeah, you were feeling bad,
but you didn't realize you were feeling bad
because that had become your normal.
So can you help, and I'm imagining this is the same thing
in your field with hormones, right, and women, can you help describe what a woman should feel like with really healthy
balanced hormones?
Okay, Adam, I love this question.
This is so awesome that you're asking this because I think this is exactly what happens
is that the body is so good at compensating that we will adapt. And
we, so this is why I asked patients, when's the last time you felt like yourself? And it makes
them pause. And they're like, oh, hold up. Like, there was a time that I felt optimal. And I just
got used to how I've been feeling now. So if we take it to a menstrual cycle, when everyone
to understand menstrual cycle actually starts we want to understand menstrual cycle
actually starts with ovulation,
but we teach it from menstruation
because the bleed is a lot easier to recognize
and it's a very easy way to wrap your head around this.
So when it comes to your period,
you may feel a little bit tired.
That's normal.
You may have a little bit of cramping, that's normal.
If you find that you are having to pop ibuprofen endlessly,
you know, your pop and mitle all the time, you are hug and a hot water bottle.
It interferes anything that interferes with your activities of daily living.
That's not normal. A period usually lasts on average about five days,
three to seven is considered normal. Less than that, you might not have enough
estrogen. Longer than that, you might got too much estrogen going on or it's not being challenged by
progesterone or you could have thyroid issues. So this is all to say, it needs to be investigated.
And in my book, I give you quizzes, I give you charts, I give you all kinds of things. You can
literally figure this out on your own, but you can also take that data to your doctor
to advocate for yourself.
So that's the period.
As you leave the period, you should notice
your energy starts to climb, your libido will start to climb.
You're finding that you could probably get
by on six hours of sleep, but find you should not
just try to get by on six hours of sleep.
But because you are just finding you are more resilient,
because estrogen and testosterone is up are more resilient, because estrogen
and testosterone is up. I was, you know, it's actually thinking this morning. So I'm
going to take a little side tangent, IVF stimulation. Your estrogen goes really high. I find that
impregnancy and during IVF stimulation, my boundary setting, like my kickassness, my
take no shit, like all of that is just so
on point in a respectful way, in the way it needs to be.
And I was like, man, everything talks about testosterone, mean, and alpha hormone.
Estrogen is an alpha hormone.
Like estrogen makes me boss like no other.
And part of that is because estrogen helps with how your brain, your corpus colosum is connecting.
So both lobes are talking so much better.
Estrogen is also going to help you be a little more sensitive to insulin.
So during this follicular phase, that's where we're at from period to ovulation, you're
also going to notice that you have less cravings and that you're not as like angry as you can be in the loodial phase.
So it's not normal.
If you are feeling all the time like you have significant cravings, your mood is tanking
because estrogen plays with serotonin.
If estrogen goes up, serotonin goes up, so you should be feeling happier, more elevated
in your mood.
So understand that if you are finding that you have a very low mood,
you find you're very easy to cry. Like these things are not normal. Being a little weepy right
before your period, that's normal. So as we get into ovulation, libido is going to be up your
like your strength training ability, you're going to be like, why am I lifting more at the gym?
Like you should be able to have more resiliency
and more capacity to push the limit.
So whether that's pushing how much weight you're lifting,
and yes, if you are a woman listening,
you should be lifting weights.
It is one of the most impactful things you can do
for your metabolic and hormone health
throughout your entire lifetime
and is literally how we get to longevity.
So if you want to live long and have ovaries that work for you as long as possible, please
be lifting weights.
So I'm taking lots of side tangents and I'm very long.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Everybody, you take it notes.
Okay.
So we've got this ovulatory phase after ovulation
and let me say that. So after ovulation, the corpus luteum is going to be formed in the ovaries.
This produces progesterone. Progesterone is a hormone that makes us feel really calm,
really chill. If you're having anxiety, friend, let's talk about progesterone in that luteal phase.
So anytime someone has anxiety, I'm asking the
question, is it thyroid? Is it cortisol or adrenal related? Or is it possibly that it
could be their progesterone's not getting up? Because cyclically, this is only happening
like a week or two out of every single month and it corresponds with the luteal phase.
It's not to say other things can't cause anxiety. They certainly can, but when it comes
to hormones, those are the big ones I look at. And let me say, if you have anxiety caused by something else,
those hormones are also going to be impacted. So they have to be looked at. So I want to back up to
that ovulatory phase, because at the top of this, Sal was talking about libido and hormones,
and what's going on with that. Research has actually classified this phase as the sexual phase.
And I write about this in my book.
As soon as I read that the abstract and it was like the sexual phase,
and I was like, that's ovulation.
And I love the way we frame this, because if you're done having babies,
you don't care about babies.
You're like, nah, I can't even have babies.
I don't want to talk about babies.
It's so great to not be like reduced to just your reproductive capacity
and to have someone actually speak about your sexual capacity. And so when we are in that
ovulatory phase about three days before you ovulate, you're going to find that estrogen has ramped
up and testosterone will follow because your body, regardless of sexual orientation, biologically
speaking, is like we could capture some sperm here
and we could make a baby.
Whether or not you want one, your biology
is wired a different way.
You're just an animal at the end of the day.
So with that, three days before you ovulate,
that is when it is, you're gonna be like in the grocery
and you're gonna be at the checkout line
and you'll just see someone on a magazine
and you'll start your sexual fantasies or you'll get brushed the right way and you'll be like
ooh, like I'm getting like in the mood. It's a lot easier because of the way these hormones stimulate
your brain, which is the main sexual organ. And then they also stimulate the clitoris,
too swell, the clitoris and the penis, same exact tissues.
Ambiologically speaking, this is where we started out.
You got the testosterone motion.
If there was a white chromosome that was set up to respond,
you got a penis.
You deviated away from the clitoris.
So in the same way that a penis becomes erect,
the clitoris becomes erect.
And this can be a lot easier around ovulation.
You just get quicker to get there.
So there's a lot of ways that your hormones
impact the sexual phase.
You're also wetter during this time,
which is normal, and then you're drier
in the luteal phase, which is normal.
And yet, we're also told the sniff that like,
if you can't get wet every single day,
then there's something wrong with you you're broken.
Not true.
Okay, three days before, then you ovulate.
So now we got four days.
Now your sexual phase may be six days, but it depends on how quickly that corpus luteum
starts pumping out progesterone.
Because once ovulation happens and progesterone starts, so you might get to day five or you
might get to day six, progester from is like, I call it the cockblock
in my book because it's literally what it will do. It is like, I know, right? But it
makes her really chill and calm, which means that the, what Sal was talking about before,
the stressors of the day, they're less apt to get to her. And so that, that break, as
it's called in the dual control model that I talk about in the book, which is some brilliant research.
You all got to read about it.
So that's a break, those stressors,
whatever those stressors are.
If your progesterone is right, those are less blockades.
And even if they end up blocking the system,
they can be easier to remove.
And so while it's being like estrogen,
you take a back seat.
And so you're going to find that like,
maybe you're not thinking about sex
who may be less inclined to initiate sex
and alludial phase.
If your progesterone's right,
then your relationship is going to be better.
Your kids are not going to get on your nerves as much.
Look, one to two days before your period,
if like your partner choose the wrong way
or breathe the wrong way,
and you're just like, I'm a throw shoe at them, like the chancola is in full effect.
That's normal because we're just thrown in estrogen or dropping the trigger of the blade.
But if you're like, I'm pulling out my hair and every sensation is aggravating me and
I feel like I'm losing my mind, that is not normal.
Although we're told, like, oh, hormones make women crazy.
Hmm, or do people make women crazy?
I mean, hormones do play a role,
but it's just important to understand
that those are regarded as normal,
but they're not in fact normal.
And in addition, I encourage anyone,
if a week before your period, you find that
sensory inputs are really aggravating you, or your ability to concentrate is just completely
gone, or it's just so difficult, you're not productive at work.
I talk about this and is this normal?
You need to look into, could this possibly be a concomitant autism or ADHD situation as well? Because our hormones impact
the our brain so much, we know a lot more women have autism and ADHD than they've been actually
diagnosed or even recognized because spoiler, we're not little boys. Which is all the research
has been done on and the diagnosis was like made off of,
but it's important to understand this
because you might get a diagnosis of PMS or PMDD
and PMDD in particular,
which is about two weeks out of every month
your life is completely hijacked
by physical and emotional symptoms.
I have a whole quiz, a checklist in my book
for you to identify this.
That is very, very high among the ADHD community and even
higher among the autism community.
So once you get one diagnosis as a woman, it's very easy for your doctor to be like, this
is who you are and all you are and to forget everything else.
And so definitely clue into those things.
Okay, I said a whole lot of stuff.
You probably have questions.
I'm sure listeners have questions.
Yeah. I actually have a sidebar that I said and I hope everybody doesn't get mad at me
for doing this like taking you to a left here. But you said that we're talking all about
sex right now. You said some things about like stress hormones and we're a woman's at certain
parts of a cycle where she's going to be calmer and then okay and it affects how wet
she is or gasemolicyng.
So you had me thinking,
and I would love to hear you describe
what is happening on a hormonal level
when a couple gets in this massive fight
where they were like ready on the verge of breaking up,
and then they have incredible makeup sex.
What is happening hormonally?
Can you describe that to me in that situation?
Yeah, oh my God, I love that.
And no, I think everybody's going to appreciate this question
because like, what's up with the hot makeup sex?
So I do talk about this in the book because this does happen.
So there are some people where that level of stress
is a complete break to them.
Like, and if you are, if you have a vagina and sex for you
is penetration, like that's
super vulnerable to have a like penis inside your body. And so it is normal. If you're like,
I have to feel really safe and secure. And I don't feel this way right now. And so I don't want
to have sex in that way. That is normal. What happens with this like hot makeup sex is that for
some people, and this happens for both men and women, this is actually
a stress relief. So their cortisol is up and their stress hormones epinephrine, nor epinephrine
is up. Like they're getting this signal of like, man, I need to fight, you know, or freeze
sometimes. So fight, flight, runaway, or freeze. That's what these stress hormones do.
time. So fight, flight, runaway or freeze. That's what these stress hormones do. And for some people, they know that sex is a great stress relief. And it is because when oxytolousine gets
released during an orgasm, and it's getting released, is you're being close. And that's
the other thing is like being close, being intimate like that, like you, you're getting all
these sensations to your nervous system that's helping calm you down
if this is you and this is what resonates with you and oxytocin is getting released and when oxytocin hits after that orgasm
it is like cortisol get that you know I don't even want to hear you right now and it takes those stress hormones and drops them
significantly and to even get to an orgasm as a woman,
you have to be in your body.
You have to be present.
And if an act of mindfulness,
and as we know from the research,
mindfulness is a great way to combat stress as well,
to help bring yourself out of that,
you know, that hyperdrive of stress hormones
that you've been in.
And so mindfulness as well,
that being present in your body
and being able to achieve orgasm,
that in itself is going to help with stress hormones as well.
And so it is something that,
I will hear from people that are like, that's crazy,
that anyone would ever want to have sex
like after a big fight.
And for other people,
so I will also say,
I put in there, Dr. Rosemary Basone's model,
I put in, is this normal, is a circular response model?
So this is how women enter into sex,
like why they want to have sex.
Pleasure is one piece, but the other piece
can be that they just need to fill connection.
They need to fill close.
And so in that fight, that fragmentation,
they're feeling so separate.
And for them, the closest way to get that connection
is to have sex.
And for people who are like, oh, that's toxic.
It is sometimes, but not always.
Sometimes this is the quickest way to get over it.
And that really melts everything
so that a couple can now communicate and can now work through that.
I love you explaining this because I feel like, and the way I would say that you would
decide whether this is toxic or not, is if this is a common behavior, right?
Like, I grew up in a household that this, like it was almost like an addictive behavior,
the hot cold.
My parents would go on this cycle of like crazy fights
and then rat like madly in love with each other,
crazy fight, almost like they were seeking
that hormonal response that you're describing.
And so I think that is toxic behavior.
If it happens to a couple randomly that they,
this happens and then they come
back together, I think that would be considered maybe healthy. And if it's something that you
repeatedly do, it's probably toxic.
Well, Jolene, I think it's an understatement to say that sexual desire and then the actions
that potentially could occur from that desire is very complex. But I think it's also an understatement to say that it's
more complex in women from just from an evolutionary standpoint because women are they have to be more
choosy. They're more of the gatekeepers, the potential risk of getting pregnant. I mean, the burden
of that, if you want to call it that, lies with women. There's also a safety component. Women need to feel safe.
If you look at the data, this is what I've read,
and I'd love your input on this.
Safety plays a big role.
Whereas with men, not so much,
we don't necessarily feel as threatened.
Whereas a woman, she got to make sure she's safe,
because otherwise this could be a bad situation.
So the complexity of sexual desires,
I mean, it can't be overstated.
So hormones play a role, but gosh, so does other things, including, you know,
catacolamines and other chemicals in the brain.
You mentioned some of them.
In fact, I wanted to ask you about dopamine and serotonin.
Going back, talking about like, ovulation and different phases of the menstrual cycle,
it sounds like some of them might
would be more dopamine, heavy,
and others more serotonin-heavy.
Do you, is there data showing
where you're more dopamine versus serotonin
during the cycle?
Yeah, so I love this question.
I'm gonna answer this,
I'm like, how do we go about this?
Cause I do want to just,
briefly just say, I'll briefly say it,
when we look at primates, and I know people don't like to be compared to primates, but we are
most closely linked to the bonobos, they will have sex as a caretaking, as part of caretaking
to the tribe, from making people feel better, like, well, other primates feel better.
And so that can be part of it as well in in this like fighting or
why women enter into sex is also because they want to caretake their partner. And it's also why
we see the phenomenon of altruistic deceit which is faking orgasms. It is not because women are like
oh I just like you know hate you or whatever. They want them to make a man feel better because
women understand that in society,
there's way too much of pressure on male performance
in the bedroom and then have a lot of pressure
and a lot of expectation on them.
And women are like, I want you to feel good.
I want you to feel good because if you don't feel good,
this like then this was just a no experience for all of us.
Now back to your point about
serotonin dopamine, you know,
some of this like let's fight
all the time and then have sex
is definitely dopamine chasing
behavior in some people.
What we see, so estrogen, as
I said, will follow, will play
with serotonin. So as estrogen
goes up, serotonin goes up.
So this is why in the follicular phase,
we'll see that serotonin is on.
Sometimes if you're somebody who's like,
why is it certain times in a menstrual cycle,
it is so hard to orgasm,
like it takes me forever to get there,
that may be because serotonin is up.
And when serotonin is up,
we know this from studies on SSRIs,
that can lead to an orgasm.
Yeah. So difficulty to achieve an orgasm. No orgasm or like meh orgasm where you're like, is that it?
Did I just work all that time for that? That's all I get it? Like that kind of situation. And so serotonin,
so even though I'm like, oh, ovulation around that timeless hormones rising, it can be a really good
fun time. If that serotonin is really up,
that might be, it might be really difficult for you to orgasm.
Now, as you go into the loodial phase,
progesterone comes up,
estrogen still there, but takes a back seat,
or at least it should.
If it doesn't, now we got symptoms.
That is when serotonin's gonna come down.
It should.
And as serotonin comes down, estrogen comes down.
We see that there is less
insulin sensitivity. So now cravings are going on. You actually, and because progesterones up,
your body temperature is going to be up and your calorie burning capacity, you may require
5 to 10% more calories during this phase of your menstrual cycle. So this is why,
you know, I talk all about, I was actually lecturing two years ago in
London, all about biohacking on the menstrual cycle and intermittent fasting. Where does it fit in
and how to how to do this as a woman because the hormones matter around all of this. So that's the
serotonin component. What's interesting about dopamine is that we find that so people who are on ADHD medications, they report that during the
follicular phase, ADHD medication works just fine. This is when estrogen's up. When they get into
the loodial phase, that's when they start to struggle. And I wanted to go into all details about this
and is this normal. I couldn't because I already wrote 126,000 words for that book. So put it
on drbritein.com. I have a whole article about ADHD and hormones and what you need to know about
your menstrual cycle. And it absolutely can be tied to part of the shifts that are happening in
dopamine. So seeing those shifts and how how estrogen is stimulating the brain, can be impacting how these ADHD medications work, or even how
you want to seek out things more to get more stimulation.
So what most people think of during the luteal phase is chocolate.
So chocolate, dark chocolate has magnesium in it.
It's got polyphenols.
It's got good stuff that maybe you're seeking it out, or maybe it is that serotonin is down
and dopamine is like,
I just want to get a little hit.
And you're like, I know that something sweet and this chocolate is going to do that for
me and it's going to make me feel good for a period of time.
Very interesting.
As you're talking about hormone imbalances and how they're potentially worse and endocrine
disruptors, I go and I start to think about how we can help our body deal with some of the stuff.
I keep thinking about lifestyle changes and potential supplements that help the body potentially
detox, right?
Like get rid of some of these chemicals and maybe because I know estrogen, our body gets
rid of estrogen through our digestion.
I know that when people are, let's say constipated or have gut issues,
that can cause what I've heard be labeled as estrogen dominance.
What are things people could do with their lifestyle
and then supplements?
What supplements can they take to help their body?
I guess detox from some of these chemicals
and help balance out some of these potential issues.
Hello, I love how controversial the term estrogen dominance has become
lately where it's like, so what is estrogen dominance? This is when we most typically do not have
enough progesterone and alludeio phase. And so we'll be experiencing too much estrogen. And I
actually had somebody, they subsequently took their video down, but they were like, it is
Dr. Brightens fault. She coined this term estrogen dominance. And I, but they were like, it is Dr. Brighton's fault.
She coined this term estrogen dominance,
and I laughed and I was like,
friend, go to Pamette because there were studies
saying estrogen dominance before I was born.
I wasn't even here yet.
I was just a little like, you know, precede.
I wasn't even swimming around yet.
Like, so estrogen dominance has been something that has certainly become a hot topic and anyone
who has experienced the hot flashes, the adverse mood changes, the PMS, the bloating, the
heavy periods, the things that we see that we don't like in the loony of phase, has probably
experienced issues with too much estrogen relative to progesterone.
So what can we do now?
And as you were saying, Xenoestrogens can absolutely be leading to, they're not going to cause
elevations in your total estrogen levels in your body.
They're going to stimulate the receptors in a similar way that estrogen would or they'll
block it.
But if they stimulate those receptors,
they're changing the DNA and they're changing the way
that things function similar to what
too much estrogen would do.
Now, our liver is really good at detoxing
if you give it everything it needs.
And this is what's important to understand
because there's people out there who will say,
if you don't take detox supplements,
you won't be able to detox.
And then there's people that are like, you don't need detox supplements, you won't be able to detox. And then there's people that are like,
you don't need detox supplements, it's called your liver.
And I'm like, okay, the truth is always like,
somewhere in the middle it seems.
The liver has several phases of detoxification.
So phase one, phase two.
And then it is gonna move things out
and then we're gonna get to the gut.
And when we get to the gut, we've got to move that out.
We're also going to urinate
it out. So let me just say that as well. That's how we test urine mitzolytes for estrogen.
So the liver requires certain nutrients. And in beyond the pill, I like nerd it out on a
whole liver chapter and people are like, those too much biochemistry. And I'm like, sorry,
I'm a chem nerd. I have a chem degree is the way I do.
This time it is this normal.
I'm like, here's a diagram.
Here's what you need from phase one.
Here's what you need for phase two.
And then I put a chart in the back of the book
and here's like, here's the foods to eat
to get those nutrients.
So we know we need cruciferous vegetables.
So is there going to deliver us dim?
We need to be bringing in high quality proteins
because without amino acids, we don't run these detox pathways in the way that we should.
We need to be aiming for at least 25 grams of fiber every day.
If you have certain autoimmune conditions that might be too much for you, but for the average person,
the average woman, it's going to be 25 grams every day.
The reason for that is because we want to eat nutrients that support the liver,
but once it gets into the gut, we have to make sure that
we are moving it out. And there's something called the astroblome. The astroblome is the
bacteria that interacts with your estrogen. If you've got dysbiosis, it's not pathogenic,
it's not causing disease, it's just an imbalance of these organisms, they're going to increase beta-glucaronidase.
Beta-glucaronidase is an enzyme that reactivates your estrogen.
So your liver goes phase one, phase two, get it out.
The gut with the beta-glucaronidase, it's like, take it back. Do it again. And so the way we can safeguard against that
is one eating fiber, taking care of our microbiome.
So maybe you're also taking a high-quality probiotic.
And we additionally, on top of eating the fiber,
is probably bringing on some calcium deglucrate.
And that's because calcium deglucrate
makes that beta-glucarone that they stay in check.
So it's not gonna squash it so you have none
because you need some,
but it is gonna help keep things in check.
For anyone who's struggling with pain with sex,
repeat UTIs, vaginal dryness,
anything that's related to an estrogen issue,
taking care of your gut is key.
And this is a key component because that a strebulum is also taking care of your gut is key. And this is a key component because that astroglome
is also taking care of your vagina.
And estrogen is absolutely essential in stimulating
the cells in the vagina to create glycogen.
That is sugar.
And it's the right kind of sugar because it
feeds the lactobacillus species.
Everybody's familiar with lactobacillus acid off list
if they've ever had a yeast infection
because this acid producing organism
keeps that yeast in check.
And it only is alive and thriving because of estrogen.
So estrogen is not all bad.
And this is how gut health impacts vaginal health
and it's super, super important.
So we talked about cruciferous vegetables,
having your fiber, making sure you're eating high-quality protein. Please make sure you're drinking
enough water. And when it comes to supplements, calcium D-glucrate, if you're going to take dim,
you also want to have sulfurephane and you want to have phase two detox supporters as well.
This is how I formulated my balance women's hormone support, is to help you get the right amount
of estrogen and progesterone
But also support estrogen metabolism through the liver so you get the right estrogen metabolites and not to get too nerdy
But too high-droxyestrone is the best and the other ones you're gonna have a little bit of them
But for in 16 those can be come problematic as in causing cancer causing fat
Assist in the breasts, growths in the uterus, growths in the breast.
So just be mindful that what you are using
and what you are doing in your life
can have huge impacts on how you feel now
and how you feel in the future.
You know, you know, sorry.
Oh, sorry, go ahead.
Oh, I was just gonna say,
so you've mentioned a lot of like hormone disrupting chemicals,
like a lot of flame retardants being culprits.
Do you have a top five or top 10 offenders
in terms of what we should actually be concerned
because there's so many things in the environment
that we can't...
Obviously, we have to live in it.
And there's ways to preventively combat some of these things.
But in terms of eliminating some of these things, but in terms of eliminating
some of the top sort of five items that you're constantly exposed to, what does that look
like?
Parabins and palates in your personal care products and formaldehydes in nail polish, those
kinds of things for sure.
You can look at those.
In your house, this is what I would say.
Get rid of anything non-stick. I'm sorry. You're going to have to use some healthy farts and do the dishes, but get rid of anything
nonstick. That is step one. I would get rid of anything that's a fragrance in your house. So
when it comes to fragrance, blade plugins, like throw those away. If I get in an Uber and they
have an air freshener, I'm like, I'm sorry. I'm very chemical sensitive.
I need, can I remove this?
Like, can we take this?
Because if it's blowing on me through the vent,
I'm like, we can't have this.
This is where it goes back to you saying,
once people feel good, they're like, oh my God.
Once you remove all fragrances from your life,
I went to a fragrance free school.
My med school did not allow any fragrance.
And once I removed every fragrance from my life, oh my god, I became so sensitive to it.
And I realized like getting headaches, like that's not good. That's not a good sign.
So when it comes to fragrances, what's in your laundry detergent?
Get rid of that sooner than later. When it comes to like shampoo, conditioner,
lotions, things like that, phase
amount, I know that's expensive and it buys you time to be looking at what other products
can you replace it with. So phase it out so that you don't go into analysis paralysis,
but also like, you know, it's just too much, it's too overwhelming, so you do nothing.
So we've got teflon pans, we've got fragrances in your house. Take off your shoes before you come inside or immediately when you come inside.
My family knows if they want to get yelled at, they're going to wear their shoes in the house.
Like that is going to be like that is like my jocks.
The trade is going off the handle when I see shoes in the house because everything you step in outside,
you're bringing in, you are stepping on herbicides, glyphosate,
in the grass, you are stepping on anaphyse.
You are stepping in dog shit, like, take it off.
So in a really easy way to reduce that.
So take off your shoes before you come in,
open up your windows at least once a week.
So I remember back in like 2018, 2019,
I was saying in Paris for about three months with my family.
Sorry, everybody backstored, my son got really sick.
We couldn't get on a plane.
We had to stay in Paris.
And it was like winter and freezing.
People still open up their windows all the time.
And I was like, man, these French people
are in the know on this because we were doing the same. Even if it's freezing, open it up because indoor air is some of the most polluted
air that we come in contact with. So really easy step, open all that up. The other thing
I said earlier, get ready for plastics in your kitchen. You don't have to go, like, there's
these people that I see on the internet and I just think they're amazing people who like
spend hours of their life
like organizing their pantry and putting everything
and they have all these like glass containers
and crazy containers, just kids amazing, jars.
They're super cheap.
And then your kids break them and you don't care.
But like, you can have a really easy replacement.
We don't wanna microwave in these plastics,
we don't wanna store anything acidic in these plastics,
we don't wanna put fats in these plastics, like we just don't want to store anything acidic in these plastics. We don't want to put fats in these plastics like we just don't want the plastics altogether
So that's another step that you can take and everything I just explain
These are really simple things that you can start doing the makeup the skincare the the you know toiletries
Ah, that's a bigger one to take on but I give you permission to slowly phase out and to take your time at looking at
like what are better alternatives and better solutions and phase those out.
Last thing I'll say is that if you are buying clothes, please wash them. So don't buy
flame retardant pajamas. My god, don't even touch them in the store. But your children sleep in
those. They stay in those for like hours. They're in their bed. Like no, bad, bad. I'm like, if you see those in Target,
you walk the other way, like get away from those.
But when it comes to buying clothes,
our clothes have a lot of chemicals on them.
And it is, like I'm gonna tell you,
this is gonna be the next big thing.
It is on the hush right now.
It's not being talked about.
In fact, when you try to talk about it,
people are like, nah, like silence that,
that are our clothes.
It has always been something, like even my son knows, like silence that, that are closed. It has always been something that even my son knows.
Like, if he has, we bring clothes home, he's like, I can't wear those.
Like, I need to wash them and you do, you need to wash your clothes.
And as much as possible, be very mindful of fast, fast, fast fashion, the cheaper it is,
the more synthetics it has, the more chemicals it's probably coming with.
I'm glad you went that direction.
You mentioned your son, the question,
piggybacking off of what Justin said,
we're all parents now.
What is going through your head as far as your son's timeline?
I think about it like, oh, this age,
I wanna make sure I'm teaching this.
What are you thinking from like a hormonal level?
What are things that you were thinking about?
You, like, there's certain things like Justin Pony,
like he's got to live in this world,
so he's gonna come into context with some of this stuff,
but what are you trying to prolong?
What are things you're for sure carving out right now?
What is his timeline look like for you as his mother
to protect him as long as you possibly can?
Oh God, yeah, that's a thing.
He's been messing with me lately. Was he been, oh's a thing. He's been messing with me lately.
Was he been, oh McDonald's, he's been messing with me
and I know he's 10.
You're already going on like 16 and so annoying
because he's like, oh, I know if I say,
mm, McDonald's looks so good
that that's gonna like trigger my mom
and I'm like, oh, but you don't know that I was that kid.
So like, I'm not, you're not gonna get to me. But it is like, I'm like, oh, but you don't know that I was that kid. So like, I'm not, you're not going to get to me.
But it is like, I'm like, oh, God, like, do I let him just like eat McDonald's
one time? Spoiler guys, he has an autoimmune condition that affects his brain.
So no, the answer is no, we're not going to, we're not going to mess with that.
So it's really scary when I think about the trajectory of the world.
I definitely, you know, we-school, slash home-school, world-school,
so he gets exposed to a lot of cultures and gets to see a lot of different ways of doing things.
And I will say that the way other cultures' values food is,
it's just not the same as the US, the way the US is like,
how cheap can I get it and like how much value do I get
kind of situation?
And so I think that's been beneficial.
I am, you know, I just try to educate him
as much as possible in every way that I can
in a non-shameful way, especially when, you know,
because he's a kid and he'll look at other people
and like, oh God, we had a baby sitter quit one time because
She told him she had Crohn's disease and then she was eating like all of this processed vegan food and
He's like a at the time and he's like, you know that food is not good for you
And if you have got condition you shouldn't be eating that because it's bad for your got bugs
And you have to take care of your got God bugs She was so offended and so upset and you know
I
He was just trying to help and I had to have a conversation with him about like you know
I know a lot of stuff and like I go through grocery store and I could literally help everybody with their cart
I don't because we only help people who ask for it and it's not our business to think we know how to live someone else's life better than them. When it comes to the hormone stuff, we have a
very open household open. I mean, my son, we've been talking about it. So at like three or
four, I have like a picture on my phone with his connects, he built an anatomically correct
uterus, philopian tubes and ovaries, and brought it to me.
He woke me up, and he's like, look, mom, and at the time is so cute, because he could only say
arteries. And I was like, most people cannot even identify those things, let alone build a
connect structure out of that. Like, only God, like supergenus to human anatomy. So we're just really open.
I take more of the Dutch perspective in terms of sex education, which is that I've been
teaching consent, which is I think really important for males to understand consent because
while everybody's like men are toxic and horrible and they're abusers. They don't wanna be the trauma-inducers.
They just sometimes don't understand
what consent actually is,
because nobody taught them.
And so, you know, this starts at a very young age.
So I also have a two-year-old.
He is, man, I got, he is a totally different child.
He is, I'm gonna have more hands full with that one. But, you know, with him, it's like, I'll ask, can I kiss you if he says no, it's a totally different child. He is, I'm gonna have more hands full with that one.
But with him, it's like, I'll ask, can I kiss you?
If he says no, it's a no.
Can I hug you?
If it's a no, it's a no.
Grandma's like, can I give you a hug?
He says no, it's a no.
This is teaching body autonomy.
This is teaching consent.
And when you teach consent from that perspective,
it's a lot easier for them to understand later in life.
How to keep their, well, now, how to keep their body safe as it is, but also how to have those conversations because they've just been normal conversations, just like we have normal conversations
about periods and about, you know, man, in next week, I'm going to be like even closer to A-Greet
Treble. And I'm in cry. There's going to be tears. Like there's justriple, and I'm at cry. There's gonna be tears.
Like, there's just gonna, and I explain to my son's,
like, mom has got a lot of hormones right now,
and so, like, these little things
are gonna trigger me more, and I'm gonna cry.
And, like, that's normal.
This is what happens.
So, a lot of just, like, normalizing normal conversations
that happen, and these normal human experiences.
In terms of, like, how do you guys' kids,
so you got a teenager.
Yeah, I have two teenagers and then a two-year-old
and a seven-month-old and then Justin's got
almost two teenagers.
Yeah, 10 and a 13-year-old.
Yeah, that reminds four.
Okay, wow, that is like the spread.
And Sal, I love that because I have a 10-year-old
and I have a 2 year old.
And I actually, I love that age gap so much.
It works for us, it works for us.
So I just asked that because it's very different, like try to tell a teenage girl what to do.
That can be like a challenging thing. And so we want to start the education earlier of like the why and how this benefits their
body and then making observations without shame.
So we've always done, I'll use Halloween as an example, we've always done this switch
which thing like give me your candy, I'll give you a toy, like do some Legos here.
And it's always worked.
But this last year
He was like I really want to eat the candy and
We actually turned Halloween Shugnight you guys familiar with Shugnight
I knew this joke in London telling this story and everybody's like Shugnight and I was like it's funny
and I was like, it's funny, trust me. We're like, okay, it's gonna be a shug night.
Like, and it's gonna be as bad as shug night was,
like, getting ready for it.
And so it was.
He decided to eat the candy.
And I was like, okay, like,
I told him you can't eat all the candy.
I pulled out things that were like, okay,
like, this is the rug dye,
like, this gonna be bad for pandas, ADHD.
Like, and so, like, I went through and I was like,
you can eat the candy.
Any snack even more, any binge on candy,
any felt so sick, any threw up, and it was horrible.
And I just said to him, like, so wow,
like you ate the candy and like, how did you feel?
And he's like, I felt really bad.
And I was like, do you think it was worth it?
And he was like, no.
And I'm like, yeah, I mean, what do you want to do in the
future? And just like ask questions and let him get to that place of like, okay, coming
to that understanding of the way things are because we're not, we're in a situation
where he does want to experiment with things. As children do, they're a little scientist.
And they should be able to. And and so want to do it in like
a controlled fashion that he can actually learn from the experience and it not be and well you did
that see it told you so kind of thing because if somebody said that to me I would be like oh yeah
watch what I do next you know you earlier you talked talked about the benefits of lifting weights and strength training
and it made me think about the importance of muscle and how it affects hormones. I know we've
talked about hormones a lot here. What is the effect of muscle on hormones like insulin, estrogen,
testosterone, why is it so important for people to maintain or build muscle?
Okay, this is going to be a big one. Okay, this is gonna be a big one.
Okay, so my master's nutrition research
was on sarcopenic obesity.
So this is like 20 years ago.
That's how old I am.
And I was blown away because at the time I was a vegetarian
and seeing, we were doing this in animal monols
and seeing that if you put someone on essentially
a vegetarian vegan diet and they're devoid of these branch chain amino acids that only roll with
high quality animal protein, the muscle wasting that happens and the metabolic fallout that happens. And this results in
sarcopenic obesity.
Sarcopenic obesity, I call it like the M&M body, like the round M&M guy, because you just got all your fat in the center with the worst place to have it, because that's to affect your organs and your metabolic health and then your really skinny arms and really skinny legs.
Cicopenic obesity is increased more about morbidity and mortality. Like you're going to die younger
and it's going to be bad. The way we combat that is through nutrition and lifestyle and lifting
weights you have to challenge your muscles. If you are somebody who wants to have an easy time
in parimenopause, transition gracefully in domenopause,
and have a great sex life, you need to lift weights.
Lifting weights is, so having that,
that metabolically active muscle mass
is going to sensitize you more to insulin.
Spoiler, insulin sensitivity,
so when you lose sensitivity to insulin,
is so bad for the clitoris.
Your clit hates it, okay?
And that is gonna lead to decreased sensitivity.
So less sexual pleasure.
We've always understood this,
well, we've understood it for a really long time.
Remember I said clitoris, penis, same, same.
So if we've got metabolic chaos,
the penis may not become erect.
The penis may be less sensitive due to the increase in your blood sugar.
And this can cause problems with your nerves.
And so having that muscle mass is going to help sensitize your body to insulin, maintain
that insulin sensitivity, keep your blood sugar
optimized. This is what I call the foundation of your hormone health along with adrenal
function. In is this normal, there's a pyramid, the base of the pyramid is adrenal health,
insulin, okay? Got to have those on lock. Above that, you're going to find that is where
the thyroid lies and the tipippy top is the sex hormones.
If your sex hormones are not right, like you got to go to the base because you can work on those and
we do it real time for symptom management. But if all you're doing is working here and you
not have a good foundation, you will forever be chasing these symptoms. And part of that foundation
is building that muscle mass. Now as I talked about that visceral adiposity,
that's when that fat likes to pack in around the organs.
That is going to lead to a higher risk of diabetes,
of cardiometabolic issues, so like high blood pressure,
heart disease, all of the really bad stuff we don't want
that we get super concerned about as we get into menopause.
Now here's the part that really sucks.
We start losing muscle mass in our 30s, even worse than our 40s, and it just keeps going
down.
But it doesn't have to be that way if you are lifting weights and challenging your body
in that way.
The other great thing about having that muscle mass is that when you've got the right proportion
of muscle to fat, and again we're getting rid of that visceral adiposity, that is going
to keep your inflammation in check.
Now inflammation, and this is especially important to men, but it's important to women
as well, increases aromatase, an enzyme that takes testosterone into estrogen.
So now we've got like man boobs, that sucks.
We've got irritability, we've got like we're crying more.
This is also problematic in women because fat loves estrogen, estrogen loves fat.
They're besties.
They work together.
So estrogen can increase fat.
Now you're like, why am I gaining weight?
What's going on and all these fitness bros on the internet are like, you're a hormone
type, nothing to do with it. You just lack willpower and it's like, friends, no, there's something very complex going on and all these like fitness bros on the internet are like you're a hormone type nothing to do with it. You just lack willpower and it's like friends. No, there's something very
complex going on because if we don't know that testosterone, now we can't build that muscle mass
and this becomes problematic. So balancing out the muscle and the fat because we do need some fat
is going to help in terms of inflammation. If you're helping inflammation, you're helping your adrenal glands
because cortisol's job, one of their jobs, one of its jobs is to keep inflammation in check.
So muscle is something that is so overlooked in women. And I want them to understand, I want
women to understand, yes, you can keep doing your Pilates. I think you should because it's so great
for your pelvic floor. And we want to keep a healthy pelvic floor, because urinary incontinence is one of the top reasons that women end up
in nursing homes.
It's like 60% of women.
So, I just see people all the time that are like, why are you doing Pilates?
You should just be lifting weights.
I'm like, it's an amd conversation, and you should have flexibility.
Like, do your yoga, you do those things, but don't negate the the strength training because
You need that pressure you need that that pressure on those muscles
To actually stimulate them to build you have to be
uncomfortable and then you have to fuel
Trust friend if you were in your forties it better be at least one
Ram her kilogram of body weight of protein that
you're eating every day. That point eight is not going to be enough. So you have to basically
shred the muscle and make yourself really uncomfortable and then you have to fuel correctly,
especially getting those branched-cheon amino acids. And as we were talking about with
supplements before, creatinine friends, take your creatinine because it's not just
good for muscles and it's not just good for energy, but super good for the brain as well.
And that just leads me to the last thing I'm going to say, which is that strength training,
helping your metabolic health, helping your hormones, E is going to be neuroprotective.
We know that women are the highest population with Alzheimer's and dementia.
Strength training can help prevent that.
Because the more mitochondria we are building, especially in our thighs, it's correlated
with more mitochondria in our brain.
Yeah.
Jolene, I wrote a book on this and when I was doing the research for strength training, I was
surprised at how much more effective strength training was for hormone balance and for brain
health.
In fact, it was, I, it was the only form of
exercise that's been shown to stop and maybe even reverse the beta amyloid plaques that
are associated with Alzheimer's, which was kind of weird. When I used to train clients,
I used to work a lot with functional medicine practitioners in conjunction. And as a trainer,
my tools were exercising diet. And strength training was the most effective thing
I could do with a person to see changes in hormones.
And it was even before they built muscle.
And I want to say it's because you're talking about muscle
and people think, well, I have to build all this muscle
for that to happen.
No, just simply sending the signal starts to organize
a hormones in a way to build muscle.
And that organization of those hormones
is actually the hormone profile we tend to look for.
So it's just even the act of doing so,
that starts to change those things.
And I wanna make that point
so that people don't think they have to build
like 20 pounds of muscle to make this happen.
Well, and you're probably not going to as a woman
like get to be able to do that
because just the way that your hormones
and your genetics are set up,
but I'd love that you make that point
because what we are told day in and day out in society is that
your body needs to look a certain way.
In fact, what we're often told is take up less space.
Be quiet.
Don't ask questions.
Take up less space.
Shreek yourself down as much as possible as a woman, which is so bad for our health and
long run.
But I'd love that you say that because it's not
about how your body looks.
I talk about that in Is the Normal.
You can't look at somebody and know their metabolic health.
So there is somebody who might look really thin
and they're fitting the societal profile of like,
what's in right now, what women should look like
in the moment.
And yet, I've had patients where their cardio metabolic profile is so scary.
I'm like, oh my God, we've got to fix all of this fast.
And that is one of the ways.
I'm like, you've got to start fueling appropriately
and putting on muscle.
And then you'll have people.
I, people love to hate on Lizzo and her body.
And I remember I saw Lizzo in concert.
I was in medical school and I saw her in concert.
And that woman is like doing push-ups on stage
while singing, doing high kicks, playing a flute,
running around.
And I was just like, I don't even know.
Like I was a Nike tester.
So I was a shoe tester for Nike during this time
and I got to their campus and they would like push me so hard I would almost like throw up. And even I was like,
I don't know if I could ever like keep up with Lizzo because like she is seriously like
so fit even given how her body looks. And this is why I'm always very careful to talk
about visceral adiposity because being a curvy like, you
know, woman having a badonka dog, like these kinds of things, these are not problematic.
What we see in the research is problematic is when that fat is packing around the organs
and you can't always just see that in someone.
It's not easy just to see.
And so, do your point. It is so important for people to understand that you don't have to see the change immediately.
And especially if you're someone in your 40s and you start strength training, you won't
see the change like a 20-something does.
Like it's going to take more time.
But know that consistency is king or queen in this instance.
And that is actually making changes internally.
Again, you can't see it, but notice how you feel.
How you feel matters so much more than how you look.
Are you able, like, are you not dragging in the afternoon anymore?
Are you not feeling these cravings anymore?
Are you able to wake up in the morning with energy?
Are you noticing that, like, despite your doctor being like,
yeah, of course, your knees hurt because you're 40,
you're like, no, they're getting, I go out,
went up the stairs, I feel like totally fine.
These are the things that society is not telling us
to measure, but a good practitioner, like,
so we'll tell you to be on the lookout for.
Yeah, I appreciate your approach
because I think a big challenge also, especially
in my generation and older, is that you go to the doctor and you're afraid to question,
you're afraid to, you know, to maybe counter some of the things or say, well, actually, I
feel this way because they're like the God, right? And I think what you're doing is you're
arming people with not just information, but the right questions to ask and maybe the right tests to look for so that they can take their
health into their own hands.
That's one of the main reasons why I appreciate what you do.
I'm making trouble makers.
I want everyone to be a troublemaker in your doctor's office.
If they are just being like, this is normal and passing you off.
I don't do lab testing.
It will matter.
Be a troublemaker and question them
because we've absolutely been taught,
especially in women's medicine,
then you don't question the white coat.
You have to question them
because they make mistakes.
They're humans.
Not to mention that like the third leading cause of death
is Dr. Induced because of issues with medications.
I mean, that could be a whole podcast in itself.
So you have to be a trouble maker.
You have to ask questions.
And that is how I set up is this normal.
I want you to figure out in real time what's going on for you.
There is, is it parimenopause?
Is it PCOS?
Is it PMDD?
Is it fibroids?
You can do that quiz and you can figure out, okay, this is what's going on.
You take that same data to your doctor.
And when they start to be like,
oh, I don't think it's any of that.
And I don't think it can be that.
Okay, well, help me understand.
Like, I'm showing signs of excess antigens.
Like, I've got herstautism.
I've got acne going on.
My periods are irregular.
Like, let help me understand, like, could this be PCOS?
And if you don't think
it is, what have you done to rule that out? That kind of conversation is what needs to happen.
It shouldn't. The burden shouldn't fall on the patient, but it's what needs to happen to slow down
what, you know, essentially insurance companies and hospital administrators have totally screwed up
in medicine, which is packing a schedule of 36 plus patients and
expecting that you can give the individualized care that someone needs.
It slows the role of the provider.
So understand your doctor is not your enemy.
They are trapped in a system, often it's making it impossible for them to do the kind of
job they always dreamt of doing.
And you need to approach with
curiosity and kindness so that you can get get them thinking, get them
critically thinking about your case and get it exactly what you need from that
doctor's appointment. We also know like Dr. Visas aren't cheap healthcare in
America, really sucks when it comes to insurance. I know in Canada they're
waiting like six months to see a gynecologist and you also
as a patient don't have time to feel sick. And I think this is so important to understand.
We only get so much time on this planet and we should not spend a minute of it feeling
unwell if we can avoid it. Excellent. Well thank you so much for coming on the show again,
Jolene. This is awesome. I can't wait to have my wife
My wife really loves your stuff. So I'm gonna send this book. Yeah. Yeah, I appreciate you coming on
You know the things that we're having me. I always love talking with you guys you have the best questions
This is like one of the best podcasts out there. So keep doing what you're doing. Thank you
And next time you're around in California, please come visit us. I know I need to make a trip
No, Trevor makers, please Please and good luck everything. Thank you. Thanks, Shaleen. Thank you for
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