Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2187: Why Building Muscle Is More Important Than Losing Fat With Dr. Gabrielle Lyon
Episode Date: October 19, 2023In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak to Dr. Gabrielle Lyon about the role muscle plays in overall health and longevity. We are not overfat but under-muscled. (1:57) What makes muscle so protecti...ve as an organ? (4:51) Why are doctors so slow to change their paradigm of thinking around building muscle? (7:49) How insulin resistance affects the body. (11:47) The disconnect with measuring strength vs. muscle mass. (17:33) If you want to have a healthy brain, MOVE! (22:47) How do we move the needle to get people to lift weights? (27:28) The effect muscle has on hormones. (38:33) Why are nutrition conversations steeped in politics? (46:22) How does building muscle help with organ health? (1:05:45) Why we must stop talking about protein as a generic term. (1:09:19) Creatine is an anti-aging/longevity supplement. (1:14:36) Having concerns over the anti-animal narrative. (1:18:12) The myths surrounding kids and exercise/tech. (1:22:12) How dietary cholesterol can positively affect muscle strength. (1:26:11) Feeling the responsibility to help people and change lives. (1:27:37) How actions will ALWAYS trump words. (1:31:23) Making the case for the benefits of strength training. (1:33:58) You move your body; you move your mind. (1:39:25) A PSA for EVERY trainer out there. (1:40:11) Related Links/Products Mentioned Forever Strong: A New, Science-Based Strategy for Aging Well – Book by Dr. Gabrielle Lyon For a limited time only, Mind Pump listeners get a free LMNT Sample Pack with any purchase: Visit DrinkLMNT.com/MindPump October Promotion: MAPS Bands | The Skinny Guy ‘hardgainer’ Bundle 50% off! **Code OCTOBER50 at checkout** Higher weight is linked to poor brain health in children Association of Grip Strength With Risk of All-Cause Mortality, Cardiovascular Diseases, and Cancer in Community-Dwelling Populations: A Meta-analysis of Prospective Cohort Studies The Midlife Muscle Crisis: why we've gotten obesity all wrong | Gabrielle Lyon | TEDxWestMonroe The Resistance Training Revolution – Book by Sal Di Stefano Strength training can help protect the brain from degeneration D3-creatine dilution for the noninvasive measurement of skeletal muscle mass in premature infants Mind Pump #1835: Why Resistance Training Is The Best Form Of Exercise For Fat Loss And Overall Health Mind Pump #2152: How To Convince Friends & Family To Work Out Mind Pump #2075: The New Science Of Living Longer & Better With Dr. Rand McClain The effect of acute sleep deprivation on skeletal muscle protein synthesis and the hormonal environment Keto Diet May Improve Fertility in Women with PCOS, Study Finds Stanford historian traces military's influence on U.S. nutrition The food industry pays ‘influencer’ dietitians to shape your eating habits Systematic review and meta-analysis of the associations of vegan and vegetarian diets with inflammatory biomarkers Plant Based Diets Won't Help | Peter Ballerstedt PhD – The Dr. Gabrielle Lyon Show Muscle-strengthening activities and cancer incidence and mortality: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Dr. Gabrielle Lyon (@drgabriellelyon) Instagram Dr. Rand McClain (@dr.randmcclain) Instagram Layne Norton, Ph.D. (@biolayne) Instagram Peter Ballerstedt, PhD (@grassbased) Instagram Bedros Keuilian (@bedroskeuilian) Instagram Ed Mylett (@edmylett) Instagram Â
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Mind, mind, up 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.
Today's episode, we have the pioneer of muscle science,
Dr. Gabriel Lyon.
She's the one that essentially coined the phrase,
we are not overfat, we are under muscle.
She studies, understands and explains how muscle mass, muscle itself, is a healthy organ.
How having too little muscle is probably the cause of most of our chronic health issues.
Not that we have too much body fat, but rather that body fat, or too much body fat, is
a result of having too little muscle.
And it gets much deeper.
It's phenomenal.
I learn a lot from listening to Dr. Gabriel Lyon.
She actually helps me back up.
A lot of things I observed as a trainer over the last two decades.
She has a new book, in fact, about this.
It's called Forever Strong, a new science-based strategy for aging well.
And remember, she is a doctor.
She knows what she's talking about.
Check her out.
You could also follow her at Dr. Gabriel Lyon.
So that's DRGAB, R-E-L-L-E-L-Y-O-N.
So find her on social media, give her a follow.
She's amazing.
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All right, here comes a show.
I want to know what inspired you to write your book.
Like, what was the inspiration behind it and talk a little bit about the information
that's in there that's so strange to say this, but counter what is considered mainstream
advice around things like health and longevity?
Well, we've been trying to fight an obesity epidemic for the last 50 years.
And when you have the problem correct, you assume that we get solutions.
For the last 50 years, we've gotten sicker, fatter, weaker as a country.
And in my mind, we have to ask a different question and a better question.
And this actually, this book came out of personal experience.
I don't think that I've ever told you guys this.
In fact, I know that I haven't.
I did my fellowship in geriatrics.
So geriatrics is end of life.
65 and up.
I did at WashU, and at the time, I was forced to do geriatrics.
So I actually don't think that I've ever really
publicly talked about this, but I went to wash you to study nutritional sciences.
So the goal was, I was gonna do a fellowship
in nutritional sciences.
The catch was, I was gonna have to see people
at the end of their life.
And you can imagine the impact that would have
day after day in the nursing home on the weekends,
seeing 30 patients a day that are at the end of life.
And then in the evenings doing weight management clinic,
and in the early mornings doing muscle biopsies
and cardiovascular testing, doing research on obesity.
And I became really attached to one of these participants.
And she was a mom of three,
trying to lose the same 20 pounds after her last three kids.
And I imaged her brain.
So we were looking at the interface
between body composition brain function.
And I imaged her brain.
And her brain looked like the beginning
of an Alzheimer's brain.
She was in her mid 50s.
And I knew what the trajectory of her life was going to be.
And whose fault was it?
It was our fault.
Because the information that we had been telling her was, eat the food guide pyramid, further
reduce your calories, do more cardiovascular activity, don't train, don't address skeletal muscle, do all the
things to treat obesity.
And then I had this aha moment, and I realized that the sickest patients all had one thing
in common.
It wasn't that they were overfat.
It was that they had unhealthy muscle or they were undermuscled.
And this was the problem.
And then if we began to shift the focus and we really cared about human health and doing
the right thing for people, then we have to shift the conversation and begin to ask the
right question. And that's where this concept of muscle-centric medicine came from.
What is it about muscle that makes it so protective
as an organ?
I think the obvious thing people would think about
is, well, I need mobility.
I need to be able to move around.
So that's why I need muscle,
but it goes a lot deeper than that, right?
And we need to all look jacked in town like South,
which is really what people think about.
They think about muscle.
Do not lie, people think about the 80s with the spray tan and the muscle teeth. That's the problem. It is still breast science,
no offense to the dudes in the room. But it is not. Skeletal muscle is an organ system.
It is the largest endocrine organ in the body. Trump's the heart, itumps of thyroid, dare I say it even trumps the gonads.
Skeletal muscle from the framework of medicine and health is this should come as shock, is
the site of glucose disposal, right?
It is the primary site of insulin resistance.
So if we were to take a step back, what are we all wanting?
We are all wanting to age well.
You guys look great for 25. We are all wanting to age well and
increase the quality of our life over time. So everybody listening has to be interested in outcomes.
What do we know affect individuals? We are seeing, if you look at the CDC where you are seeing
where you are seeing causes of mortality, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, cancer, all of which are rooted in what?
Skeletal muscle. Skeletal muscle and obesity are not on that list.
Wait, as a cause, as a cause of death, skeletal muscle is not on that list.
So when we think about skeletal muscle, these are underlying principles that directly affect
our capacity to age and have optimal wellness and vitality in strength.
Skeletal muscle as a glucose disposal unit.
Insulin resistance, we've all talked and all heard about insulin.
Insulin is this peptide hormone released from the pancreas, as you well know, saline
for you talk about it, moves blood glucose from the blood into cells, right?
Well insulin resistance, when you require more insulin for the glucose that you have,
what do you think one of the first tissues affected is?
Skeletal muscle.
Decades before.
There's information some of the earlier studies out of Yale
at 18-year-old, quote, healthy sedentary,
no visual excess body fat or abdominal fat,
showing insulin resistance in skeletal muscle at 18.
This begins decades earlier in skeletal muscle before we're even
seeing adiposity, before we're seeing excess subcutaneous fat. So we have to dress skeletal
muscle as the primary site for all things metabolic.
So from a doctor's perspective, I'm really curious to hear your opinion on this because
the way I used to explain it to clients
Why because we've known this and we've been communicating this message for a long time
But when I get questions from my clients, they'd say well my doctor doesn't tell me that
So I used to say because this is what I believe or thought
To is that it's because of the risk factor because doctors don't want to tell people to go build muscle because they could hurt themselves.
And so we pushed this narrative that cardio
is the best form of fighting obesity.
Is that not true?
Why is it that we're this,
if you know this, we've known this for a long time,
it's not like it's not known,
why is the messaging different?
We have completely missed the boat as muscle as the pinnacle of health. When you go to a physician's
office, they measure blood pressure, they measure temperature, they might even measure BMI,
they might focus on body fat, although very rarely. When do they measure skeletal muscle mass?
Not only that, but they're so off by the general recommendation. They might focus on body fat, although very rarely. When do they measure skeletal muscle mass?
Not only that, but they're so off by the general recommendation.
Yeah, I remember going in and getting measured, and according to their charts, I was obese,
because they don't even factor muscle in it.
And also, by the way, we also don't directly measure skeletal muscle mass.
And I think that that's important to point out, DexA doesn't directly measure skeletal
muscle mass.
We don't even have the tools
to routinely measure these things at a population level.
Well, we know that a simple grip strength test,
which is a general proxy for overall physical strength,
can predict all the cause mortality better
than almost any other single metric.
We're not using it yet, maybe because we don't have standards, but we are seeing now the
conversation change a little bit.
I think part of the problem was the studies done on exercising longevity were all, none
of them were done on any of the form of exercise and cardiovascular exercise.
And I don't know if that's because it's easy to put a hamster on a wheel.
And it's hard to get, you know, myse to lift or if because maybe strength training was always relegated to,
you know, first bodybuilders and then just athletic performance.
So we had athletic performance studies.
But there were nose, I mean, 20, 30 years ago when I first became a trainer,
you couldn't find a study on strength training and longevity.
They just didn't exist.
Yeah.
I think it's a really good point.
And I think that we are slow to catch up, and we are all seeing this in clinical practice,
and we're really slow to change the paradigm of thinking and the conversation.
So I gave a TEDx talk, which in May was the second most viewed TEDx talk in the conversation. So I gave a TEDx talk which in May was the second most viewed
TEDx talk in the world. It was flagged. It was flagged as miss it. Yeah, they flagged it as
this is information only of the person giving it. Do not take this as science advice.
It was eight minutes. I sent in 52 references for each statement for so I sent in a total of 52 references
for eight minutes for eight minutes
for eight minutes. What would it was missing from it? Hold on. It's weird. Who knows who knows?
I said everything you know everything you thought about obesity is wrong that we don't actually have an obesity epidemic
They have to make your cacles just like a what we have is a midlife muscle crisis
Mm-hmm. You have an obesity epidemic. Yes. Do we have it obesity as a problem?
But okay, that's symptomology
Where what is the cause?
Cause is and you know, I'm saying this blank at least so I
I'm sensitive to that I understand for the providers and the professionals listening things are multifactorial
But you cannot discount the massive influence of skeletal muscle as this primary site.
And that while obesity, quote, is a problem, why don't we address it at the root cause
level?
And the root cause level is skeletal muscle.
Dr. Lain, when I wrote a book around this, around just strength training, I tried to
create it for the layman, right?
Just to kind of create a narrative or change a narrative
for the average person who wants to lose weight,
who never really considered strength training.
That's what it was about.
But I did do a lot of research and looked at studies.
And one of the studies that was shocking to me at first,
and it makes sense when you think about it,
was how they would take severely obese people,
have them lose no weight at all.
They would just have them build a little bit of muscle
and their insulin sensitivity would dramatically improve.
They lost no body, they were still massively obese.
They just built a little bit of muscle.
Let's talk about that for a second.
Maybe talk about insulin resistance,
what that does to the body,
how that can cause so many different diseases, and then how muscle can affect that.
Yeah, I think that's a really great point.
I want to point out this idea that when we get excess body fat, we don't just get it
on what you can see.
We've all heard of visceral fat, visceral fat, fat around the organs.
We've all heard of liver fat. Well, fat also infiltrates skeletal muscle.
Skeletal muscle, which should look like a filet,
ends up looking like a ribisake.
And it is this fat infiltration
and granted, you see some intramuscular fat
from athletes as a source of energy
intramuscular triglycerides.
But intramuscular adipose tissue
really affects insulin sensitivity.
It affects the quality of skeletal muscle.
It affects this flux.
So skeletal muscle, if you think about skeletal muscle, think about it like a suitcase.
And if you're going on a trip and you're a woman, let's say you're packing for four days,
but you're really packing for a month.
Shout out to all the women listening.
You know, you're laughing because you know exactly what I'm talking about.
So if you open the suitcase and let's say glucose is, you want to pack some glycogen in
there.
You're eating carbohydrates.
You're not exercising.
You're packing carbohydrates into this skeletal muscle.
And then you're not moving it.
You're not creating any flux.
Over time, the glucose has nowhere to go.
It begins to go back into the bloodstream.
You have elevated levels of glucose,
you have elevated levels of insulin.
Insulin over time creates a whole host of issues,
whether it's the insulin in and of itself,
or the elevated levels of glucose that ride along with it,
and then subsequent elevated levels of triglycerides,
all of which can create low levels of inflammation
and just a complete metabolic disaster,
elevated levels of atlas sclerosis, and just et cetera.
So, when you have an individual who is obese,
there's this concept of, you know, there's, you
can be metabolically healthy and obese or overweight, I think over time, that's not going
to be true.
And one reason is we're not looking directly at the tissue.
We are not directly imaging skeletal muscle tissue.
So we have no way to assess the amount of fat that is now infiltrated into tissue.
Over time, this affects the mitochondrial aspect of skeletal muscle.
It affects strength.
It affects contractility.
It affects the muscle protein-synthetic response.
So skeletal muscle, as this primary organ system, when it becomes dysfunctional, while it
makes 40% of the body, maybe everyone in here, it's like 60%,
but this is a huge tissue that over time,
when not leveraged becomes dysfunctional,
also perpetuates low levels of inflammation.
So now it becomes an inflammatory,
a cause of inflammation rather than something
that can reduce or modulate in an appropriate way, inflammation?
Yeah, I think that's safe to say.
It becomes unhealthy tissue that again,
exists as a massive portion of your body.
Wow.
Does this also have to do with the reason why
there was a study done in Australia, I believe,
where they looked at strength training
and the progression
of the beta amyloid plaques that there seems to be a relationship with those in Alzheimer's.
It was the only form of exercise that stopped the progression.
All forms of exercise improve your health and seem to have a positive impact, but it
was a strength training that had the biggest impact.
And I've heard people refer to Alzheimer's and dementia as type three
diabetes. That's actually what I did my, that's what I did my clinical fellowship. So in
geriatrics, I spent time running in Alzheimer's, memory and aging clinic. And the question
was, was it made of amyloid plaque? There's how proteins are all kinds of hypotheses as to why it happens, but one thing is for sure, is that metabolic dysfunction
is a huge contributor to Alzheimer's. Just as you mentioned, type 3 diabetes of the brain.
The other aspect is vascular dementia. And again, while they seem separate,
they all ride together. And again, you have to ask yourself, what acts as a root cause mechanism?
Skeletal muscle.
The more healthy skeletal muscle mass you have,
and actually we saw that.
The, in some of the studies that we did,
and you'll see this now in subsequent studies,
we looked at FMRI studies of the brain,
and one thing that we saw routinely, and again, you see this now, is that the more the
wider the waistline, the more overall obesity, the lower the brain volume.
And why is that?
One theory is this just metabolic implication over time.
Let me add, typically with, there used to be this belief,
and I remember when I first saw an MRI of an obese person
next to someone who was not obese,
there used to be this belief that obese people
would have more muscle mass because of their body weight.
I'm so glad you brought this up.
But the MRIs show that not only do obese people
not have more muscle mass, they actually have less muscle mass than the average person.
So it could, and I'd love your comment on that, but also the reduction in brain volume
due to obesity, I'm going to hypothesize here, but do you think it has less to do with
the obesity and more to do with the reduced muscle mass because, okay. Yes.
All right. Smart, Sal, very smart. One of the other things that they didn't look at Do you think it has less to do with the obesity and more to do with the reduced muscle mass? Yes. Okay.
Yes.
All right.
Smart, Sal.
Very smart.
One of the other things that they didn't look at is the quality of the tissue.
Let's say, in fact, it was true that individuals that are carrying around more weight need more
tissue to support that.
Let's say that's true.
That does not address the quality of the skeletal muscle at all.
You have no idea what that quality that tissue is.
You could have more tissue.
You could have a large cow and you might take this rib eye cut and half that tissue is
connective tissue and fat.
It's not as if it's just this filet of tissue.
The other thing that you said is very important and I want to just point out that we are not great at measuring skeletal muscle mass directly. And because
of this fact, there is this disconnect, which seems logical, but in the research, as it
stands right now, people will say strength is much more important than mass. Right. We all can agree that nearly all the data would support that.
Right.
There's a major flaw in the way that that is done.
And that is that because when we look at mass,
it's just people don't realize it's lean body mass.
Which is, is anything that's not fat.
Right.
So it could be fluid.
It could literally be oil, like some builds one, inject themselves with like,
oil to make the muscles.
So how do we solve this in terms of measuring?
So it's now come out to a researcher named William Evans
and he and he'll have said his another researcher,
they've come out with a D3 creatine,
where an individual will take a pill
and it tags, it's a de take a pill, and it tags,
it's a deuterated creatine, and it tags skeletal muscle.
Oh, wow.
That's cool.
And that is what I believe.
And so now, with this research, there's a great paper that came out in 2019.
They've tested it in infants, neonates, all ranges of humans.
And what they're starting to see is that muscle mass and strength correlate when you
directly measure skeletal mass, skeletal mass and strength do correlate. Yeah, and the reason
by the way that you strengthen now is because strength by itself is a better measurement of
lean of actual muscle fibers than what we do now, which is just look at lean body mass, which I can affect.
Literally, I could go on a keto diet, suck the water, and glycogen out of my muscles, and
I'll measure lower lean body mass, even though my body mass might not be affected in the
sense that I don't have less muscle contractile tissue.
Now you're saying they can actually test and say this is actual Yes, contractual tissue and they're seeing differences in the DexA
So where they would say okay, well DexA is showing no relationship between muscle mass and strength
Right that they're seeing when you directly cut measure skeletal muscle. That's not true
There is a relationship and you also says it said something else that's very important
It's not the gain of body fat, and this is by the same group.
Evans, that it's not the gain of body fat over time
that's more detrimental.
It's the loss of skeletal muscle mass.
You know, in aging, research,
and in clinical practice,
we never tell an older individual
over the age of 65 to lose weight.
Because if they fall, if they break a hip, we do not tell them to lose weight.
That is not the recommendation.
Now results in worse outcomes.
It does result in worse outcomes.
And not just only result in worse outcomes, they might not die from the fall, but the subsequent
metabolic consequences of that fall, having bedrest, they do see increase
in insulin resistance. An individual on bedrest could lose two pounds of muscle in a week.
Wow.
And when you're young, you can gain that back. But as you age, it's much more difficult.
This is what's known as a catabolic crisis.
I used to train doctors, and I remember one of them saying a statement that I thought was
It's like I couldn't believe it and then I confirmed it with every other
I trained at one point maybe like 1314 doctors. I say I'm sorry
No, they were for not great people wonderful people and I one of them said oh, yeah, you know break a hip
Diabne pneumonia. Yeah, exactly. That was what they would say like when people fall and get hurt when they're older
Diabinamonia. Yeah, exactly. That was what they would say like when people fall and get hurt when they're older
They're their life quality their health to climb
Rapidly because now they can't move and the body just degenerates at a much better. Yeah, no, it's roughly what three million falls
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the part of the visual the part about muscle and brain volume I want to go back to that because this one's an interesting one to me and I want to hammer this home
Because I don't think people are making the connection. Okay. If you look at body fat on the body
And I'm so glad you're here because you're gonna be able to help me with this thought here
If you look at body fat on the body it does there are
There are functions that are required within the body to preserve that body fat
Ners the body fat preserve that body fat, nourish the body fat, sustain the body fat.
But it's nothing like muscle, right?
Muscle requires a lot from the brain, okay?
So every time you learn a new movement,
you're not just developing your muscle,
developing the brain in the central nervous system.
If you stop moving, we could do MRIs and notice
parts of the brain that'll actually atrophy
because you no longer are contracting, controlling,
balancing.
People don't realize they take for granted all the movement we do, the brain has to be
well developed to perform certain movements and the more intricate the movements, the
more strength is required, the more organization from the central nervous system.
That's all CNS building, that's brain building.
When you lose muscle, do you think the connection
with brain atrophy is just that?
There's less muscle, so there's less for the brain.
That's a great thought.
I don't know.
I have not thought about that.
Wouldn't like a test where you measure someone
like before they got casted up
with I'm a broken limb, be like the best way.
And you measure the brain, measure the...
That would be very interesting.
That would be a cool study.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Where you had like, you'd measure all these people
that broke a limb, their brains before and after.
And then you obviously know that's gonna atrophy
because it's not being used.
That would be very interesting.
Yeah, I don't know that answer, but that is a...
Seems logical.
It does seem logical, which means it takes a long time
to catch up in the science.
Yeah, I think so. It's a logic.
It's 20 years from now.
So yeah, in about 20 years, they'll figure out what you're also pointing out is that they're
perishable skills.
Yeah.
When we stop searching for things that require growth both physically and mentally, then
body parts, atrophy, brain atrophies, we have to learn new skills because life and
these are perishable skills.
Yeah, you know, it's part of that well, the evolutionary reason behind that that I subscribe
to is anything that requires energy, your body is going to need a reason to preserve.
Otherwise it wants to be as efficient as possible.
I mean, we evolved with scarcity.
Muscle is expensive tissue.
The brain even can be expensive.
So if it doesn't need a skill, it's going to prune it off.
There's no reason to have a V10 engine if you're not going to be holding a lot of weight.
So your engine is going to modify itself to your needs.
In other words, you're only as strong and as smart and as balanced as you need to be. And then there are studies where they will compare people exercising
their brain with like, you know, word exercises and stuff, which does something to people that don't
do that and just move more. And the brain responds better to the movement than it does. Not to say that
they don't both have value, but it's like you wanna have a healthy brain move.
Yeah, well, there's an interesting phenomenon
when you think about skeletal muscle as an endocrine organ.
So again, it's an endocrine organ.
When you contract it, it releases myocins.
And there's hundreds of different myocins.
These are what would be considered hormones
or peptides that interface with all organ systems.
Myokines, for example, I'll just name a few inner luchen six, inner luchen six, which we
often think of as a cytokine coming from the immune system or macrophages or inner luchen
15.
These are released from skeletal muscle, exercising skeletal muscle, and have a influence and
an interplay in the immune system.
Balancing inflammation. Exercising skeletal muscle also releases something called capceptin,
capthepsin B and irisin, both which influence the increase in the brain BDNF, brain derived in retrophic factor, just by contracting skeletal
muscle.
Skeletal muscle is so multifactorial as this pinnacle of health from the metabolic aspect
which we talked about from the brain aspect in multiple domains, not just from connecting
the brain to a movement, but also from the exercise capacity
to then influence the brain above and beyond endorphins,
but really these molecules that service
to interface with the brain.
And that, to me, is just so fascinating.
So let me pose a question to you.
Here's what I'm trying to solve.
We can appreciate how important skeletal muscle is.
We can all agree that it's the organ of longevity.
Right?
Everyone listening, they can agree.
50% of Americans don't exercise.
50% of Americans don't exercise.
24% actually meet the exercise requirements, which are a small 150 minutes and then two
days a week of some kind of stringed training, which could be what any modality.
How do we move the needle to get people to do this. How do we impart upon them that it's not about looking good, it's
not about what you have to lose, it is totally about what you have to gain.
I really think it's what we've been trying to preach to the masses. Well, one, I think part of the challenge is, unfortunately,
in our space, we're still viewed as the Arnold Schwarzenegger
10 and Jacked Bros.
And so I don't think the communication to the average person
is still appropriate.
I think they think that in order to lift weights
to be healthy and for longevity,
it means you got to dip into being body obsessed and training super intense and hard. So I think
the messaging is partly our fault. I just think that we've done a really bad job of communicating
to the average person, what health looks like. And unfortunately, the way our system works,
the most famous or loudest people
are that we highlight on magazines, on television,
these shows, I mean, there are some of the worst people
to probably be communicating health to the average person.
And, you know, one of the things that we're always trying
to say is like, man, you'd be so surprised how little it actually takes to move the needle when you
strength train. It's not, you don't have to, it's not like you're the kill yourself.
There's a silver lining here. So, number one, we need to communicate what you're communicating,
more effectively and better and more often. I think the average person doesn't understand the true health and longevity and quality
of life improvements they can get through strength training.
So that's number one.
It's still, you ask the average person, you know, hey, what's a good form of exercise to
improve your health?
Most people are not going to say strength training.
They just don't know.
So that's number one.
Number two, this is what Adam's talking about.
You don't need much.
Here's a silver lining.
You talk about the benefits of muscles contracting.
Okay.
Bigger muscles produce that effect at greater intensities,
at greater amounts because they're bigger.
So bigger muscle is going to make all of what you're talking
about much easier instead of me having to constantly move of what you're talking about much easier.
Instead of me having to constantly move, but there's nothing wrong with activity. I think it's great.
You have to move.
But bigger muscles buffer the inactivity that daily life kind of presents itself as.
It doesn't take much to build muscle.
Now, it takes a lot to become a bodybuilder.
Nobody wants to become a bodybuilder.
And even if you try, you probably would have become one, that's a whole other conversation.
But if you took the average person, we did this for years, I train people for years, two days a week.
Two days a week of proper strength training is going to give you pretty much everything that
we're talking about right now. And it's not, you're going to train so hard that you can barely crawl
out of the gym, in fact, that's inappropriate. If people...
Like fun.
Yeah.
Well, at our level, it is. But if most people really understood what felt like to have
an appropriate strength training workout, they wouldn't be so afraid. They would leave
the gym or whatever and they'd feel like, oh, this feels kind of good. You don't need
my... In fact, when I used to train people in advanced age, I worked for a long time
with, because of the doctors that I trained,
they would send me to their patients,
all of which were over 65.
They strengthed the training with me once a week.
And we saw profound improvements one day a week,
and it was like, we could maybe do three exercises
in that whole hour, just because of their age
and the capabilities.
Well, in terms of answering your question too,
like I think, I think we're trying to solve a problem
from like your everyday average person of like,
just getting introduced to a better way to approach it
and that there actually is a scientific way to train
your body and to get there with good result.
But what I do think is doctors are still revered
as sort of the gatekeeper of knowledge
in our culture. And I think like doctors like yourself, we need more doctors to speak
upon this with authority and to have actual procedure and protocol. So when you go in to
have like your checkup or, you know, just your to see how you're doing. This gets brought up in terms of like,
we can measure your strength.
So if it's the grip test,
or if we have some kind of like a standardized
sort of group of exercises that we test your strength
or something new you've found
in terms of being able to measure
where we're at in terms of lean body mass,
we need to get better at that.
So they feel like this is coming from the top down.
So I'm working on that.
Yeah.
Would you believe that?
I just finished the first iteration.
I work with a PhD.
Her name is Alexis Cowan and she is a PhD from Princeton, who is now doing a postdoc
at Penn.
And we just created a muscle-centric medicine
certification course for providers.
Oh, awesome.
What's in that certification?
I will send it to you.
Okay.
Maybe one of you guys will come through it.
Or just, I mean-
Is it open to anybody or do you have to be a provider?
So the first iteration is open only to
for healthcare professionals,
so they have to have a license.
And then the second iteration, we're going to open to trainers and health coaches.
Are you selling that now?
Well, depending on when this comes out, yes.
Because I want you back on, so we've done it.
I know, seriously.
That's a big deal.
So what we've done is we have compiled all these hallmarked studies.
So we've taken clinical practice.
I've been in practice since, I don't even want to say Botox is good, 2006, since 2006,
but you were 12 when you were coming.
Exactly.
So we have compiled kind of the mechanistic, all the hallmark studies, all the ways in
which things kind of need to change
and ways of diagnosing, ways of treating,
ways of implementing exactly what you're talking about.
That's amazing.
Yeah, I think so.
Because here's what happened.
I gave this lecture at a conference
called Obesity Medicine.
No offense, it's great.
And there are hundreds and hundreds of physicians in the room.
Mm-hmm. And it's a conference
called obesity medicine. And you know what I talked to. So I got up there and I said,
okay, it's got this all wrong. It's not about obesity. Let's just say that the
reviews were split on the talk I gave, but nearly all of them came around by the end.
Look, here's the bottom,
here's the bottom, this is an over-generalization,
but it is the bottom line, okay?
When you look at the data,
and the data is clear on this,
when you look at the data of the negative effects
that of what we eat on our health,
I don't care if it's sugar,
I don't care if it's seed oils and flammatory fats, I don't care what it's seed oils inflammatory fats, I don't care what it is.
When you eat below what you burn,
almost all of those negative effects go away.
Now, I'm not saying that they're innocuous,
obviously they affect your behaviors,
they make you wanna overeat, craving all that stuff.
There's other effects, I'm oversimplifying here.
But if you can burn more calories, then you can consume.
I can't think of a better way to buffer yourself against what we're dealing with out in
the real world, including your body's ability to detoxify from all of the interesting and
strange chemicals that we're constantly being exposed to.
So then that begs a question, okay, do we just move a ton more?
No, that's actually a terrible way to try to burn more calories.
We have incredible studies showing that if you just try to move more? No, that's actually a terrible way to try to burn more calories. We have incredible studies showing that
if you just try to move more,
your body adapts in pretty interesting ways,
one of them is to pair muscle down
and make you more efficient calorie-preserving machine.
You just gotta build muscle.
If you build muscle, you speed up,
like right now, if I had to solve the health epidemic
right now with one thing
that I could do, I would, I could, if I could snap my fingers and boost everybody's metabolism,
I would solve a lot of the problems through muscle. Yes. And that's what I try to say because I think
people get that, why do they get that? Because it's still connected to obesity, right? We're so
fixated on the obese aspect. So it's like, hey, fine,
you want to be lean, speed up your metabolism, how do I do that? Build muscle that tends to
sell the message a little bit more.
Back to Justin's point though, I really do think that we need all the doctors on the
right side in this one because I remember this was a long time ago on the podcast. One
of the most controversial things I ever said was when I get a client or would get a client back in the days
That needed to lose 30 40 50 pounds. I always added to their diet before I ever took away and that was like what?
That's not the law throwing them. That's not how why would you ever do that?
I said well when you assess someone's diet that was overweight like that many times they were
Lacking in nutrients over consuming all the bad ones and so instead of me going from that was overweight like that. Many times they were lacking in nutrients,
overconsuming all the bad ones. And so instead of me going from that point and like restricting,
I focused on adding foods in their diet. Also did a like a psychological thing for them.
It's like I'm not telling them they can't have something. I go, this is what I want you
to do. I want you to go target this. And it would pull and then I would focus on strength
training and tell them, listen, we actually don't want to see the scale move right now. I actually, in fact,
if it goes up one or two pounds, I don't care. Our goal right now is to get stronger
in the gym, add these foods I'm telling you in your diet, everything else that I've
even let you, I'm not worried about and they would just look at you crazy. But what you
would do is slowly over time start to speed that metabolism up and then they were eating
more food than they ever did, then I'd bring them back down to the calorie and they would just drop.
And that is a much more appropriate pro-active messaging.
Right now we are so focused on what we have to lose.
Everything is about loss.
What do you have to lose?
If we can flip the conversation to it's all about what you have to gain.
It's all about what you have to gain. It's all about what you have to gain, whether it's skeletal muscle, whether it's adding dietary
protein, whether it's who you have to become to impart these disciplines, the resiliency
and the capacity that you earn by building muscle.
I think that we would absolutely empower our society 10x.
Dr. Lyon, I'm going to open by saying you look phenomenal.
And I noticed this in gyms when I managed gyms all the time.
I could see, I could always tell who focused on strength training and who focused on other
forms of exercise.
The strength training crowd always seemed to age better in this sense.
They didn't seem to display the same signs of aging as the other side.
Now, they were all healthier than the average person.
Everybody's working out.
It was like the cardio bunnies versus the people that lifted.
They looked very different.
Let's talk about hormones for a second because now you mentioned insulin.
Very important to have to be sensitive to insulin.
I think everybody knows that. But there's a lot of hormones in our body. And as we age,
people are focused on how do I get more youthful levels of hormones? How do I get my growth hormone
to be higher and my testosterone to be higher and how do I get cortisol to be more appropriate?
All this stuff, can you talk to the effect that muscle has on the other hormones or even
the process of building muscle, how that affects our hormones?
So I think that this is somewhat of a complex topic.
Let's think about how we frame it in something that would be very valuable for the listener.
Deal?
Yeah.
Number one, we know that obesity poses a problem with testosterone, right?
And I've heard Dr. Rand on here, Rand McClain, that's his last name, right?
Yes, you know.
Amazing, Dr. Rand, if you want to come on my show, Riff all about hormones.
Let's get that on to that.
So one of the things that we have to recognize is that with increasing obesity, especially
for men, we do see lower levels of fertility.
Actually, men and women, and I wrote about this in the book,
whether it's PCOS, which is polycystic ovarian syndrome,
a can-effect fertility via one mechanism is insulin resistance,
insulin resistance of skeletal muscle.
When we think about obesity and men,
we do think about this increase in estrogen, right?
Aromatase in fat cells causing an increase in estrogen over time.
This is not ideal.
This is not ideal for men.
Therefore, I would say having an ideal or more optimal body composition, lowering excess
body fat and improving skeletal muscle will help this.
Does skeletal muscle directly influence gonadal production of testosterone?
I would say I haven't seen data that I'm convinced about that.
Have you guys?
I've seen data that clearly shows an increase in androgen receptor density.
And that's what matters most. Absolutely. Increase in androgen receptor density. So like And that's what matters the most. Absolutely.
Increase an Androgen receptor density.
So like your same testosterone is now way more effective.
But absolutely.
But would I say over time does resistance training
in a meaningful way?
Increase testosterone production?
I can't say that.
Or does it increase growth hormone production
in a meaningful way?
I'm not sure.
Mm.
But it does. So my opinion on that is, because it's interesting, right?
So does vitamin D reduce depression?
Only if you have a deficiency and you take it.
Otherwise, it doesn't do anything.
So does having muscle keep your testosterone levels higher than if you just let your muscle
waste away.
Yes. So when you compare strength training men in their 60s to non-strength training men,
what you will probably see is higher testosterone.
So I don't think it's as much of a directly making it go up.
But rather a maintaining of a fertile level of testosterone.
And then we talked about the receptors. Yes.
They did a study to try to connect testosterone levels
to strength and muscle mass.
And these were all men within normal range,
so lower end, higher end.
And what they found was total testosterone
and free testosterone, it was maybe a small effect.
The big effect was angiogen receptor density.
Yes.
Muscle, you build muscle, you get more Androgen Receptors.
And you get more receptors for growth hormone. And you are more sensitive to insulin. So,
whether or not your hormones change, they become more effective.
Is what ends up.
And you think the problem with that is because it's the example you gave of the six-year-old who
lives versus the six-year-old doesn't. It's because we're not going to be able to tie it
to one specific thing like, oh, you do that, and then it's going to build this much more test-oshromb
because, although you would see that to your point, it's because it influences so many other
aspects and behaviors of your life. That person who's trained trains probably sleeps better,
probably has better energy levels, probably also makes better choices. So there's too many other
things that we can't isolate to one and say, oh, strength training
increases test-ordered, but who fucking cares?
Who cares if it does in positively influence all these other behaviors that collectively
all together really make a difference when you're test-ordered?
So you mentioned something about behaviors, which I thought this was very interesting.
So this is out of the Galveston group.
And they showed one night of sleep deprivation,
suppressed muscle protein synthesis by 18%.
Yeah.
Didn't you just bring something like that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's crazy.
Yeah.
You said PCOS, there was a study that just came out.
And when I see studies like this, what's interesting is,
studies will come out, people will see the smoke,
but they'll fail at noticing there's a fire.
The smoke is the problem.
There's a fire over here, so we've got to look at.
They just did a study that showed that a ketogenic diet probably positively affects women
with PCOS.
So now everybody's like, oh, keto, that's the answer.
Just like a ketogenic diet improves cognitive function.
Is it was it that or was it the reduction in carbohydrates? That's what that's okay. So just like studies
that show, you know, ketogenic diet better for people with Alzheimer's. The root is the person
has become so insulin desensitized that they can't use glucose properly that going keto, which is kind of a band-aid at this point,
is better because they have no carbohydrates. But the real fix would have been
improved insulin sensitivity. Yes. Right? Yeah. When you see studies like that,
do you just want to tear your hair out? I mean, I really appreciate what you said that we are
missing the big picture.
And that's exactly why I wrote this book is to kind of bring it all back into perspective.
I put a whole, there's, I mean, tons of, there's nutrition tracks in this book that make
it very simple, you know, from my perspective, when I see these studies, I mean, I'm very
interested in dietary protein just because of my training.
I train under Don Leaman, same guy who Lane Norton trained with.
In fact, we trained at the same time we, uh, are we overlapped, um, at the same time.
And I think that if we really want to solve this dietary aspect, by the way, 100% of people eat,
that is like the lowest hanging fruit ever.
Exercise is optional.
You could probably live your entire life and not exercise in a day.
Although no one in this room is recommending that, you cannot survive without eating.
You have to nail that component.
And from a dietary perspective, the research is clear.
It's interesting because I think in the beginning of the bodybuilding age, the golden era, they really focused on higher protein.
Body composition changes were pretty obvious, is that fair to say?
And over time, they have numerous, you know, hundreds of studies of showing increased dietary
protein, how that affects body composition.
Meanwhile, the recommendations for dietary protein
have not changed since 1968.
They haven't changed since 1968.
Can I just mention one more thing
that you guys might find interesting or not find interesting,
but I find this interesting.
So when I was doing research for this book,
I was very interested as to why we got to where we are.
What is the history? Why every time we have a nutrition conversation research for this book, I was very interested as to why we got to where we are.
What is the history?
Why, every time we have a nutrition conversation, is it steeped in politics?
Why is it a political moral and then maybe a little bit over here in nutrition conversation,
you know, empirical data conversation, right?
It's never a straight conversation.
So after World War I and this great depression happened, they
were facing World War Two and Hitler, losing the entire nation, right? I would say, do
you guys remember that? But obviously, that would be...
That was only 17 back then. You look great, by the way. So when they drafted the first million men, right?
So they called in a million able, bodied individuals, 38% were unfit for war.
And this is what, again, I was looking at these historical papers.
They were called Flabby.
So one of the things they said, they all had Flabby muscle.
They all had nutrient deficiencies.
They didn't really know how to define that, but they didn't have any teeth. There were all kinds of, they
had really bad eyesight because of lack of vitamin A. There were all kinds of problems. At this
moment, nutrition became a national fucking emergency. So they called this immediate congregation.
They had three days, and this is like they're facing war,
and all of a sudden they have to start thinking about nutrition.
Met for three days, they came out with what was initially
the RDA, which ended up changing in the 60s,
and they came up with ways to educate the public,
ways to educate the homemaker, ways to educate the worker, ways to educate the homemaker, ways to educate the worker,
because they needed the goal was, how do we get people strong, able-bodied, and capable,
and vital, having vitality? This was their main focus. They came out with, I don't want to say,
it's a propaganda, but they came up with a strategy to how to educate.
One group, they said, you're gonna help Uncle Sam.
And in order to help Uncle Sam,
they had this picture of this strong, able-bodied worker,
and they had a series of guidelines.
You wanna know what they were?
Let's hear it.
Make sure that you are eating high-quality protein
at least two servings at lunch.
This include liver, beef, chicken, eggs, this is in the 40s. Because of muscle strength,
we need your muscle strong. Make sure you're eating unprocessed foods. Make sure
you're getting enough vitamin A from places like liver. Did you know this?
I've never heard this.
And I'll send you guys what they put out there, the pamphlets.
And that's a great birthday present.
If anyone is ever listening, if you guys want to find the original copies for me, I would
love it.
Make sure that you are eating vitamin A in the source of liver.
Make sure that you are getting salt.
So you have this whole list, how do you help Hitler?
And then they actually put something on how the worker can help Hitler about how they can
be irresponsible.
Do not eat a high quality protein diet.
Do not increase your sodium in your diet.
Do not eat vitamin A or bioavailable nutrients.
Make sure that you are eating processed foods.
Make sure that you are eating white bread, x, y X Y and Z and they show this kind of like decrepit
Soldier or this decrepit work. You have to advertise this
But here is my point here is my big point
When the world
was up against war
When we were at risk of losing everything and fighting a war out there, the government,
policy came in full force. How do we make people more vital and capable?
And now we might not be facing a war out there. How have our recommendations changed so much? Oh, I know.
I know what happened.
They came out with those recommendations.
They did have an impact, and just like a referee playing the game, everybody then decided
to influence the referee is what happened.
This is when, because you had other industries that would suffer from this kind of Information so what they did is they lobbied government to require fortification of
nutrient devoid foods they were required to put iodine in salt
Fortify cereals and breads. This is why things now say fortified right?
This was actually government like they required if you're gonna make bread
You got to fortify it with these vitamins and minerals
And this is what they're compromised type of deal and they continue to be influenced
through these massive very powerful
lobbies it which still happens today actually it's even worse today
Oh my god because you can you can say now that you could say now that okay back then
The incentive was like we need strong man to go fight or we're done
The incentive now if you look at incentives
So I'm not saying that there's some evil like ruler that's pulling the strings who knows?
I don't think that's what's happening. I just the the incentives go in the opposite if you're sick and unhealthy
You're a better consumer. With almost every
powerful market that exists, every market in the grocery store is geared towards being
unnoticed. For medicine, for sure. Pharmaceutical industry profits from poor health,
distracting services, profit from poor health, keeping you, not allowing you to be vital and
healthy actually means you're a better
consumer across the board.
I don't know if people actually thinking about it that way, but that's where the incentives
are.
It's where the money goes.
It's interesting though, when the government wants us fit in strong and effective, they actually
know the right information.
Yeah, that's really interesting.
Yeah, I know.
I didn't know that.
That's 12. And then one of the other things is and the reason I'm bringing this up is because
I think that if we are going to speak about these things, we have to put it into context.
Yeah. Because we have to question, why do we believe the things that we believe and perhaps
open the mind to the listener that potentially they've been indoctrinated by other ways of
thinking. And by bringing this to the attention,
then maybe they can understand that the lens
in which they are viewing things potentially is skewed.
Yeah, you're intentionally.
Yeah.
Well, I'm speaking of that.
That's a nice question.
I want to give you something else.
Yeah.
So again, what do I care most about?
I care most about human health.
I am a physician that has sat by the bedside
of more dying people than I care to remember. Took me a long time to get over that. So
that is why I'm here doing, I was talking to Adam before I'm like, gosh, you know, wouldn't
it be great if I could just talk about my kids? But I, if you have the capacity to do something,
you have a responsibility to do it.
And I care about the information that gets out because I care about the human.
And I care about the influence on their families and what it is like at the end of life.
And who has to pay for that?
I don't ever want my children to have to deal with that.
Ever, right?
So the scope of the information that we're hearing when you think
about Whole Foods, so we've got Whole Foods commodities, Whole Foods, Whole Foods are like beef,
chicken, dairy, corn, soy, whatever, like these Whole Foods commodities. And that's they
undergo, they're under the jurisdiction of the USDA and the check-offs. So you don't know the individual milk farmers, but they all collectively pull their money
so that they have some kind of marketing budget which is under the USDA.
Now, that's very restrictive.
And I'm going to give you an example.
We're going to play a little game.
You guys ready for game?
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm going to say something, a commodity, you're're gonna tell me what the commodity slogan is
All the toothpaste commercials
It's not a clue toothpaste
Zest fully clean
Milk
Makes body good does your body good. Yeah, that's about a good
Beef it's what's what's what's for dear pork? It's a body good. Does your body good, Ian? Does your body good? Yes.
Beef.
What's for dear?
Pork.
You have to wait.
You have to wait.
Amazing.
Do you think it's interesting that it's a one-liner that doesn't say anything?
Sure.
Discriminating against any other food.
Right.
Okay.
Now we're going to play another game.
I'm going to say, Oatley Milk.
Oh.
And you're gonna say,
it's better for the environment.
Yeah, WTF.
I'm gonna, I'm with you.
I'm gonna say Impossible Burger.
It's not meat.
And you're also gonna say,
oh, this is a better source of protein
and it has a lower carbon footprint than beef.
It's better for you.
It doesn't have any hormones, X, Y, and Z, right?
Yeah.
So you're gonna hear a processed food and then you're gonna hear subsequent blah, hormones, X, Y, and Z, right? So you're gonna hear a processed food
and then you're gonna hear subsequent blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
barf out of my mouth.
Commodities are under jurisdiction of USDA.
They cannot defend themselves.
They cannot say actually agriculture collectively
is 9% all of agriculture is collectively 9% of greenhouse gas and this
is a BS smoke screen that we are never going to eat our way out of climate change.
They cannot say meatless Monday is going to have almost no impact on greenhouse gas.
They cannot say milk is a more bioavailable calcium than almonds, almond juice.
They cannot say anything.
Collectively, the marketing budget for a commodity
is $750 million.
One company, PepsiCo, has almost a $2 billion
marketing budget.
Yeah.
Who controls the money controls the narrative? Yep.
You're probably like, wow, we're not talking about politics, we're talking about nutrition.
I agree.
We're talking about nutrition.
But we cannot dismiss that we have a mouse over here and this massive conglomerate that is influencing what the public
thinks is healthy and influencing the information that comes out because they're under a different
jurisdiction.
And they can essentially be disparaging against foods and other things.
Yeah.
Well, the most of my mind, I mean, people don't think that's a big deal.
Also, look at this fucking crazy.
Here's the bottom line.
Okay. If you look at the average Americans. Here's the bottom line, okay.
If you look at the average Americans die,
it's something like 70, 75% heavily processed foods.
What's left over is typically meat, milk, eggs.
If we keep pushing this message that those foods are immoral,
because that's the message, they're immoral,
the bad for the environment,
it's right.
It's going to result in nutrient deficiencies. It's going to result in nutrient deficiencies.
It's going to result in worse health.
And our biggest weapon, our most effective weapon
against any impending disaster,
including climate change is innovation.
It's healthy people innovating.
You're gonna make everybody sick.
You think that's gonna help the climate?
That's gonna be the worst possible thing we could do.
It's such a marketing slogan.
It has zero basis in reality.
And what you're talking about are foods
that you can patent versus foods that you can.
That's the big difference, which by the way,
everybody's like, why are they making lab-grown meat
to save the environment?
No, it's not.
It's because you can patent lab-grown meat.
And so the question becomes,
how can we at least have transparent conversations?
That's what I care about.
Whether you want to eat lab-grown meat
or you want to eat drink, almond juice, fine.
Personally, I have that in my coffee.
But the reality is what becomes important
is that we at least have to be on the same page with a transparent conversation.
It has to be honest. It has to be honest. Yeah. So if we are having a political discussion
about nutrition, then let's do that. But if we are going to have an empirical discussion
about the data, then let's just do that. And ultimately let people choose and let them be in control of at least hearing information
with an open mind to be able to make better choices for themselves and their families.
What did you hear about all the doctors and practitioners that just took money from
ABA?
Did you? I did.
It's fucking unreal.
That's the problem though.
We have people that are supposed to be on the good side or the right side that are
being influenced by.
What are these lobbying groups?
What are these things happening?
Because I've seen this in the last two and a half decades I've been in the space.
Protein slowly becoming demonized, which is interesting.
They'll say things like, it raises mTOR.
mTOR causes cancer.
That's not how it works, but okay fine.
So I'm seeing that now.
Just keep me wondering, yeah.
Okay, thank you.
So, protein is being demonized, protein containing foods
are what are largely becoming demonized.
Yes.
And we're now seeing the weirdest article,
I never thought I'd see an article like this in my life,
but strength, training, and gyms are becoming demonized.
What's going, it's almost like anti muscle propaganda.
Probably the same reason they were trying to pull your Ted X.
Well luckily it was published. So you guys go check it out.
Yeah, yeah. It's crazy. What's going on?
I think at the end of the day,
the question becomes, who stands to profit?
I hate for that to be the question,
but it seems to be who stands to profit.
Because at the end of the day,
the idea of protein and emtore is so ridiculous.
Let's just cover something like that.
Yeah.
So first of all, the data is very clear that anything below the RDA
will create a deficiency. And that number is 0.8 grams per kg, 0.37 grams per pound.
If I were 115 pounds, that would be like 45 grams per protein.
Yeah. In the longevity space, people are saying to go below that.
I know. Just crazy. But wait a second, the nitrogen balance studies
are marginal at best, and they have under appreciated
the role of dietary protein, meaning quite simply
that we need more than the nitrogen balance studies
have implied.
Okay, so we know that.
So we know that the minimum to prevent efficiencies, which,
again, point 8 grams per kg, point 3, 7 grams per pound, that would be 45 grams of protein
for a female 5 pounds every year than me. I'm not going to call myself 115, I'll say
110. But the idea that in a longevity space, if you believe everything that we've spoken
about about skeletal muscle, there's only two ways to support skeletal muscle.
You cannot support skeletal muscle without dietary protein.
Okay.
You are not going, it is going to be very difficult to maintain skeletal muscle mass with that
minimum amount of dietary protein.
It just is, especially if you're in a caloric deficit.
And there's multiple studies,
I was just looking at one that compared
0.8 grams to double the RDA to triple the RDA.
Those that had double the RDA,
their body compositions always did better.
Always maintain scale, I mean always,
at least with all the studies that I have seen,
they've all done better from a body composition perspective, from a metabolic
perspective, you know, and not to kind of go down that rabbit hole, but we can. This idea
that we should further reduce our dietary protein because it affects longevity and the mechanism
of action that they're talking about is a mechanistic target of rapid mice. Okay. Mechanistic target of rapid mice in is a protein complex that is in every tissue in the body.
It is necessary for growth.
It is in the brain, it is in the pancreas, it is in the liver, it is everywhere.
Mechanistic target of rapid mice in is sensitive to insulin, especially in the liver and
the pancreas and other tissues, and in skeletal muscle,
M-tore, mychnecichtarietaractyromycin, is exquisitely sensitive primarily to dietary protein
in particular this amino acid called lucine.
Okay, so this idea of, and by the way, resistance training also stimulates MTOR.
Yeah.
So if people are saying, well, we don't want to stimulate MTOR
because of this growth factor, and it's somehow
is going to have a genomic derangement and cause cancer,
well, then you're right, people shouldn't be resistance training.
Yeah.
But if you really cared about MTOR, then you would care. People shouldn't be resistant to training. Yeah. But if you really cared about M-Tore,
then you would care about a high carbohydrate diet.
And you wouldn't pinpoint skeletal muscle as the problem.
Yeah.
That makes no logical sense.
No, and also, it would be like making this comparison
right here.
It would be like saying testosterone causes cancer in the prostate. So we should all have no testosterone.
Hey, but did you know that that I love that you said that? Have you seen the more recent
data?
Yeah. Yeah. No, that's right. So if you have prostate cancer, testosterone can fuel cancer
growth because they're testosterone sensitive cancers. In other words, if you have cancer
and it's growing,
anything that can fuel any cell could potentially grow cancer cells.
Wait, wait, time out.
Okay, so listen, I'm going to throw my husband into the fire about this. So I don't know
if you guys know this, but my husband is a surgical resident in urology. One of, he's
a baler, so you know, Mo head care, huh? Do you have you guys sort of Mo head care, he's
like the guy of testosterone.
Who's doing the research?
And he challenged this paradigm of thinking
that those individuals with prostate cancer
could be on testosterone.
Wow.
And in fact, many of them, of course it is dependent.
Many of them did better.
Yeah.
And so again, so this is now questioning the paradigm.
Wow. Wow. Also, he published now questioning the paradigm. Wow, wow.
Also, he published something called the Traverse Trail,
which came out, you know how everyone was talking about,
well testosterone will perpetuate cardiovascular disease.
There was no impact on cardiovascular disease.
No, in fact, if you go from low testosterone
to high within normal ranges, you probably improve your,
because of its effect on skeletal muscle.
But what about this idea?
So nobody with prostate cancer had been given testosterone for decades.
Yeah.
In fact, some of them were put on blockers.
I know.
I bet you though paired with exercise, training, or string training in particular, and I bet
you'd be just fine.
So then this guy went back and he challenged that.
And he found that many individuals with prostate cancer did better.
Wow, wow that's amazing.
How the hell did he get away with even being able to test that?
I have no idea.
I asked him something, I was like,
how do you do that?
I mean, these are the studies that are being done.
Yeah, okay.
Renegade.
So we talked about, we're talking a lot about muscles,
positive effects on overall health,
but let's talk more specifically to other parts of the body
that are closely connected to longevity.
How does building muscle help with bone health? How does building muscle help with brain health and other organ health?
Yeah, I think that when you think about skeletal muscle as this focal point and what you have to do to maintain and build it, there's no greater influence
on the physiology in the body, right?
There's no pill that is going to be as effective, not just having muscle but training it.
So the impetus of training and this crosstalk of myocons, this crosstalk of just the massive
influence, this interorgan crosstalk, I think is really the key. The interorgan crosstalk with these
myocins plus the metabolic effects and also the cognitive central nervous system effects.
I think that it's just all encompassing specifically for bone. There are some studies coming
out that are actually linking more specifically this bone muscle crosstalk, which I think is really fascinating.
In the idea that it's not just the loading mechanism,
so obviously you need to load bone, right?
We see that in space.
Astronauts, they have rapid declines in bone health.
But the mechanical loading is essential for bone health,
which we all talk about that, but also the interfaces.
And I don't, other than these myocin cross-talks, there's other mechanisms of action, which,
you know, I couldn't go into, because I haven't looked at it recently, but all of which
potentially bone health.
And there's something to be said for the loss of muscle as a predictor for the loss of
bone.
Of course, an anchors of bone.
But these are all of this, we think as this is common sense.
Yeah, yeah.
I talk about a client that I trained.
That I trained.
I talk about her all the time.
I trained this woman who hired me because she,
osteophenium, moving into osteoporosis,
was very scared, very healthy.
Otherwise, did lots of walking and they put her on,
I don't remember what the drug was, but it was a pretty harsh on her to try to stop the bone loss.
She hired me, we strength trained once a week, okay. Six months later, she got her bones scanned,
and the doctor re-ran the test because he didn't believe what it said. And then he called me, he said,
what are you doing with her?
I said, we're just doing traditional strength training.
But you probably also had her on dietary protein.
Yeah, oh yeah, yeah.
I had a report.
So there is this myth that protein reaches calcium.
Right, but actually, you know,
when I was in my geriatric fellowship,
we saw those with the lowest protein diets
had the greatest risk of hip fractures.
Protein and bone is made from protein.
Yeah, yeah.
Obviously, you need calcium, vitamin D,
and these other matrix food that come within a food matrix.
But the theory is so stupid, it's so ridiculous.
The theory was eating a lot of protein,
your body needs to buffer the acidity of it,
so it's gonna release calcium to balance it.
That is a ridiculous thing.
They die really hard.
They die really hard.
And I am really worried about this anti-protein narrative
because these things, like, for example, cholesterol.
Yeah.
Diature cholesterol was taken out of the guidelines in 2015.
Yeah.
And I started to watch everyone talking about this blue zone
thing.
So I started to watch it.
I had to turn it off because the third sentence was,
these people ate lower cholesterol. And after that, you lost me. I mean, I, I,
you know how dangerous this narrative is because we talk about this from our experience,
right? Collectively, we've trained thousands of people, you know, either in person or by proxy.
And we don't try, I mean, I have trained athletes and high performers, but 95% of my experience is with just average Joe and Jane,
you know, that don't even really care for exercise,
but they know they need to do it.
I have never not won had a client who eats enough protein.
That is like the number one fact,
if I've been asked like, you have one tool,
you got nothing else you could do,
what do you go do to an average,
it's, I just tell them that, increase protein
because I know what it does, not only for them muscle-wise
and health-wise, but also what it does,
as far as the choices of food they'll make,
I know how to impact behavior.
So I want to touch on this.
This is super important.
We, and this is where I think the next couple years
is going to go, if I have anything to do with it,
is that we talk about protein and this is generic term.
And when we talk about protein in a generic term, it really does it a disservice, okay?
So stay with me here.
Protein is made of 20 different amino acids, nine of which are essential.
Each should be considered its own nutrient. Each so we should no longer look at protein,
but we have to look at and understand that each amino acid has diverse biological roles.
It's true.
For example, we just talked about leucine. Leucine not only helps with muscle protein synthesis, but also laying down with,
you know, it also stimulates emtore. So leucine stimulates emtore. It has an impact on, you know,
certain fatty acid mechanisms has a diverse biological roles. Phenolalanine. Fennelalany is a precursor for dopamine.
Triptophan is a precursor for serotonin. So we have to underarginine is a precursor
for nitric oxide. Musin production is there's another amino acid that is
dependent on the levels to produce mucin.
But yet we continue to talk about dietary protein
as if it's one thing.
So if we are not keeping up with protein turnover,
for example, in the body,
turns over anywhere from 250 to 350 grams of protein a day,
those other amino acids,
they will not be enough to have, you know, to kind of
delegate to, for example, focusing on mucin production in the gut. Right? So, three
a.n.e. three a.n.e. might not, there might not be enough three a.n.e. to produce mucin
in the gut because it will want, because the body will want to maintain tissues first.
Yeah, the reason why what you're saying is so important, because there's only one place
to get the most diverse.
Yes, well, it'll be difficult to get all those from...
Well, neither you eat a lot of protein, like a gram of protein per pound of body weight.
Yes.
And then you'll probably cover all your bases, but knowing the average person,
and actually how challenging that, so this is the other part about protein that's amazing for
the average person, it produces satiety like nothing else. You want to not overeat a high protein
diet, you will naturally not overeat. It just happens that way. But if you don't eat that massive
amount of protein, which is what we always recommend, and you miss that, which most people will,
don't eat that massive amount of protein, which is what we always recommend,
and you miss that, which most people will.
Now protein quality, as measured by bioavailable
essential amino acids, becomes imperative.
So let's say you eat 50 grams of protein a day.
It really matters where you get it from.
That's right, and the evidence supports that.
Yeah.
And it supports it, again, not just based on this protein number.
I think we've become hyperfixated on protein as a macronutrient
So if you're getting all your protein from plants
That's okay. I can appreciate that but what about the food as a food matrix
What about creatine? What about Torin which is really important for aging? What about carnitine?
What about these low molecular weight molecules that ride along with a food matrix and also bioavailable iron
and zinc and selenium.
So it's not overarching, you know, the baseline is protein, but again, it's these individual
amino acids that need to be thought of as individual nutrients.
And when you look at the back of a food label, all you see, like if you look at the back
of food label, all you see is protein.
Which by the way, that number can be totally inflated because that number is based on nitrogen.
You know, we would have to get this complex, I feel, if we weren't also simultaneously demonizing
meat.
So we wouldn't or any high quality protein source.
So let's just say it's not meat.
I mean, I don't know.
It seems like fish just kind of skated by.
Damn it.
I'm not cute.
That's why.
Yeah, yeah. But again, we wouldn't have to get this granular, but we do have to have these transparent
conversations.
You can choose to eat however you want for any ethical reason, but you cannot say this
is better for you than this.
And you should cut back on high quality dietary protein because you're going to get cancer.
I'm going to cut back on high quality dietary protein because it's better for the planet.
You cannot have these conversations.
No, you mentioned Crating.
I said this 10 years, nine years ago, on the podcast.
Crating, I mean, I was a kid when Crating first hit the shelves
and it was like this performance enhancing supplement
and it built muscle, that's a controversy.
And I, as I saw the data, I remember,
it was like at least eight years ago, I remember saying, this is going
to be a, one day it's going to be a longevity supplement.
They're going to give it to everybody.
And the data now completely supports what I'm saying.
Do you think it has, it's a pro longevity ingredient because it helps build muscle and
that's the main mechanism or because it supports the mitochondria or all the above?
Or because we're so deficient.
So that's what I think.
Yeah.
That's actually what I think.
And I have been trying to look for these calculations.
What would a, if someone were eating a high animal-based
protein diet, what, how much creatin would they actually get?
Yeah.
I just have been thinking about this in my own mind,
how do we calculate actually what we would get naturally
versus what we would get naturally versus
what we would get from a supplementation.
And I believe that part of it, and I'm not a creatine expert, but I believe that part of
it is because that we aren't eating enough in general.
So it's the same thing with arginine.
Arginine, when an individual is deficient in arginine, we may see that they have improvements in blood pressure.
Yeah, they're vascular.
But why?
But you don't see the same improvements if they're eating a diet sufficient in arginine.
It's a deficiency.
That's a great point.
So the question becomes, how do we then become very intelligent about the deficiencies
that we are treating?
And it would be nice to say, well, you have a deficiency in glycine.
So we're going to give you this or deficiency in glycine, so we're going to
give you this or a deficiency in creatine.
We're going to give you this.
But again, if we begin to think about these whole foods within individual nutrients, I think
that's where longevity is going.
Dr. Lyon, I'm going to back you up.
When you look at the studies on creatine and cognitive performance or IQ, okay?
When vegans add creatine to the diet,
we see a measurable improvement in IQ.
We don't necessarily see this with omnivores,
especially high protein eating omnivore humans.
That, I think, points to what you're saying.
Because it's more of a feeling of deficiency
than it is a magic supplement.
Yeah, because vegans are going to have the lowest amount of creativity.
And I actually saw, I was looking at, there was a recent amount of analysis.
And I think it surveyed, I'll have to send it to you guys.
I want to say it was at least 17 studies.
And it looked at vegans over across populations.
And their average protein intake from
was around 60 to 68 grams
But 60 to 68 grams of plant protein. Yeah, that's like 30 grams of animal protein and so how do we?
Kind of improve their health over time and again, that's just protein. That doesn't address other
You know what I did with my vegan clients because Because I had clients that were vegans and the most consistent vegans are the ones
that do it for moral reasons.
So, and that's fine.
And the reason why I'm saying that
is because vegans do it for dietary reasons,
they end up falling off the wagon like any other diet.
But what I used to do with my vegan clients
that had profound effects,
like I would do this with my vegan clients
and was like life changing.
They all took an essential amino acid supplement. So I had them take essential amino
acids with their meals and I had them take creatine and they were all like, what
did you give me? This is a mate. I feel incredible. But I need a lot of
deficient. Yeah, I'm like, well, you're not getting a lot of essential amino acids
and your body's having to produce its own creatine through synthesizing
through the amino acids that you're not consuming a lot of it. What is the
percentage? Do you either one of you know the percentage of people that choose to do a vegan diet are
doing it for moral reasons?
The ones that stick to it.
No, I know.
That's a great question.
I don't know.
How many are doing it for?
I don't know.
Thinking it's a healthier diet or thinking it's going to save the planet versus people that
actually are against killing animals.
Yeah.
Neither one of you have an idea what to do with the percentage.
But I have to say, I do really get concerned
about this anti-animal narrative.
And here's who I get concerned for.
I get concerned for the people that are in the middle
and trying to figure it out.
That's right.
And that's actually why I reluctantly
got into this space.
I actually didn't want to do it.
I didn't want to go out there.
And it's very weird going from being a physician to then being vocal about something.
But over time, the more influencers that I started to see coming out saying these things,
and I just, I became concerned for the people in the middle where they don't know where
to go and what to think and what to do.
And those are the most at risk for misinformation. And rather than them having to crash and burn, because that window of
opportunity closes. You and I both know that because we've seen it with aging individuals.
You can't spend dietary habits are hard to kill over and over and over and over time.
And so if we at least don't lay out these conversations,
then I think we're going to see epidemics of sarcopenia
and osteoporosis, like we have never seen.
You know it worries me the most. By the way, it's 34% that do it for ethical reasons.
You know it worries me the most, Dr. Lyon, is there's a certain level of
plasticity in the brain,
and I don't know, I guess you could say in the body,
that children have that eventually goes away
as you get older.
So like an example is like a kid could learn four languages,
speak all of them with no accent,
but if you try to do that when you're 20,
you're gonna have an accent
because there's a certain amount of plasticity that's gone.
What I worry about is how this message is affecting children.
So now you get parents who are feeding their kids this way
and because they're lacking these nutrients
that are essential for development and their pets.
We could be permanently, and I would argue we are permanently,
negatively affecting their cognitive potential and their physical potential
because that window is gone.
Once you hit a certain age, you can make improvements, but you can't, we can't go back to where
we were.
So you are absolutely right.
I actually interviewed on my podcast, a PhD named, do you know Peter Baller said is, and
he is actually an agriculturalist and he he is big into room and an agriculture,
and he's very interested in global effects.
That is exactly what he said.
He is so concerned about the children,
their iron needs, and their ability to get these amino acids
that if they do not get it when they are younger,
that that cognitive window,
that that brain development window,
that physical development window closes.
And again, that's why he does what he does.
Wow.
You combine that with what's going on with our kids and putting them in front of iPads and
not interacting with each other and the social aspect is fucking scary time to be
parent.
That is we don't have an ability to, you know, all these things are new.
Right, we don't have this ability to modulate ourselves
like with these devices and the way
that we're becoming more sedentary.
They are new to even us.
There's no rulebook as to how to navigate this environment,
both with the information overload.
I mean, when I was studying, I had to go to the library
and we had to go through the card catalog and pick up the journals. They would yell at me, Gabrielle, did you, you
just checked out like 17 journals and you better put those back, right? But now it's so
easy, you just go to PubMed and just amount of information that is being turned out can
overshadow really good science. The worst part about it, I think,
from the talking about the tech,
is what it's replacing.
Dr. Peterson talks about this.
We've got to watch him live
and really get in this.
It was a really good conversation.
And the ages two to four
is such an important time
in their development of social skills
and interacting.
And we think of, I think we dismiss play that kids have as like this, like, oh, they're playing
on their iPad, but it's not the same as playing.
I also want to bring up something here.
Yeah, and this is like, and then you don't get this back.
If you miss this from two to four, and it gets replaced with playing on an iPad versus
socially interacting and playing role playing with kids,
that's them practicing how they need to act in real life.
So we're seeing this manifest now in these teenagers and young adults right now.
So in my book, there was another myth that kids shouldn't be exercise or doing exercise
or resistance training to people with stunther.
That's not true.
The real play for us.
So that's actually not true.
Well, we know that.
But again, for the moms out there listening, I have two very little children.
In fact, I've already married one off to you.
And I'm, so I have a four-year-old.
Oh, you guys already do the plan.
They don't know this, but yeah, I have a plan.
Hey, a range marriage is a versus this.
I got a sum, too.
We got to have the compete.
My daughter is a, I mean, she is a beast.
She's in Taekwondo and she's in jujitsu.
She's like a phenom.
And then I have Leonidas Michael, my little one.
He's funny.
I'm just trying to get him to not pee on the walls.
But anyway, when I wrote this book,
I was very curious in terms of what the recommendations
for exercise was for children.
And the amount of kind of misinformation
about being able to stimulate their tissue
and letting them exercise.
And we're not talking about a max deadlift.
Yeah.
We are talking about priming this muscle tissue for memory and potentiality over time.
My kids work out with me. You better believe it. One is four and one is a little over two.
By the way, on little weights.
This whole myth is what I hate this myth. It's one of my favorite myths to debunk.
The myth was if you lift weights as a child,
you'll damage your growth plates
and then you won't be able to get any taller.
The amount of weight that child.
I did that, I did that.
That's what happened.
That's why I did that.
That's why I did that.
Yeah, yeah.
No, the amount of weight that a child would need to lift
to damage their growth plates is an amount of weight
that they're incapable of lifting.
So unless your four year old could deadlift 500 pounds,
you're fine. It's not going to happen. Their body is as strong as it is it is it is it
way. I always deadlifting, but this is again, this is why I'm five. That's why. Now you all know
my secret. No, I think we're battling a lot of things here, Dr. Lyon. We're battling the fact
that there were lack of studies because they're just worn on on strength training. The worn on on muscle mass and strength and its connection to longevity.
We're also battling media. Whenever muscle was presented through media, you look at the
the the original movies and media around muscle. What are they present? A bunch of dumb muscle bound
people, right, that are super narcissistic. You look at the muscle beach movies and media around muscle what are they present a bunch of dumb muscle bound People right that are that are super narcissistic you look at the muscle beach movies and it's like these guys
It just want to flex and oil themselves up and aren't very smart
Muscle bound was a myth that actually had to become overcome for a while and that one was overcome quickly because
Sports teams are profit driven and so very quickly. They're like, oh, wait a minute, if they live weights, we win.
Now I have everybody live weights preventing injuries.
But still, we have the myths of like the pro female body builder.
And so the woman is like,
you know, women are like, I don't want to look like,
you're not going to.
So that day, that's one of my most common questions.
Yeah, I don't want to get, you know, musk,
I used to tell my clients, listen,
if you wake up tomorrow and you look at all your money back.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And don't worry you look at all your money back, all your money back.
And don't worry, it's real easy to get rid of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Don't worry.
So twinkies and just chill out for a week.
So there's culture and then there's the medical community and that's kind of what we're battling.
I think we're starting to make headway.
I really am.
You mentioned something else too earlier.
Dietary cholesterol. How
familiar are you with how dietary cholesterol in the short term can positively affect muscle
strength? Have you seen this? It's pretty remarkable.
Really?
Oh yeah. If you ever want to experiment, so this is old muscle building wisdom. If you
ever want to experiment with this, triple your dietary cholesterol intake, go ahead and control everything else. Keep your macros the same if you want want to experiment with this triple your dietary cholesterol intake
Go ahead and control everything else keep your macros the same if you want to make it to control study and watch
How much stronger you get within a week in the gym? Okay, there's a very interesting
It is one of the most
Annable, I'm gonna try it. It's one of the most Annable things that I've ever been like raw eggs
I mean you do it you do whatever you want. You do liver, you do eggs, you do whatever you want.
It's wild, but I mean cholesterol is a building block
for testosterone.
It also has a very interesting effect
on the central nervous system.
But it doesn't the body regulate the amount
whether you'll make less if you're eating three times more.
It's short term.
So if you do it, it's like a four to eight week,
like crazy boost and strength,
and then it kind of levels out.
But yeah, test it out.
I'll try it.
I've talked about this so many times on the podcast.
He wants to make a supplement.
Like somebody make a cholesterol supplement, please.
That you can take a very controversial.
You do it.
Yeah, no.
He's not a lot of them.
He's not allowed to.
The margins are great on the subject.
He's the business guy.
He's the, yes.
16% for all.
Yeah.
We like being very profitable.
So, supplements not a very profitable space.
So, what's the push the back been like for someone like you?
Because you're not saying what most doctors say.
Wait, before you get there, I actually, which is sets the table for that question.
I actually, you mentioned something about, you know, moving out from just a clinical setting.
Was there, like, a tipping point for you?
Or was there, like, do you have a, like, a story or a single moment where you just, like, that's it? I got a fucking, okay, I want a tipping point for you? Or was there like, do you have a story or a single moment
where you're just like, that's it?
I got to fuck off.
Okay. I want to hear that for.
So I, by the way, I still have a full concierge clinic.
We were just talking about my take care of them.
And these guys are all public about it.
Badras Kulean is a long time patient.
Ed Myled, I take care of.
Oh, cool.
And I still, we treat a lot of war fighters.
My husband's a seal was a seal.
We take care of a lot of war fighters. My husband's a CEO, was a CEO. We take care of a lot of war fighters in the practice.
And anyone, it's not like a physical demographic.
It's a mental demographic.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, the people that come to the clinic,
are they are hard charging, they want the best,
and that's just how we roll.
Anyway, I remember I had 6,000 followers on Instagram.
I was wearing a little white shirt.
Me, there's flowers kind of behind me totally different than I actually am because I never
was on there.
It was just so stupid in my mind.
I love you Instagram.
I'm not saying anything bad.
And then I started seeing just this huge push about protein and cancer.
And I was just like, holy shit. And so I trained with Dr.
Donna Layman. This guy is the the concept of protein distribution,
losing and mechanistic target of m-tore, this idea of meal dosing of protein.
This is the guy that really put it on the map. Yeah. He's been doing it for 40
years. I mean, he is he's the authority. He's the map. Yeah. He's been doing it for 40 years. I mean, he is...
He's the authority.
He's the authority.
And he's trained me for 20 years.
My book is dedicated to him.
Mm-hmm.
And I was just on Instagram,
I was in my clinic,
so I had a clinic on Fifth Avenue across,
from in New York City, across from the park,
super beautiful.
Everything is going great.
And pick up Instagram and I'm just looking at it
and they are just bashing protein.
Now I'm a trained geriatrician
who trained with Dr. Donald Lehman.
I did seven years of nutritional science studies,
professionally, okay?
I've been in school for 17 fucking years.
And I picked this up and they're talking about
how bad protein is for your health
and how it's going to cause
cancer and all of this stuff.
And so I call my best friend Teresa Deepa Squally who was like this big influencer at, you know,
like she was, she actually has a social media agency now, but she at the time, you know,
when people didn't have a ton of followers, had the blue check and was just, you know, when people didn't have a ton of followers, it was, had the blue check and was just, you know, this, whatever, influencer,
high T, she's the godmother to my kids.
And I called her, I was like, I cannot believe this.
I have to say something.
And she's like, yeah, you have to,
I'm like, oh, but they're gonna cancel me.
I can't just go out there,
everyone's gonna come after me, you know?
And she's like, well, you have responsibility to do it.
And if you do not do it, then all these people
are gonna believe this.
And even if you help a handful of people,
you can do something good outside of your clinic.
And then it was game, right?
My armpits were sweating before I posted that first thing.
I was like, I do not wanna do this.
I do not wanna go head to head with people.
I don't wanna do that.
I wanna be able to take care of people's lives. How effective is that going to be? Yeah, so I remember my first post when I started on
I do that. I was so nervous again, sweating. That's what happened. How has the reception been?
Yeah. What's the pushback? I think the more visibility you get, the more good and bad comes with that.
So I think if you're one of the first female physicians through the gate, you're going
to get a little bloody.
Yeah.
Do you, what would you say is the most common argument that you have to debunk or that
you're so tired of hearing like that somebody comes on to try and debate with the message or something.
So what I think is really interesting
is that people take things out of context,
typically like a conversation like this,
this is a long conversation.
There will be a sound bite from this.
Yeah, yeah, which I'm sure will be like super whatever.
And what I have noticed the most
that in the academic world is not like this.
So if in an academic world you have a disagreement
or you want clarity, you go to that person.
This is how academics are done.
You go to that person, you say,
well, the data shows this here.
How did you come up with this?
Let's go through your thought process.
In social media, people will make videos of you.
Yeah, yeah.
And do these things, but it's not because if the end result
is to really move the needle of health and wellness
versus a narcissistic form of self-serving, of I want the attention,
that's what I've seen. Yeah, we just got it. We have two doctors that we allow to actually have
conversation or community, and one of them actually came out and made a stupid video like that about
the other one who we... So they should never do that?
Yeah, no, of course not.
Of course.
But that doesn't happen in academics.
It's unbelievable.
And it's also unprofessional.
It's so childish and it shows you how insecure you are,
how little you are that you have to try
and start from for a pinch.
And do something that I feel like kids do
on social media to gain traction,
because that's the trendy thing to do.
Human beings are human and you will make mistakes.
You will say something I've said stupid things,
I have two little children and a husband
that works 100 hours.
I have a full practice and multiple businesses.
There are days where I get four hours of sleep
for the week, four hours each night
because I'm a caretaker for little children.
I am going to be tired and I might screw up.
It might be one of those days or maybe I have a sick kid at home and I just got off
a red eye and I might make a mistake.
We are human, but now fully exposed and what you say becomes, um, like, again,
then it's locked in because you said something.
So the question I ask is,
what is the ultimate goal of that person?
If the ultimate goal is to really,
if that is the truth,
then actions will always trump words.
That's right, 100%.
So always look at the actions
you will never see me do a video about another person.
Yeah, it's also a cheap way to build a following.
And it doesn't really build any value as well.
You know, I wanted to bring something up to you
that I read a while ago, I thought was really fascinating.
So studies will show that muscle is incredibly anti-cancer.
It's actually one of the most anti-cancer things.
Yeah, it's also very protective if you get cancer.
Right, so it's the strength training
is the most effective anti-cancer form of exercise
because of that.
And I read this study on the life expectancy
of pro bodybuilders, and they measured them all the way back
from those that competed in the 60s and so on.
Now, pro bodybuilders are in no way
shape or form a healthy group of individuals.
I mean, they're very, this is extreme.
Like all extreme performance, it's not healthy.
When you train for extremes, you're sacrificing longevity.
I don't care if you play pro football, if you race cars,
and if you bodybuild.
Bodybuilders don't live healthy.
They've eat.
Yeah, and there's just a lot of tissue,
just so, you know, they got to be.
They give pressure and all. Crazy amounts of drugs. So look the way they do. They, and they just have a lot of tissue to, you know, they got a really bad pressure
on all.
Crazy amounts of drugs.
They look the way they do.
They train.
They overtrain.
They eat and say they live crazy lifestyles.
And yeah, they're asleep at the end.
But when you look at the, when I looked at the data on probiotic builders, their rate of
cancer, the life expectancy, by the way, was the same as the average American, which isn't
saying a lot because the average American isn't very healthy.
But their cancer rates were substantially lower.
Here are people taking insane amounts of hormones, including growth hormone, not healthy at all,
and they have lower rates of cancer than the average person.
I think that speaks to the anti-cancer effects of muscle alone that they actually get lower rates of cancer even though they live
A totally unhealthy life. I have not seen that study, but I'm not shocked by that and in fact
Cancer caccia might kill 22% of individuals that get cancer and it's cancer caccia is this hypercatebolic state that destroys skeletal muscle
Yeah, and that kills people yep
state that destroys skeletal muscle. Yeah.
And that kills people.
Yep.
Not saying that you can treat it necessarily, but again, the higher your amount of skeletal
muscle mass, the greater your survivability against nearly all cause of morbidity and mortality.
Yeah.
I'm going to put a cherry on top of all this because someone's listening.
He's like, OK, wow, this is amazing.
This is great.
All right.
My mind has been pumped.
Yeah, what do I do?
It's great. No, that's what has been pumped. Yeah, what do I do?
No, that's what we named it.
What do I do now?
Here's the beauty.
The benefits you get from strength training come from the muscle that's built.
That's an adaptation process.
All you gotta do is send the signal.
Doesn't require a lot.
That's a plus.
You don't need to go to the gym every day to get the effects of strength training.
The beneficial longevity effects of strength training.
In fact, most people will get it
with a couple days a week of well-programmed,
structured exercise.
Number two, we live in a world
where food is plentiful and hyper-palatable.
That's a tough thing.
That's a hard environment to live in.
Well, a faster metabolism is one of the best buffers
you can have against that.
Guess what strength training does?
Builds muscle makes your metabolism faster.
So that's number two.
Number three, our hormones play major roles in our health and muscle makes all your hormones
work better.
So strength training not only gives you the muscle that we need for this longevity, but
also in the context of modern life, it's probably, it is.
It's the form of exercise.
Most people will most likely be able to do consistently
because it requires at least amount of time to do.
And can be modified no matter what your condition or your situation.
It's the most individualized,
you, you, you cannot take any form of exercise
and individualize it, like you can't just train.
I never thought about that, actually.
I never thought about that.
Oh, you need to rehab someone who's had a major injury
or an action, You do strength training.
And you can choose.
There's so different.
Like, yes, I'd never thought about that.
It's the number one tool for rehabs.
But I mean, just that the amount of different choices
that you have versus you're going to run or sprint,
the way in which you move your body
would be totally individualized.
It also trains the brain better than most forms of exercise,
all forms of exercise or activity train the brain,
but they tend to like running, looks like running,
swimming, looks like swimming, you know,
there's repetitive motions over and over again.
Your body learns that motion and that's that.
Strength training trains proprioceptive ability.
It trains why?
Because with strength training, you can move in any plane with balance,
with more variables.
With variables.
And it will increase survivability.
You have to be able to interface with your environment.
God forbid, there's something that happens.
I need to be able to pick up one child
and the other and be able to run.
There has to be translational movements in real life.
Yes, yes. And can you also think of a more empowering form There has to be translational movements in real life. Yes.
And can you also think of a more empowering form of exercise for women?
No.
Who you talking about?
I mean, you're tiny.
You're tiny.
Yes, because I, that's because I lifted five feet of my foot.
I'm sorry.
No, look, imagine if you weren't strong, okay?
And you went traveling and you had to lug your kids in some big ass who cases.
I had female clients tell me this well
they say
You know what's crazy so I didn't have to ask somebody to help me put the luggage in the overhead compartment or help me carry stuff
She told me she's like it's one of the most empowering feelings ever had because I've always had to rely on some dude
That was around me to help me out personal strength is a personal responsibility
Strength is a personal responsibility. Strength is a personal responsibility.
I've never had someone regret saying, I got strong.
Yeah.
I've seen thousands of patients.
No one has ever said, oh man, that's sucked, I'm stronger.
All right.
You know what we haven't really touched on very much,
and I just think that our society has riddled with it,
but what are your thoughts on strength training,
building muscle in relation to
things like anxiety and depression?
I mean, you move your body, you move your mind.
You know, I mean, you move your body, you move your mind.
They've done a study where they compared
different forms of exercise, strength training for depression
and anxiety outperformed other forms of exercise.
I mean, that was, they already did that.
That's why I asked,. I mean, that was, that already did that.
That's why I asked, because I mean,
it's, we still, the go to move is to put somebody
on a medication when they're suffering from something
like that, even though the research is showing
that strain training is actually as good or better
in many cases.
Yeah, I know.
One last question, when this cert is ready, when this program is ready, can you please come back on and work with us because we would like to push this out there. We need.
I would love to. We need the medical community. We have a huge audience of trainers and coaches, and they trust us. So they'll look for sure if this is available to them at some point, I'm sure they'll be interested, but I would love for you to use our platform
to get this to as many doctors as possible.
Thank you so much, guys.
Because this needs to happen,
because I know my parents' generation,
and they listen to their doctor.
That's God who I'm really breaking through.
Yeah, and so they need their doctor to tell them.
My aunt, my aunt has been listening to me,
hearing me talk about strange training for ever
She just started strange training because her doctor told her and I'm like
Fine, I'm glad you're doing it but you know, I've been telling you forever. So please come back
I would love that. I really appreciate the sport
You know and my book forever strong is really great for the trainers for anybody.
It has a lot of these foundational principles.
Every single trainer needs to own your book because this will arm you.
Yes.
To be able to discuss the longevity and health effects of strength training with all your clients.
And most trainers listening right now train every day regular people.
And you're going to have these conversations constantly.
And with physicians.
Yes. So this book has hundreds of references conversations constantly. And with physicians. Yes.
Yes.
So this book has hundreds of references in there.
Awesome.
Awesome.
All right.
Beautiful.
Thanks for coming on.
Thank you. Thanks for having me, guys.
Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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