Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 620: Chris Kresser on the Chronic Disease Equation, the Potato Hack for Fat Loss, the Disease Worse than Being Eaten by a Shark & MORE
Episode Date: October 19, 2017In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Chris Kresser, a globally recognized leader in the fields of ancestral health, Paleo nutrition, and functional and integrative medicine. He is the creator... of ChrisKresser.com, one of the top 25 natural health sites in the world, and the author of the New York Times best seller, Your Personal Paleo Code and author of the new book Unconventional Medicine: Join the Revolution to Reinvent Healthcare, Reverse Chronic Disease, and Create a Practice You Love. This conversation with Chris is not only highly informative but fascinating as well. Chris talks about Intestinal permeability, the Really Boring Diet that Doesn’t Taste Good, the potato hack, the chronic disease equation, the HPA Axis (hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis), cortisol resistance, the difference between common & normal, the dirty windshield analogy, Functional Medicine, he disease worse than being eaten by a shark, the gut brain connection, the 3 Hit Paradigm, pig/hook worms, the hygiene hypothesis, sleep and weight gain, unplugging & Traveling, being a sprinter not marathoner, Digital Detoxes, the Rocking Chair test and more. Everything in your body is outside your body (2:12) How far along is western medicine in intestinal permeability? (5:40) Modern diet and lifestyle affecting our gut (6:56) Power of the reward system (11:20) Genes load the gun and environment pulls the trigger (22:19) What is functional medicine? (27:10) Adrenal fatigue? Burning the candle at both ends (30:00) Can you reverse food intolerances? Dirty windshield effect (42:50) Does everyone have a gluten intolerance? (49:15) Will functional medicine be practiced in the future? (57:00) Physical health vs. Mental health (1:04:00) People self-curing themselves (1:13:15) What is the greatest threat to our health in the modern lifestyle? (1:24:45) Chris’s athlete mindset, younger days… (1:30:13) Mindfulness and being a sprinter more than a marathon runner (1:39:00) Chris’ new book and final thoughts on health care system (1:49:55) Related Links/Products Mentioned: Chris Kresser (website) Chris Kresser (@chriskresser) Twitter (PRE-ORDER NEW BOOK NOW!!) Unconventional Medicine: Join the Revolution to Reinvent Healthcare, Reverse Chronic Disease, and Create a Practice You Love – Chris Kresser REVOLUTION HEALTH RADIO (podcast) The Little-Known Connection between Leaky Gut, Gluten Intolerance, and Gallbladder Problems (article) The Truth about Genetically Modified Food - Scientific American Man v. Food: Kitchen Sink Challenge – (YouTube) The Potato Hack (website) Study: Parasitic Infection Causes Rats to Fall in Love With Cats Subliminal: How Your Unconscious Mind Rules Your Behavior - Leonard Mlodinow (book) Chronic Disease Overview (website) RHR: The Myth of Adrenal Fatigue (article) Adrenal Fatigue or HPA Axis Dysregulation? (article) Addison's disease Chronic Stress, Cortisol Resistance, and Modern Disease (article) How to Become Gluten Intolerant (Funny) - Ultra Spiritual Life episode 12 - with JP Sears (YouTube) What Does It Mean When You Have Silent Celiac Disease? (article) The top 10 leading causes of death in the United States (article) Medical error—the third leading cause of death in the US (article) Researchers Map Direct Gut-Brain Connection | Duke Today (article) The three-hit concept of vulnerability and resilience: towards understanding adaptation to early-life adversity outcome (study) Researchers Test Microbe Wipe To Promote Babies' Health After C-Sections (article) Old Friends Hypothesis Sleep Deprivation and Obesity (article) The Rocking Chair Scenario In Silicon Valley, Working 9 to 5 Is for Losers (article) Iora Health: Restoring Humanity to Health Care Cost of diabetes hits 825 billion dollars a year (article) People Mentioned: Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Robb Wolf (@dasrobbwolf) Instagram JP Sears (@awakenwithjp) Instagram Dale Bredesen, MD Dan Bilzerian (@danbilzerian) Instagram Jason Kidd (@RealJasonKidd) Twitter Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS Prime Pro, which shows you how to self assess and correct muscle recruitment patterns that cause pain and impede performance and gains. Get it at www.mindpumpmedia.com! Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. 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Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
What's up, mind pump listeners.
So me, Adam and Justin, had the amazing opportunity to sit down and have a great conversation with Chris Cresser.
Now, for me personally, I have a special connection to Chris.
Back when I started having gut issues and health issues,
his articles were the ones that really directed me,
or really helped me, I should say,
find the right direction to help myself.
In the wellness world, Chris Cresser, he's among the
best. His information is incredible. He's got some phenomenal books. He's a functional
medicine practitioner. He looks at the entire body as one organism. In this episode, we
have some great conversation with him. We ask him a lot of good questions. We talk a
lot about the state of health in this country. We talk about, you know, diets and why we crave certain foods and, you know,
everything from leaky gut syndrome to HPA access dysfunction to adrenal fatigue. It's a
really, really good episode. He is one of the experts in this realm. So you're going to
love this episode. Now you can find his information at chriscresser.com,
that's chris, say, ch-r-i-s,
chr-e-s-s-e-r.com.
He also has a book that's about to come out.
Now, we were lucky enough to get an advanced copy of it.
I'm already halfway through it.
Brilliant book, one of my favorite books.
The title of it is unconventional medicine.
Join the Revolution to reinvent healthcare,
reverse chronic disease, and create a practice you love.
It should be available either by the time this airs
or within a few days, so go check it out.
He also has a podcast, Revolution Health Radio.
So without any further ado, here we are talking to Chris Cresser.
Chris, I think I first heard about you.
God, it's gotta have been at least six or seven years ago,
maybe longer.
I had a client that I was working with who had just some strange
issues with fatigue, just chronic fatigue, had issues with food,
she was developing more and more issues
with different foods that you would eat,
where she would get reactions like bloat
or digestive issues or skin issues.
And she talked about you and I looked you up
and then I read, I think I read an article
that you wrote about leaky gut syndrome
and what that is.
We've talked a little bit about Leaky Gut Syndrome to our audience.
Maybe if you wouldn't mind explaining that a little bit and what that is and how common
that is, because I think since the learning about it, I feel like it's far more common
than people realize.
Sure.
Yeah, so our gut is basically, if you think about it,
it's kind of interesting.
Everything inside of our gut is technically outside
of our body.
Oh yeah.
It's weird to think about it,
because we think about it as we say it.
We'll explain it to you.
All right, let's just throw it over here.
Here's how I imagine it like this.
Like you have a donut, and then there's a hole in the donut, right?
Inside the donut would be in the donut.
The hole is not in the donut because it's true.
That's exactly right.
And that's what your digestive system is.
It's like a hollow tube, you know, that connects your mouth to your anus basically.
I got it.
And so anything that's in that tube is not really in your body yet.
Wow.
Wow.
So she's shettling through.
Yeah. And that is helpful to think about it that way,
because then you start to understand one of the main purposes
of the gut barrier, which is to keep things out of the body
that shouldn't ever get in.
You know, some things we put in our mouth,
that we're not supposed to absorb.
That's why they come out the other end, right?
But some things we
need like nutrients and food. And so the gut is this barrier system that decides what gets
in and what stays out. And so it should normally be permeable, but only at the right time and
for the right things. And leaky gut is what happens when it becomes inappropriately permeable.
So it starts letting things in that should not get into the body in the first place.
So these could be big protein molecules that haven't been broken down.
It could be toxins from bacteria in the gut if there's an imbalance of good and bad bacteria.
And then when those things get into the bloodstream, they trigger an inflammatory response and
all-hell breaks loose.
So it can cause everything from digestive symptoms,
clearly like you mentioned,
so but also skin breakouts and rashes
because skins the biggest organ in the body
and inflammation will almost always affect it.
So you got kids with acne, adults with acne,
exema psoriasis, all that stuff can be got related.
It can also cause depression and anxiety because there's a profound connection between the
gut and the brain.
So, unfortunately, most doctors, most people in the general public don't really know about
this, the connection between the gut and all of the rest of the body.
It used to be, people used to laugh at leaky gut syndrome, just the term, like that's bullshit, it doesn't exist.
But it seems like more and more people are now starting
to accept that that's something that can happen.
How far along is Western medicine in this regard?
Are they acknowledging it at all?
Or is it just right now in the study phase?
Oh, well, that's an interesting question,
because yeah, it's true.
I mean, if you wanted to generate some serious eye rolling, you know, or like get yourself
laughed out of a room 50 years ago, you go to a medical conference and start talking about
leaky gut, you know, it was like the realm of alternative quacks.
And now if you go to a PubMed, which is a big repository for scientific studies, and you
search for intestinal permeability.
So you have to use the very official sounding term. Then you'll see thousands of studies,
literally thousands of studies connecting intestinal permeability with everything from autoimmune
disease to depression, the schizophrenia. So it's a legitimate condition that's being studied and peer-reviewed, you know, prestigious scientific journals.
But whether that research is actually trickled down to the average primary care physician is a different question.
And this is one of the biggest problems in medicine right now is there's at least a 20 to 30 year lag time
it seems between like the cutting edge research and then what becomes
the standard of practice. What are some of the main causes? Why are we having some issues with our guts?
You know, today, what's causing this? Well, in a nutshell, the answer would be the modern
diet and lifestyle. So, you know, we human beings, just like all other organisms and animals and nature, we evolved
in a certain environment and we're adapted to survive and thrive in that environment.
And when you take us out of that environment and put us in a really different one, our
genes can't change fast enough to adapt.
And so we have things like processed and refined foods, you know, big goleps and cheese doodles and you know all the
crap that we eat today, that stuff will cause intestinal permeability.
What is it Chris in those that are causing that? What is it? What is it? Sugar, refined flour,
all of these things cause what we call dysbiosis. So it feeds potentially harmful microbes in our gut
and allows them to proliferate.
And then the toxins that those bacteria produced
can cause that intestinal permeability.
Is it because it's just like,
it's an overwhelming amount for the gut
to handle at one shot?
Is that what it is?
Because we've refined it so much
and we've processed it so much
and it's just like this.
I'm going off in our gut.
Yeah, I mean, to put it simply,
like if you think about what our ancestors ate,
it was all real nutrient-dance, whole unrefined food.
It was, it was meat and fish, wild fruits and vegetables,
some nuts and seeds, and some starchy plants.
And what these foods all share in common is,
they don't have a lot of easily accessible sugar in in them. I mean they have the fruit has some sugar
But it's locked up with fiber and there's a lot of water and so
When we eat these foods our body knows what to do with them when we eat the you know
The top six foods now in the American diet are
grain-based desserts bread pizza, pizza, sugar-sweetened beverages,
like colas, alcohol, and chicken dishes, but mostly fried chicken, you know, like chicken
nuggets and KFC. Those are, those six foods comprise the majority of what people eat.
Wow. Yeah, I mean, the new food pyramid.
The new food pyramid. Yeah, and you're saying that that?
You make me sick.
That's weird.
Isn't that crazy?
I mean, who knew?
So, I mean, it's kind of fun sometimes
to think about the evolutionary adaptations
we'd have to go through in order to thrive on those six
foods being the part of our diet.
I mean, they're totally depleted of the nutrients
that we need, like the micronutrients, the vitamins,
minerals, trace minerals.
That's like fuel for the car.
If we don't have that, we can still function,
but we're not gonna function very well.
It's like putting diesel in a car that runs on gasoline.
It'll still go, but it's not gonna work well.
And so yeah, those foods are,
they have a lot of sugar that's readily available.
And so that sugar feeds the microbes, bacteria love sugar just as much as we do.
And in fact, we know that those bacteria can actually cause us to crave sugar.
They're actually kind of running the show when it comes to our cravings.
So if we have more of these bacteria, they can make us crave.
Isn't that another controversial thing to say too?
Because some people's the whole craving thing is, I remember when we had lane on the show
that was as big.
I said, well, man, I get these cravings when I eat these foods and you all, we're careful
with what you say when you say the word crave.
Is that kind of like a gray area?
Like what?
Well, I mean, there's certainly plenty of research that shows that the gut microbiome affects our cravings
because the chemicals that the bacteria produces
affect our brain and our brain is what determines
our cravings for food.
We have this system, the hypothalamus
and other regions of the brain that basically determine
what we seek out.
And that's a survival mechanism that when we were living in, when we were 100 gathers,
it was a survival advantage for us to seek out sweet and fatty foods because if we obtain
those, we would survive.
That's great.
But when there's a 7-11 on every corner, and we can just walk down to the end of the
corner and get a big gulp and all kinds of other stuff, that's where that hardwired
programming starts to work against us.
There's also, you know, when we did seek those things out, at some point we have these
natural systems where we'll actually get sick of a particular flavor.
It's like a natural satiety signal.
So like if I were eating something sweet in nature, I could eat so much of it, but there
would be a certain point where I'd be like, I don't want to eat anymore.
We've all experienced that.
But when I introduce a new flavor to it, I kind of hijacked that signal and I'll eat and I'll eat more and what happens a lot of times
This is what I talk about a lot of magical science behind McDonald's fries and ketchup
Exactly and this is what I like to talk about on the podcast a lot of times is how
Food manufacturers of these process because process foods really what they are is just highly engineered foods
Yeah, there's lots and lots of money and science that goes into
figuring out the perfect
texture, you know, crunch or whatever, the taste, the saltiness, the sweetness, the color, the smell, like all the factors that go into making a food desirable. And then also
overcoming your body's natural systems of satiety so that you eat more of them.
It all goes into processed foods, whereas natural foods,
you know, we evolve to kind of where our bodies will stop eating when they need to
or crave them when they need to. Whereas with the processed food that doesn't really
happen too much. Yeah, there are a couple good ways I like to talk about this
that make it pretty clear for people. If you imagine two plates
on one plate, you've got a big potato with no salt or butter,
just steamed, plain, big potato,
it's pretty hard to overeat that, right?
You'd probably eat it if you're hungry,
but you're not just gonna keep eating
once you're satiated.
Then you imagine a plate with potato chips,
and it's pretty easy to imagine over eating those,
even once you're still full, you're still eating
because it's hitting all of those reward signals
that you just mentioned.
Another example is that Rob Wolf likes to talk about,
I know you guys have talked to him before.
The poor hamster.
Well, he loves to go that direction, right?
There is that.
That's not the one I had in mind.
But I know you guys have this book here on the table.
Maybe that's not mine.
Yeah.
So he was, there was a video he actually links to.
It was this contest where it was like,
who could eat the most ice cream?
I don't know if you guys have seen this.
But so this guy's eating this, like,
just disgusting amount of ice cream,
it makes me sick.
It was like, it was the kitchen sink bowl.
It was very helpful.
It was very helpful.
It was very helpful.
And he's getting to the end
and you can see him start to flag.
Like he's getting green
and it almost looks like he's gonna throw out.
And how does he actually finish this?
Orders a large order of fries.
You got it.
Salty, you know, crunchy, totally different reward circuits.
He eats the fries and then he's able to go back
and finish the ice cream.
That's variety is one of the most powerful signals
for that food reward system.
This is one of the reasons why, if not the reason why,
I think the whole, watch your calories, watch you know, watch your calories, watch your proteins,
watch your fats, watch your carbohydrates,
model fails because it doesn't take these root systems
into account at all.
And so when you're sitting there trying to restrict yourself,
but you're not, you don't understand how these natural
systems of satiety, hunger, reward systems work, then you're fighting it up hill battle.
And then it's just your willpower
versus your body's natural desires.
And guess which one's gonna win eventually?
Yeah, you know, it's not gonna be your willpower.
No, I'll tell you, I mean,
there's some phenomenal ways to put this
in a practice for losing weight.
It's just that nobody will do them.
So one is, we could just call the really boring diet.
You know, it's not going to be a best sounder.
I don't think so.
The really boring diet that doesn't taste good, you know, you just, you eat like a few,
you choose a few, simple foods, you don't eat a lot, you don't add a lot of seasonings, you don't add fats.
So if you out, you know, steam broccoli,
just have it alone without salt or fat on it.
And then you have a, you know, like a piece of meat or fish.
It's just very simple.
And then maybe even a starchy plant, you know,
like a potato or sweet potato with, with,
with not, you guys are salivating.
I can see it, loving it over there. I know you're all getting so integrated.
No, I mean, if people ate that way,
it would be almost, it would be very difficult
to gain weight and it'd be easy to lose weight.
And there's the potato hack,
have you guys heard of this?
No.
Potato hack?
No.
It's actually one of the most successful strategies
for rapid weight loss.
You eat nothing but potatoes for three to five people.
People did.
Days.
Not by choice.
Not by choice, exactly.
And you don't put butter and olive oil and chives
and sour cream and bacon bits on it.
You just eat the potatoes.
And you cook the potatoes.
People are like, wait, isn't that going to tweak my blood sugar?
You know, I'm all eating all these simple carbohydrates.
You generally, you cook the potatoes in advance, so you don't have to cook the potato every
time you eat it.
And when a potato is cooked and cooled, it forms resistance starch.
So this is a type of starch that's not digested by humans.
So it doesn't impact your blood sugar the same way that eating a potato would normally.
And it actually feeds your beneficial gut bacteria, which is one of
the reasons it might be beneficial. But generally people can lose like a half a pound a day eating this.
You just sold the hell out of that back. And the reason it works is for exactly the reason you're
talking about. It's almost impossible to eat more plain potatoes than you're actually hungry for it. Totally short circuits that reward system.
And you eat only what you're hungry for,
and maybe not even that,
because you're so tired of potatoes.
And you don't have to do it forever.
You just do it, like there's different ways of doing it.
Some people do three days a week,
and then the other four days they eat normally,
there's a variation called potatoes by day,
where people eat potatoes in the morning and at lunch and then they have a normal dinner, you know, pay their
interest in dinner.
That's interesting.
And I'll tell you, it's one of the most effective way for people who will do it in my practice.
These are the people who've tried everything else and it doesn't work.
They're not usually just going to start with this.
Is this easier for you to find than like having people fast as opposed to that?
Uh, often, I mean, it depends on the person,
but I would think so because you're getting something.
Yeah, you're actually fasting,
taking some discipline.
You're getting something, you're eating,
it may not be exactly what you want to eat.
It's super easy from a time perspective.
You just, you know, bake 10 potatoes on Sunday,
but you know, or whatever it's gonna be for the week.
I'm kidding.
Oh man. And then you just eat the potatoes.
So I mean, like I said, I realized not everyone listening
to this is gonna go out and rush to do this.
Not an ideal diet, but I think it's a good example.
The point you're making very, very well made
because I think the old paradigm of the hunter gatherer
or how we used to eat was that we were constantly starving.
And that's why nobody ever, you know, that's why now we have food in front of us when
that we just overeat.
And I don't think that's necessarily true.
I think it's the body not only did it evolve, surviving with not having food, but it also
had to evolve so that we didn't overeat when we did find food because every once in a
while we would make a successful hunt
or we would come upon a field of plants or whatever.
And overeating would have been just as dangerous
as under eating.
We could become sick, we could damage our guts even then.
We could cause problems which would then affect our survival.
So these natural systems of satiety that we have,
we still have them, we've just hijacked the fuck out of them.
Yeah, totally disconnected from ourself.
Totally disconnected.
And the point you made about the bacteria driving our behavior,
it's funny when people laugh at that because really,
if you, first off, we probably have more bacteria cells
than human cells in our body.
We've evolved, we've co-evolved.
It's a symbiotic relationship.
We can't survive without each other for very long.
So it only makes sense that our behavior is going to be influenced by our host, which
outnumber our cells.
But we've also got evidence of this.
They've done functional MRI studies on people where they've mapped out their brain and how
it's operating, then they'll give them probiotics, and then the way their brain operates will
kind of change a little bit after taking a particular type of strains of bacteria.
We also know there's examples of, and I can't, there's a type of bacteria that rats and mice
can pick up from,
I believe from cat feces if I'm not mistaken.
And what this bacteria does is it makes the mice
and rats seek out cat urine and be less afraid of cats,
almost as if it's like forcing the mouse or rat
to get eaten by the cat to start the whole cycle over again.
And so, and this is proven, this is proven.
So, to think that we're somehow immune
from being influenced by our bacteria is absolutely
ridiculous.
I totally agree.
I would point out though that even in nature,
there are examples of people getting exposed
to highly rewarding foods and over and not system
being overrided or overridden diace and pottergoye
are like a hunter gatherer people there
and they will go to extreme lengths to obtain honey.
They'll climb trees which they fall from and die.
They'll get stung by hundreds of bees.
And then when they get the honey,
they'll consume up to two liters at a time.
Oh, shit. Leaders of honey. Are you sure you imagine that? That's a lot of honey. And then when they get the honey, they'll consume up to two liters at a time.
Oh shit.
Leaders of honey.
Stringy.
Do you imagine that?
That's a lot of honey.
I mean, they don't have any conception of what's healthy or not healthy, like they're not on the low carb.
Oh, there's honey there.
I'm doing it.
I'm in my cyclical keto phase.
I'm just going to skip that.
I'm just going to get away till Tuesday.
Yeah, no, they just eat it.
You know, it's there and it's available,
and they're gonna eat it while they can.
So even in nature, that's how powerful
these reward signals are.
And the difference is in nature,
what do you have to do to get that honey?
You gotta climb a 50 foot tree and risk falling
and get stung by 100 bees.
It's not like Amazon Prime, you know,
a bee like a show up at your door in two days.
I just came up with a new diet.
This is what you do.
If you have donuts or whatever your house,
set up some traps, put some bees in front of it,
and go through an obstacle course.
And then you have to find a mountain
and poke you with needles to simulate the bee scene.
It'll be right up.
And then on the other end, it's just potatoes.
Yeah.
So I guess the potatoes at the end.
Oh, damn it.
Guarantee weight loss.
Right.
Boring diet wins.
So I'm reading a book called Sobliminal right now.
And how much, Chris, do you think a lot of this stuff
is driven from the hijacking and the processed foods
and chemicals?
And how much of it do you think is driven from behavioral,
like from when we were children,
like your mom or dad hitting an ice cream
because you did something and rewarding you with foods
and stuff, how much do you think?
Obviously, they both play a role.
How much do you think each?
I think that probably depends on the person.
It's really difficult to quantify
an exact percentage in general.
I mean, some people did learn in their childhood
to use food as a way of suppressing difficult emotions by an exact percentage in general. I mean, some people did learn in their childhood
to use food as a way of suppressing difficult emotions
or as a reward system or whatever.
But for other people, that's not really that big of an issue.
And it's more just a question of these reward mechanisms
that we've been talking about,
which everybody is susceptible to.
I don't care who you are.
Right, right.
And this is what happens when you take a hundred,
you know, a hundred-gather group of people
and you expose them to modern diet.
They're not like, oh, I'm sorry, that's not on my,
you know, my hundred-gather diet.
They'll eat that stuff and they'll eat it liberally
and they'll start to acquire all the diseases
of civilization as they do that.
So I tend to think these hardwire biological mechanisms are primary for most of us.
And then you layer on top of that some of the stuff that you talked about,
and it's a, it makes it even worse.
So shitstorm. I felt like, I feel like all the years that we've,
thousands of clients that we've trained, the ones that really struggled with weight had the
combination of both. Yeah. Like If you were 100 plus pounds overweight, it wasn't just you getting
chemically hijacked. You also had some sort of attachment to food in a bad
relationship and the combination in and up with this disaster.
And jeans do play a role. I often say jeans load the gun and environment pulls
the trigger. Well, keep in mind that you can pull the trigger a lot,
but if it's not loaded, it's not gonna make a difference.
So genes do play a role.
And I think it mostly determines,
like, I mean, we all know the person who just eats like crap
and doesn't exercise, and they're still lean,
and they don't have a problem.
And then we know the person who does everything right,
and they're still overweight. And a lot of we know the person who does everything right and is still overweight.
And a lot of that does come down to genetic predisposition.
That doesn't mean that you don't have responsibility
or there's nothing that you can do about it,
but it is worth pointing that out.
I also think it's important to note that fat gain
is one symptom of, it's one of many symptoms
that can happen when it comes to, you know,
poor nutrition or, you know, bad lifestyle in that sense because there's a big chunk
of people who get diabetes or die from heart disease have, are not overweight.
Many of them are of normal age.
Or have get autoimmune issues or like psoriasis like myself, but never once struggled with
weight my entire life.
Autoimmune issues, and it's kind of nobody really talks about, but that is an exploding
epidemic in modern Western societies.
And that is the one thing that we have such a tough time treating with our Western medicine
strategies.
Yeah, I mean, one way I think about this is
I have a pretty simple heuristic for talking about
chronic disease.
And it's just, if you think about like a math equation,
you have genetic predisposition,
plus modern lifestyle, equals chronic disease.
No, I think it really is that simple.
But the type of chronic disease you get
is mediated by that genetic predisposition.
So you take 100 people, 100 gatherers, let's say,
who've never been exposed to the modern lifestyle,
you expose them to it.
They're not all gonna develop the same problems.
10 people will get psoriasis and exema and skin problems,
and other 10 people will get some different autoimmune disease,
and other 10 people will develop Alzheimer's and dementia,
another 20 people will develop cardiovascular disease,
metabolic problems, and this is why we see this
pinopole of conditions in our society,
but what we don't emphasize or get is that they all
come back to that same equation of modern lifestyle plus just the triggers.
Yeah, the triggers are all the same.
The epigenetics.
The epigenetics.
But they manifest differently, and that's one of the biggest problems with conventional
medicine.
We see all these diseases like separate things were locked up in doing research to find
drugs that will address the ultimate manifestation.
We'll fix the skin problem or we'll alleviate the depression
or we'll lower the blood sugar or whatever. We're looking at it from the outside in and
we should be looking at it from the inside out instead.
That's more functional medicine you're talking about. Could you describe to our audience
what really is functional medicine? How are you addressing like these problems with the Western way of doing it?
Yeah. So, you know, our healthcare system, I like to say, it's not, it's not really healthcare.
It's better. We should probably call it sick care or disease management, because what we typically do,
let's get better name. We wait for people to get sick and then we try to give them relief from the symptoms by primarily using drugs.
Right? I mean, let's face it. The average visit with primary care practitioner now is 10 to 12 minutes.
So, after you get done saying hello and with the pleasantries, that leads probably seven to eight minutes to, there's no way in that period of time you're going to be doing anything other than, you know,
prescribing a drug based on the symptoms that the patient has. And that's what our
healthcare system is. So you go into the doctor, you've got high blood pressure. What's going to happen?
You're going to get blood pressure medication. You go in with high cholesterol. What's going to happen?
cholesterol. And you say, doctor, how long am I gonna take these medications?
What are they gonna, what's the answer?
Forever.
Right, that's it in a nutshell.
And, you know, don't get me wrong,
the conventional medicine is amazing for acute emergency trauma situations.
Like, you know, we were talking before I came.
Like if I get hit by a bus, take me in the hospital right away.
You don't want acupuncture? No. I don't want acupuncture me in the hospital right away. You don't want to actually puncture?
No.
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to actually,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to,
I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to, I don't want to and things like modern sanitation and antibiotics, and these things have had incredible impacts
on our quality of life and our lifespan,
so I'm not denigrating that at all.
But when it comes to chronic disease,
which is by far the biggest challenge we face today,
seven out of 10 deaths that happen
are caused by chronic diseases,
not accidents and trauma and emergency.
So functional medicine takes a different approach.
We look at it and we say, okay, like I said before,
you've got all these different chronic diseases,
but what are the common mechanisms or pathologies
they're leading to all of these symptoms?
And so those could be things like disrupted gut microbiome,
which we've been talking about or leaky gut.
It could be things like blood sugar,
dysregulate, you know, high blood sugar, low blood sugar.
They could be things like heavy metal toxicity.
They could be things like stress,
which, you know, some people call adrenal fatigue
and we can talk more about that.
Yeah, let's get into that because.
So, you were the first person
cause adrenal fatigue was as buzzword for a while
in the wellness world.
It still is.
And it still is.
And I remember when, and I know, because adrenal fatigue was as buzzword for a while and the wellness wore off. It's still is. And it still is.
And I remember when, and I know,
maybe we can get into the symptoms of what that is,
but I remember learning about the symptoms
and seeing it in my clients and working with them
on that type of a model and helping them,
but then I would have clients that were doctors
and they'd say, what do you mean adrenal fatigue?
If they got their hormones levels checked,
their adrenals are functioning just fine.
And then I read an article by you,
where you were saying adrenal,
that's the wrong thing to call it.
And you were calling it,
you were talking about HPA access dysfunction.
So first off, can we talk about
what are the symptoms of what we used to call adrenal fatigue?
And why is adrenal fatigue the wrong thing to call it?
Yeah, I mean, so this is, is epidemic today and almost everybody I know has some
love love it because we're just burning the candle at both ends, you know, and we can't get away
with that without consequences. So, uh, that's a strong statement. So you believe that like most of
us are somewhat battling this. Yeah, I mean, how many, I don't know what do you think? I agree,
we all agree. Yeah, I mean, almost everyone I I don't know what do you think? I agree, we all agree.
Yeah, I mean, almost everyone I know
has some issue, okay, so here the symptoms would be,
fatigue could be waking up in the morning,
feeling unrefresh, not getting quality restorative sleep,
difficulty with exercise tolerance or recovery. So, you know, your
improvement and your progress in the gym is starting to go back in the other direction.
Could be, you know, low energy, depression or anxiety.
Lobito issues. Lobito cold hands and feet. For. It's often amen or you know lack of
menstrual cycle completely or changes in their menstrual cycle. I'm sure you
guys have seen this a lot women who are training who are training really
intensely. They're not eating enough. They lose their periods well known in
the in the training world. You know, there are there are many more but that's the
basic constellation. And yeah, I mean I so, but that's the basic constellation.
And yeah, I mean, I have so many people that I work with and just friends, family, people
I know in my life are dealing with it at some level.
You know, it might not be severe, but they're dealing with it in some way.
And look, I mean, adrenal fatigue is an okay term, I think, for the general public to use.
It's certainly easier to remember and say than HBA access dysfunction.
My point about this was mostly for practitioners and mostly around, like, look, if we want
to build bridges with conventional practitioners and be you know, be taken seriously.
We have to use terminology that is consistent with what we understand about the body today.
And so adrenal fatigue, the sort of core idea is that what happens is, over time when
we burn the canel at both ends, these glands that sit on top of our kidneys, the adrenal glands get exhausted.
They get tired and they can't produce cortisol.
Cortisol is one of the main stress hormones.
And so over time, the adrenals get tired,
they can't produce cortisol,
and that causes adrenal fatigue.
And again, in terms of people just trying to get a handle
on this and figuring out how
stress is contributing to their health problems, I think that's fine to talk about it that way.
But the problem with it is that that's actually completely not what happens.
Wow, it's fine.
Well, because then people will get tested and they're like, well, your cortisol levels
are normal.
I guess I don't have a drill for that.
Well, we talked about leaky gut being the main way to generate eye rolling amongst
doctors.
But now I would say adrenal fatigue has taken that top spot.
Candida might be number three.
So we can talk about that.
So yeah, I mean, it's true that stress has a big impact on this system called the HPA axis.
Hypothelmus in our brain, pituitary, and then the adrenal glands.
And this is a system that primarily governs our tolerance of stress
and how we're impacted by it.
The adrenals are just one part of that whole system.
Most of it is actually in the brain.
So it's the brain that mostly determines our stress response.
And the adrenal glands, in some cases, will be unable to produce cortisol, but that's
actually pretty rare. I mean, there's an autoimmune disease called Adescent's disease,
which leads to inability to produce cortisol. But in many cases, when we end up testing
patients who have so-called
adrenal fatigue, we see that they actually have high cortisol. Or maybe they're producing
cortisol at the wrong, you know, not in the right amount at the right time of day. So it's
just that-
It's like low in the morning when it's supposed to be high.
Exactly. And high at night when it's supposed to be low and so that interferes with their
sleep. They don't actually have a problem with production, they have a problem with regulation.
And the reason I think this is important to understand
is that, well, for one, a lot of times people
go out and take supplements that raise their cortisol,
which is obviously not a good idea
if their cortisol is high to begin with.
Well, see, the problem is that when you're in this state
of each PA access dysfunction
or adrenal fatigue or whatever you want to call it, you feel tired and fatigued and it
feels good to take things that raise cortisol like caffeine or stimulants or whatever.
I would say, yeah, so it is drinking coffee.
It doesn't mean it's the best long term solution.
You get a temporary hit, but then that can further exacerbate this syndrome.
The other thing that's important to understand, I think, and I like to shift to HPA axis dysfunction.
Maybe you guys can help me figure out a cooler name.
I was thinking we can re-brand that somehow.
HPAD, HPAD, HPAD.
Yeah, we need a rebranding answer.
Why can't it be more, explain to me why can't it be just like cortisol regulation or the
failure of that or the why can't?
Because there's other hormones and things.
Yeah, I mean that is actually true.
When I teach practitioners I say you can name the specific dysfunction.
So you do testing and you find if I have high cortisol you just call it high cortisol or
you can call it hyper-cortisolism,
which is a fancier scientific term.
If it really is low cortisol, you can call it low cortisol,
but you should find out, testing first,
or you can call it cortisol dysregulation
or disrupted cortisol rhythm,
because it's a diurnal hormone,
it should be produced at high amounts in the morning and then dropped during the day. But the other point is that if you just look at it as a
cortisol problem and this I think is what you were getting at, you're missing the bigger picture.
And that's what I would often see with clinicians. It would be like, oh, adrenal fatigue, okay,
take these adeptogenic herbs and you know, boost your, take some adrenal glandulars and you're done,
you know, you're, but if we understand that it's a system
that, you know, a whole disorder that involves the brain
and other parts of the body, then we look at it
in a bigger picture setting, we know that there are
four main triggers of this, of dysfunction.
One, only one of them is perceived stress, which we all,
that's what we think of when we think of stress,
work stress, financial stress, relationship stress, et cetera.
Another trigger is blood sugar issues.
So, let me just name all of them.
The third trigger is inflammation,
and the fourth trigger is circadian disruption.
So getting exposed to too much artificial light
at night, the wrong time, not enough during the day, sitting in a
room like this all day, recording podcasts, not getting out in
the sun, for example, explains why you're not sure if I'm
just saying that. So what was wrong with me? So this is an
example I like to use to my patients. Let's say someone's independently wealthy
land on a beach in Thailand.
So they've got no perceived stressors
as we would typically think of them.
But they've got seabot intestinal bacterial overgrowth
and inflammation in their body.
Let's say they're eating a crappy diet
and their blood sugar is high. And let's say they're staying up with their iPad and bed late at night,
staring at the screen. That person could have a seriously disrupted
HPA axis, even though they don't have any stress as we classically call it.
And the treatment for that person would not be to give them
adapted drugs and some, you know, bit of lipid more pills or whatever. It would be to fix the blood sugar, you know, fix the inflammation and help them with circadian
entrainment, you know, go outside. Well, he's on the beach in Thailand. So maybe this isn't the best example.
Get off your iPad at night. Yeah, get off your iPad at night and make sure to go outside in the morning, get some bright light hitting your eyeballs
And you know, so we we we expand it a lot more and we think about more things when we put it in this bigger context
I think the other thing that I read about was how
Because it's now well
Accepted and understood that we can have something like insulin resistance where
Because we're constantly exposed
to high levels of insulin that our body then becomes
more and more resistant to it.
And in this case, you could test someone for their insulin
and be like, you have normal insulin levels,
even though they display all the signs of low insulin,
because the resistant to it does this happen
with other hormones.
It happens with cortisol.
This is actually one of the mechanisms
that I teach people and practitioners
in my training course is cortisol resistance. So when you have high levels of cortisol, the body's
going to do what it can and protect itself from excess cortisol. And one of the mechanisms for
that is making the cells resistant to it. Or decreasing the number of receptors on the cell
for cortisol. So either way, you get
a decrease in the effects of cortisol, even though the circulating cortisol levels are
still high. So you can get a kind of paradoxical situation where you have the effects of low
cortisol with high or circulating cortisol levels.
In that case, in a situation like that, how do you resensitize their body to cortisol? Well, the primary trigger for cortisol resistance
is inflammation.
So lower inflammation.
Reduce inflammation.
Which is likely coming from the gut.
All of the stuff we've been talking about
come from poor diet, poor sleep, overtraining
or under-training, stress, environmental toxins, which aren't unfortunately a growing problem
that there's not very much awareness of.
Well, could you, would you say that a body that's in balance with all of these things should
be largely void of any chronic health issue?
Is that the root, like, kind of message?
Yeah, actually, I know people have a really hard time believing this, because now chronic
diseases is so common, we think it's normal.
We think it's part of life, yeah.
I always, there's a big difference between what's common and normal.
And, you know, we, everyone knows someone with chronic disease, or maybe has one, one
in two Americans now with chronic disease, and one in four have multiple chronic diseases.
Now, over 25% of kids have chronic disease,
and that's up from just 13% in 1994.
So we're not talking about a lot, you know,
that's 25 years.
And I'm a doubling of the incidence of chronic disease
and kids.
So, you know, it's easy for us to be like,
oh, chronic disease is just normal.
Everybody has it.
But actually, that's not true. And if you look
in hunter-gatherer, contemporary hunter-gatherer cultures, they don't have chronic diseases, typically.
I mean, they suffer from, they have a lower lifespan on average. But those averages don't take
into consideration the lack of emergency medical care and the high rates of infant mortality
and deaths from trauma and warfare and what get eaten by a lot of exposure to the elements
exactly. And the anthropologists who have studied this have found that if that's considered
and if people in those cultures survive those threats and if they have access to even the
most rudimentary forms of medical care like walking for half a day to get to a rural medical clinic, they live life spans equivalent to our own in the
West. But the difference is they reach the ages that we reach without acquiring multiple chronic
diseases. They don't have heart disease, they don't have diabetes, they don't have obesity,
they don't typically get Alzheimer's or dementia. They actually just live long healthy lives and typically die in their sleep.
I had my own experience where my body seemed to just rebel on me when I was 30.
And this was after years, I probably 15 years of
abusing my body with supplements and diet and, you know, over training because I was always into, you know, trying to build more muscle whatever.
And what happened to me was my, all of a sudden I just had, I thought I had severe, irritable bowel or even worse.
I couldn't, you know, I was losing weight. It seemed like everything affected me. And I did some food intolerance testing.
And at this time, this is when I first really got introduced
to the topic of leaky gut syndrome.
And the person who did my test said,
what you're probably going to find is that a lot of the foods
that we're going to find that you're intolerant to,
a lot of the foods that you eat a lot of now.
And it didn't make sense to me then,
because I remember thinking like,
what do you tell him, I've always eaten these foods? These are things that I'd never had an issue
with before. Why would I have an issue with them now? And the way they explained it to me
was because of the inflammatory response that I had caused through, you know, my lifestyle
because my gut was, you know, permeable, but it shouldn't. It started recognizing these
foods that I ate all the time as foreign invaders and it shouldn't. It started recognizing these foods that ate all the time
as foreign invaders and it created antibodies.
And this is what happened.
This is literally what happened.
I couldn't eat peanuts up until this point.
I ate peanuts every single day.
Gluten was definitely an issue.
Dairy was an issue, but before that it was lactose.
So I knew I couldn't have lactose,
but if something was lactose-free, I was fine.
Well, now it was all milk proteins. I had developed antibodies against milk proteins
egg whites because ate lots of egg whites. And it was just went down the list of all these
foods that a spinach was my vegetable. That's what every time I had to have a vegetable, I'd
have spinach. And I'd developed an intolerance to spinach. Now, through the years, after identifying
those things, changing my lifestyle and having
it gradually really learned my lesson a few more times, I feel like I can have some of
those foods again without having such a strong reaction.
So my question to you is, can you reverse some of these things?
Is that what I'm experiencing?
What is a protocol for that?
Yeah, so
You made a couple of good points there that I want to highlight one is
You know and this sometimes happens where I get a patient come in and we'll do the testing
I'll say your gluten time and be like what are you talking about eight? You know bread and pizza all the time
I have a problem with it
and
This is a phenomenon that we call masking,
and it's a more scientific term,
but I like to call it the dirty windshield effect,
because it's easier to understand.
So imagine you have a dirty windshield
and you get another speck of dirt on the windshield.
You're not really gonna notice that additional speck of dirt,
right?
And that's like what's happening
when someone's eating gluten on a daily basis.
So when they eat, they feel crappy,
which is why they've come to see me in the first place,
but they don't notice like a significant effect
right after eating the gluten.
So you clean the off-chilled them.
Right, you clean the windshield,
so you go, they go on,
I put them on a gluten-free diet for 60 days,
then they're like, I think this is probably phony and then they, you know, they, they go on and put them on a gluten-free diet for 60 days. Then they're like, I think this is probably phony
and then they, you know, they,
they miss it, they go have bread
and then they're just like sprinting to the bathroom
and just shoot, pff, pff, here's explosion
and then they come to me and they say,
you caused me to have gluten intolerance,
you gave me gluten intolerance, you know.
And I have to explain the dirty windshield analogy
because I think the body in its wisdom
has mechanisms for protecting against
other things.
Right, it's trying to save you.
It's going to adapt.
You keep shoveling that shit in your mouth.
It's going to, it's going to do what it can.
Right.
And which, you know, is limited, but it's something.
But then you take those out and it's like the,
kind of like the proverbial sigh of relief.
The body lets down its defenses. And then you put it, yeah, and then you put it back in. It's like the kind of like the proverbial sigh of relief the body lets down
its defenses and then you put it back in.
It's like whoa.
Really?
Yeah, so that's an important phenomenon to point out.
So often people will actually become more sensitive right away for that reason.
I did initially because this has been years now, and 30 years, this is eight years now of
me doing this.
Initially, I would just have like a breadcrumb, you know, or whatever, and I'd have an issue. Now, I can eight years
later, now I can eat a bowl of pasta, and I don't do it very often because if I push it,
then I'll have problems. But if I do once or twice, I notice a little bit, but I seem to
be okay. So it's almost like I healed myself. Yeah. So yeah, I mean, what happens there is the inflammatory response
subsides the antibody production if there what if it was mediated by that
declines to zero or drops so low that you know, there's some controversy in this in the
world of immunology, but typically, once you start producing the antibodies
to something, the idea is you have these memory cells
that will remember, and that serves us very well.
If we get exposed to a virus like chickenpox,
when we're young, then we get exposed to that later.
Even 20 or 30 years later, you have the cellular memory
for those antibodies
you can produce it and you won't get that virus again, right?
You're not affected by it.
So with foods, it's less clear how that's actually happening, but I know from treating a lot
of patients that generally after a period of time of avoiding the problematic foods and
after the gut barrier heals, which that's probably what happened in your case
Is that just that is that the reproduction of good healthy bacteria that's happening?
reproduction of healthy bacteria the ceiling of the gut barrier so that it's not permeable and it's not letting these big food proteins in
Into the bloodstream. It's a thin barrier. Yeah, it's not a very thin barrier. It's almost like you've got like this scab
and you've stopped rubbing the scab
and you let it fully heal again.
Exactly.
When we're constantly eating this food
that we have intolerance to,
it's like you're seeing there's scratching at a scab
which finally just let it be for a little while
that it heals.
That's right.
Exactly.
And in that situation, I mean, those food proteins
shouldn't be going into the bloodstream anyways
that you were eating.
The only reason they were getting in is because you had a leaky gut that allowed those to get in, and that's what triggers the immune response.
But if you're gut barrier sealed, you know, and you should be much better at able to tolerate it like you you are.
And, you know, as you said, if you push it too much, you start to go back in the other direction.
If you push it too much, you start to go back in the other direction. Speaking of gluten, what is it with gluten?
Why is that a common intolerance?
Why is it such a hot button?
And if somebody's perfectly healthy, no inflammation, whatever.
So many hippies have it.
Is gluten a problem for everybody or just...
AJ Spears.
I've never had videos on that.
He's hilarious.
Is gluten a problem for everybody or just some people.
So I might differ a little bit from my colleagues in this.
I don't think there's strong evidence that gluten is a problem for everybody.
The most kind of liberal estimates I've seen for non-sealiac gluten intolerance, which
means people who are affected by gluten but don't actually have celiac disease are one in ten. So I would still mean that nine in ten people could
theoretically eat gluten without having an immune mediated response. Now does that mean
that I think gluten should be part of everybody's healthy diet? No, because think about most
of the foods that have gluten in them. There are usually a lot of other reasons
not to eat those foods.
They're generally nutrient poor,
pretty processed and refined like breads or cookies
or crackers or things like that.
They're generally not,
when we think about diet,
I think about it in terms of nutrient density.
You wanna maximize the nutrient density
of everybody of food you put in your mouth,
because that's what our bodies run on.
So if you're eating a lot of foods that are really depleted in nutrients, that's not
going to be good for you, no matter if you tolerate gluten or not.
The other reason I think it's tricky is that all of us are kind of just, unfortunately, it's a constant battle to stay healthy in this
world.
I mean, there's so many threats, whether we're talking about diet or lifestyle or environmental
toxins, et cetera, that who knows who's going to become one of those one in ten people that
starts reacting to gluten. And it's probably if you're concerned about that
and you want to maximize your chances of staying healthy,
it's probably safer.
I feel like it's getting punched in the head.
It's like some people get knocked out right away
when you get punched in the head.
And just because you didn't get knocked out,
it doesn't mean it's probably a good idea
to keep getting punched in the head.
It could be like that.
I mean, I think of a good idea to keep getting punched in the head. Isn't it kind of like that? It could be like that. I mean, I think of things of like an aspectrum.
You know, like it's just,
there are a lot of people out there
if they're eating a little bit of gluten
in the context of diet that's overall healthy
and nutrient-dense and they're taking care of their sleep,
you know, they're getting the right amount of exercise,
the right amount of sun exposure, they're doing everything right, that person's probably going to be fine.
But then you take someone who is eating processed and refined foods, including they've got
a disrupted gut microbiome, they have intestinal permeability, they're not sleeping well, they're
you know, all of those kinds of things, which really,
it's a majority, a lot of, yeah, a lot of,
a majority.
And our culture, then I think the risks start to get high.
That something's gonna go wrong.
I think it's also, we also have to consider that
in Western societies, gluten is just an everything.
And what I mean by that is if you go to like,
for example, what country in the world do you think
has some of the highest rates of rice intolerance, right?
Countries that eat a lot of rice.
Like you go to Japan and having an intolerance
to rice is much higher than you would find
in other countries.
That's a chronic exposure.
I think we're just inflamed
and gluten is in fucking everything.
It's not only in food that contains flour,
but it's added to foods that don't for,
you know, it's for the texture or it's mouthfeel
or whatever.
They add gluten to sport strength sometimes
to make them taste a particular way,
or marinades, and I found this all out the hard way
when I was dealing with my gut issues,
is where I said, you know, they told me don't eat gluten,
so I said no problem,
and I was buying these marinaded chicken breasts,
and I was eating them,
and I was having horrible reactions,
and finally someone said, dude,
there's gluten in the marinade.
It's fascinating, I didn't know that.
It's in everything, and so this is why the common food, look at the common intolerances that, the most, dude, there's gluten in the merida. It's fascinating, I didn't know that. It's in everything.
And so this is why the common food,
look at the common intolerances that the most common ones,
dairy, nuts, egg whites, gluten.
I mean, these are things that we just consume a lot of.
And if you understand that when you get inflamed,
when you, if these things pass through the gut barrier,
your body creates antibodies
against them, gluten's probably going to be one of them because it's just, it's literally
an almost, everything-
It's all about the game, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
It's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
It's all about the game.
It's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game.
Yeah, it's all about the game. Yeah, it's all about the game. Yeah, it's all about the game. Yeah, it's all about the game. Yeah, it's gluten in it too. So it's really tricky for patients who are super sensitive, like you were at one point because you don't, you know, I mean, I just tell those patients,
just don't buy processed or find foods because you never really know, you know. And if they have
a reaction that is clear, that's one way to know. But the bigger problem is what about people who
have a reaction that's not so viscerally clear?
That's great. Let's go into that.
Yeah, so there's something called, let's just stick with C. they act for the time being, but
there's something called silent or atypical C. they act disease. And most people, and they think
of C. they act, they think of gut problems, you know, diarrhea, gas, bloating, et cetera,
because that's the typical presentation of celiac.
But there are a lot of people who have celiac
that don't have that.
And the way it might manifest for them is in the brain.
So there might be a gluten related to taxia
is a form of paralysis that's caused by gluten.
So this is how serious that it can be.
It typically happens in children,
but it can happen in adults too.
Gluten and celiac has been linked to all kinds
of brain-related disorders like depression,
even schizophrenia, anxiety to neurological problems,
like multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's and other issues, it can also
manifest in the skin.
A topic dermatitis or exema is one of the most common what they call extra intestinal,
meaning outside of the gut manifestations of celiac disease, but all of this skin condition,
psoriasis, acne, acne rosacea can all be related to gluten intolerance.
So this is problematic because imagine somebody who is having, you know, has neurological
issues and anxiety.
That's the last thing they're going to test.
They're not going to think about that.
They go to the special doctor for that.
You know, we have different doctors for all the different parts of the body.
Then they go to the dermatologist.
They go to that doctor and that doctor puts them on some medication for those symptoms.
Then they go to the dermatologist and they say, I've got the skin rash, the steremititis,
doctor gizm, some cream, steroid cream for that.
They may be to go to their primary care doctor for nobody's putting the pieces together and and and realizing that all of these symptoms in this patient are
related to one single food protein that if they remove from their diet can resolve all of these
problems. So that again like getting back to functional medicine that's the difference between
functional medicine and conventional medicine. The conventional medicine is often playing whack-a-mall with symptoms, you know,
and functional medicine, we're asking the question, what is it the root of this problem?
That's a huge, that's a huge paradigm shift.
Although I think I have hope because I feel like we're heading in that direction,
I just think we're probably another couple decades away from it.
But Chris deals with it on a regular basis.
What do you think?
How much are you fighting Western medicine, everyone?
How many things do you need to rebrand?
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm a need your help for sure.
I think it's both.
I think there's both really promising signs that ultimately,
I think functional medicine is just how medicine will be practiced in the future.
I don't think that at some point it will even be a separate thing.
It's just going to, at some point, we're going to realize this is the way we have to approach chronic disease.
Like, if you think about how our medical model evolved, it's easy to understand how we got to where we are.
So in the year 1900, the top three causes of death
were typhoid, tuberculosis, and pneumonia.
So all acute infectious diseases, right?
The main reasons other people went to the doctor
at that point were also acute.
They were like a gallbladder attack or appendicitis
or broken bone.
So they would see one doctor,
they would get one treatment, you know, it might be the doctor removing the appendix or
the gallbladder or setting the bone or might be later after antibiotics were developed,
there would be an antibiotic for the infection. And that was it, very straightforward, right? And our medical model frankly excels at that.
It excels at that then and it excels at it now.
It's getting better and better at that kind of intervention.
The chronic diseases are not at all straightforward
in that way.
So the average person now has one or more chronic diseases.
They require multiple doctors. They are seeing a doctor for every
different part, they might be taking multiple medications and they might be taking these treatments
for the rest of their life. So we have a medical model that evolved in the context where acute
problems were the biggest issue and it's been kind of applied to this to our current
and it's been kind of applied to this to our current challenge, which is chronic disease. By far, it's the biggest challenge and it doesn't work.
It's using the raw, it's like using hammer to screw in a screw.
It's just not, I mean, it kind of works.
You just keep banging that thing.
You know, it'll get in there, but it's not the right tool for the job.
Yeah, and it needs to evolve
because we're solving a lot of those problems,
but now the chronic, in the main killers,
I just read a study, you know, heart disease is still number one,
cancer's catching up to it, cancer's starting to kill.
It's very close, and actually, you know what,
is number three, little known fact here.
It's a medical mess-ups.
Yeah, I thought that was number one.
Medical care, not even mess-ups. Yeah, I thought that was number one. Medical care. Not even
mess ups. No, errors are one part of a subset of it. But even like, I knew a lot of
there. Medication that's prescribed appropriately. You know, it's crazy. It's not like the wrong
medicine, like the doctor made the, you know, dosing error or something. It's the right medicine,
but it just happens to have death as a side effects. Yeah, so there is a editorial published in BMJ, British Medical Journal, in 2016, that
counted up the deaths from what they call e-atrogenic events. So these are events caused by medical
intervention of some type. They could be errors, but they might also just be the right thing done with unfortunate outcome.
Wow.
And there was another analysis in 2000 that found the same thing.
And that analysis actually, and this might be what you were thinking of, they said that
only 5 to 20% of the autrogenic events are actually reported.
So that if all were reported, it would actually be the number one cause of death.
Yeah. Wow. Our, yeah. Yeah.
Or medicine is killing us.
So, I mean, one of the best examples of this is Alzheimer's disease.
So now, you know, it's growing on the list of top causes to death.
It's making a run for number one.
And I mean, I don't know about you guys, but that's terrifying.
Like, if you think of like the worst way to die, I think I'd rather get eaten by a shark for sure.
I'm a surfer and I'm like, yeah, send me out there.
You know, it's time for me to go,
Gary the great white, just go to Epic.
I would rather, yeah, I would rather go out that way
and get Alzheimer's disease.
And it's just devastating for not just the person
that's around you, but the family members.
I mean, we talked about
HPA access dysfunction before,
when researchers wanna study that,
guess who they study?
Caregivers of people with Alzheimer's.
Cause it's recognized that they're like
the people that are under the greatest stress.
Most stressful thing you could do.
Yeah.
So if everybody, oh go ahead, Chris, are you?
I was just gonna say, 25 years of drug development for Alzheimer's using this conventional medicine
approach of like the silver bullet.
What's the one thing, the one drug that we can develop that will reverse this syndrome
and that because that's the conventional approach is symptom suppression.
Like we'll figure out a mechanism will develop a drug to it, and then that's how we'll do it.
Complete failure.
After 25 years, not a single drug can prevent the progression of Alzheimer's, much less reverse it.
And, you know, there are researchers now, I talk about one in my book, Dr. Dale Bredison,
who's been studying Alzheimer's his whole life as a bench scientist.
He's an MD, but he's mostly, he was in a lab trying to find the silver bullet.
And he eventually figured out that that's not going to work.
Why?
Because Alzheimer's, like every other chronic disease, is not caused by a deficiency of a
drug.
You know, that hasn't been developed yet.
Heart disease is not caused by statin deficiency.
It's caused by all of these numerous factors we've been talking about in our modern diet
and lifestyle that can cause inflammation and all the other mechanisms that lead to Alzheimer's.
What he argues is we don't need a silver bullet, we need a silver buckshot, which
is a good analogy.
We need a multi-pronged approach to addressing chronic disease that looks at the patient's
diet, looks at their lifestyle, looks at their behavior, and then starts looking at underlying
mechanisms or pathologies that lead to all of these different syndromes and diseases and
symptoms. And that's how chronic disease has to be approached.
So I really do believe that eventually that's just how we will approach chronic disease.
We'll call it functional medicine.
It will just be how we approach chronic disease.
And I think we'll get there either the hard way or the easy way.
And that's what I know.
Knowing our history probably the hard way.
Yeah, I tend to believe that, to be honest.
I will get there by just literally beating our heads
into the wall one too many times
where we finally realized that the approach
that we're doing isn't working
and that it's bankrupting our government.
I mean, that some statistics I've seen suggest
will be completely insolvent by the year 2035
because of rising healthcare expenditures.
And I'm glad you brought up Alzheimer's
because it wasn't that long ago that Alzheimer's
was considered a psychiatric disorder.
But now we consider a physical disease
because we can see that what's actually happening
to the brain, but the reason why I'm making this point
is because we separate, we because we separate mental disorders from physical
as if they're not connected.
The reason why I'm talking about this is we have recently we had a tragedy in Las Vegas.
We had someone just a lunatic just kill all these people.
I was thinking about it this weekend and how there's a distinct difference between people
who do something like that and you're everyday crime,
where it's either because of poverty,
because they're stealing something or gang related
or the black market for drugs.
Here you have someone actually losing their mind.
So I went through and I actually did some research
and I knew what I'd find, but I wanted to see it for myself.
And we all know, and it's widely accepted now,
the physical, what's happening to our physical health,
and how bad it is, and how bad it's getting.
You know, people will call it the obesity epidemic,
or the diabetes epidemic,
or just the chronic health epidemic,
but people are not talking about the mental health epidemic
that is also right along with it.
Right along with it, you have as our physical health
is declining, so as our mental health to the point now
where I forget, but there's an incredible statistic
in terms of the amount of people that have prescribed
anti-psychotics, antidepressants, ADHD medications,
anti-exhidemetications, all through the roof, and they're all connected.
Can we talk about that for a second, the connection between our physical health and our mental
health?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I mean, it's true.
The World Health Organization, I think, saw some recent statistics that depression is increasing
by 20% year-over-year.
Holy shit. What are you, asshole?
And then it's predicted to become one of the biggest health
problems from a global perspective, not just in the developed
world, but in the developing world as well.
And I mean, depression and another mental health issues
are really complex topics.
So I don't want to be too reductionistic here because it's true.
Certainly our circumstances affect our mental health.
There's no doubt about that.
I think that's been firmly established.
And depression can often be situational and related
to those circumstances.
We know that, so I'm not going to dwell on that.
I want to introduce here something that's less well known,
which is that let's just take depression.
For many years, the prevailing thinking was,
well, initially it was the depression
was caused by serotonin deficiency.
That was never really believed by serious scientists.
That was a made up thing that made it easier to sell
and it presens.
Yeah, because I think they discovered
that these drugs increase circulating levels
of serotonin and so then they came up with theory afterwards.
Exactly.
Which is how they would stand in all other drugs.
And they, you know, drug companies hire marketing,
you know, advertising agencies.
Yeah, first before the scientists.
They get the marketing first.
There we go, get our scientists. And, you know, advertising agencies, first before scientists. Yeah, come up with this first. There we go, get our scientists.
And, you know, advertising agencies have come up with all kinds of new names for diseases.
They create the disease to create the demand for the drug.
That's how we got bucking on real life.
That's how we got viagra.
Absolutely.
They created a drug to erectile ED.
Yeah, it was for heart, it was for blood pressure, and it kind of worked for blood pressure, but oh shit people are getting boners
Same thing with the stuff you put on your what is it called?
Monoxidil or yeah a lot of these were just marketing teams that came in and SSRIs like we have this drug that does this
What can we do with it? Yeah, so yeah, so it was, okay, serotonin deficiency, you've got low serotonin, that's very easy to
communicate, you know, in advertisements, then people were walking around going, yeah,
I've got low serotonin, I take this drug, it increases my serotonin.
Great.
So, only problem is, I was not accurate, and certainly depression can involve changes in
brain chemistry, neurotransmitter levels, and things like that. But still, the question is why, right?
Is it just because of situational factors or are there some other things that play?
Well, there's a more current theory of what causes depression in many cases, and it's
called the technical term is the immune cytokine model of depression.
But the, it's pretty easy to understand. It's inflammation that generally starts in the gut and inflammation
these inflammatory cytokines, that's the, their chemical messengers get created in the gut. They
cross into the bloodstream, they go up to the brain, cross the blood brain barrier, and they suppress
the activity of the frontal cortex, and that produces the symptoms which we refer to as depression.
So basically, in many cases, depression is a problem
that starts in the gut and then affects the brain.
And this has been, like, people have been writing about the gut brain access
for a hundred years. There were these MD scientists at Duke University in the 1930s
that wrote a paper on the gut brain skin access.
They actually talked about how changes in the gut
can lead to skin problems, psoriasis, eczema,
and also depression and anxiety.
And they even talked about probiotics
as a way of intervening to
address these problems.
That was even before the term probiotics had been invented, but they talked about our
fermented milk beverage, which is basically, you know, probiotic as a way for intervening
here.
So this has been known for a hundred years, but it's only recently that's been kind of
rediscovered because I think
the whole depression and mental health feel got so hijacked by the pharmaceutical feel
that we stopped actually thinking about what are some of the underlying causes that contribute
to these problems.
ADHD autism spectrum disorder, they're now researchers in the U.S. and abroad who are
looking at, okay, certainly we know that genetic predisposition
is a big factor, but the stratospheric rise in autism,
the latest figures I think even from the CDC
are now one in 45 kids have autism.
So it used to be like one in like 4,000.
Yeah, exactly.
And we're talking about a short period of time.
There's no way that genes can explain that.
It's impossible. Our genes cannot explain that. It's impossible.
Our genes cannot change that quickly.
We've never evolved and changed that fast.
So there has to be environmental,
environmentally driven.
And so there are researchers who are now looking at this.
And there's a framework called the three-hit paradigm.
I'm not going to remember, I might not remember them exactly,
but it's basically genetic
pre-disposition, microbiome disruption, and then environmental insults. So you have poor diet,
environmental toxins, all these things, they affect the microbiome. Microbion changes in such a way that it alters neurochemistry that then results in ADHD,
OCD, autism spectrum, anxiety, and all these problems that are so epidemic now.
And I know there's got to be people right now that are going like, well wait a second,
how does that happen to a child who's born with autism, so that now?
And I know we have studies that are linking what the mother, the mother is passing
down to the child and it most certainly could be coming from some of the habits that she
had for her entire life and that's what's happening.
So we don't, yeah, that's a really key point. We see heritable traits as always being
genetic, but that's not necessarily true. You inherit your initial imprint for your gut microbiome
from your mom.
You know, the babies microbiome or gut is relatively sterile.
They used to be thought that they had no bacteria
in their gut in utero, but now some recent research has
suggested that actually bacteria can cross the placenta
and they may be some initial seeding that happens
while the baby's still in the womb.
But generally speaking, even with this new research,
the primary kind of seeding of the microbiome,
if you think about it as a garden analogy,
the seeds are planted when the baby is coming
through the birth canal and gets exposed to the bacteria.
To the point where when a baby is born by C-section,
there's actually movement
now for doctors to swab the vaginal area of the mother and apply it to the baby to give
that exposure.
This is not like woo woo stuff.
This is actually, you know, there are papers that have been written about this.
So what that means is you can, it's not genetic, but you're still inheriting that from your mother.
And if the mother, we know that the mothers of autism have been studied and they have a lot of
different characteristics. So it's a combination of these genetic and environmental factors.
Wow, that's fascinating. So here's some I'm going to throw you a curveball here.
I've been reading about,
so I have a family member with Crohn's.
And so very close to them.
And so I've done lots of my own reading
and research on autoimmune disorders and diseases.
And there's this fascinating kind of sect
and field of study where people with autoimmune diseases
will self administer a
Like a parasite and that'll cause their symptoms to many times disappear
What's going on there? Do you know what's going on there? Yeah, okay. Yeah, oh, I mean as much as we know
It's gone. I'm very familiar with the research and I actually did that myself
So I have some personal experience. Oh wow.
I don't know if you guys know anything about my history,
but I got into this work because I got extremely sick
with a digestive illness when I was surfing
in Indonesia in my early 20s.
And I got exposed to multiple parasites,
just totally wrecked my gut.
And at one point I was diagnosed with IBD,
Crohn's disease.
I don't think it was accurate now in retrospect,
but me being the geek that I am,
I wasn't gonna do the steroids
in the typical treatment.
And I was probably very early days
in this, you're referring to home-inthic therapy.
Yeah, there we go.
So, home-ins are typically nematodes, they're worms,
and they've been a part of mammalian evolution
for something like 300 million years.
So, in other words, all mammals harbor helmets.
They have worms, and typically it's not a problem.
I mean, we think of worms, it's gross, first of all,
and we don't wanna, especially if you go and look up pictures of some of these organisms. I do. Yeah.
Yeah. I turn you off to this idea real quick in most cases, but generally, there's even
a theory, and then there's research behind this that suggests that our immune systems
evolved in response
to these organisms.
Like, this is so long ago in evolution
that we're talking about pre-immune system
as we even understand the immune system.
And there's some thinking that our immune system evolved
in response to these organisms such that, in a way,
our immune system can't function properly
without them.
And so what happens is in the industrialized world,
we got sanitation.
And sanitation has saved, you know,
immeasurable number of lives.
Like it prevents so much acute infection.
So I'm not saying we should go back to an unsanitized environment,
but all things have consequences, and some of them are anticipated and hoped for, and others
are unanticipated.
And one of the unanticipated consequences of the increase in sanitation and the removal
of these organisms from our guts.
And one way I like to explain it to people is if you're standing up and you
have your hands out and you're facing someone and they have their hands out and you're
leaning into them, if you apply a kind of a similar amount of weight, you're going to
balance. You're not going to, neither one's going to fall down, you're balancing each
other out. And this is how our immune systems were tuned
in the presence of these organisms.
So these organisms exerted like a kind of tuning effect
where our immune system would push back a little bit
and they're pushing back a little bit.
So we're in that state of dynamic balance.
What happens if you take away those organisms?
This fall over.
Yeah, the immune system, that energy that was being directed
at that low level
pathogen that starts getting directed at something else. What does it get directed at?
Our own tissue. Exactly. Or environmental antigens like dust, pollen,
beastings. It can show up as allergies. It's just a hyperactive, hypervigilant immune response
because it doesn't have those internal things
that we had for so long.
And this is called the old friends hypothesis.
It's sometimes called the hygiene hypothesis as well
because the hygiene and sanitation being related to it, but old friends
refers to these worms, which were our old friends in the sense that they tuned and regulated our immune
system. And so once you know this theory began to be developed, then the obvious question was,
can we reintroduce these organisms and will that have the same impact? And lots of research and clinical experience suggests
that they can and people will talk.
There's clinical experience.
So what happened with you?
So I've done it twice.
There's two ways that it's typically done.
One is with trichurus, sweet, which is pig, whipworm.
So it's a whipworm, and it's one that typically colonizes
pigs. And the
reason that they used, they first selected this is that it can't colonize humans long
term, which means that, you know, when you swallow the whipworm, it will stay in you
for about a week and it will have its immune-regulating effects, but then you poop it out and it's
gone. It can never, you know long-term. The thinking was that
was safer to do that. The problem was it doesn't have the same impact because it's not really a human
adapted organism. Then they also start using human hookworm, necotor Americanus. This can
colonize the human host and it will stay in human. But, you know, hookworm can be problematic, but only with uncontrolled exposure.
So like, let's say some, you know, a person living in a rural village in Africa is walking
barefoot in through latrine kind of area, and they're continually getting more and more
hookworms, and they can start developing
anemia and other problems with parasites. But if you have only a small population of hookworms,
maybe 25 hookworms, then you can get the immune-regulating benefits. They don't multiply and just
grow inside of you. You just have that same 25. And they stay with you? Like they don't.
They stay with you in theory.
If you take antibiotics or certainly anti-parasidics,
like mebendazole, you can get rid of them.
So I did the trichurus swiss first.
Didn't really have much impact on me one way or another.
And then a little while later I did the hookworm.
I didn't really have much impact on me either.
Other than being kind of weirded out by the wholeworm. It didn't really have much impact on me either other than being kind of weirded out by the whole thing.
And having to go to Tijuana to do it because it's not legal.
And there are some legitimate ways to do it in Tijuana. So you probably know there's like medical
tourism that happens there. They have good doctors and down there. I don't
recommend this to people without being under the supervision of someone who really knows what they're
doing. But in my case, it didn't work simply because I don't think I ever had Crohn's disease.
And I had inflammation in the terminal Ili, there was probably caused by the parasite infections that I had.
And it was misdiagnosed as Crohn's disease.
However, I've had lots of patients, not lots.
I mean, this is a pretty out there therapy, but I can think of over 10 over the years that
have done it.
And in some cases, it's been absolutely miraculous.
We're talking about people who were facing removal of their colon because
their inflammatory bowel disease was so bad who basically within three month period became
almost symptom free without making any other changes. Wow.
What's the other ones? What's the other ones, how that everyone's leaving the country to
go do the stem cell stuff? There's, there's another procedure right now,
people are that you can't do in the States that's...
Are you trying to play?
You think in a fee-go-transplant?
I don't think it's fee-go-stuff.
There's another one that we're not,
what we don't do here.
You know who did it was a Dan Bilzerian,
he left, he goes to, he fought.
I don't know.
I think that's legal here in the States, isn't it?
Yeah, there is stem cell here in the States.
It's not really that regulated at this point and there's a lot of controversy about what
you can and should use it for.
But it is legal.
It's about 10 grand a pop.
Maybe that's what it is.
What do you know about it?
I don't have a lot of expertise in stem cell treatment, but I know there are some indications
that it actually has been studied for in peer-reviewed journals published, particularly related
to musculoskeletal complaints, tissue regeneration and repair, etc.
But it's being used in a much broader way, in some clinics, for just health optimization
and life extension.
That's where I hear people.
Yeah, looking younger.
I know a couple of people who have done it and actually do look five or 10 years younger
than they did before.
But I think there's some unanswered questions still about that.
So your experience with the parasites
after you went surfing, is that what got you to do
what you're doing now, or were you already?
Yeah, no, I was not really contemplating
a career in healthcare.
I was on a different track, but I got so sick.
And really, when I came back, that was my first experience
with the conventional
healthcare system.
I was a pretty healthy kid and teenager athlete, you know, you know, I'm maybe gone to the
doctor a handful of times and just for the usual stuff.
And then I came after that and I got sick.
I, you know, went to the doctor and doctor prescribed some antibiotics and said, oh, it's
probably just parasites.
So get better.
And then, you know, it took about 10 years for me to fully recover my health.
And that was, it was a brutal journey.
And along the way, I'd learned just how poorly equipped the conventional medical system
is for dealing with the kind of problems that I had that didn't fit into like a nice clean straightforward box
and weren't amenable to just some drugs or medication. And so I, as I started to get better,
people around me started asking, what are you doing? Because they'd seen how sick I was. I mean,
I was taken to the curb. I was completely down and out, unable to work.
You know, I was in my mid-twenties. I had no idea if I was even able and out, unable to work. You know, I was in my mid-20s.
I had no idea if I was even able to support myself
and live a normal life.
And so it was pretty scary.
And then people around me, as I started to get better,
were like, wow, how did this work?
What did you do?
And I started to share with them.
And then just over time realized that there was a lot that I had learned in that process that could be helpful to other people and
Decided go back to school and formalize that and then you know here. I am well. That's excellent. Yeah. I'm glad that happened for you
Well, I'm sad that I have
You're glad you got
I was sick for a decade, but it's helped me out
You helped us with your sickness gifts coming in many, many different ways.
Of course.
And that's the way you got to look at it.
So that's definitely the way I look at it.
I mean, I wouldn't be here if I, you know, in this chair, if I weren't the case.
What would you say is the single greatest, I guess, threat to our health in modern times
right now?
What would you say is the one thing that we could,
if someone were to look at just one thing,
what would you say that would be?
Well, I would say chronic disease,
but I think you're asking as a cause, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, diet is the kind of,
it's still up there at the top,
but there's more awareness about that.
I would say actually sleep deprivation is probably, when I look at the research on just about every condition,
and let's just talk about obesity. So most people think of obesity, they think of diet and
exercise, right, as being the big triggers. And certainly diet, I think still is the primary
trigger, but exercise actually, although it's important, it's not sleep is probably
number two, ahead of exercise in terms of the obesity epidemic. And this is, I think, not
really even that controversial now in the scientific world at least. There are studies
have shown that, I think, eight nights of sleep deprivation can lead to an increase in calorie intake of over 500 calories a day
Which is equivalent to fit gaining 52 pounds in a year. Wow
That's crazy. Yeah, and you know that's significant sleep deprivation that they're doing in an experimental setting
So it wouldn't be likely that someone would have that every night in their life
But if you take just even a lower level of that, where someone is like,
we now know that 35% of Americans sleep less than six hours a night.
And that's up from just 2% in 1960.
So that's a 15-fold increase in the number of people that are getting less than six hours
a night asleep in just the past, you know, 60, 50, 60 years.
15 years ago, I would have laughed if someone talked about
sleep and walking.
Sleep to burn.
Sleep, and then the two things I talk to more than anything
else now, is addressing sleep and then just moving.
Because I feel like those two are probably the simplest things
that people can address and look at in their life,
and start to make improvements.
Yes, it totally had to change your tune with that too.
I bet.
Yeah, in your profession.
Right, yeah.
If you look at, this is where the ancestral perspective
comes in, so it's so helpful.
We, it's not that we need to return to the lifestyle
of our ancestors, but we can use differences
in our modern lifestyle with our historical lifestyle to generate
hypotheses about what might be screwing us up.
So we look at our ancestors and say, oh, they and contemporary hunter-gatherers.
Most of them slept at least seven, eight hours a night.
Like in the Cimane people in Bolivia who have been recently studied, we can talk more about
that.
It's really interesting. There's not even a word for insomnia in their language. The researchers were trying to ask them
about insomnia. There was no word because they sleep and they sleep restfully.
And they sleep for 78 hours. And so then we can start asking, like, okay, well, that's not happening now and does that make a big difference and then we can with movement
We look at our ancestors and we say and contemporary outer gathers and we say, okay
They walked an average of 10 12,000 steps a day. They didn't sit for long periods and
Yeah, so those those lower- level activities were punctuated by more intense
activity, chasing prey or lifting something up when they're building something.
SPRATICALLY. Exactly. So now we're in a situation where you could meet the government recommended
guidelines for exercise. You can be completely sedentary, but go to the gym for three to five days
a week and exercise for 30 minutes a day. You're meeting the government guidelines for exercise, you can be completely sedentary, but go to the gym for three to five days a week and exercise for 30 minutes a day
You're meeting the government guidelines for exercise
You're still at a much higher risk of death and disease
Then if you are gardening
Walking or bicycling to work, you know taking the stairs instead of the escalator and just doing what is called non-exercise physical activity. Neat.
Yeah, so we make the case that when you look at the problems with modern lifestyle and
what forms of exercise directly combat some of these modern problems, one of the best
forms of exercise is resistance training.
And the reason why I say that is because resistance training directly improves how your body responds to cortisol, insulin,
and it also has an adaptive effect in the body where it causes you to,
your body wants to burn more calories, which isn't necessarily a good or bad thing,
but in the context of modern lifestyle,
it is because you want to be able to have a metabolism that burns more calories with modern lifestyle, which usually results in more calorie intake.
Most people are in a cleric surplus, so it's not a bad thing to do that.
The other benefit of resistance training is just maintaining bone health as we age.
You probably heard the phrase break, break your hip, die of pneumonia. Like fractures are a big deal in elderly population
because they result in immobility
and that immobility can cause pneumonia
and other things that can kill you.
So it's no joke to maintain healthy bones
as you get old and resistance training
is one of the best ways to do that.
Absolutely.
Chris, where did, where did the motivation for all this come?
I know we talked about what happened in your 20s, but go all the way back to like high school. What
kind of kid were you like in high school? Were you a nerd? Were you always reading and studying?
I mean, I was, I did well in school, but I was, you know, identified as an athlete, you know,
I played basketball in high school. I was a surfer all my life, but I played basketball
in high school. And then what's going to play in college?
UC Davis or Santa Clara, actually, not too far from here, where I got recruited.
And then at the last minute, I decided to...
I wouldn't have chosen either of those schools where it not for basketball.
And I didn't really want to go to either of those schools.
So at the last minute, I decided to go to UC Berkeley,
which I did, I was interested in.
And I was gonna try to walk on there,
but unfortunately Jason Kidd,
I was just gonna say,
I was just kidding.
You were out of your mind.
You were so, I think we are on the same generation.
All right, yeah, I was a guard.
I was a guard.
So, Jay Kidd was playing my position. I was like, generation. Yeah, I was a guard. I was a guard. So, J.K.K.D. was playing my position.
I was like, oh, what a loss of interest for trying.
Yeah, maybe you'll get hurt.
I guess I'll give up basketball now.
And no, I did play Inter-Mier also,
which is pretty competitive at Berkeley,
but I just kind of left that behind.
So I've always been driven by athletics and performance.
Did you watch him play a lot?
Oh, yeah. I'm a die-hard, J.S.K. fan. I played basketball through high school. been driven by athletics and performance. Did you watch him play a lot?
Oh, yeah.
I'm a die-striker fan.
I played basketball through high school.
I actually played against him.
There's a lead called slamming jam.
Yeah, yeah.
Remember that?
So I was on the Southern California All Stars,
and he was on the Northern California All Stars.
And my big claim to fame was that he only scored 40 on me.
Because in high school, you scored like 80. And my big claim to fame was that he only scored 40 on me
Because in high school you scored like 80
He was like 64 point guard who could like jump through the roof. I mean that in high school that that was just bizarre You know super
And then I got really into martial arts when I was in high school. I actually started with Muay Thai
really into martial arts when I was in high school, I actually started with Muay Thai,
study with Richard Bastillo and Dan Inosanto,
who is Bruce Lee's student at IMB Academy.
So I did that while I was in high school
and then got into Bhagwan and some of the Chinese
internal arts as I got older, mellowed out a little bit.
You definitely are, okay, so now I'm gonna ask this,
if you for sure are an athlete,
where do you see that athlete mentality
of yours transfer over into the work that you do now?
Yeah, I mean,
are you competitive with what you do
and what you put out there?
I mean, I'm super disciplined.
I mean, my wife jokes a lot with me.
Like, I'm really like when I, I'm like a dog with a bone.
You know, when I set my mind to something,
it's hard to get me off that track.
And I'm very disciplined and segmented with my time.
I schedule everything out.
I have no trouble sticking to a routine.
And I'm definitely performance oriented.
So I've studied a lot of, you know, productivity,
enhancement, time management, like I'm always trying to up my game, basically, and perform
at the highest level that I can. I don't feel competitive in the sense of like, oh, this
guy's got two million, you know, blog visits, and I want to get three million. I don't really approach it in that way. So I think it's more just
disciplined.
Do you think that stems from a coach, a father figure? I mean, did somebody implement
that in you early on?
I mean, my dad was a really high achiever and he was off in my coach.
He coached a lot of our kid,
before we got to a higher level basketball teams
and stuff like that and I always really appreciated
his work ethic and the integrity
with which he approached things.
But yeah, I think,
I mean, I think of my parents had a lot to do with it.
They really set high expectations for us
and we always had those for ourselves.
I have two brothers and they've been similar in there.
Can you see now as an adult
where some of those things have been a huge asset for you
and then where they've also potentially hindered you
as an adult?
Absolutely, in both cases. I mean, as I said, I think I've been able to
accomplish a lot because of my focus on performance and in all of the areas of my professional life where that's important. But in some ways, I mean, just going back a
little bit into my early 20s and what happened there, I was working in film and television
actually in business and just working, you know, a lot. A lot of hours I was driven and
my life basically fell apart.
Like I was young, I was in my early 20s, I had already bought a house, you know, I was
on the fast track.
But I was just pushing myself relentlessly.
And I got to the point where things just kind of fell apart.
And you know, looking back, it was a total blessing.
But at the time time it didn't
really feel like a blessing and but I knew intuitively that the path that I was on was not the best path
and that it was going to end in destruction. Where did you make that connection? Was it the
the major thing? So no so a bunch of things happened to me all at once, which were kind of like a, that I took as a sign.
So, I had bought a video camera,
where I was gonna start to make my own movies.
That was kind of one of my, my things.
And, and so that camera got stolen.
My computer with that had the,
all the videos I had made crash.
And then my hard drive that I had back up crash and lost all of that.
It's a sign.
My relationship, I had a girlfriend at the time, we broke up and kind of disintegrated.
I quit my job.
Like everything just kind of fell apart and I was like, wow, I have nothing.
I was like no attachments and I'm just gonna sell everything
I own and go travel around the world for a year.
So I did that.
I got rid of everything.
I ran it out my house and then just took off.
And I went to Thailand first and I did a 30 day meditation
retreat in the jungle above Chiang Mai,
which was like my way of like, what's going on?
What's going on?
It's a strange way that I can like just sit there and stare at the ground for like 30 days
and try to figure this out.
And so I was like,
Which had to have been a hard transition from a guy who's like, like you said, like a dog
and a bone.
It was the hardest thing I've ever done in my life.
I bet.
No question.
Like, there's nothing that even comes remotely close to that.
Wow.
So that first 30-day retreat.
And then I stayed in Thailand for another few months
and was continuing to study meditation and time massage,
which was also a total departure of what I'd been doing before.
And then I went to Indonesia and I was there for three months
and that's when I got sick the first time but I continued to Indonesia and I was there for three months and that's when I got sick
the first time but I continued to travel because I got better at first from the I took some antibiotics
that I had in my medical kit. And then from there I went to the Maldives which are these islands
off the coast of India. I went to South Africa, Madagascar, Mauritius, reunion island,
and then back to Australia and then back home.
And by the time I got back, I was a different person.
I bet.
You know, it was just everything that I had planned for my life before, and I think my
parents had planned for me was just completely obliterated.
And that began this 10 year journey that I talked about before, which was not just about
recovering my health.
It was also about figuring out what I was going to do with my life.
And how I was going to apply my internal resources in a way that served me better and served
other people and kind of like get off of this treadmill of this life that I feel like I
was expected to live in some way or I expected it myself.
And looking back on that, it almost seems like the only way that I could have gotten
off of that because of how much I said I'm like a dog with a bone was to be completely
kind of destroyed, you know, to where I built.
Yeah, and then re-bought.
That sounds like an awesome movie.
That's a better than point break.
Yeah.
As a wise, well-traveled man now, what do you seek?
I always say that your greatest strength
is also your greatest weakness.
What do you still have to like catch yourself?
Like you catch yourself going back to old habits
or things kind of resurfacing where you have to be,
ah, I know that behavior, I know that pattern.
Do you have to be, ah, I know that behavior, I know that pattern, you have those.
Yeah. For me, it's definitely a tendency to lose sight or just get to intense, you know, and work too much. I'm pretty good about maintaining work life balance, but I've come to realize that I'm like a sprinter more than a marathon runner.
So I can produce like really a lot in a short period of time, but then I need a lot of time to
just rest and integrate and recuperate. And my tendency over the past several years has been to sort of measure my own time spent
against other people.
You know, like, hey, there's a 40-hour work week, right?
That's just what everybody does.
So I should therefore be working, you know, 30 to 40 hours or 50 or 60 hours a week.
But what I've come to recognize is that that's not my rhythm. And that's not the way that
that I function best. And if I do that, I suffer. You know, my health. My health is now like it's like my
I'm the canary in the in the coal mine, you know, it's like is I start I can recognize them off track by
physical symptoms starting to talk about that's a little bit what do you
what do you start to notice when you because I you know I could so relate to what you're saying
right now and it's taken me years and 36 years old finally piecing this together now I have an
incredible and a lot of that's having an incredible partner I've been with for over six years
and she knows to just kind of let me do me and I know that I'm a little out of balance and out of
whack and going full speed for maybe a week or two.
But then she also knows like, okay, I'm going to set book a trip for us to get away.
Fones go off, computer gets shut down, we're by water up in the tree, somewhere like that
and helps me get reconnected and it's become extremely healthy for myself, for my relationship
with her and others.
What are some of the strategies or things that you do?
Yeah, I definitely do that.
I do regular digital detoxes.
You wanna call them that, like you said.
Surfing is a big thing for me.
So, like, go to Nicaragua,
just post up on the beach somewhere
and turn everything off and just surf all day.
At my daughter's six now and she's getting into surfing.
So, last time when we were down in Nicaragua, she and my wife were surfing, you know,
taking some lessons, I was getting them out there, which was amazing.
I have, I try to do that throughout the week too.
Sundays are like a Sabbath.
I don't check, you know, I turn off phones and computers.
Don't do that at all.
I'm pretty disciplined about that in general,
even during the evenings.
I still meditate regularly.
I've been doing that now for 25 years
and it feels like an absolute lifeline to me.
I think I would completely self-destruct if I didn't do that.
And, you know, 45 minutes is my target.
And most days I get there, but some, you know,
if I'm traveling or something, it's hard to do.
I'll just do what I can.
You know, it could be five minutes or 25 minutes.
But that's been a bedrock for me.
And my wife also is really a good powerful advocate for me.
And that way she can recognize the early signs often before I do.
Especially if I've got my head down and really focused on something.
Spending time with my daughter is huge for me.
I've made that a priority and we have every Friday afternoon.
I take the afternoon off and we have what I call adventures.
We call it ventures.
Oh, that's adorable.
She's six and so a couple of weekends ago we went out to Stinson Beach and just hung
out and went surfing.
Last weekend we went to a pottery studio and did some
paint in some pottery and she had fun with that and we'll go sometimes to
parks. We just do, we went to the Children's Creativity Museum in San
Francisco, which is a great place for kids. And I just spending time with
her is if I apply the rocking chair test,
you guys know what this is.
No.
So, when I, if I ever have any question about what, whether to commit to something or what
it's relative level of importance is, I do the rocking chair test where I imagine that
I'm 100 years old sitting in my rocking chair, looking back on my life.
And I think how will I look back on this question
at that time?
And if I think, for example, will I regret,
what will I regret more, not taking on this new work project
or spending the time with your daughter on this weekend or so?
Friday, giving up my Friday adventures with Sylvie.
There's never been anything yet that has trumped that.
Trumped that and led me to think that I would look back
from my rocking chair and not say that,
gee, I wish I wouldn't have spent so much time with my daughter.
You know, it was me the giving tree.
That was me, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, so, and being with her, it's like, you know, just being fully present, turning
off my phone, not responding anything, just being totally present
with her is the best thing that I can do for her. But it's also,
you know, just for me. Yeah, the irony too of all of this is doing
these things and understanding these things, you actually
perform better also.
And I like to say that because we do have a lot of entrepreneurs
that listen to our show and a lot of young kids.
You just want to grind it out and go crazy.
And you can do that, but also recognize that balance,
your body imbalance will perform,
your body and mind imbalance will perform
far better than when they're out.
So understanding that and tweaking those things, you're going to do better anyway.
It's like trading dime supporters.
I feel so passionate about that.
I'm glad you brought that up because during the last three years,
I've tripled the size of my clinic,
more than triple the size of my staff.
I'm running a training program for clinicians. We've trained hundreds of clinicians.
I have blog podcasts, I've written two books. No, I'm not slowing down. Like things are growing and building.
And yet, you probably have more rest days. I work fewer hours.
That's awesome. I work fewer hours over that period of time. So I really challenged that idea. Like I read an article in the New York Times
the other couple of weeks ago, maybe you guys saw it.
I just wanted to throw something against the wall
and I wrote an email to my,
to my people about this because it just drove me nuts.
It was about work culture in Silicon Valley
and about how you're looked at as like a loser
if you don't work, you know, 70 to 80 hour work weeks.
So the point where Soilent is making its way,
but we're like shit like that.
And there was a quote from an entrepreneur,
I won't say his name, but you know,
some people know him, where he said something like,
you know, yeah, I don't have any time for my kids.
I don't hardly ever see them,
but that's just the cost of being successful.
And I just absolutely think, you know,
that makes me so angry,
gets hard for me to even express it.
And what is this guy doing?
He's making software that helps people
visualize furniture in their home
So that's the important I wanted to send him the rocking chair test
You know, so imagine yourself in your rocking chair and you're gonna look back and be like wow that
That software that help people visualize that coffee table on their living room
That was a game changer. I just didn't, my kids hate me.
I don't know them at all, but I'm so glad I did that.
I also think it's just the false paradigm.
It is when people approach us to what's made of gold.
Well, it's like when people approach us with fitness,
you know, and they say, you know, I know, you know,
you guys talk about being healthy all the time,
but I just want to look really good.
I just want to look aesthetic.
And it's almost as if
health and aesthetics are separate when in fact,
they're both one and the same, and this is one of those
things where if you're in balance with yourself,
and that means sometimes you get a busher ass too,
because you can also be out of balance
in the other direction, but being in balance
both body and mind, you're gonna perform better
and be able to produce more.
Well Chris will appreciate what motivated us to do what we're doing here,
which was what we saw. There is a huge problem within the fitness community
with programming and all the information that we're giving out there, the beast mode,
the no days off and that mentality of like kill it, you know, you don't leave until you feel like
you're going to die in a workout. And that could not be further from the truth of what's really gonna give you long-term results. Sure, that type of that type of mentality might get you a
faster along in two weeks time, but when you look at it like a year or two years, ten years of your life, if you want overall health long-term longevity, that's not the approach at all. And so when we first came out with our programs,
people just thought, oh, this is too simple,
it's too basic, I don't understand.
There's only three days you're saying
I have to be in the gym, like, yeah, no shit,
you ain't got to be in there seven days a week.
It's crazy where the, it's very similar,
the message that, and two and a half years later now,
we're getting emails from people,
like, oh my God, my body's responding like crazy.
Yeah, no, it's, I mean, I don't know,
it's, I think there's some deep cultural roots
with the whole periodanical work ethic thing
and they're just hard on.
Yeah, there's nothing wrong with working,
it's the whole suffering.
Right.
They can equate to work.
Well, it's also not understanding the things
that you're talking about here, like periodicity.
And, and, you know, me also understanding different work styles. Like, for me, I've figured out that
I can accomplish a lot in a short period of time, you know, relative to maybe some other people,
not better or worse, just the different, you know, tortoise versus the hair type of thing.
But in order to maintain that level of productivity, I need more rest and integration.
I'm the same way. I used to think I went through periods of hypomania, but I mean, really,
it's just, I get super passionate about something. Very passionate, very inspired, and I'll put out
incredible amounts of content, a very short period of time, and ideas, and whatever. And then it's
like, I need time now to recharge and let that. So Chris, moving forward, what's...
You have a book that's about to come out.
Let's talk about that for a second.
What's your book going to be about?
So the book is called Unconventional Medicine.
And the premise of the book is chronic disease
is the biggest challenge we face.
Excuse me, but our current system is hopeless at addressing it. As we've talked
about before, it evolved during a time where acute problems were the biggest issue and
now we're trying to apply those same solutions to chronic disease, which just isn't working.
We have a system that's based on band aids, basically. If you use an analogy, you have a rock in your shoe
and it's causing your foot to hurt,
you go into the conventional system,
you're gonna get some ibuprofen
and a diagnosis of such a great analogy.
Of foot pain.
Actually, you'll have to have more scientific term for it.
It'll sound more official than just foot pain. But of course, it makes
a lot more sense to just take your shoe off and dump out the rock, right? And that's,
you know, I propose a solution in the book that is focused around this approach of functional
medicine getting to the root cause of the problem is one component, has three components. The second one, though, is the ancestral diet and lifestyle.
We have to recognize that environment is the primary driver of chronic disease.
This is not just me making this up.
There are studies that show that 85% of disease risk comes down to environmental and behavioral
factors.
So, genes, yes, they play some role, but it's really people making the wrong choices about
their diet and lifestyle on a daily basis that's driving this.
And then the third thing is what I call a collaborative practice model.
So we need doctors.
We need doctors who are specialists who can do a colonoscopy, who can do these specialized
procedures, who can do doctorate type of stuff.
Absolutely, we need that.
But what we need arguably even more now
is an army of what I call allied providers.
So these are health coaches, nutritionists, trainers,
all kinds of people who can work intensively
with folks on behavior and lifestyle changes.
Because, you know, to use, we talked about this before,
the average appointment time is 10 minutes
with a primary care doctor.
There's no way, if someone goes into the doctor
and they've got multiple chronic problems going on,
they're presenting with new symptoms,
there's no way the doctor is even going to be able
to figure that out, much less to spend time
with that person giving them the support
they need to make meaningful changes that are going to last for a whole lifetime.
They might give them like as they're going out the door, you know, oh, remember, you
need a healthy diet.
Patients like on their way out.
And you know, first of all, the doctor often doesn't even know what that is because they've
taken one nutrition class in college or in medical school, if that.
And second of all, if the patient just hears it as they're going out the door to go up
to the front counter, they're not going to take that seriously.
If 10 of the 10 minutes was spent talking about medication and then the last 10 seconds
are spent on diet and lifestyle change, they're not going to make a difference.
Plus it's behavioral change.
I mean, I work with clients for, and sometimes it takes a year before.
Absolutely.
Things start to happen.
The behavior change is hard.
Okay, I mean, if it was easy, we wouldn't have the problems that we have.
And yet, I wasn't trained in behavior change as a practitioner.
I don't know.
No doctors are trained in it.
And but yet, there's tons evidence that that supports all of these principles
of behavior change to make it successful. It's out there. We know how to apply it, but
we just need to train people who can do that with folks like yourself and a whole bunch
of other people who can be in that capacity and work intensively with people to make these
changes. Because that's going gonna have a far bigger impact
in terms of preventing and reversing chronic disease
than just more research to find new drugs.
That's awesome, it's funny because I trained a lot
of doctors and I would tell them this,
like, oh, we gotta look at new trends and they say,
yeah, of course, but I have patients who wouldn't even
take the fucking pills.
They don't want to answer right now.
They would take the pills I give them,
like they'll forget to take the medications
and you want me to tell them to fix their diet.
Yeah, it's a systemic problem.
It's not the doctor's fault.
And more, I mean, it's,
it's their victims of the system more than anybody else.
Well, they're taught that way.
They're educated that way, right?
They're taught that way.
They're, if they're practicing within an HMO type of framework,
they're often rewarded for seeing more patients
and spending less time with patients.
You know, that's efficiency and medical speak.
And many doctors know this and they want to do something about it, but they don't know
how within the current framework and system.
So there are actually some really interesting things happen.
This goes back to your question about, you know, are you seeing positive changes or are
we going in the wrong direction?
There's a group called Iora Health in the Rocky Mountain area, it's a primary care group.
And they basically approached some HMO, some insurance companies and said, give us your
patients with diabetes or pre-dibedies.
We have this new approach that's really effective.
And we're going to, you know, reverse, we'll take your type 2
diabetics back to pre-dibedies or we'll take your pre-diabetic
back to normal blood sugar.
And if we achieve our goals, you pay us so much.
If we don't achieve our goals, you don't pay us at all.
Or you pay us less.
This is called capitated payments.
It's actually aligning incentives with
performance, which of course like happens in gyms and offices
everywhere else other than healthcare, right? Where you're
rewarded for not performing, that's right. That's a
different topic. But and then if they exceed their goals, they
get more money. So what these, what they do, their approach, which is really amazing and smart.
They just hire a huge number of health coaches, all from the communities in which the people
that they're serving.
They don't hire them based on expertise and nutrition.
This is a really interesting part.
They hire them based on their ability to form a connection.
Communication.
Right. If you had asked me, I would have said,
as coaches, as people who manage trainers,
you'll know.
That's the most important thing.
Yeah, number one.
So they don't care anything about their background
and nutrition.
They're like, we can teach them not to do anything.
We can teach them not in like two weekends, you know?
So what they do is they have like a speed dating
hiring process where they sit them down
and they have conversation with them and they have like undercover
observers in the room apparently they're like watching how they interact with each other and
You know in a way so they make sure they're hiring people who can relate because that's what it comes down to the coaching relationship is about trust and
The ability to to empathize and connect with your client.
And so then they train them, give them the nutritional information they need, and then
these people work really intensively with the clients.
They go to their house, they do pantry clean outs, they go shopping with them.
They basically hold their hand through every step of the process.
They still see the doctor occasionally, they get the blood tests and if they need medication,
they get medication.
But this has dramatic impact.
They're taking people, as I said,
back from type two diabetes,
not only back to pre-diabetes,
but sometimes all the way back.
And they're just killing it.
And I think those kinds of models
are gonna be what we need more of.
How cost-efficient is it?
I mean, do you get it?
Very efficient.
Yeah.
The cost of treating a patient with type 2 diabetes
is $14,000 a year.
So imagine, and now, per patient.
So now people are getting diagnosed earlier and earlier.
Kids now are getting diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
So imagine someone who's diagnosed at even 30.
And because of our modern technology,
we can keep people alive for a really long time,
even if they're living a low quality of life.
So imagine that person spends 50, lives another 50 years
until age 80.
They're spending, I mean, that's well over half million dollars,
right, to treat this one single patient.
Right, man.
So you wanna talk about cost effectiveness.
You could spend $5,000 on coaching
and functional medicine testing
and still have some left over.
And if you prevent diabetes in that patient from progressing,
you've just saved the healthcare system.
$9 million.
$9 million for that one patient.
Wow.
That's cool.
That's what I talk about in the book,
because one of the common criticisms is like,
oh, this is just functional medicine is expensive.
The diet and lifestyle, it's all expensive.
And that's only because everything is subsidized
in the insurance care.
If you go to the doctor and they give you,
this is what the conversation really should look like.
You'd be like, okay, you've got high cholesterol, so you've got two options. I can give
you, you know, I can make diet and lifestyle recommendations, but you're on your own when
it comes to implementing that. We have no support for you. You're going to pay all those
costs out of pocket and good luck. Or I can give you this drug. And good news is that's totally subsidized by the healthcare.
You'll pay your $10 or co-pay,
and your numbers will come down.
And the idea in that conversation is that those changes
are equivalent.
You know, they might lead to the same number on the paper
in terms of the cholesterol level,
but they're not equivalent.
Not at all.
And they're not equal.
If the patient was paying true cost of the cholesterol level, but they're not equivalent. Not at all. And they're not equal. If the patient was paying true cost of the drug,
and those costs were actually made clear,
it would be so much cheaper to do the diet and lifestyle
intervention, hire a coach to help them,
and even do some additional testing up front
to see what other mechanisms might be contributing
to the high cholesterol and address those,
and then save decades of subsidizing that person's medication.
It's just so ridiculous to me that we look
at our healthcare system and we're like,
oh, we gotta fix our healthcare system.
It's the insurance programs or it's we need a single pair.
Because it's so expensive and it's like nobody's talking
about the elephant in the room, which is we're getting sicker
and this shit's gonna keep getting more expensive.
And you can package it however you want,
some maybe a little better than others,
but at some point, it's gonna fucking bankrupt us.
We have to have our health.
That's exactly the point I make in the book.
I mean, I could just, you tick the words right out of my mouth.
It's like the debate on ACA versus ACHA
that we just went through.
Yeah, it matters.
It's important, it affects people in real ways.
So I'm not saying that that's not important,
but I am saying that the problems that we have
go much deeper than that.
And there is no scenario that anyone can come,
this is why it's so hard.
There's no scenario in which we can use insurance
to pay for the growing burden of chronic disease.
As chronic disease increases, it will bankrupt us.
I don't care if you have the Obamacare plan or the Trump plan or any other plan.
There's no scenario in which we can be spending as much as we're spending, you know, to cover
each or we're spending $3.2 trillion a year.
That comes down to 10,000 dollars for every man,
woman, and child in the US.
And there's no scenario in which we will be able to do that
as the rates of chronic disease continue to increase.
So just think about diabetes again, $14,000 a year.
Just think of the impact of the average age of diagnosis
going from 40 to 30.
At 10 years.
That's it.
That's it.
Game over.
Right.
For the whole healthcare system, if you do the math on that, you will quickly see how that
takes the 3 trillion to 10 trillion more.
And that's it.
Bankrupt.
Game over.
So, it's really clear, if you start thinking about this in a systematic way, it's absolutely
clear that the problem is chronic disease.
We have to figure out how to prevent
and reverse chronic disease.
Otherwise, our whole society is gonna fall apart.
It's not even just about healthcare.
It's about the effects of how to survive.
Yeah, our society survive.
I mean, how about having a government that functions
or isn't completely bankrupt?
Oh my God.
So this is the motivation for this book for me.
Like I think in the whole healthcare debate,
it was so frustrating not to see that mentioned,
even once in popular media.
It's not in the conversation, not at all.
Well, I appreciate you writing this book.
I know people can pre-order it right now.
Yeah, I'm not sure when this is happening,
but October 16th is pre-order.
It's unconventionalmedicinbook.com.
And then it comes out on November 7th,
and that will be on Amazon.
Beautiful.
We'll definitely have a link in the show notes
and everything to drive everyone over there for sure.
We, I really appreciate you coming on our show, Chris.
Your information online is a lot of what you wrote, a lot of
stuff that I found that you wrote in your videos, or the things that kind of pointed me in the
direction that I am today. So I want to thank you again for coming down. It's great to finally
meet you. I'm pleasure, guys. Thanks very much. I talk with you and keep up with great work. I
really believe that people like, you know, the work that you're doing, as I said, is arguably
the most important work we need to do because you're on the front lines working with people
in an intensive way to get their diet and lifestyle in order. And that's going to have a bigger impact
on anything else. Excellent. Thank you very much. Check it out. Go to YouTube, subscribe to mind
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