Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 875: Dr. Stephen Cabral
Episode Date: October 8, 2018In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Dr. Stephen Cabral, author of The Rain Barrel Effect and host of The Cabral Concept podcast. Who has been his favorite guest to interview? Challenged him...? (6:11) Why artificial sweeteners are some of the most toxic things you can put in your body. (8:25) The #1 reason for having low testosterone. (14:34) The major issues with CrossFit adopting the Paleo/Keto Diet. (16:31) Is it a bad idea to make things so palatable? (19:25) How a “nuclear bomb” was created in his immune system by trying to cure himself using Western Medicine practices. (23:30) What is Ayurvedic Medicine, the approach and how it different from other forms of medicine? (27:50) How he aims to communicate his knowledge to others. (30:06) Why the modern lifestyle is keeping us in chronic stress. (34:05) The circular loop that is keeping us from getting to our goal weight. (37:08) The scenarios of IF you SHOULD EAT or NOT EAT post workout. (38:51) How can we get into the parasympathetic nervous system? (41:30) The Western mentality of taking everything and making it intense. (43:30) Does he see benefits of using tools to calm the parasympathetic nervous system? (45:30) His theory on EMF’s (electromagnetic fields) and their impact on the human body. (46:56) The differences between a naturopathic vs. medical doctor. (50:11) Is TOO much saturated fat good or bad?? (53:50) The FACTS and SCIENCE behind fasting. (57:05) Why cold showers/plunges may not be beneficial to everyone. (1:07:57) Are people changing their behaviors to seek out those cortisol spikes? (1:09:09) WHY you have psoriasis and HOW to treat it. (1:13:16) The “Big 5” lab tests you SHOULD ask for when visiting your doctor. (1:16:14) The Mounting Evidence against Eating Meat: Is higher protein the right move? (1:22:28) Why he believes EVERYONE has a set point. (1:25:37) His approach to why we have food allergies/sensitivities. (1:28:00) The importance of a vaginal birth and breastfeeding to a healthy gut. (1:33:08) The stigma behind CBD and how he uses it in his practice. (1:40:50) The future of Western Medicine and is it trending in the right direction. (1:49:05) How would he treat a woman who is estrogen dominant? (1:53:53) What does he do NOW to combat potential future disease? (1:59:17) His take on creatine as the end all be all supplement. (2:03:40) Ways to prevent prostate cancer. (2:05:20) The foundational supplements you SHOULD be consuming. (2:07:53) The RIGHT way to eliminate heavy metals from your body. (2:11:21) Featured Guest: Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram Website Podcast Equilibrium Nutrition The Rain Barrel Effect: How a 6,000 Year Old Answer Holds the Secret to Finally Getting Well, Losing Weight & Feeling Alive Again! – Book by Stephen Cabral People Mentioned: Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram Jay Ferruggia (@jayferruggia) Instagram Ben Pakulski ® | Official (@bpakfitness) Instagram Dr. Joseph Mercola (@drmercola) Instagram Links/Products Mentioned: Effects of the Artificial Sweetener Neotame on the Gut Microbiome and Fecal Metabolites in Mice Ayurvedic Medicine: In Depth Neuro-Endocrine Networks Controlling Immune System in Health and Disease MAPS Prime Joovv Brain.fm Cabral Concept 767 - TWT: What to Ask for (and Why) When Running Your Annual Blood Work Everly Well **Code “MINDPUMP” for 15% off any test** Sunlighten Saunas **Mention “Mind Pump” for FREE SHIPPING** Cabral Concept 802 - TWT: The Mounting Evidence Against Eating Meat? Feeding Babies Foods With Peanuts Appears To Prevent Allergies FDA and CDC Bias Against Raw Milk Ned **15% off first purchase** What are bioidentical hormones? Cabral Concept 325 - TWT: Heavy Metal Toxicity & The Foods That Detox Them IAOMT: The International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology 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 Strong, an expertly programmed and phased strongman inspired training program designed in collaboration with World’s Strongest Man competitor Robert Oberst to trigger new muscle building adaptations and get you STRONG. Get it at www.mapsstrong.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 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. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. 25% Off your first purchase Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com/mindpump Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mite, ob-mite, up with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
Listen, listen, listen, listen.
This was actually a good time right here, man.
I didn't know very much about Dr. Cabral until he got here.
I mean, I looked up some of his stuff
and just follow him on Instagram and...
I got on the phone with him before as what happened.
It could start stuff.
This was really you who introduced him to us.
Yeah, I got on the phone with him
because I knew of him, but I didn't know too much.
Got on the phone and he has a background
in naturopathic medicine and a revedic medicine,
which sounds like they're they're opposing but they're
not and he just has an incredible I like his approach I like his approach to
total health and he's extremely intelligent I mean in this episode you're
about to hear he goes off for an hour like you probably get a new
tropic or something yeah I mean stay yeah in line with this episode. He breaks a lot of things down,
and we ask him a lot of questions,
and he keeps breaking them down.
Very, very, very smart and form guy.
All you nerds who like listening to Minecraft,
you're gonna love this.
This is a nerd-tastic episode.
You're gonna love this episode.
He also has a podcast.
It's actually quite popular.
He was telling us about how big his reach is.
It's a pretty popular podcast.
It's called the Cabral Concept.
So if you're really into health and the technical side
and the scientific side,
you're probably gonna wanna check that out.
His website is stevencabral.com
that's STEPHENCABRAL.com
and then he has a book called The Rain Barrel Effect.
I think you can find that at equilibriumnutrition.com,
is that correct Doug?
That is correct.
And then in this episode, we talked a lot about
all these different ways you could optimize your health
besides the staple most important things,
like nutrition, exercise.
It was really interesting to hear him talk
about some of the tools that you would use to do that because you know
And typically when you get these you know, I don't know what I want to categorize him at
But like your your nature pathic type of doctors or
Aravatic type medicine
Yeah, you said me. Thank you. Just that's the direction. I was headed with it
They are like anti any tools
But he actually was really open minded to all that.
And I think he dropped some really good information in regards to it.
Yeah, he's a very Western approach to it. I feel and what was great about it is,
we even got into a few like specifics like Adam brought up his psoriasis and he talked a little
bit more about like reflex. So it's like you got a free doctor visit. Yeah, it was really cool.
Yeah, we got into cellulite too.
Cellulite?
Yeah, he talks about the hormonal causes of cellulite actually
in this episode, so that's going to be really good.
But yeah, we talked about some of these
because he combines Western and Eastern philosophies
because there's value in both.
And we fully agree with that.
That's something we've been talking about for a while.
So we talked about cannabinoids,
like the cannabinoids found in hemp extracts.
Of course, we're sponsored by Ned, one of the best companies for that type of product.
You can go to helloned.com, forward slash mine pump and get 15% off your first purchase.
Then we talked about testing, lab testing, or testing at home, your hormones and food intolerance
testing. All of those are available at Everly
Well.
So if you go to EverlyWell.com, use the code MindPump, you'll get 15% off.
He also blew me away with his, with quoting studies on sauna use and it's dramatic reduction.
That wasn't familiar with just how big of an impact it had on reducing all cause mortality.
Crazy statistics.
One of our favorite sauna companies is SunLighten.
If you go to sunlighten.com and you mention MindPump, you'll get free shipping that we talked
about, Red Light Therapy.
Of course, Juve, that's the company that we've been working with for a long time, Adam
used it for his psoriasis and to help him with his testosterone.
If you go to Juve.com, j-o-o-v-v-e.com, forward slash mind pump, you will get a free Maps Prime
program with the purchase of $500 or more and free shipping.
And then finally, we talked about using tools like brain.fm to help get your body into a more parasympathetic state.
That's the state that's recovery. It's also the rebuilding state. So for those of you that want to boot your tablet.
Powerful tool for that. Yeah, absolutely. He loved it. He talks about using it all time. So you can go to brain.fm
forward slash mind pump. And finally, uh, October, it means a couple couple different things. One of them is Halloween, the other one is.
Which is.
The other one is the biggest promotion we've run all year.
This is the one we've gotten all the DMs about all the time.
We have this huge debate, you know,
what we're gonna do is sail on map,
systemic at 10% off and no, 20% off.
That's a take move.
30% off, no. 40% off. That's a take move. 30% off, no.
40% off, Adam says no.
That's you, no.
We're cutting the price in half.
Half you say.
In half.
Maps aesthetic is flying off the shelves.
We only have three left if you go to,
it's mad.
I don't know, that could be backfire.
I know, right?
So here's it, eight days ago. Oh, yeah, someone definitely got it.
No, it's digital, there's no limit.
If you go to mapsblack.com, enter the code black50,
BLA CK50, the number 50, at checkout,
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which is a full year of exercise programming you can go to maps fitness products dot com and without any further ado
I do I don't even know what that really means. That's not what I said. You're not even French, dude. I did, you.
Here we are interviewing Dr. Stephen Cabral.
Have you done a favorite interview yet?
Like, who's been your favorite that's interviewed you?
You know what, I've really connected with Jay Faroujia.
I love Jay.
He's an amazing guy.
But the reason I like Jay is just because he's no nonsense.
Like, he will never agree with you
or disagree with you if that's his belief.
He's just like, I've been through it,
I've seen it all and he's very open to new concepts as well.
So he gives kind of like new,
I mean, I've been doing this forever,
but like he's one of the original guys too, you know?
Like he was there in the beginning.
So I really enjoyed him and who would be one other person?
While I did the skinny confidential show
and their audience, we did advanced functional medicine
lab testing, went through the roof.
Like this, bananas.
Excellent.
I think the girls, right, that do that one?
Skinny confidential.
It's Lauren and Michael, a husband and wife.
Oh, husband and wife.
And they just have on like anybody,
like all sorts of different influencers or doctors or whoever it might be and for whatever
Reason it just kind of like clicked and it was just huge. Have you had any have you had anybody that's really tries to put you in the show and challenge this shit out of you and
Well, I was just did Ben Pukulski show
Okay, good friend of ours. Yeah, yeah, very good friend of ours. This is an amazing guy
And so we've been just chatting back and forth for a couple of months.
And again, like everything I do is I always say,
like, I have no dog in the race.
Like I don't care who's right.
And so like that throws people off to like, what do you mean?
And like, well, I'm like, I can give you points on veganism.
I can give you points on why a carnivore diet
might work in the short term, but not the long term.
I was like, I honestly don't care.
And so Ben goes after that.
He's like, what are you talking about a low protein diet? What are you talking about this? And I'm just like,
here it is. And just say, I see the points of why some people do it, and why I don't, other people
don't. But I've never had anyone just come after me because I'm not that kind of guy in the first
place. Right. I don't, you know, for whether it's keto based or whatever, I'm like, get it. I
understand why you're doing it. But there's a huge difference between short term
amazing results and a lifetime of data
and a lifetime of doing it.
You know, like what happens when you put yourself
in more of a catabolic state that creates
a lot of a topogy in the body.
But you do that for 30 or 40 years.
Like, do you get osteoporotic?
Do you get, you know, myelin,
sheath based, you know, delineation?
So when you say a point like that,
what do you think about when you hear all the stuff
about artificial sweeteners right now?
Yeah, so I'm, I'm not, I mean,
artificial sweeteners are one of the most toxic things
that you put in your body for sure.
Mm-hmm.
And that's what's playing that.
Yeah, please explain.
So when we, when we look at, like,
let's just take something, for example, as sucralos.
So Splendil, now this is something I just said,
I keep myself open.
I was back personal training in the late 90s and early 2000s.
And sucralose Splendidl kinda just came out
and I was like this is great, it's zero calorie
and we're looking at like kind of blood sugar spikes,
those types of things, I'm like this looks good.
And then I get into functional medicine
and I get into a naturopathid and I'm like,
oh, I'm like they replace one I'm like, they replace one molecule.
Like, oh, it's no big deal, it's just one molecule.
Well, it's one molecule that they replace with chlorine.
And so once we look at that, we're like, oh, yeah,
it doesn't, it does affect our blood sugar
because you taste the sweetness,
which means your body is looking then for the minerals
that should come along with the sweet
and it doesn't get it, so that actually triggers
more appetite in the body or at least no suppression
of hunger.
But worse than that, it actually starts to disturb the microbiome.
So when you look at that and you look at like, okay, well, what are the repercussions of
not doing Splenda One time, but doing it every day, a couple times a day, for a decade.
What does that do?
Does it actually imbalance cause some type of seaboss, small intest intestine bacterial overgrowth, and that's what I see.
So I look at all of these things as part of the rainbow,
like literally, it's like, okay,
if you just do Splenda, probably no big deal.
But what if you do Splenda,
and you have Mercury, Malgum's in your mouth,
and you're exposed to EMFs all day,
it's like you're just, you know, it talks in mess.
So what I try to do is I say, listen,
I live in the real world as well,
what I need you to do is I say, listen, I live in the real world as well. What I need you to do is get yourself healthy first and then focus on kind of like you're
non-negotiables and then try to remove as much of the other stuff as you can.
Yeah, there was a study that just came out from European and Israeli scientists studied
six of the artificial sweetener, so sucalose, aspartane, saccharin and a couple others.
And they found that all of them have a negative effect
on the microbiome.
And, you know, and the argument I hear from people,
you know, is, well, we don't know what that,
okay, fine, it affects the microbiome,
but we don't know if it's negative or positive.
Like, how do you argue with that?
Well, for sure, they're synthetic.
And whenever we're talking about synthetics,
the body wasn't necessarily made to process those things.
So now you're asking the liver then to do that much more work.
So again, I look at it as part of the overall process.
We know that aspartame in certain people can absolutely cause or at least exacerbate
neurological-based conditions, like without a doubt.
I mean, it can be a neuro-based toxin.
So then you say, well, for who?
That's always the argument.
We just say, well, we don't always know.
But the truth is like, maybe it is you,
but why play Russian Roulette in the first place?
When you could just do a teaspoon of raw honey
or teaspoon of organic maple syrup
that contains five grams of sugar,
that literally will not spike blood glucose levels.
They show, for most people, eight grams or less
is not gonna have the massive glucose effect,
which is why I'm type two diabetes. You can typically do a little sugar and, is not gonna have the massive glucose effect, which is why I type two diabetes.
You can typically do a little sugar,
and it's not gonna have any effect.
So why wouldn't we do something a little bit more natural,
or if we do something such as stevia?
Just did a podcast on this, where stevia,
if we look at green leaf stevia,
most people don't use green leaf stevia,
because it's only 10 to 15 times sweeter than sugar,
but it has a very bitter aftertaste.
So we actually look at the extracts.
It's extracted to two different steveo sides,
and I believe it's like rubbato sides
or something like that.
And when you look at those extracts,
those are still okay as long as they're organic.
And the reason is that if they're not organic,
they use chemical solvents.
So sometimes it's not the thing,
it's the chemical solvent that they're putting on the thing
that actually creates the toxicity. So we look at that, we also look at dosage. You know, it's for the thing, it's the chemical solvent that they're putting on the thing that actually creates the toxicity.
So we look at that, we also look at dosage.
For right now, it's somewhere between,
I think it was eight teaspoons per day.
And just again, if you're using a little bit of stevia,
no big deal.
But if you're using eight teaspoons of stevia,
I mean, you have to ask yourself why.
What's the sugar addiction?
Because it is a sweetness addiction.
So now we need to wean people off of it.
So I look at it as, here's what you are in the short term.
Here's what we need to get.
Nobody needs to be using all these artificial sweetness
in the first place.
We need to eat sweet foods that are naturally sweet,
such as your berries and your low glycemic fruits
and your kiwi, and then you should enjoy that.
Like you get used to natural taste.
Yeah, and back to stevia, there's some evidence to suggest there may be
some contraceptive effects in high doses and animals and stuff.
Is there anything to worry about with those?
Yeah, that's interesting.
It actually showed that it can potentially raise progesterone.
Okay.
So, I found that interesting, and the main reason is because we test thousands of people,
we've literally done over a quarter million client appointments.
And when we look at that, we say,
most people are actually deficient to progesterone.
And we can talk about that.
Is this actually being used for the podcast?
Absolutely.
All right.
You're right.
I love that we just go right into it.
That's great.
That's how I am.
I'm like, let's just start jadding.
So when we look at that, we're looking at,
well, why are most people deficient in progesterone?
That's because progesterone is down the catabolic pathway,
meaning that progesterone's the precursor to cortisol.
So when I look at the precursor to cortisol,
and I say, okay, well, I can understand that
most people are stressed,
or then at least the sympathetic nervous system
for the majority of the day.
So progesterone's going to be lower.
So then I say, okay, based on that,
it's taking in some stevia,
and if it were to elevate progesterone,
would that be a bad thing?
The question is always, well, is it in within ratio
with estrogen? And so that's how I look at it.? The question is always, well, is it in within ratio with estrogen?
And so that's how I look at it.
The other part is that I haven't seen it actually work,
or anyone say that it would be as a contraceptive.
A few things I have seen is that it can cause kidney-based
issues, cause nausea, vomiting, at high dosages.
The problem is the dosages are quite high,
and I would hope that it's just like people
are just trying to be responsible with any supplement because it is a supplement
Right, we're taking it we're processing it because you're not eating stevia leaf which most people would never do
You can't ground it down to the powder, but just most people don't enjoy that so you said most people are a little bit low and and
Progesterone of obviously typically women right. What are the symptoms of the symptoms of a ratio of estrogen
to progesterone where they're estrogen dominant,
if you will?
What do they need to look for?
And why is that so common?
Why is that more common than to say too much progesterone?
Yeah, absolutely.
So what we look at is, so basically,
your autonomic nervous system has two branches.
And it has the parasympathetic and the sympathetic nervous
system.
It's the single most important thing
that no one is talking about.
I know that you guys talk about it chat about sympathetic nervous system. You guys did a great podcast
on lower test osterone. The number one reason that we work with CrossFit athletes, work
with the limpians, I work with right down the street from Harvard University, so we work
with guys on scholarships, you know, trying to keep their scholarship. And we see low test
osterone all the time. And so when we look at it, we just say, the number one reason for
lower test osterone, in my opinion, is in the lack of vitamin C,
it is in the lack of zinc,
it's not the lack of glutamine and B vitamins,
it's the excessive dominance of the sympathetic nervous system
because of the stress in the Western lifestyle.
So what we do is we shut off,
we try to slow that sympathetic nervous system
because that sympathetic nervous system dominance
will bring more hormone towards cortisol.
If you look at it and you have a big bucket of hormone
for your day, you get to put that wherever you want.
But if your body's under more stress,
then you're going to be able to turn on more cortisol.
So how it essentially works is that your brain
and through the peripheral nervous system,
it looks at your entire environment.
If it sees you in a stressful space,
getting the kids ready in the mornings,
and rush hour traffic, a really hard workout, I'd love to talk with you guys about that. Like low carb diets, don't actually
keep your blood sugar low if you're doing a lot of other things in life.
It's a liver pump.
It's a glucose or whatever without a doubt.
And, well, and it does that though, because you're in a fight or flight based situation,
your hypothalamus is telling you're pituitary gland. All right. It's time to secrete something
called adrenal corticotropin releasing hormone. That tells you adrenal medulla, let's go,
let's produce norepinephrine.
What happens?
Heart rate gets going, blood pressure gets pumped up,
you start sweating, and then a positive feedback,
loop tells your brain, we're in fight or flight.
Like there's a survival-based situation.
So based off of that, what do you think about like
CrossFit adopting like the paleo diet?
Is that not ideal then?
It's gotta be the worst combo then.
Well, the problem is the lower carb, right?
So like, we do lower carb in my practice
to help people lose weight,
but we only do it for three weeks.
And then what we see is it works great
for three to four weeks,
and then there seems to be a downward trend.
One of the reasons is this,
if you put, it works great in the beginning
because you're leveling out blood sugar,
you're then reducing insulin,
you're balancing back out hormones and inflammation. But what people don't realize is you could do a really hard crossfit workout
and again, we use a glucometer all the time in my practice. We just teach people that it's $20. You can bite anywhere.
There are better brands than others. But what you do is go into a crossfit workout fasted.
And then your blood sugar, you know, should be between 75 and 95 or so, test yourself after a CrossFit workout. I've seen people at 300.
Yeah.
That is pure, that's like a glucose tolerance test, like just drinking straight sugar.
You know, I learned that lesson about 10 years ago, I had a client,
good friend of mine who developed type 2 diabetes, went on a very low carbohydrate diet,
and we would do, when we do heavy leg workouts, he'd call me afterwards and be like,
dude, he goes, my blood sugar through the roof,
and I couldn't figure it out because I was like,
we had no carbs, it's guys eating low carbs.
We just did a workout which should deplete glycogen.
How is this making any sense?
So I did my own research and I realized,
oh shit, it was too hard and his liver was just pumping out
because your liver stores a certain amount
is just pumping out all the sugar
and his blood sugar was through the roof. So we had to reduce the intensity of his workouts.
What are the potential long-term effects of that? If you're constantly doing that,
if you're somebody who loves CrossFit and you're adopting this ketogenic lifestyle or the paleo
lifestyle, what are some of the adverse effects that can happen from that?
They simply don't go hand in hand. That's the problem. And so when we look at it, so
going back to that adrenal medulla produces the norepinephrine
on the adrenaline, well that gets things going, but then your brain tells the particular gland
again to tell your adrenal cortex to produce cortisol or glucocorticoids.
Once that happens, its job as that hormone is to actually tell the liver just like you
were saying to actually make sugar, right?
So it takes stored sugar from your liver and it brings it into your bloodstream and your liver stores for the average person between
a hundred between 80 and 120 grams depending on the size of the liver. That's a lot of sugar to be able to pump back into there.
And then if you're keto based though, if you're low-carb based, you'll say no, no, I've already depleted my liver glycogen.
I would say okay, but guess what? This is even worse. This is much worse, because the next place to go is your muscle tissue
and it stores over 400 grams.
So you have plenty, now that's survival based situation only,
but now you're doing these really hard workouts
and your gains are actually getting less
because you're breaking down muscle tissue
because your tissue now contains glucose plus amino acids
which is exactly what the body wants in fight or flight.
Wow, and that's not a good combination.
Next, a horrible recourse.
Yeah, that's a terrible combination.
You know, we were talking about sweeteners like Stivia
and the artificial ones.
And I've had this conversation a couple times
with people where we are always seeking
to increase the palatability of food.
And this is something we've done since the beginning of time.
We've cooked food and then ever since we figured out
we could add things to it and make recipes
to increase its palatability.
And sometimes I think, I know we're always trying
to make healthy food taste better to make it easier to eat,
but do you think maybe it's a bad idea
to always make things so damn palatable?
Without a doubt.
Yeah, I mean, it's a great point.
And I didn't know this honestly.
I mean, these are all things that I just try to keep
myself open to because I was not open to anything.
Like, absolutely without a a doubt any of it.
And so I'm doing one of my internships
and I'm in, not Sri Lanka, I was in India,
and I'm at an aerivatic hospital clinic,
and I see people eating with their hands,
and then I see them combining certain foods.
I'm like, why are you, I'm like, you have a fork,
like you can use a fork, that's okay.
But when you begin to realize that it's all
about the peripheral nervous system and the input,
you guys know obviously it's all about
proprioception, right?
It's like how, how's your body working in space?
If your hand touches a certain food,
it's already sending a census to the mind
to be able to tell your body which enzymes to produce,
how to actually properly digest that food.
Well, it's the same with certain tastes as well.
So in Ayurveda, we have the bitter taste,
we have the sour taste, and so the bitter taste actually helps you
to better digest and break down foods.
So that's one of the interesting things, like coffee,
we had sweetener to it, but yet it's a meant to be bitter
and astringent,
which makes it a great digestive aid.
But you take all that away when you make it sweet.
And you actually then,
coffee with sweetener is the best way
to actually put on body fat.
Cause now you're spiking what?
A adrenaline, cortisol,
and then you're adding sugar to your bloodstream.
It's great combination.
Great combination.
And then add cream to that.
Thanks Starbucks.
So now add all your fat to that, right?
Right. And then what are you doing? Well, you have high blood sugar, and now you have lipids in your bloodstream, and you're gonna to that. Thanks Starbucks. So now add all your fat to that, right? Right.
And then what are you doing?
Well, you have high blood sugar,
and now you have lipids in your bloodstream,
and you're gonna store that as fat.
It's really bad combination.
Yeah, I would even say that,
even adding the artificial sweeteners
or the calorie-free sweeteners like stevia
to something like that,
because here's a deal,
I think a lot of people don't realize that
your body reacts to tastes as well.
It's also a signal,
and it tells your body,
you know, certain things to do.
And if that, even if the calories aren't present
or whatever, it can change certain reactions in the body.
Not to mention, you know, if it affects your gut microbiome,
which we now can see and it may be correct,
if I'm wrong, the microbiome is also responsible
for our ability to gain body fat or to lose body fat
or at least plays a role.
It does play a role, and that's the bacteriodes
and the firmicides.
So you need a balance between those two in the gut
in order to burn body fats.
And so when there aren't bacteriodes enough of that ratio,
you're not gonna be able to burn body fat
as well as the next person.
Now, again, we're looking at somewhat in isolation,
obviously there's a lot to it, but it does play a role. It also plays a role in leptin and gorilla. So that
matters, you know, that matters too. And I agree. So what we'll do is if someone's using
like, they take that white shaker bottle, who even knows what's in that sugar right there,
and you're just holding it there for 10 seconds, you know, and you're letting that drain
in your coffee. All right. Well, what I would rather have someone do is then use some
stevia instead.
And then after that, I would like them to go less of a dose of stevia every week or two
weeks and then eventually if they're drinking coffee, drinking black or drinking it with a
little bit of their favorite nut milk.
I want to go back. You mentioned our vetic medicine and I'm not very familiar with it. I
was just wondering if you could kind of explain that to our audience like, you know, further
as far as like where it came from, the methods, all that kind of.
Yeah, because you're Western trained in naturopathic medicine,
and you're also trained in aeravetic medicine.
Like, I mean, explain the difference between the two approaches.
Yeah, and they are, they're more similar than people think.
And so just like a really short story is, I got extremely sick when I was 17 years old.
And I'm live right outside of boss mass.
Choose that some of the best hospitals in the world.
I mean, we've got boss university, Harvard, MIT, TOS.
I mean, there's no slouches, right?
So I went to the best specialist in the world and they had no idea what was wrong with me.
Like literally no idea because my blood work looked okay.
And so after that, I was told, well,
you know, we know something's wrong with you,
but it's either all in your head
or you can have to get worse until we can help you.
Eventually I got worse.
And so I ended up with Addison's disease,
my logic and cephalmyelitis,
pots, type two diabetes, and rheumatoid arthritis.
Holy cow, shit.
It sounds like a massive autoimmune response.
Exactly right.
So my immune system was shutting down.
And I was getting worse and worse literally by the month.
I would get sinus infections in pneumonia.
I couldn't keep up.
Like my immune, I was just my body was dying.
It was literally dying.
And that's what they told me.
And obviously it was a 17 year old kid.
I'm a mess, right?
And then I'm depressed.
I'm anxious.
I can't sleep.
I have insomnia all night.
Only getting worse.
So what happened was, of course, I went,
then went on a cocktail of pills
in pharmaceuticals. But I realized after, you know, again, this is in the late 90s, I'm
reading these are books, right? Because we're on the internet, at least in Med from Astuce,
it's we don't have the internet. We have like a Commodore 64 computer. Is that, you know,
I just, I have this love of reading. So I just started to read. And what I realized was
that one of the reasons I got there in the first place was, yes, I have this love of reading, so I just started to read, and what I realized was that
one of the reasons I got there in the first place
was yes, I was that type A kid,
wanted to, you know, to well sports and school and all that.
But I had a dermatologist put me on 3000 capsules
of a moxicillin for three years, basically.
I was on two capsules a day for skin.
You know, most guys, teenagers, you get some acne.
Well, my dermatologist said,
you're gonna take this moxic marks cell and these jars were giant,
and I would take two a day for over three years.
Consistent?
Every day.
Holy cow.
I would take Benadryl then for my allergies.
I would take Clared Indeed during the day.
Benadryl at night to help put me to sleep.
I was on it, basically that's how I grew up,
and my immune system.
So we talk about the microbiome, right?
Well, what do you think,
3,000 capsules of marksis cellan does to your...
That's like a nuclear bomb.
That's right.
Just sterilizes it.
That's 80% of your immune systems in your gut.
So then that sent me on a quest to say,
and well, if conventional medicine,
if this isn't the root,
because I'd plan on being an MD,
like, and I don't get me wrong, I love MDs.
Like, a lot of my personal clients are MDs,
and a lot of my colleagues are MDs.
We do different things.
We need MDs for acute-based medicine.
If I have a heart attack or if I'm in a car accident
or anyone of those things, anything, right?
Take me to the emergency room and get me a acute care
and I'm glad that we have it.
But if our chronic-based illness, I'm sorry,
but you're not getting well.
Like there's just no hope for you.
So you'll be put on medication.
If you have high cholesterol,
you're not told how to rebounce it.
You're told all it it's just genetic.
Why don't we just give you some statins?
Well, here's what statins, it's a doing.
It can cause cardiomyopathy.
So you may not die from high cholesterol,
clogging your arteries, but you may die of a weak heart
because it can cause cardiomyopathy.
Also, depletes essential things like coq10,
which it can cause heart failure.
Exactly, yep.
Exactly.
So it's doing the exact thing that you don't.
Yeah.
So what I did was then I said, OK, how can I get better?
I was introduced just by chance to functional medicine,
started looking at some additional lab tests,
such as now we're talking about all the times today.
We're doing saliva testing, urine-based testing
for the gut, stool testing.
We're doing here.
We do all of that.
So that's essentially notch-pathic medicine
or functional medicine.
And what I wanted to do,
so I did my internships all over the world
because I had a belief that there was one best form
of medicine and I was gonna find it
and I was gonna teach people about it.
Like I was like super passionate.
At the same time, I was very angry.
Like I was an angry kid.
I grew up angry at a temper, all that.
But I said-
That's funny because you don't seem like that at all.
I know, I've done a lot of work.
That's a lot of work right there.
When you were searching, were you still sick
or did you finally tear yourself?
I was on the mend because I met my mentor
when I was about six years into the process of getting well.
And she, now this is how I did it.
Like she was a naturopathic doctor
and she had a subspecialty and function medicine,
aerobic medicine.
So I said, this is the person that got me well.
Obviously I should study what she's studying.
And then, but what I did was I said,
you know what though, let me explore other forms of medicine.
That might be one best form.
What I found was that they really all do work.
You just have to know who to use what thing with,
because we're all individuals.
And so Ayurvedic Medicine, that was a long story
to get to Ayurvedic Medicine, but Ay aerovatic medicine is the original form of medicine.
Most people don't know that.
6,000 years old.
It is the largest recorded history of medical records.
It has different branches, even plastic surgery.
Traditional Chinese medicine came out of aerovatic medicine.
And even today, when I was, I've studied all over India,
but when I was in India and the foothills of the Himalayas,
there were the reps of many different pharmaceutical agencies
were there working with the Ayurvedic doctors
to study their plants, to then try to bring back
and create patented pharmaceuticals from.
A lot of people don't know this,
but a statin drug is actually a patented pharmaceutical
of Red G's rights or at least the extracts from that.
And you can actually still buy Red G's rights
it's like a mild statinol on its own.
Without a doubt.
Now this, aeravetic medicine originated out of India?
Correct, out of Kerala India.
Okay, okay.
So, how is there, what's their approach?
Is it, you know, because I know,
I kind of have an idea of Chinese medicine,
traditional Chinese, of course, in a Western medicine.
What's the difference?
They work with the body's Chi,
is it similar to Chinese medicine, is it?
Well, even in Chinese medicine,
but in aerovatic medicine, they do a best.
They call it the doches or the body types,
but it can do with anything.
It's about creating balance.
So let's say that we have someone that,
we would call it cold or weak digestion,
what they're really missing is a lot of hydrochloric acid, right?
So they have hypoclyhydride.
They're an ability to produce as much hydrochloric acid.
So we would bring then heat to the stomach. What would we use? Well, we would use ginger,
or we would use cayenne. We would do something heating to build up those stomach acids.
And then let's say someone has acid reflux. Now, of course, we want to figure out why they've
acid reflux. Is it H. Pylori overgrowth? Is it fermentation? What is it?
Lower suffigilous fincter, not closing. What is it? Because we can fix it. I mean, I'm telling
people that there is literally an answer for everything. I mean, I'm telling people that there is literally
an answer for everything.
I mean, honestly, there is an answer for everything.
That's what I'm discovering.
And a big thing, so that we would say,
if you have acid reflux, well, that's heat, right?
So we'd want to bring in cooling.
We could use marshmallow.
We could use peppermint tea.
And we know a lot of these things right now as well.
So it's very, very interesting.
Iivata is all about balance.
And it's literally, it translates to the science of life.
It is the most complex and in-depth form of medicine in the entire world and it takes a lifetime to really study and master
but I think for anyone wanting to get into it, it's one of the best in the world.
Now when you're going into it and you're learning it because I had an experience years ago, I still have a wellness, fitness facility.
Nothing is as elaborate as yours but I had an acupuncturist in there,
and I could see actual success
when she would work with people,
especially in combination with my personal training
and massage therapy, for example, for pain.
But the way she would explain things
used to get on my nerves.
Back in those days,
that was very macros, calories,
lip weights, correctional exercise, and that's it.
And she would talk about the meridians of the body and balancing out the chi.
And I guys get so like, oh my gosh, like just don't say that.
It obviously, I see it works, but this is the way you're explaining it doesn't make sense.
And then I took a pause and I said, okay, let me see if I can explain it in Western medicine
or scientific ways.
And I started to think about all of the ways that we have
referred pain, right? Like the most common one, right? Your left arm hurts really bad.
It could mean you have a heart attack. There's definitely parts of the body that you'll feel
pain that refer to a different part of the body. And this has been documented in Western
medicine. And so I said, I wonder if she's working with the nervous system through the
needles to create, you to create just a better communication
pathway so you don't necessarily feel pain like you normally would.
Or so you move better because we know the central nervous system plays a role in pretty
much everything.
Do you do that with your Western medicine knowledge when you look at things through their
application through our medic medicine?
For example, you said cold digestion and hot digestion.
Do you look at those things and say,
okay, I think I can explain that in scientific ways.
I believe, if I do anything, that's my job.
I really believe that.
I believe, for whatever reason,
I don't know if everyone has this philosophy,
but I had never planned to get into medicine
or naturopathic medicine or any of these things,
but life led me in that direction,
and I have a very scientific Western-based mindset as well,
probably like yourself.
I get a little bananas when I hear things like,
you know, cheese and stuff like that, but I believe in it.
So my job is saying like this stuff is real.
It exists.
We actually have scientific research on it, so people like, oh, I don't believe in Ayurveda, I'm like, how do you not believe in Ayurveda? I'm like, there is real. It exists. We actually have scientific research on it.
So people are like, oh, I don't believe in Ayurveda.
I'm like, how do you not believe in Ayurveda?
I'm like, there's nothing to believe in.
I'm like, you can just believe in the research on it,
if you'd like, because there's a book
just called Scientific Studies on Ayurveda Research
that's over 700 pages long.
And it's like, it's just study after study after study.
The Maharishi Institute in conjunction with,
I forget which hospital might actually it was Ohio University,
did a study showing that Panchakama
actually removed 50% of all the heavy metals
and other PCBs and toxins from the body,
which is basically a certain type of detoxification.
What was it called?
Panchakama.
And this is an herb?
And this is actually a detoxification-based protocol.
Oh, it's a protocol, okay.
Yeah, they're doing like manual lymphatic drainage.
So that's how instead of saying Abayanga,
which is an IVATIC massage, I say manual of drainage, which is a type of Yeah, they're doing like manual and phatic drainage. So that's how you're, instead of saying Abayanga, which is a Iveyadak massage, I say manual and drainage,
which is a type of massage that we know in Western countries.
And you're communicating to me much better.
Well, that's how I feel.
Like, you don't need to go off the deep end
because then you alienate people.
Like, we live in, so a lot of the people
we work with are UK, Canada, Australia, Europe, and the US.
And like, we just don't speak the ancient, you know, speak.
And so why not bring it up to our, you know, knowledge base or our dialect.
And then people can go back and read it and they can look it from their perspective
because you can say Prana or Chi or you can just kind of say like, Hey,
the nervous system and energy in your body.
And that is the biggest overlook thing.
The way that people get sick and the way that people will get well is something
called the neuroendo immune system.
Your nervous system affects your hormones,
we were talking about low testosterone earlier,
which then affects your immune system.
So if you can figure out the link between
what's wrong, what's stimulating,
overstimulating the nervous system,
viruses, heavy metals, some type of leaky gut
and testimonial brace permeability,
toxicities, work,
life, stress, and then understanding the hypothalamus pituitary adrenal axis, which we just went
over the sympathetic nervous system, overstimulating the adrenals.
People talk about adrenal fatigue.
Forget about all that.
You don't have to use those terms, which people have turned off at as well.
Think about it as your brain telling you adrenals what to do, and then that fires your nervous
system.
All right.
So what happens is, well, then you're going to get a reduction or a decrease in testosterone and DHA.
In the short term, they actually spike.
When someone is under stress,
testosterone and DHA go up.
Under chronic stress, they go down
because it's been happening for too long.
So that's why you have to look at those tests
with the grain of salt, where are you in your life?
And then after that, morning cortisol starts to fall.
So you start to get a little bit groggy in the morning.
You wanna have this news better instead
of just jump out of bed.
But later in the day, your cortisol stays high.
And too high at night,
so you get what's called a broken diorama rhythm.
So now you wanna go to bed later.
You think you're a night owl.
When there's no such thing, people say,
oh, there's studies showing that some people
have higher cortisol at night.
I understand that.
Yes, I get it.
But that's because we have electricity
and we can sleep in later.
And lights, you put someone in the outback
and you put them there for three weeks.
Or even three weeks.
A year is great.
Believe me, they're waking up when the sun's rising
in the morning after three weeks
and going to bed when it's dark.
I got a question.
So it's funny you say this about stress.
How short stress raises testosterone or a DHA.
It's the long-term chronic stress.
The reason why that's fascinating to me is when I've talked
about how the modern lifestyle is inundated
with all this chronic stress, I'll hear the argument
like people will say, well, God, when we were hunter-gatherers
and we were cave people, that shit was stressful too.
Like, we didn't have food all the time.
You got chased by a saber tooth, you know,
lion or whatever.
You know, you were gonna get killed,
you broke your bone, you were dead.
And I, I, I, I,
with the argument just be, look, the stress was different.
It was acute and then gone.
And today it's this mild long term,
like never goes away type of stress.
Is that accurate?
That's accurate.
So I would say that, um,
there were also less choices in life, right?
So like, the input right now is so unbelievable. say that there were also less choices in life, right?
So like, the input right now is so unbelievable.
I don't know the statistics because this is certainly not my
Eruverks' expertise of how many times per day were
bombarded with input, right?
From advertisements, lights, like just walking around.
Well, when you're walking around in nature,
you're getting natural, uh, uh, binaral beats, right?
You're getting natural, like waves and wind and sound.
You're getting all those things that calm
the sympathetic nervous system.
Now we've got, you know, phone alerts, we've got...
All the stimulus on our, again, peripheral nervous system,
on our autonomic nervous system.
And so, and if you were chased by a saber-treat tiger,
listen, after about what, 10 seconds, you were either eaten or you got in a way.
Like, it was binary.
Like, you didn't get half eaten, like that was it.
So, you got away, you probably were like,
yeah, stress is going on the mission.
You got to decide it.
Yeah, without a doubt.
You're going to bang your cave woman and then that's it.
That's it.
And then you were like, hey, let me not go
to that watering hole again.
Well, the cyber tiger was there.
Like, you learned or you were literally dead.
So I do believe that now we're in just chronic stress
instead of up and down stress.
I mean, we're just having evolved,
we didn't evolve to deal with that stress
in that particular way.
You said the nervous system affects the hormones
which affects the immune system.
Is it always in that order
or can it go the other way around?
Like if something affects the immune system,
then does it go to the nervous system and vice
versa?
Yeah, that's a great point.
It is.
It's a circular loop, which is why it's so hard to get out of it.
So what happens is a lot of people don't know this, but when you produce cortisol, we talked
about it producing the glucocorticoids, right?
So it produces sugar.
Basically, it's going to drag glycogen from the liver or anywhere.
I mean, it will dry it from, if you have food in your
system, it will use that.
It could use muscle tissue, but your body will survive.
Like, it's meant to survive.
That's why you can't trick it.
I mean, I love the term biohack, but the truth is, you
can't hack your body.
You can do things to kind of like modulate it up and down, but
it's going to figure out a way eventually because it's built
for survival.
So what happens, though, is when you produce higher levels
of glucose, and again, you don't have to be eating
glucose, you can be stressed, your body will produce
more insulin.
When you produce insulin, you actually produce something
called interleukin six.
When you produce that, you're gonna have higher levels
than of inflammation or immune-based response.
That inflammation can cause weight gain or puffiness.
I really believe that when people are closer
they're goal weight and they're doing everything right.
I've talked about this before,
that when it's usually not body fat,
you're literally swollen with water
because you're inflamed.
So when you look a little softer overall,
it could be food sensitivities, it could be gut issues,
it could be higher levels of stress,
it's inflammation that is then looping back around,
like you just said.
So let's just say you have intestinal permeability,
really calm with all the antibiotics and alcohol
and all the other stuff going on,
is that you're spilling proteins,
even from healthy foods in your bloodstream
and that's causing immune-based reaction.
Well, that immune reaction is a stressor on your body,
for sure, so that's absolutely correct.
So I have a question for you along those lines.
We've talked about on the show how,
and speculated that it may not be a good idea
for athletes to consume food right after a workout.
Because of the systemic inflammatory response,
and maybe not for everybody,
but maybe for people with who are prone to,
you know, intestinal hyperpermeability,
that's probably weight until that inflammatory response
goes away.
Are we giving people the right advice?
It's complicated, but there are scenarios
when you wanna do some feeding and some not.
If someone is looking to actually get the benefits
of the fat burning potential from that workout,
just to keep that going where the blood glucose levels
are a little bit lower, that's great.
I mean, I think you guys agree,
and I would agree that you're not looking for any one workout
to transform your body, you're actually looking
for the body of your work, and to do maybe interval-based training,
which is a little less maybe calorie burn at the time,
but more metabolic effect over the greater term.
However, I would say this is that after a workout,
we've seen some really good research now,
and I was actually talking with this about a big name in this industry, I just won't mention his name.
They were going to do IVs for people right after they work out, Myers cocktails.
And so that would obviously be a lot of vitamin C and it'd be magnesium, great things for
your body, right?
Boost your immune system.
The problem is this, we've actually seen it be detrimental to take in a lot of antioxidants
after a hard workout.
And you're not allowing your body, it's natural inflammatory process to begin to repair
those muscles.
So that's huge, but the other thing is this, let's say it wasn't really hard workout, what
do you want to do after a really hard workout?
Because cortisol levels are now up, you want to test cortisol and testosterone in a direct
inverse ratio.
You know, if you work out too hard, I mean studies are all over the board, but usually it's over 40 minutes of a really inverse ratio. You know, if you work out too hard, I mean, studies are all over the board,
but usually it's over 40 minutes of a really hard workout.
Cortisol is gonna be higher, testosterone's gonna start
to drop, you know, just that inverse curve.
So when I look at that, I say,
well, what's the easiest way to turn off cortisol
after a workout, carbohydrates, not protein and fat?
So that's why you have to be careful with a client
who doesn't, if they're a hard gainer
and they want to gain carbs after you work out,
absolute fruit, just fruit.
So, fruit is anti-inflammatory,
and it's also gonna cut cortisol.
It's the only food, essentially, that does it.
You can do sweet potatoes, you can do anything
that you want, but make it easy to digest, and then stretch.
So, I'll talk about this all the time.
It's like, you stretch after you work out,
not because you want to become more flexible.
You can do that if you'd like.
You stretch after you work out
to turn off the sympathetic nervous system,
what would you like?
And turn on the PNS, which is gonna start recombing the body. Oh, good that if you'd like. You stretch after your workout to turn off the sympathetic nervous system overdrive and turn on the PNS, which is going to start recombing the body.
Oh good, we're on the right track. We have a program. We have a program that we've incorporated
that in one of our programs. Yeah, we have one of our programs where teach people how to prime
their workouts or set up their workouts and also how to do it at the end. And at the end is what we
incorporate the static stretching. So, I mean, from everything you're talking about, it sounds like
we should really focus more on how to get into the parasympathetic state.
Like, do you have any ways that you know,
or you tell your clients as far as methods
that you promote with that?
Yes, and we certainly don't need any more help
getting into the fighter flight, right?
The sympathetic, so it always is, like you said,
it's getting that parasympathetic, well, how do you do it?
You know, that's the challenge you part,
it's all the things that we don't wanna do
because it causes us to slow down.
We're having meditation, walking, all of the exactly freezing.
What do you do?
Well, you basically try to do nothing.
That's easier than done.
A sauna is a great way, but a lot of people exercise
and they're sauna-like.
That's such a Western-based mentality.
Just sit there and breathe and meditate and relax
and focus on gratitude.
It's like all of those things is trying to get to sleep
at around 10 p.m. or a little bit early
to work with a natural diurnal rhythm of the body.
It is doing meditation, it's doing hatha yoga.
So a lot of things that we recommend,
yes, we'll recommend high intensity,
the interval training, we've actually gotten
a little bit more, believe it or not,
into some steady state cardio,
which we got away from for like a decade.
And the reason we did is that it doesn't stimulate the sympathetic nervous system in the
same degree.
And it's great, it almost has like a recovery workout, which oxygenates the body to a
greater degree of circulation.
Exactly.
Because it's not anaerobic.
It's more aerobic and anaerobic is great.
We know that, but like it's all about balance.
So the more someone is sympathetic nervous system dominance, especially like the hard gainers,
the thinner people,
the smaller joints, we need to do more
of the parasympathetic.
And so, I mean, you guys are, you know,
absolutely in the wrong track, it's right track,
it's the meditation, it's the hot the yoga,
it's the stretching, it's foam rolling, it's float tanks,
but gentle massage.
A lot of people are going for deep tissue massage.
It's painful.
Pain turns on the sympathetic nervous system.
You're in a survival state.
Someone is literally with their elbow and your back.
Dude, I've been massage like that before
and I'm in a cold sweat while I'm getting hammered
by someone's elbow, so for sure I could tell.
Now, why do we do that on the west?
Like we take everything and make it intense.
Like yoga, power yoga, yoga with weights, you know?
Sonna, let's see how long I can go.
And inside the Sonna, how long I can last.
Like we do everything like that.
Why do you think that is?
Is it different?
Human nature.
Do you think it's a different though
in other countries with roots in,
you know, Ervedic medicine for example?
Do they treat it differently?
That's a good question.
It is a good question.
And you know, it's part of the psyche for sure more
in the West where it's like, how can we one up that?
Like, even as health professionals, like,
oh well, that person's keto, but I'm even more cute.
Like, yeah, right?
Like 50 grams.
We can my pee strip, bro.
Yeah.
Like, oh, they're eating 50 grams just in broccoli,
but I'm actually not doing any vegetables at all.
So I mean, I was like, what are we doing?
So yes, it's definitely a more Western-based mentality, but there's, you know, there's
a competitive gene in humans, and I think that's what really has helped us move forward.
Absolutely.
So we evolve.
Somebody has to go and fall off the cliff, right?
Find out there.
Can you fly?
You don't want to just make your arms.
Yeah, man.
That's hilarious.
You're very...
You're very killed. Yeah, Adam always makes this comment
of how the people who need to relax
are the ones that aren't.
And the ones who need to kick up their intensity,
the yogis or the dudes at the long hair,
like smoke weed all day long,
and don't do anything,
they need a little amp up in their life.
And that's Ayurveda in a nutshell.
Like that is it, the Vata body type of the ectomorph
are always on the go, and they wanna do everything,
and then the endomorph, which is typically the larger
or body type, they're just born, they've larger calves,
they're just, you can just tell, by the body type,
that's something I never used to believe in,
but the truth is the truth, is they wanna do the yoga, right?
They should be the ones doing the daily exercise,
whereas the ectomorph, maybe three times a week,
Monday, Wednesday, Friday for a hard gainer.
You tell me a hard gainer should work out every day when the whole count of all in the
first place.
That was the biggest mistake that I made as a kick, because I was definitely the ectomorph
in the hard gainer.
And what was I doing training seven days a week, sometimes twice a day thinking that I
was going to pass them all in between yet for sure?
That's hilarious.
So what do you think about like tools, for example, I mean, are you try, do you try to do
everything all natural or like, like, for example, like one of our sponsors
is a Juve Red Light therapy.
Like do you see benefits of tools like this?
Yeah, absolutely.
I love sonas, I love infrared sonas.
Juve is another great example of that.
I love binaural beats, you know,
literally just putting those on.
I like whole tones, I'm not sponsored by them.
I just think they're another great one.
Brandefem.com.
What's that name?
Brandefem.com.
You have Brandefem as well.
Oh, I love them.
I love them.
So yeah, and I actually, I pay for that.
So I love all of those.
And the truth is that you'll cycle through things.
So one of the reasons why I love all of these gadgets
is because they keep our Western based minds interested.
So I'm wearing this ring right now.
I won't give the name of the ring in case you guys have different sponsors.
They're moving over or or so.
It's all good.
So this right here, I'm not going to wear this forever, but I test all these things for
myself, like it's fun, right?
Cool.
So I said with this, I'm like, listen, I want to start looking at my sleep again.
How restful is it?
Am I staying asleep?
Am I waking up too often?
Am I getting my 10,000 steps a day,
which I'm a huge proponent of,
because again, that's a parasympathetic nervous system
activity, as long as you're not checking your email
while you're walking.
And, you know, but with this was a kept me interested,
kept my mind in it, and I started to have fun again,
and that was kind of like a big part of it.
So, I like all of them, I really do.
These things worry me, the smart gadgets,
and so I test them for EMFs,
and I also test them for radiation,
electronic as well as magnetic frequencies,
and then radiation, because I do think
that we have to be careful with it.
So it's funny you bring that up,
because I think Sal speculated this just the other day
when we were talking that,
that's gonna be the next big thing
that we're gonna hear a big scare about,
because of all these wearables and tools,
and now we're putting gadgets under our skin.
The phone right next to your crotch all the time. So what's your theory on that? scare about because of all these wearables and tools and now we're putting gadgets under our skin.
The phone right next to your crotch all the time.
Right.
So what's your theory on that?
Well, so I believe, because again, I like to really be honest to my research and I have
read research on it and there's actually more research in Europe being done on this
than in the United States.
And they're showing that it actually affects our DNA to cellular level.
So this could become a huge issue.
It's potentially affecting children with ADD, ADHD,
as well as IQ.
I think we need a lot more data.
I also believe that some people are susceptible
to it more than others,
which will be interesting to see if that's actually
affected by the microbiome,
if that's actually affected by other things
within the body itself.
Heavy metals, I think is a huge one.
If you have heavy metals in your body,
you're more of a beacon for electromagnetic frequencies.
That's just going to make sense.
You literally have metals in your mouth
or in your body from aluminum in your tap water.
So I think that that matters.
And one other piece I wanted to say to that as well,
when 5G comes out, no one's talking about 5G.
A lot of people don't know the level
that that's going to be.
It's 10X what we're at right now with our 4G.
So when we look at that, we say, well, what's that going to be?
Because remember, the 5G does not have a great span of width.
I'm not an expert in 5G, so I don't want to pretend that I am.
But you're going to have them all around you.
They're going to literally be on streets, everywhere.
So you're more intensive of frequency frequency more intense of a frequency closer up
So here's what I do because I get I live in the real world
I'm gonna have wireless internet a lot of people just directly plug in I don't what I do is this
I test my house. I have an EMF meter and I just make sure that my bedroom that I'm in for eight hours a night is
EMF free and so this is really interesting because I have two young daughters the four and six years old
And I'm like I need to I need to young daughters, the four and six years old.
And I'm like, I need to figure out for them because they're probably more susceptible, only
make sense that they're tiny, they're like 35 pounds, they're going to be more susceptible.
So one thing we found is that their mattresses, believe it or not, had coils in them.
So most mattresses are a lot of them have metal coils.
And they were baby monitors in their room, and they were white noise machines.
Those are two of the largest EMF base frequency generators.
And then their coils were picking up those EMFs.
Again, they're invisible, so you don't see them.
So their mattresses were literally sitting here
generating these frequencies.
So we replaced those out with coil-free mattresses
and actually that made a huge difference.
It did.
It did make a big difference.
Huge, yeah.
Wow, so you're thinking that this could be a problem in the future.
We just need a little bit more data.
And the problem is it's long term, right?
So it's, we're going to fuck ourselves up for a while before we figure it out.
It's decades.
Yeah, some people feel it right away now.
Again, some people really feel because the nervous system based issues that they feel
it right away.
And it's hard for me with the science and Western based mindset to say like,
how, like how, like I can't see it happening.
We don't have a ton of data, but I believe it.
Like we're, we're, our bodies are frequencies, right?
So like when you look at it at a quantum mechanics
and quantum physics level,
this is no longer woo woo based science.
We're literally vibrating beings.
So if we enter in a new vibration or frequency,
that is not part of nature.
Would that change us? And I would have to say it does. I don't know, but I would have
to put that.
It's got to have some kind of an impact. I know Dr. McCullough sleeps in like a Faraday
cage over his bed to block all EMFs and stuff like that.
Right.
You know, we should have probably done this in the being of the episode, but what is it
exactly? Is it is a naturopathic doctor? What, like, what do they specialize in? What's
different about them? Then let's say, your normal MD?
Yeah, so a medical, see you study the same two things
basically for the first two years,
which is your biology, your chemistry, your physiology,
toxicology, all your allergies, I always call it.
And then after that, a medical doctor will study pharmaceuticals
and how to use those in the treatment
of acute or chronic-based diseases.
And as a naturopathic doctor, you just decide to use the best of natural-based substances,
whether they be herbs or vitamins.
You still use functional medicine.
Well, actually, so there's a huge difference.
Naturopathic doctors will use functional medicine lab tests, and they will be saliva tests,
urine tests, stool tests, hair tests.
And what we do is we don't diagnose treat
or cure disease.
We look at the underlying root causes
of why people have the disease in the first place.
It's my belief that diseases don't really exist
how we think they are.
We give a name to a set of symptoms
that we call a disease,
so that we can then build insurance
to perturb his pharmaceutical.
Rheumatoid arthritis is literally the destruction of,
let's just say your finger joints are joints in general
by something called CD8 cells in your body.
CD8 cells are triggered when they see something
that's far into the body and they create something called
apoptosis or cellular death, program cellular death.
They tell that cell to kill itself
and the cell actually will kill itself to preserve the body.
Well, but if they ask yourself, like why is the immune system telling that cell to kill itself and the cell actually will kill itself to preserve the body. Well, but if they ask yourself, like, why is the immune system telling that cell to kill itself in the first place?
So we look at all the different reasons of why that might happen. And again, I'm not the first person.
Like, I always tell people that
think of every area of medical or science. I'm not the expert in that.
What I try to do is bring all of those together in a truly integrated form of medicine that hasn't been done before.
Meaning like, are you Vedic medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, bioregulatory medicine? What I try to do is bring all of those together in a truly integrated form of medicine that hasn't been done before, meaning like
aerovatic medicine, traditional Chinese medicine,
bioregulatory medicine, you mentioned acupuncture earlier.
That's not a form of medicine.
That's a submodality of traditional Chinese medicine.
Acupuncture is amazing, especially for nervous system-based issues,
anxiety, sleep issues, et cetera.
However, when I was in China
in a traditional Chinese medicine hospital studying there,
we never did acupuncture without herbs or other lifestyle-based things as well, and foods.
So what we do is we try to work on the whole person and figure out why the autoimmune,
and now we know that 90% over 90% of all autoimmune-based issues have some type of intestinal permeability
where proteins are moving through the gut wall and immune systems are marking them as some
type of antigen or pathogen to be removed from the body.
Now, there are many theories. It could be something called molecular mimicry,
where the body looks at that protein and sees a similar one to the cell or inside the cell
and causes that cell to destroy itself. Or that bacteria,
because there are something called lipopolysaccharides as well.
This you'll start to hear more of as well, because people are doing the keto diet, right?
A lot of it's saturated fat. Well, when you take saturated fats
and you enter them into a gut with a lot of bacteria,
what happens is it can transport that bacteria
through an intestinal wall if it's permeable enough
and into the bloodstream.
Now you've introduced a libel polysaccharide,
it has to actually sugar,
that you move through the gut wall
into potentially being taken up by a cell.
If that happens, the body can still look at that cell
as harboring something that's toxic to the body,
and then can use this specific immune cell
to create apoptosis within that cell,
basically program cell death.
And now what do you have?
Well, you have destroyed joint tissue,
but is it your body's fault?
I don't know.
I don't know, but what I know is that we can,
and again, we don't treat diagnosis or cure disease,
but we can fix the underlying root causes.
People are in our practice. We see these things miraculously go away. Well, that makes sense with the saturated fat because there
seems to be like this big difference between how some people are perfectly fine with a relatively
high saturated fat diet and other people, their lipids will go all over the place. They'll have all
kinds of, you know, terrible health effects. So it kind of makes sense and why there seems to be that line in the sand where some people
are totally fine and other people, it's like, okay, we got to stay away from the saturated
fat.
I mean, I really want to qualify this because this is something that at least people want
people to think about, all right?
So I want just, we're not going to say it's right or wrong for everyone.
If we believe in genetics and we believe in our genetic testing, we know
something that's been around now for over 30 years and that's called the APOE Genotype.
This is a specific allele. Everyone gets one copy from each parent. There's a two, a three,
or a four. That's all you can get. So you're either a two-two, I won't go through them all,
but there's a two, a three, and a four. You can get one copy of each. So anyone that has a four,
they've found that the higher the fat in their diet from anything,
but specifically saturated fat, the greater their causes of inflammation in the body, which
leads to then Alzheimer's, dementia, and cardiovascular-based disease.
If we look at those as the leading causes of death, we can say, well, that would be great
for us to reduce.
Now, let's go to the other side of the spectrum because for those people, believe it or not,
if you have an apoi, especially four, for those that's specific allele,
that protein. What we're looking at is those people that take in a lot of saturated fats
that actually does affect their blood cholesterol. Now, here's the interesting thing. They only
make up 26% of the population. So when you do a study, saturated fats don't matter, right?
Because it only affects 26% of the population, but that's really detrimental for a quarter
of the people out there.
And then if you look in the other side,
the three three is the normal one that's,
I say normal, but it's the norm.
It's 55% to 66% of the population at 3.3.
So they can kind of get away with the things in the middle.
But the two two is more of a,
actually it's more of a Neanderthal based gene.
Only two percent of the population has this,
but they can have up to 35% of their diet pretty much insaturated fat, a larger amount or fat in general, and
not of an issue.
But now when we start to talk about...
Kido, when we start to talk about things like that, I say, okay, short term, absolutely,
I get it could be used for cancer-space tumors, could be used for different medical-based
reasons.
But if we take our fat to 70%, I don't see, that's not in the literature at all
for long term, especially for genot
for genotops. Like that much fat, she would really take
one macro and throw it through the roof
to the detriment of the others.
I don't believe that that will hold up
except in medical-based instances where we're trying to really,
what are we doing with keto too?
Really a lot of the benefits which no one's talking about
as well as coming from fasting and autophagy.
Yeah, yeah.
I was like, if we clear the case studies and research
based on that, are we really getting it?
Just because we're leveling out blood sugar
and we're fasting for 12 hours or more.
Right.
It's mimicking fasting and many people.
There's some studies on long term,
but it's all on children with epilepsy
or people have like a medical reason for going on keto,
in which case intervention. Yeah, in which case it's better than the alternative which is having seizures all day
Totally agree and I think that's what people are pointing at let's get into fasting a little bit
That's something that we we kind of
I think we recommend to people to
Intermittently do every once in a while and I think it's something that's turning into a
Popular thing to do that I don't know if they're getting more of a weight loss method.
Right.
And it's the call that starving yourself.
So will we typically recommend for people?
And of course, if you're healthy and can do this and balance, right?
I think we say anywhere between 24 to a 36 hour type of fast to once a month is something
that we think is better than somebody who skips meals for 16-hour
window and does that every single day. What are your thoughts on fasting?
I love that you guys are saying that. I don't believe the 16-hour fast today is a great thing.
16 hours a day. I just don't. And the reason is that we lab test this. So it's not, again,
like a quarter million client appointments of data. It's just like, I don't want to guess.
I just don't, because I want to get people
to write information.
And when I see people fast, they're, again,
getting the kids ready, they're running off to work,
they're trying to meet deadlines,
and they're drinking coffee in the morning.
You're not really fasted.
You spike quarters all again.
You're gonna have sugar in your blood
no matter how you state it.
You're not fasted.
You cannot eat and not be fasted.
Meaning like if we're talking about glucose,
because when we say fasted, we're saying like,
oh well, yeah, I'm fasted because I haven't eaten, sure,
but like you're fasting because you want the benefits
of fasting, right?
Like if you're going hypocaloric because you're skipping
a meal a day and so you take out five or 600 calories,
I get it, like yes, okay, so that will work too.
But what I like to say is,
we do, so in my practice, we do this in four ways.
We do a 12 hour overnight fast for every human being alive.
So essentially from six or seven o'clock, whatever you can do at night to 12 hours the next
day.
And what I would say is you can actually fast until you get going.
So if you have a slow morning and you wake up and you meditate and you just take a shower
and you kind of ease into the day, no need to eat yet.
You're at a slow, fat, oxidizing stage, right?
But once you start revving up,
that is when you need to put some food in your body, ideally.
For at least especially that ectomorph,
that vatabody type, the person who's more catabocked,
they lose weight without trying
versus gain weight without trying, right?
So I'm a big proponent of that, like six, seven o'clock at night,
stopping eating two to three hours before bed,
one of the best things you can do to get a better night's sleep
and just be able for better digestion.
But then, so what I'll just give an example for myself.
Like I stopped eating about six, 30 at night,
and then I don't eat until seven, 30 the next morning.
That's 13 hours, right?
Because I start my day around seven, 15 or so,
and I'm so I'm gonna start just by sipping on
like some smoothie and kind of get it into the day.
For a lot of people, they could go maybe until like nine
or 10 a.m., but not to lunch.
And the reason just goes back to again,
that cortisol-based spike in women,
doesn't happen to men, is often.
But in women, I would say it is detrimental
to skip breakfast.
And the reason is we see hypothyroidism
from keto-based diets and low carb diets and long
fasted diets in many, many women.
And I would obviously say it's more of the norm than not.
I think it's evolutionary.
I think if we go through the hunter gatherer theory, men being the hunters, we probably
evolve to go without food for longer periods of time and be active.
Women being the gatherers, they probably came around
small bits of food throughout the day
as they're gathering roots and tubers and nuts and seeds
and all that kind of stuff.
And they're also the ones that bear the child.
And I've seen that as well.
I've seen women go on fast consistently
and start to experience things like hair loss.
You know, and the guys don't seem to,
we seem to have a better resilience towards fasting.
I actually agree with that,
and there's then science to back that up as well.
So what happens is when,
this is again, specifically,
more specifically for women,
when you produce your first adrenal based response,
which is norepinephrine,
it stops making that conversion from TSH to T4.
And then when you produce glucocorticoids, you actually block the conversion from TSH to T4. And then when you produce glucocorticoids,
you actually block the conversion from T4 to activated T3,
which happens inside the cell.
Or you take active T3, which is the active thyroid hormone,
and you create something called reverse T3, so it's unusable.
And I believe the reason that this has happening in the female body,
and again, this is, it's theory, but my belief is this, is that if you're in a stress-based
situation, there's not enough food, there's not enough water,
there's water, there's water, there's whatever there might be,
you're telling your body, this is not the situation
to bring a child into this world.
That's my belief, and I see it play out
with infertility in my practice, so what do we do?
Well, we start to calm down those quarters all levels,
replenish the body with the B vitamins,
the vitamin C, everything that's missing,
zinc, whatever it might be.
Again, you can lab test those.
You can find out what you're low on
for your vitamins and your minerals.
We put those back in, we get them into more of what,
we would say like a safer, calmer environment,
which again is more mindset and framing that
and then not the excessive low carb.
And again, I'm a huge proponent of low carb.
I've been doing that since like the late 90s,
but not forever.
And then we also do it cyclical based,
meaning like we'll do refeeding meals every week
or cheat meals, whatever you wanna call it,
flex meals.
And also, what do you consider low carb?
Because some people are like,
low carb means no carb, which is different
than what I would consider low carb,
which is like 100 to 150 grams a day.
It seems to me too, in terms of fasting,
that the ancients had it right, right?
So they use it more in their spiritual practice
in a state of like a meditative state where they are calmed.
So it's just interesting to see these things
kind of come around like what you're saying
makes a lot of sense as far as being like super active
and all that goes, probably not a good time to use it.
Exactly.
So we'll just get him back to your point.
I don't want to not answer that question.
We'll recommend a once,
so we get people healthy first.
That's really important.
Get them balanced.
Then we'll do a once a week fast,
but it's 24 hours,
but it's actually not a day without eating.
So it's very simple for people to do.
So every Sunday night,
I'll do a blow out mail on Saturday night,
whatever I want.
And it will be like be to the nines.
And then Sunday, go back to normal eating,
and the reason people don't fast the day after you get crazy
with alcohol or whatever, right?
And I'm not a big drinker of alcohol,
but you don't want to do the next day
because you're then re-regulated and blood sugar the next day.
So it's gonna make your fast that much harder
if you do your fast the next day after that big cheat mail
where you're gonna go hypoglycemic most likely
the next morning.
So I take Sundays a normal day,
unless the Patriots are playing,
and then on Monday, I'll do the fast.
I'll do it from Sunday night until Monday night.
And so that's 24 hours,
but I'm still having dinner with my family Monday night.
And during that fast, I try to do water only
or I'll do hot ginger tea,
which is great for open up the lymphatic system,
kidneys, all of that as well.
So I did a protocol for about six months
and it was the single most effective thing
that I've ever done for my particular body.
Now I've had gut health issues for,
I had to deal with them, I'd say for the last maybe 10 years or so.
And I manage it with what I eat.
I eliminated certain foods and, you know,
see, kind of a dial actually helped me quite a bit, CBD,
you know, helped me with that as well.
But what I did, maybe about three months ago,
was the last time I did it,
is I did a once a month, 48 to 72 hour fast.
And the reason why I did that,
as I was reading literature on fasting,
and I read that in animal studies,
they showed that a 72 hour fast
would almost completely replace the immune cells in cats.
And I thought to myself, well, if my issues are autoimmune and I know that fasting induces
a poptosis and then stem cells are stimulated and I feed myself and then maybe that'll end
up happening for me.
And I don't know if that's exactly what happened, but I'll tell you what's the single best
thing I ever did.
It was a six month period, and my gut got progressively better
to the point now where it's better than it's been in a long time.
Was I on the right track with that?
Obviously, I got great results with that, but is that something
that you think would work for other people?
Yeah, that's really great to hear too.
So one thing is, like we said, we walk people up the level so that
every day for 12 hours to maybe up to 14
And again that depends on how quickly you get going during the day and then the once a week or maybe just once a month of that one day of
Week fast the 24 hours we do quarterly to 48 hours to 72 hour fast
So these are longevity based. I mean this is like legitimate. This is if there is a fountain of youth
It's fasting. Honestly, the second
fountain of youth would be sauna based on the finished study with over 20, I can't remember
the number right now, thousands and thousands of people over more than a decade. And they
found that it reduced cardiovascular risk by 43, 63% cardiovascular risk, dying of a heart
attack. It's unbelievable. And it reduced all cars' mortality.
That means every form of death was reduced by 42%.
Wow.
By doing 19 minutes a day of sauna.
Not even in for a sauna, just 19 minutes a day of sauna.
Well, that was a cold for 45 days.
So I'm not, I wanna get back,
I wanna answer your question of fasting
and the cold plunge is a really great question.
So the fasting, we do the 48 to 72 hours every quarter.
So that's a big thing with us,
where a huge proponent of that.
So the greatest amount of a topogy can take place.
Now a topogy is basically auto-phagosotosis,
which means that your body is going in
when it has no more food coming in,
and scavenging cancer cells,
all the week-tagogy, Whatever, that shouldn't be there.
Because now you gave your body time.
Because every time you eat, believe it or not, your immune system turns on.
Like it's like, hey, is this good or bad?
Is this good?
Like, it's always asking.
Because your intestines are essentially a single cell.
You know, when we look at the LAMO appropriate, we're looking at, okay, like your immune cells
can go into your intestines whenever they want, and when food comes out, then it's going
to get attacked as well.
So, I think that that absolutely did help you.
What I would say, and my rebuttal to that
is because also when you have no food coming in,
your actual microbiome is shrinking, right?
So every time you fast, you don't have enough good carbs
meaning vegetables, your microbiome is shrinking.
So that's what I worry about long-term health
with keto as well as the microbiome.
Sure, like there's studies on this, but like what about this part? So it is about balance. And what I would
say is as always look at what is going on, is it H. Pylori, is it Candido Overgrowth, is it
small intestine bacterial overgrowth, is it parasites? And if you've done the lab testing and everything
is balanced, yes, then I would look at sealing up that gut wall and making sure that it's not a
vagal nerve stimulation of your gut, because that can cause you gut issues as well.
But for sure, you can figure that out.
But the fasting, no matter what, is absolutely great.
And it does help to reset the immune system.
That's the way to think about it as this.
And this is what I wrote about as well.
My book is, when you look at the overall immune system, think of it as a Pac-Man game.
And think about not adding more of those little like discs
or whatever they are that you're eating up, right?
So let's say that you have three Pac-Man inside of a ball,
and they get to eat three of those pieces every day,
and there's 10 of those pieces.
By the end of the three days,
they've eaten up all the bacteria.
They've eaten up everything that shouldn't be there.
Well, but every time you eat new food, more come in.
So we can look at it as like,
you have to fast in order just to catch up.
So I really believe that that fasting is
the closest thing we have to the fun of youth.
Back to the cold plunge, just talk a little bit about that.
This is controversial as well.
When I talk about this with people,
like there are no nine hours is very controversial,
but I say I just believe that I can back it up.
Good, that's good controversial.
And so cold showers are not for everyone.
Cold plungers are not for everyone.
And the reason is this, cold plungers are amazing
for stimulating dopamine, the immune system,
waking up the body, but it does that
by what revving up the nervous system.
Norepinephrine, I think is the best bike to the river.
Exactly.
So when you rev up Norepinephrine, that's the first phase.
That's the adrenal medulla phase of the hypothalamus adrenal axis.
So, okay, great.
If you're someone that needs a stimulation, like it let's say you are a lower cortisol
person because you're more of the endomorph body type.
I recommend absolute cold plunges, hot cold showers, but if you're more of the ectomorph
and you're already super sensitive in the first place, you're telling me that you want to jump under that cold charge.
Very interesting.
You want the heat, you want the rest, the relaxation heat actually will calm the nervous system,
where cold will stimulate the nervous system.
Yes, it produces more immune cells in the short term,
but it also stimulates all of the peripherals.
No, I can 100% agree with you.
So here's a question on that, because it does feel good to spike cortisol.
This is why people do it all the time.
Cortisol feels great.
Oh, it's addictive.
Yeah, and so I'm wondering,
do people's behaviors inadvertently,
or maybe subconsciously, do they change their behaviors
to give themselves more cortisol
because their bodies have become desensitized to cortisol?
So in other words, I'm a high-stereous person,
not good sleep, drink lots of coffee.
I work out hard, and then my energy starts to drop
and lower, so I'm seeking out situations
that raise my cortisol more.
I work out harder, I find myself more late to appointments.
I, you know, maybe I drive differently,
all of these subconscious ways of spiking cortisol,
and because I've had clients like this,
where they come to me and I'm like, listen,
spin class is not the workout you should be doing.
You're type A, you don't get good sleep,
and they'll tell me, but I feel fantastic afterwards.
Do you find people changing their behaviors
to seek out those cortisol spikes
because their bodies have became maybe
desensitized to cortisol?
Absolutely.
I mean, when you look at it,
it's one of the best drugs in the world.
And our body makes it and caffeine makes more of it.
And so when you say like, oh well,
I'm not myself without this.
And but at one point in your life, you were yourself.
But what happened is you just never found the balance
between being able to rejuvenate
in the parasympathetic nervous system
and then work in the sympathetic nervous system.
So I completely agree with it and the worst part is we're doing it later in the day.
I could get behind some of the things that people do earlier in the day, like 11 a.m.
12 p.m. or before.
But when you look at a natural diurnal rhythm curve of cortisol and diurnal just diurnal
just means we have two phases during the day.
So our cortisol naturally starts to ramp up around 4am, same with the highest levels of
thyroid.
That's when blood pressure starts to increase.
These are all like natural processes.
Melatonin starts to go down because melatonin's in juxtaposition to cortisol.
When cortisol starts to rise between 6 and 8am, we should naturally wake up on our own.
But again, if we're starting to get burnt out or a little grog your cortisol doesn't rise as much. But cortisol should be at its highest peak around 8 a.m. and then it gradually decreases all the way throughout the day till about
4 p.m. where it really starts to fall out. This is interesting because people like, oh I need I start to get tired about 5 p.m.
I'm like you should start to get tired.
It's not like 5 p.m. It's a lot of success.
That's that you should actually that should happen.
You don't want to ramp it back up.
And so that's that's what we're looking at.
And it's at its lowest at actually 9.30pm, which is why some people can feel a second
wind once if they don't get to bed by 10pm.
Do you think it's better to work out in the morning then when cortisol is naturally at
its highest levels?
You think it's smart to combine because, because exercise is going to stimulate that sympathetic
nervous system.
It should be stimulated in the morning anyway.
Do you think that's the best time to work out them?
Yeah, that's a great question too,
because that's a challenging one.
If you're already overstimulated,
you don't want to work out first thing in the morning.
If you're someone that overly produces dopamine,
like if you're revved,
I don't know, and you're already in the verge of just basically burning
out, I don't think that you want to do that first thing in the morning to start
your day when your cortisol is already going to be at its peak. So for the
people that are hard gainers, I'm sorry, hard to lose body fat, they look at
carbs and they gain weight. They're a little bit more sluggish in the first place.
Yes, wake up, do workout, potentially on an empty stomach
if that works for you.
But if you're someone that, again, is very primed
in terms of nervous system and you're a hard gainer,
you need to eat before the workout as well.
You can vary that between anywhere between 30 minutes
before, 60 minutes before, easy to digest.
That will help with your cortisol spike during your workout.
It won't lead to more of the catabolic states.
And that workout should probably be somewhere between like 10 AM
and 3 PM during, you've already gotten,
you've had a meal in your body, maybe two,
you've started to ease into the day,
now you can do a workout.
And so that's what I've seen work.
And that actually took quite a bit of time
for us to kind of figure out in our practices.
Yeah, I've seen that as a personal trainer.
It was just through my experience training people and myself.
Yeah, that speaks to me a lot.
That speaks to me to like, now I have some selfish questions
to ask you because something that I've just never been able
to get to the bottom of is I have psoriasis.
So when you have someone like that,
what are your areas you're looking for right out the gates?
I mean, vitamin D deficiency, like what also are you probably
looking at with someone who has psoriasis? Yeah, that's when we look at that, we're looking at some type of stress as well as gut-based
issue.
The greatest flare ups we see with psoriasis are based on certain food sensitivities based
on the protein of that food, not necessarily the sugar of the food.
We look at both short-term food sensitivities and long-term with an IgG food sensitivity
test.
The major ones we see, and we get phenomenal results, so just a little advice for anybody
with psoriasis.
If you have not gotten gluten, which includes wheat and yeast, dairy and egg-free, try that
for 21 days, that might be enough for people to get a remarkable reduction in symptoms.
At the same time, I recommend running an organic acid test as well as a stool test.
You can do the free-density test as you want as well. To look to see if you have some type of
intestine-based permeability, if you have yeast overgrowth, bacterial overgrowth, we see a huge
connection between that, and then the same thing is the body's ability to regulate stress. Vitamin D is a
huge part of it, but actually taking vitamin D helps,
but what we've seen work better,
this works, this is in the research as well,
is ultraviolet light.
So it's the vitamin D, but it's actually the light as well.
So people during the summertime that it gets exposed
to sunlight, their psoriasis goes down
to a much greater degree.
So it's actually, it could be the sulfur,
believe it or not, the sun helps to produce vitamin D
with cholesterol, but it actually works in another way.
The body produces more sulfur,
which is naturally detoxifying as well.
So it's interesting.
So what's interesting to me is that I never had it as a kid.
So I grew up around the lake outside playing all the time.
And when I turned 19, I moved to San Jose.
I got a job that was indoors,
and I literally worked 5 a.m. to like 10 p.m. almost every night at 25 all the sudden
Surrices comes out. No idea the connection to sunlight anything at this point
I didn't even know what it was took me years before I even figured out what I had certain to show up and
I do notice that more than anything if I can discipline myself to get out there and get that daily sunlight that and stress and then also
The gluten has been a big one for me too.
So I've eliminated that pretty much in my diet.
And if I ever do allow it back in, I always know.
In fact, I've now got it down to where,
if I like go have like a cheeseburger or something,
I know within like hours, I can already feel myself like
itching or picking at it right.
Right, I'll let her.
Yeah, alcohol's a big one as well.
I don't know if you see yours flare up with alcohol.
Red wine can be another one that flares it up.
That's good to know, because we just went on a trip
and I've noticed that it flared up from this last trip
but we are all off our diet and when we drink
at a party and so that I don't really drink that much
and we have been this last month or so.
What are the most, I guess, what are some of the standard
labs and tests that you run on people?
Like, what are things that people,
because I get questions like that all the time,
like, I'm gonna go get a bunch of tests done.
What should I get done?
What should people look at?
Yeah, I did a podcast called, like,
what to run when you go to doctor's office.
Like, if you pay health insurance,
you should get your blood run, right?
At least get that out of your health insurance.
So, what I said is like, here's what to ask for.
And you want a complete blood count,
you want a lipid panel, you want, but on top of that like here's what to ask for and you want a complete blood count. You want a lipid panel
You want but on top of that you also want to ask for something called homocystine
CRP and you want to make sure that they run your hydroxy or your 25-hydroxy vitamin D
Those are things a no longer run that they should be running
Because those a lot of people worry about their cholesterol
But if you have your cholesterol is a little off
But you have good homocyst assisting and you have good CRP,
your chance for a heart attack or cardiovascular disease
go way down.
The issue is when people have high cholesterol,
they have high home assisting and they have high CRP,
home assisting being the inflammation of the arteries,
CRP, C reactive protein, being systemic-based inflammation,
acute-based, then you're literally,
you're a disaster rate and it happened,
and we need to fix that right away,
and that's because you have high cholesterol,
probably have some plaque in the arteries,
but your arteries are also constricted,
so now there's not a lot of blood flow,
that's when we're looking at, so.
Oh, that's a bad combination.
Really bad, because only half the people
who have high cholesterol have a heart attack.
The other half don't have high cholesterol,
so there's another factor,
and that's in anyone, those arteries can be
really squeezed tight. And when they're squeezed tight, if you have any blockages, you're not going to be
able to push that blood through. So, homocysteine, CRP, vitamin D, vitamin D is not okay just because
the range is 30 to 100. The range truly should be between 50 and 70. Some people are saying more 50 to 80.
So that's for overall health. Some people, I don't go to 100 and don't recommend it, because then you're
looking at a helper calcemia of the blood because then you're looking at help hypercalcemia
of the blood, and you're also potentially
turning on the immune system too much.
But for those people that are battling cancer,
they might be working with their doctor saying,
okay, let's get your vitamin D to 100,
maybe more to really ramp up your immune system,
but you should be working with that doctor at that.
Yeah, low vitamin D levels is very strongly correlated
with cancer.
You're almost always, right?
Don't they always, almost always have low vitamin D levels
on their test end?
Yes, but I mean, so we do so much testing.
We do thousands of labs.
We literally, we ship labs all over the world.
And what we found is this, and this is no exaggeration,
three out of 100 people are okay with
for vitamin D levels.
Okay.
Literally three.
And that's in summertime.
That's it.
Like, anytime, and here's why, people go out in the summer and they go out on the weekend.
But what about the five other days?
That means you're not getting your vitamin D stores.
So we see people hover somewhere between,
I would say 12 and maybe like 37 for most people.
So they're just like barely there,
because some even lab say to 20, but,
so that's your blood work, okay?
But that's when things are really bad.
Remember your blood's called a homeostatic fluid,
which means it will rob from other parts of your body
to make sure that it's level.
But what we do is we, I just,
it's my, I call it my big five.
And so what I look at is the organic acids test
to look at all of your minerals.
And I look at it from a,
I love the organic acids test.
And I use this because it's urine,
so you can do it right at home, but it shows waste. So it actually shows the byproduct of whether you're using these things or not. So it's a great test. And I use this because it's urine, so you can do it right at home, but it shows waste.
So it actually shows the byproduct
of whether you're using these things or not.
So it's a great test.
We look for candied overgrowth, seed if,
we look for mitochondrial function,
we look at ketones, we look at fatty acids,
we look at neurotransmitters,
the waste products of those,
and we look at all your vitamins,
your B vitamins, your vitamin C,
coQ10, biotin, it's an amazing lab test.
Then we look at your mineral levels
with a hair tissue mineral analysis.
You can look at that through other ways as well,
but it's an easy one to do at home.
We look at heavy metals on that as well,
aluminum, mercury, cadmium, arsenic.
We see some pretty wild ones as well on there,
and then we do an omega-3 test.
So omega-3 test is easily one of the most underrated lab tests
out there because cardiovascular disease is the number one killer
in the United States.
What if we could wipe that out?
Well, there's an amazing research study that shows
those people with a 9% saturation rate of omega-3s
in their blood have a 90% risk reduction rate
for cardiovascular death.
We just did that.
We just did that.
That omega-3 test through everly well.
I was just gonna say, I would actually send that out to you
guys, you already did it.
Yeah, we did it.
Everybody was, I was the only one that was within normal range,
but I supplemented with cod liver oil on a regular basis.
I think Doug was pretty good at celebrating because of that.
That's a great tip because in my practice, the only people,
this is really important because that's humans.
I believe that we were meant to probably get some type of fatty fish
or some type of shellfish or somebody like that in our diet
or maybe
just a lot of algae.
I don't know, but we were meant to get omega-3s.
The reason is that when we look at that, the only people that ever passed that test are
those people eating sardines, wild salmon, mackerel, there's one more or trout three to four
times a week.
If not, if you're not doing that, your omega-6s are gonna be higher than your omega-3s. So, now I wish I remember where I read this,
but I read that if you still have a poor diet
where you're eating a ton of six and nines,
and not very many threes,
but then you're supplementing with the threes
that it won't matter,
that the sixes and nines are competitive with the threes
and it will, in turn, fill up the cell
and then the threes don't even,
you basically just shitted out. Is that true? Is that...
I would love to see more data on that. I actually think that it's a competition,
and I think by adding in more of the threes, you will do a lot better.
Okay.
And I have seen that play on the lab test. Now, the goal should always be to eliminate
as much of the sixes you can, but not to the point where you don't need omega-sixes.
I mean, humans are really meant to be
somewhere around a three to one ratio
of omega-6s to omega-3s.
You see that nature, if people are reading,
let's just say like, you know,
they're reading grass-fed B for pastured eggs,
whatever it is, it's about a three to four to one ratio
of scale, like even with grass-fed.
So when I look at that, I say, okay, well,
you know, that's pretty much what we see in nature.
If you look at nuts, well, they're higher in omega-6s.
So it's not that we don't need the omega-6s, we do.
We need them actually for cell membrane health.
Or essential.
Yeah, without a doubt.
And so I would say supplementine is going to be a very good thing for most people.
Yeah.
But reduce the omega-6s.
I go with the cloud liver oil, just because it also has a natural vitamin D in it as well.
You also mentioned the grass-fed beef.
How important do you think that is to incorporate that and how detrimental is it for us to just
get some regular beef from the grocery store?
Yeah, there's another controversial topic that I talk about sometimes and I did a show
called the mounting evidence against meat and it wasn't actually just against meat.
It was against a higher protein diet and that's why I get really worried about people
who say they're doing keto, but it's not keto at all.
Right, it's old school adkins.
You know, and it's like, oh, I'm having just this huge stake.
Like, I don't know how that became keto.
Like, I just, I mean, I don't, not,
because that's not matching up with the ratios.
And if you eat that much protein,
it actually spikes blood sugar.
So people don't get that, like, and again,
like they're not supposed to,
because that's not common knowledge.
That's in-depth nutritional biochemistry.
When you eat a big serving of red meat,
it will most likely spike blood sugar
because of the high glycemic load,
because of what it does in the body of when it's being processed.
And protein in our field is the magic macronutrient.
You can't have too much of it,
always have a lot of it,
because it builds muscle,
so it's always great to have it.
And I was there as well, for sure,
when I was trying to get, so my frame naturally likes to sit
at somewhere around a hundred, let's say, 160, 165 pounds.
I like to be 165, 170, for overall health.
But at one point when I was getting a natural body building,
I said, I'm getting a 200, that's my goal.
And I did it, but to the detriment of my body.
I was eating 275 to 325 grams of protein per day.
Oh, the cow.
And-
Constipated.
It was just overall, it was not a good scene.
I could barely raise my arms about my shoulders,
but what I'm saying is you can do whatever you want
with your body, it doesn't always mean it's healthiest.
That's all.
So that amount of protein, just understand
that it's the highest thermogenic effect,
highest thermogenic food, which is great,
but it's also the most tax in the body.
It requires the most amount of water,
the most amount of work for the kidneys,
the most amount of work for stomach acid,
it's a hard food to break down,
and it's the greatest increase of IGF1,
insulin growth-like factor.
One, great if you're trying to build muscle and be anabolic.
I'm not gonna deny that.
One of the worst things you could do
if you're not trying to grow tumor cells in your body,
cancer cells as well.
So we just to be careful with the amount we take in.
And it showed if 19% of your diet was less than,
90% of your total diet was 90% or less of protein,
you were pretty much good.
The lower actually the better in terms of getting cancer,
those types of things.
But so I just don't want to go overboard, I would say,
in that category.
I don't want to say I'd answer your question at all.
Yeah, in the context of inflammation,
a super high protein is a pro-cancer.
If you're really healthy, you're probably okay,
but the amounts of protein that are being recommended
in our field exceed anything that's ever been studied.
I mean, the studies show 0.6 to 0.8 grams per pound of body weight,
but I know people, two grams per pound of body weight,
2.5 grams per pound of body weight,
like show me the long-term studies on that.
They're pretty much RNON.
It's just an insane amount.
And I think starting where you just said is the right thing to do.
I think if you just for simple math, because we can get into like point eight per kilogram
of body weight, I mean, if you just start half your body weight and just say, is that
enough for you to build muscle?
If not, add more.
Right, right, right.
I mean, so we like to really break things down to a foundational level, because some people
will need more.
If you are naturally, like you're genetically, you put on muscle, you put on size easier,
you're not gonna need as much protein.
But if you're a little thinner, you might, but at the same time, you probably have poor digestion
or protein, you probably need more carbs as a fuel source.
And so we look at all of these things, we really try to make it bio individualized, but everyone
has to start somewhere, So you need a foundation.
So I had this interesting experience when I, so years ago I started, we're incorporating
a vegan day and really what it was was a low protein day.
And then I started incorporating the longer fast.
And I had this really interesting effect and it's anecdotal, but now I've heard it echoed
from other people who've done the same thing.
And that's when I go low protein for like one to three days.
I get this rebound effect when I introduce protein later on
where I almost feel anabolic, like my body wants
to build more muscle.
And I did read some literature a long time ago
to show that the body can kind of become
de-sensitized protein to where the more of it you eat,
after a certain period of time, you just end up converting
more of it to glycogen, and less of it you eat, after a certain period of time, you just end up converting more of it to glycogen
and less of it's being used for a repairing tissue,
is there anything to support what I experience?
When I go low protein and then bump the protein up
and notice that kind of muscle-blowning effect?
This is one of my favorite topics
to study in the body transformation field and fitness field,
is that I believe everyone's body has some type of set point
theory, or it's called the set point theory,
where your body likes to be at a certain weight.
Like, my body likes to be about 10 pounds less than I kind of like sit in that,
that I am.
And if I didn't exercise and I didn't really watch what I ate,
like I would lose another 10 pounds or so.
So I believe that you're taking a certain amount every day,
that's helping you create where you are.
Now, if you didn't exercise, you'd maybe have less muscle or whatever it might be.
But if you remove that for a couple of days,
and then you put it back in,
protein synthesis will most likely increase,
you'll be able to uptake more of that
because it's trying to maintain where its set point is.
Which is why sometimes it's harder for people to,
you know, I mean, so someone could be 5,8,
and weigh 150 pounds, it'd be perfectly healthy.
Another person, I have a client who's 5,8,
they weigh 205 pounds, that was their healthy weight.
But they had calves like Easter hams.
Like they were a massive...
We're just...
Yeah, I haven't seen Justin's count down.
He's never trained him.
They're twice as big in self-salis.
We train him three days a week.
So they're just massive.
And like, when you look at that,
and you can say, oh, okay, that makes sense,
for that individual, that's where they're gonna sit at.
So I do agree with you and I do believe that your body
when it's lacking something or lowers it,
it will increase protein synthesis, which means that,
you know, let's say you could absorb 20 grams,
30 grams, 40 grams, of course,
it's all arbitrary based on the size of the individual.
Great, but if you haven't even got protein for two days
and you've taken 50 grams,
but you're probably going to absorb almost all of that.
That's what it feels like.
It's exactly what it feels like.
I wanted to get back to the food intolerance discussion because, so I have a niece and
a nephew who have severe food allergies.
My nephew is the older one and my niece is the younger one and now my sister has another
child who's, you know, he just turned a year old and the
approach to food allergies. Now there's a severe food allergy not in tolerance. It's like
anaphylactic shock type stuff. But the approach has changed with my nephew who's older it was
like because his dad has got severe food allergies and my sister has some you know some
signs of autoimmune issues and so they said away, avoid these particular foods for the first two
or three years of life.
And that's gonna help prevent these potential food allergies.
Well, now with the youngest one,
there was, I think it was out of Israel.
There was some studies showing,
peanut allergies were so low there
compared to other parts of other developed nations.
And they went deeper to study why.
And there's this like popular,
baby food
cereal bar that's made with peanut flour and they said, oh, it's potentially this desensitizing effect
that's happening, which is preventing these food allergies. And so she's done that now with the youngest one and
he's got the least food issues. Oh, I think he has no food issues, whereas his sister and his brother have terrible ones. Now, anecdotally, with food intolerances, I've noticed with myself, I'll avoid a food that
I'm intolerant to completely.
And then if I introduce even a small amount, much worse effect than I may have had before.
And I'll notice this from clients as well.
And I'm wondering if completely avoiding these foods is not allowing me to desensitize my body.
In other words, is it a good idea
to identify a food intolerance, reduce your intake,
but not eliminate it completely?
So there's a couple of layers to that question right there.
So the anaphylaxis is a true food allergy.
Everything else is a food sensitivity.
So an allergy can cause this swelling up up the throat
in the anaphylaxis that's life-th life threatening. So what we do is we say for sure avoid those foods
and continue to avoid them because most likely that is in a innate and a humoral based response
that you're never going to okro. Now in terms of how to help that so that doesn't happen,
we've seen very in research on both sides saying that it's actually maybe potentially the most helpful if the mom is eating that food
while nursing the child because those antibodies
actually will then move through the child's gut
because again, this is a problem.
Because the mom doesn't have the allergy,
so then the antibodies go through the milk to the child
with the food or whatever.
Correct.
Well, and the other big thing is that a child's gut
is permeable, like they're intestines.
So when I talk about the gut, I talk about, you have your soft gastro, you have your stomach,
and then you have essentially 26 feet or so of intestine, 20 feet or so of a small intestine,
5 to 6 feet of colon.
Well, that's supposed to be pretty much closed.
That's supposed to be the outside of your body.
Only the good stuff after it's broken down amino acids or sugars and smaller fats can
it be absorbed through.
Well, for the first two years of life, it's purposely permeable, which then allows the
mother's immune cells to move through into a child so that the mother gives the child
the immunity.
So there's a lot of saying that that's a great way to introduce all these foods to children
and if the mother's avoiding it, maybe that there's other issues.
One thing I would say is I'm a big advocate of introducing
for those first two years of life different types of foods and a varied amount so that
the immune system can get used to seeing this. I think a lot of it has to do with gut-based
and balances now and the exaggerated response of the immune system for food sensitivities,
which is different. So sensitivities is kind of a delayed response.
Okay, so now what the food sensitivities is it better to avoid it completely or to have
a little bit of it to maintain, you know, so you don't you desensitize your body a little
bit or you don't create a larger response when you do have it later on.
So what we do is if there's an IGG food sensitivity and again you can do this right at home
with just a finger stick, what happens is this, if you're mildly sensitive, we eliminate for six weeks.
If moderate, 12 weeks, and then for severe six months.
And the reason is that you're actually trying to hope that because immune cells pass on memory.
So we can try to go through a few cycles of it.
And then hopefully it's been decent, and it actually works.
It's remarkable.
We can see it work.
Now, what you were saying though,
is feeling worse, sometimes what happens is,
you actually decrease inflammation
and create a new normal when you've removed the food.
When you're always having alcohol,
when you're always having these foods,
you have what's called your current normal.
Well, if you get healthier
and you go to do these things again,
you feel sometimes terrible.
So the contrast?
It's the contrast, I believe.
And because you're creating massive inflammation.
And that's what I've always thought too.
So I just want to ask you because I wondered if there was something to, you know, avoiding it
and potentially causing a stronger reaction versus the desensitizing, you know, effect.
So one part that I have to say is there is truth to that in terms of not the protein.
Because remember, an allergy or food sensitivity is based on the protein.
The immune system is reaction to a protein in the food and all foods are proteins, even
a low protein base for like a vegetable.
Or looking at is when, just say something like dairy, you actually do start to produce less
of the enzyme, the more of it you take in, the less of it you take in.
So there can be a desensitation there.
Oh, enzymes.
And that has to do with the sugars though.
So that actually has to do with lactose and lactase
versus the pro team, which is caseean or weigh-in dairy.
Oh, that's very different.
Much more complex than I thought.
Very complex.
So along the lines talking about mothers and breastfeeding.
So what are your thoughts on the importance
of like a vaginal birth and then also breastfeeding
and not using like formulas.
This is a hard one because I never want to put any woman down or because there's certain
situations in life, right?
Like sometimes you have to have a C section.
I don't think an elective C section in my opinion would be the best thing to do for the
child, right?
Sometimes maybe a woman has to do it.
But and again, I'm not certainly not one to throw stones for sure, but a vaginal-based
birth is really the only way that that child is going to literally swallow and pick up
the bacteria that they need to populate their gut.
So that's very, very important.
And as the child is going down the birth canal, they're actually squeezed.
And that squeezing helps with the initial waking up and movement of that lymphatic system
and the drainage of a lot of toxins.
I mean, literally they've been in the womb for what,
40 weeks.
So these are things that mother nature intended
and we as anyone in the medical field
is never smarter than.
Like formula could never replace breast milk.
Now, I want to put a caveat to that
because a lot of moms are working two jobs
and they can't feed their child,
but maybe could they pump?
I don't know, but formula, here's the issue.
It's two things.
One is when a child believe it or not,
like a baby in infant puts its malt to the mother's breast
or it's even close to it, the mother's milk actually changes.
It will change immune cells.
It literally adapts to the child
and they're seeing this now.
Plus, formula could never mimic breast milk
because breast milk actually has more sugar up front
in the foremilk, and then in the hind milk
would be saturated fat.
So if you want to figure out the best way to gain weight,
we already know, because it starts at birth.
Drink sugar, which spikes your glucose,
and brings up insulin, then take in a lot of fat and that
will just shuttle it right into the bottom.
That's true because babies are never ripped.
Yeah, they're not.
We're trying to, you know, we're going to my BMI and they're shubby as hell.
I've done skin-fold calipers and yeah, they're way off.
Your baby's 40% body fat.
I'm like, it's not show ready.
And formula is also cow's milk for the most part.
And the protein molecules, I heard Ben Greenfield
on his show who's an amazing guy as well.
And just talks about like humans in my opinion
were not meant to drink cow's milk.
Goat sheep, the smaller the protein molecule,
the easier to digest.
Now can we of course, like we adapt to most things.
Is it healthy first?
No, it most likely caused a lot of inflammation.
Certainly high levels of IGF1,
does it matter on the cow type?
Sure, to a degree, but the truth is
that the protein molecule is large, very large
and much harder for humans to break down.
Does it also matter like the ancestry
as far as like, you know, where, you know,
you're from like, say, I'm northern European
and I can, you know, I do better with dairy for instance.
Yeah, give them a reason to keep eating dairy.
Come on, man.
Yes.
Don't be cutting it out.
So, well, first I would do a fruit sensitivity test just to check from an IGG perspective,
because a lot of people like, well, I don't get any gas, I don't get any bloating, I don't
get any of that.
That's, that is actually a digestive issue from the sugars versus a long, and there's also
an IGE effect, which means you get hives
or psoriasis-based flare-up. But an IgG is 24 to 72 hours later and it means that your body
just feels a little bit more sluggish, a little bit more inflamed, a little bit more brain fog,
a little bit more, you know, joint-based pain. So what I look at is the IgG test. I like to look
at that. The other thing is like, well, sure in the interesting, I do agree with that,
to an extent, but it was most likely warm milk
that was raw that contained the enzymes
to also break down the food.
It was not consumed with meals,
and it was also not the degree of protein,
meaning like what's six grams, eight grams,
you know, in a glass of milk,
or is fermented into a yogurt or kefir.
And it's also different.
So that's all the lactose has been basically cultured out
or fermented out.
So there are different ways of looking at it.
I just think that if you were in the wild,
you would not be milking a cow or getting dairy in that way.
I think you can actually be very healthy
from eating some raw goat's cheese or raw sheep's cheese
if you do enjoy it.
Yeah, raw milk is different.
I mean, it's got natural bacteria.
If you leave raw milk out, it doesn't go sour.
It turns into, I think, cream.
If you're a rec-pasturized milk can go sour.
And then, what about the homogenation process?
Because raw milk separates and homogenization,
they like cram these fat cells
into these small holes making it suspend itself
and milk so it never separates.
Does that affect the fat?
Does it make it less healthy?
All of this is absolutely correct.
And so, you know, what you see in a store
is nothing like real milk in the first place.
So if someone wants to make the argument,
hey, what do you think about having some raw milk
that I get from my friend down the street?
I can't give the recommendation
because technically it's illegal in the United States.
It's that gray area, just like technically CBD
is kind of illegal on a federal level.
Although we use CBD, we think it's great.
We looked at all the research and you can't overdose on it.
It's incredible.
Raw milk for building back up the gut
and for all the healthy enzymes in bacteria.
Sure, that can be some benefit.
I'm just saying, if you have the option, go for goat or sheep because it's easier to digest.
Now the homogenation is probably, I go back and forth, but it's probably the worst thing
you can do to milk.
Even if it's grass-fed, even if it's organic, if it's homogenized, you've literally taken
a fat molecule and blown it through like the little espresso type thing at Starbucks
and whatever it is, right?
So you blown up these fat molecules and the only reason we do that is because people in
a grocery food store don't want to see the milk and the cream separate.
That's the only reason we do it.
And then it makes it that much harder to digest.
So milk is just extremely hard to digest and just not ideal for most humans.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I know.
I actually read some studies I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know, it's illegal, but I do give them the, when they do drink milk, the non-homogenized,
you know, virgin work with the cream, et cetera.
You just gotta shake it before you serve it.
People are so dumb.
Well, that, and I always ask people,
like, why are you giving your kids milk in the first place?
Not you, I just ask the question.
And they're like, well, it has calcium in them.
It's like, well, did you know almond milk
actually has 30% more calcium?
And so then, like, we can get away from that argument.
Like, oh, what has vitamin D?
I'm like, yeah, but the milk,
the vitamin D in milk is vitamin D too.
It's like a synthetic, not as great a version,
the first place.
So I just ask people,
because milk's part of our culture.
Like that's all, it's been a part of our culture.
And just with the amount of like,
air nose and throat issues I see,
and kids coming off milk,
and then all of a sudden their skin clears up,
cradle, cut, clears up,
and they don't have the allergies anymore.
I happen to myself,
I could breathe through my nose
for the very first time in 25 years
when I eliminated dairy products.
And I'm like, but I still don't wanna give them up
because I wanted to have way protein,
because I love way protein, because it's very anabolic
and there are a lot of benefits because of,
you know, all the different things
they can do for your immune system.
And so I still didn't wanna give it up,
so I'd still drink it.
And I'm like, ah, you know what,
I think I should probably give this up
because I kept testing positive for it as well. And again, you can lab test it. So I don't even guess people like, oh, it's still drinking. And I'm like, ah, you know what? I think I should probably give this up because I kept testing positive for it as well.
And again, you can lab test it.
So I don't even guess people like,
oh, that's not true.
I'm like, just lab test.
Like listen, like you can figure it out.
We don't need to argue over this.
Just lab test.
Yeah, it makes Justin fart a lot.
That's about it.
He just farted a little bit.
Talk him about it.
He's not throwing me in or the best.
So CBD, let's talk about CBD for a second.
You're saying you notice all these benefits from it.
How do you guys use CBD in your brain practice?
Or should I say hemp extract because however you want to call it?
Yeah, sure.
Whatever the best and most legal term is to this date right now.
You know, and it's hilarious too.
And the only reason that there's just this big issue around it is simply because I believe
that they want to pat it somehow and use it pharmaceutical.
They already are. Already Epidiallex is about to get,
you know, it's about to get approved for use
in intractable forms of epilepsy.
And they're studying CBD as an edge of therapy for cancer
because the anti-cancer effect.
So of course, that's why they're trying to make something
that's completely non-toxic illegal.
But yeah, back to the question,
how do you guys see it affecting people?
What are its uses?
It's absolute best use that we've seen in our practice, and yes, it works tremendously
well for epilepsy.
So, we have to know that, and it can work great.
And again, we're not treating diagnosing, no curing in a disease here.
But for cancer, but the main reason we use in our practice is as an anti-anxioletic,
and that is reducing any type of nervous system anxiety in people.
Insomnia, they're always moving, that feed a twitching,
like they're just always going.
Nervousness before meeting.
And it's life changing for people.
You combine that with some magnesium,
like a full spectrum magnesium,
where it's not just a citrate
and you can literally change people's lives
and who that have suffered from anxiety.
Because maybe the four of us don't have the issue,
but there's a lot of people,
they can't speak in a meeting network,
they get nervous just having to speak up
or in classic students with all of these ADHDs.
Why can't we use something in its plant-based form
that they've used up to 600 milligrams or more
in studies with children?
The average dose, so here's an issue though,
and you can't use just five milligrams of CBD.
Sure, usually it's just like 20 to 50 or something.
Exactly, right.
25 to 50 milligrams with it,
ideally right around 40 milligrams, and that's the minimum, that's the, right. 25 to 50 milligrams with it, ideally, right around 40 milligrams.
And that's the minimum.
That's the starting does.
Now for kids, you can do less, but work your way up.
And hold it under your tongue if you're doing the liquid
for two minutes to let it absorb through the capillaries.
What's good at no?
If not, your liver's gonna pass it first.
And you're gonna knock off at least a third.
Wow, that's good to know, because we work with net
and they have a liquid dropper,
and they're one of the best ones that we've found
But I was just kind of squeezing it in and swallowing it right away. So I need to leave it under there for how long?
Two minutes to allow it to move through the capillaries under your tongue
It will go directly in your blood versus your digestive system
Just kind of move it in your cheeks anything in your mouth will allow it and then swallow it
And you'll get a much you'll actually get a faster benefit as well
So when I first started using,
I never believed in a million years
I would promote CBD, and the reason is that,
I didn't wanna be like, oh, okay, you're a naturopath,
and now you're promoting cannabis,
like of course you are.
It'd be, like,
it'd be, grow your hair long, and you know,
dread it out, like, listen,
like this is one part of the practice.
But, so I said, and anything I promote,
I always use myself first, and so I promote, I always use myself first.
And so I said, I'm gonna use this for six months.
And I use it every day for six months.
And the first two weeks,
and this is going back to your kind of your points
on the body that you used to it,
I got amazing benefits right away using it.
Like I was in like, felt so calm,
so relaxed, I would go home from work,
and I've had a tough day
or just some pretty complicated cases, things like that.
But I'm a pretty chill guy for the most part,
but then my girls were off the wall
and we're trying to get them ready for bed.
So I would just put that CBD, I'd put two droppers
under my tongue, and I'd be feeling great.
And then you kind of seem to maintain it.
You don't get that first, like you fork-based state
after a little while.
However, it's still working.
And then I believe that is one after using it for a while.
And you get the benefits, then use it cyclically.
Because now I don't use it every day,
but when I use it now it works again the same way.
So, I don't even know what the question was at this point,
but that is basically how we use it
and we use it tremendously.
Anytime you need calm and peace and relax.
Do you notice any changes in any lab tests from people who use it symptomatically?
Do you notice any changes in inflammatory markers, IGG antibodies?
Because I know that cannabinoids have an immunomodulating effect.
Are you noticing anything like that?
Like rather than just symptomatically, there's something else that's happening.
So the problem is that we don't give it an isolation,
so I can't answer that question.
We're always doing it as part of a protocol.
So if they come in with anxiety,
we're also testing their calcium to magnesium ratios,
we're testing the cortisol,
we might be using things such as a adrenal suede product
that contains like ashwagandha and fossil isserine,
along with magnesium glycinate, along with CBD.
And so they look at a broad spectrum.
Okay, now we're regulating cortisol,
we're regulating the nervous system with magnesium,
which stops the sympathetic nervous system over drive,
and we're using CBD.
The problem is, since there are not gonna be harmful effects,
try it.
Like, that's the thing.
And the funny thing is,
you get all the benefits of marijuana except for two with CBD.
And that is the antimicrobial, which they still don't know yet. It's antibacterial, but they
don't know if it's antimicrobial. And you don't get the increased appetite that you would
get with THC.
You also don't get high, which is boring.
So you don't get that. But if I get some medical benefits, you know, medical benefits. So
like for cancer, you would actually maybe you want to use cannabis because it increases appetite. Right. But for everything else, CBD will give you the exact same
benefit. And for those people, this is an amazing study. So there were over 982 studies at the
last time I checked on CBD benefits. And so for the government to try to take that away is just,
it makes no sense. There's obviously an agenda. But what they found was this, the people that get
paranoid from smoking marijuana.
If you gave them CBD, it actually started to block those receptors, the CB1 and CB2
receptors, so they didn't get the paranoia. That's how well it works.
So it doesn't have an affinity for the two cannabinoid receptors, at least from where
I read the two, you know, the CB1 or CB2 receptors, but they think it enhances your body's
ability to utilize its own endocannabinoids like an anemide. And then here's a the two, you know, the CB one or CBT receptors, but they think it enhances your body's ability
to utilize its own endocannabinoids, like an anemide.
And then here's a speculation,
and I've read a couple articles on this.
I don't know if you know anything about this,
but I would love to hear your opinion on this,
that there may be something known as endocannabinoid
deficiency syndrome, where people simply are not producing
maybe because of a high stress life or whatever,
they're not producing adequate amounts
of their own natural endocannabinoids.
These are the people that seem to benefit the most from using cannabis or cannabinoids.
Let me say why I agree with that, but I don't have any science behind it.
I don't have any data yet on that, but I completely agree.
We also don't know fully if the cannabinoids are taking up space on the cell receptors of CB1 and CB2,
or if they're down regulating the other effects
within those receptors.
But a big thing for me is, and this is why I believe it's correct,
someone in the highest-stressed lifestyle
is going to really just blow through their vitamin C,
their B vitamins, and their glutamine,
as well as zinc, right away.
Those are first first line defenses.
When your B vitamin levels start to fall,
now I'm not talking about getting rickets, right?
Or scurvy, like we're talking about like that level,
but we're talking about functional deficiencies.
You can't buffer stress as well.
Well, what happens is this,
and a lot of people don't make the correlation,
if you don't have enough vitamin B6,
you cannot turn trip to fan to five hydroxy trip to fan, which will eventually become serotonin.
And if you can't make serotonin, well, you're not going to have enough ability to make melatonin,
which means you can't sleep at night.
I believe so there's all these regulates, these pathways, same with thyroid.
Look at thyroid.
If you are iodine deficient or so iodine deficient, you're not going to make enough thyroid
hormone.
If you're salineum deficient, you're not not gonna be able to convert T4 to activated T3.
So we're looking at these things,
and I'm saying I believe all of it, like I totally agree.
Someone could be serotonin deficient,
but is it because they're deficient in the things
that actually help to produce serotonin?
And how do they get there?
Well, probably some type of Western-based lifestyle
or viruses, heavy metal toxins, autoimmune,
like all sorts of issues as well.
Wow.
Do you see the Western medicine move in the direction
of what you're doing?
I mean, how long have you been doing this for?
Well, I've been in the health and fitness industry
since 2000.
Okay.
And I've been doing functional medicine for seven years.
Okay, have you seen any trends in,
or changes in that last seven years?
It feels like, I don't know, we're in this bubble,
we talk to a lot of people like yourself.
So I might be just, you know, my perception may be just skewed.
Does it, do you think it's changing?
Because I know Western medicine, I have to advocate for it
just because it takes a long time
because of the scientific method.
So it takes forever to get to certain points
and I have to see the scientific evidence
for everything, even though the thousands of years
of anecdotal evidence shows you that there's something there.
Are we trending in that direction?
Or are we gonna see more people like you?
Or are you still like counter?
No, I believe that natu-pathic medicine is moving forward.
What I get worried about, so I did my post-doctoral work
with the Institute for Functional Medicine and brilliant organization as well, but 90% of the people there are
MDs. And so what they're doing though is they're looking at natural, let's call this just
natural, natural medicine. But they're looking at it from the eye though of conventional medicine
still. So when someone comes in with depression or high cholesterol, they're giving them B3,
vitamin B3, nice and right? I'm like, God's not really how natural medicine works.
You're giving a vitamin now as a pharmaceutical.
They're just treating it the same way.
Exactly, but with vitamins.
I get worried about that.
The other thing is that I get a little bit concerned with is that functional medicine is
now becoming synonymous with bioidentical hormones and that's not something I can really get
behind for most people.
Now explain what bioidentical hormones are for the audience.
So bioendentical hormones would be giving, so the easiest way to look at it would be the
act of form of folate in your body, which would be five methyl folate or hydroxy-5 methyl
folate.
So that's where your body can use.
So when we take in folic acid, this is a great example of why you don't want
to take a multivitamin from the same place that you buy your toilet paper, like, you know,
I have a Costco or something, it's just like not a good idea. It makes my pee really
up right now. That folic acid is not going to be converted by anywhere between 33 to
70% of the population to natural folate, which means you can build up and become toxic
in the body, very important for women that are looking to get pregnant.
So the bidentical hormone would be the end thing that
our body can use.
So like in birth control, that's not bionoidanical.
That's called ethyl estradiol, ethyl estradiol, ethyl estradiol,
ethyl estradiol.
And it's a synthetic form that they would actually make
in a lab.
And so your body doesn't know how to use that.
But with the bionoidanical hormone, you're using something
as the end product of what that looks like hormone-wise, but you're
replacing the progesterone, you're replacing estrogen, or you're replacing testosterone
typically.
Okay.
So, that's what doctors are doing when females come in with estrogen dominance, they're
giving more progesterone.
They're giving bio-identical progesterone.
Exactly.
Yep, or guys come in, and they're giving them, hard to say that you're making bio identical test to austral
That's that's a challenging one yeah
Yeah, cuz isn't that controlled. I mean how do they do without a doubt? It's controlled and so but here's what happens that
You can't confuse your body the issue that got you estrogen dominant or low testosterone in the first place
Still there still gonna be there and now you're saying I'm gonna put that back in
What I want to do is say like what say, what are you doing then to your body
by giving it two different signals?
You have high testosterone or high progesterone,
but yet you're still in the same state.
What is that?
That's weird, very strange.
And it might cause some, who knows?
Who knows?
Yeah, what kind of problems will happen?
Wow.
Is estrogen dominance the result of low progesterone
or high estrogen or can it be both?
Yes, that's funny. That's what happens. We almost maybe 1 out of 30 women
we see as actually having a high estrogen. Believe it or not.
It's just a low progesterone. It's low progesterone. They come back normal.
And the best way to test this is you're gonna run a hormone test
five to seven days before you would get your day one menstruation.
And that's gonna be around day 21, day 23 of your cycle. That's gonna be the highest peak in progesterone.
So what you want there is your highest level of progesterone
and somewhere near your lower level of estrogen.
We find almost always nine out of 10 women
have some level of estrogen dominance.
And so I wouldn't even answer your question
back an hour ago, however long I spent,
they get acne on the chin,
they get maybe lower mood, they get more bloating,
more irritability,
they might start to get a little bit of facial hair growth,
this is happening for women.
And they're like, yeah, that's me, that's me,
I'm getting the water attention, more of the cellulite.
And the other issue is that when you start to make more,
well, when you start to make more estrogen,
you can add more body fat.
When you make more body fat, it's a vicious cycle
because you start to make more estrogen.
And it causes more inflammation. And so you can break it, of course,
but it's not the easiest thing to do.
How do you typically, okay, I guess is a tough question,
right, because it depends on the individual.
But generally speaking, how would you treat a woman
who's estrogen dominant?
Let's say she has all those symptoms, acne on the chin,
water retention, more fat gain than before,
maybe in the form of cellulite,
which I've also read is sometimes connected to,
estrogen dominance.
What are some things that they can do,
the average woman can do to help balance that out?
So right out of the gates,
we believe in two things in my practice.
We want to help people get rid of the symptoms
in the short term because nobody wants to live
with their symptoms.
We want to do it naturally though,
that won't cause more harm in the long run,
while working on the long-term game
I believe most people can get well within 12 to 16 weeks and I've seen this play out over the years
I've also seen it in the Ayurvedic literature and other types of literature
But then I look at it from modern day science all of your cells in your body turn over every 120 days
It's four months it makes sense
So what we're looking though in the short term is that that's why like people of blood sugar dysregulation
I mean you need to really work for three to four months.
You need to change the cell receptors on your cells. You need new cells. In the meantime,
you need to do everything that you can not to keep spiking blood sugar and insulin.
Sure. Right? So what we do for women with estrogen dominance, that would
could happen with men, it's just at a much subtler level, to be honest, like as much, much
subtler level, is that we use dim, diendol methanol, I believe is the...
It just changes the form of estrogen that gets converted into liver, I guess, toxic form.
Okay.
That's correct.
Exactly.
And it also helps with the removal of those end estrogen metabolites.
Okay.
The other thing we want to do is work on constipation.
A lot of women are constipated.
They don't believe or know that they're supposed to have
one to two-bar movements per day.
And what happens is if you are constipated,
you can absorb, although not as strong,
lesser versions of estrogen through the colon.
So we need to make sure that that's corrected.
At the same time, we know that most likely
they went lower progesterone because they're in an environment
whether internal or external, meaning exogenous
from without or endogenous from within,
of an environment that's causing them
to be in a higher stress state.
So we need to look at their cortisol levels,
look at their thyroid.
So we run a lab called the thyroid adrenal hormone lab.
And when we run that, then we can say,
oh, look, cortisol's off.
Let's do this.
Let's calm stress the sympathetic nervous system.
Let's then, now, we don't even have to do a lot of work
for the thyroid because we know the thyroid is affected
by the HPA axis, which is the adrenals,
which then also affects progesterone.
So our belief is, we always wanna do more with less.
And if we know the underlying root causes,
let's work on that kinda like the big rocks theory.
And then everything else will fall into place.
Now, it hasn't fallen into place by 12 weeks,
then we'll start to give extra for the thyroid.
Okay, so someone like that, you wanna reduce your stress,
probably not a good idea to have coffee,
a lot of coffee every single morning,
elevate the cortisol even more.
Okay, okay, and you wanna maybe have like a sleep routine,
where you turn off the lights,
before you go to bed type of deal,
more time to yourself relaxing,
and then like you said, the supplementation and constipation.
Parasynpathetic nervous system activities
that we spoke about,
infrared sonodas, sweatout some of those toxins,
and the third would be increased cruciferous vegetables.
If you increase cruciferous vegetables that are higher in sulfur,
sulfurophane, they will help to also mitigate the effects of high
estrogen in the body.
And what about the endol III carbonyl that's in those?
Is that converted DIM as well in the Christopher's vegetables as well?
In the Christopher's vegetables as well.
Okay, excellent.
So we're getting supplements plus whole food.
We're a big believer in the best of functional medicine, orthomolecular medicine, modern supplements
combined with the best of whole food.
We use both.
Excellent.
So this is the protocol for someone who has cellulite also.
If it's due to estrogen dominance, I would say. And usually there's a connection with that,
but also there's a connection to toxicity
and that has to do with plastics in the environment
and many other things.
So what happens is that can cause water-based retention,
which by the way, plastics then cause what?
Higher levels of estrogen.
So we're going back to estrogen.
All those, you know, estrogen.
And what we're doing is we're doing dry brushing
and we're doing a lot of sauna as well for people
with, and we're doing rebounding for people with cellulite.
So we're draining the lymphatic tissue,
we're using self massage or dry brushing
to help restructure, because there's an actual structural
based dysfunction with cellulite as well.
So is it, is it treatable to the point
where you can reverse it or?
Absolutely.
So there's, people talk about genetics,
so it's just genetics, yes, there's genetics some women will never get cellular right genetics always play
Oh, they do but you put yourself in the environment knowingly or unknownly a lot of people unknowingly
But it was still the environment that allowed for the cell to come
Hey, man look I've had clients who have swore to me that like look
I used to get fat or all the time and I didn't get cellulite and now if I gain a little bit of
Way it turns into cellular like what the hell is going on and it's and typically they'll have those kinds of other symptoms of
Estrogen dominance and this is something I've just learned
Recently because before it was always like oh, it's nothing you can do about that. Just get leaner
It's just your genetics and well and later won't leaner won't do it
You know, so you'll see a lot of I mean leaner helps so sure
You won't do it. You'll see a lot of, I mean, leaner helps.
We qualify that.
Getting leaner helps, so there's less body fat.
However, you'll see very lean people still with some cellular.
I was like, well, how does that happen?
That shouldn't happen.
Yes, that's why there's just a deeper picture to this.
But that's why cellular light is not an end state.
It's a byproduct of something else that's in balance.
We talk about all the time with inflammation.
Everyone, it's not as much anymore,
which is great so the industry's definitely getting better.
But everything before was like,
we just need to squalch inflammation.
And we don't need to squalch inflammation.
We need to figure out what's causing the inflammation
because inflammation is not a disease to be dealt with.
It's a natural, it's also natural in the body.
You completely eliminate inflammation, you're screwed.
Like that's not good for you either.
So, are there things that you do
because you've seen so much research,
but it just hasn't quite been proven yet,
but you're already taking some proactive precaution.
There are things in your life that you would be
controversial.
Yes, yes.
And so back, I wanna hear what they are.
So back in the, you know, back,
and we still do fitness to this day,
but it's just kind of like one component, you know,
but I mean, I'm just a huge proponent
of personal trainers and personal training in general.
I think it's one of the best careers in the world.
I also believe that you have the potentially
the greatest opportunity to change lives
because you're seeing people multiple times per week.
I mean, who else does that?
And you work, you can work on nutrition, exercise, sleep, lifestyle.
I mean, you can get so much done.
But back in the day, we were doing way before
tabata's and those types of things.
We were doing interval-based training
with resistance-based exercise so that people
wouldn't have to do the cardio.
And we would keep it going for more than 20 seconds.
It only now is it being played out
that you can actually get the benefits of interval-based training
for between 90 seconds and three minutes as long as you double that and work rest. Now is it being played out, that you can actually get the benefits of interval-based training
for between 90 seconds and three minutes, as long as you double that and work rest.
So we were doing the intervals 20 seconds on, 30 seconds, I mean, 20 seconds with double
that and rest, but then we were saying, this isn't working.
Meaning like, people need four to five times the rest period of the work period.
Meaning if you do a 30 second sprint, you can't recover in 30 seconds or 60 seconds,
it's not for an adequate quit interval,
but that's what people were showing in the research.
I'm like, I just don't see it play out in real life.
So we looked at that, we said, okay,
no, we're going all out for 20 seconds or 30 seconds,
and that's the max.
People really can't do a 60 second sprint.
That is like, I mean, if you've ever run around
with that a sprint man, at 60 seconds,
you're dying at that.
Like you might need, I've ever
doing it in track at high school.
And I wasn't recovered in another minute
from that.
So anyway, so that's what we're doing back then.
Another example is today is we are not,
we are, we are doing a smoothie for breakfast.
We are doing liquid before lunch.
So all, and I, that includes oatmeal,
like a, include a sweet potato.
It's something easy to digest.
So here's what I looked at,
nowhere else in an ancient base times
where they do it at heavy breakfast.
So now we're skipping breakfast,
but I'm like, yeah, but skipping breakfast isn't working
because it does not help the blunt cortisol
and it's starting to slow thyroid and a lot of women.
So I'm like, what if we did something
that was easy to digest that wasn't gonna necessarily
spike blood sugar levels that they could drink over the period
of an hour or 90 minutes, so it'd be almost like
time released nutrition that would take
very little digestive energy.
Because when people were eating like the bacon
and the eggs and all, like even just like,
let's say like the pretend keto,
that takes a tremendous amount of energy from your body.
So 30% of all the energy in a day
basically goes towards digestion.
And if you get that back because you put easy to digest
foods in your stomach, well,
then that would give you a lot more energy back.
And it would give you the liquid-based nutrition
because remember, all the food you put in your body
has to be turned into a liquid by your digestive system.
What if we already did that?
So we learned this by actually going through
with people with digestive-based issues.
That's how we were learning this.
The other part to that was that we were getting the benefits
that a lot of people were getting with fasting
because basically a lot of people felt great
when they were fasted because they got to keep
all of their energy because they have to break down any food.
So we got tremendous benefits from doing that
and the way again that I learned that was people
used to do soup for breakfast and a lot of ancient-based cultures.
Americans are not going to eat soup for breakfast, but they'll do a smoothie.
And so this we did.
Now there's protein in this smoothie.
Typically we do vegan-based, and then there's some fruit in there.
How much fruit?
Well, no fruit for someone that has blood sugar issues in the beginning.
Then eventually maybe it's one cup of fruit.
Maybe it's two cups of fruit.
It depends on the individual, what's their tolerance to carbohydrates.
And you can figure that out by first starting low.
That's why we do three weeks low carbon.
Then we actually want people to eat
as many good carbs as they can.
That includes fruits and vegetables.
The goal is to eat as many good quality foods
as you can that are lower calorie,
but so high vocal oric, but nutrient dense, exactly.
Thank you.
And that's the goal.
So the goal is not to deprive it's to give more
But we have to figure out the person so that was a really long way of saying we'd like to do liquid before
Like easy digest foods and it's been life-transforming for in our practice
I have a question. I have a question about
creatine
I easily probably one of the most studied
Urgogenic
Supplements that's out there's I don't know hundreds of done on it. And they're finding now that it improves cognitive function
and some people, it's got some antioxidant properties.
But I've also read that it has some effects on maybe
DHT levels in man and can do things like,
you know, affect the lighty cells and the testes.
And this is all like not super conclusive evidence.
How do you feel about Cray team as a supplement?
Is it something you think everybody should take
or is it something that only certain individuals should take?
Yeah, that's gonna be a bio-individualized one, for sure, as well.
I do believe since it, and there's no doubt creatine work.
So people like, I don't believe in creatines.
Hard to not believe in something with that much research behind it.
And now, do some people have absorption issues with it?
Yes, that's a different story.
But when we look at it, well, we're getting it from food,
our body's gonna need creatine anyways.
I do believe that since it's an anabolic substance,
meaning it's pro-growth,
that it could lead to a conversion
from testosterone to dihydrotestosterone,
and anything that's anabolic will affect the prostate as well.
So when we look at those,
like that's like the death area for men, right? It was just like, oh, the prostate, it. So when we look at those, that's like the death area there for men, right?
It was just like, oh, the prostate.
It's just same with prostate cancer, breast cancer,
the two thing.
Anything higher in estrogen,
and anything that's gonna convert from testosterone
to DHT will affect breast tissue and prostate cancer.
So I do believe that is that potential.
I just don't think it's gonna happen every guy.
Who it happens to?
Hard to say.
And also, what in combination with what
What else you're doing right a lot of like heavy meat in the diet red meats very anabolic based foods really hard training like anything
That's gonna amp up the body put it more of an anabolic now
I have if if when if there's a genetic role for prostate cancer or prostate enlargement
I should say I definitely have it. It's on both sides of my family, all the men in my family have prostate enlargement issues.
My grandfather had prostate cancer,
but it was a very mild form.
But other than that,
it's like prostate enlargement up and down on both sides.
What are the things that I can do
to help prevent that from happening to me?
So over the age of 40,
most guys have some type of prostate cancer
based cells in their body.
Over the age of 70, every male has them.
So now we're looking at how quickly is the proliferation,
which luckily is slower for prostate based cancer.
What you want to do is you want to make sure
that you do not have any heavy metals in the body.
Aluminum, they seem to have an affinity
for the prostate, just like breast tissue as well.
And what you'll also want to make sure
is that you are eating a lot of those cruciferous
base vegetables that we talked about.
So check, I would also do a quarterly-based liver detox.
What does that mean?
Just simply getting more phase one
and phase two nutrients in your body
with a longer fast so we can kill
some of those cancer cells.
So that's absolutely recommended.
And then the other part, so there are great natural-based substance. So again, I'm a huge believer in orthomolecular medicine,
which is basically looking at vitamins and minerals and all those great things, combined
with the best of herbal-based medicine that we've known for thousands of years. Well,
stinging nettles and pyjeeim are absolutely tremendous for the prostate and prostate inflammation.
Zinc is the number one for prostate-based issues.
So I'd make sure that you're not deficient in zinc.
Anywhere from 15 milligrams to 50 milligrams a day
of a zinc picolinate or some other great form
of a killated-based form of zinc,
as well as doing things, maybe like a prostate support-based
supplement that has natural herbs in it already
that will help with the prostate-based issues.
Some guys just get prostititis,
which is inflammation of the prostate,
then they have poor urinary flow,
maybe some erectile dysfunction-based issues.
Those are your first signs,
so it absolutely look at that first.
Inflammation comes first for the cancer.
Stinging nettle and the other one, Pygum, I don't know.
I can never pronounce it.
I know how to spell it.
Is that something you would take regularly
or is that something you take cyclically?
You would take it regularly, and again,
I'm not a huge fan.
There's a few supplements that I recommend,
kind of foundational based supplements,
but regularly, I don't like to do anything unless needed.
But after the age, let's say, of 50, you say,
yes, but everyone on my family had this,
so it makes sense for me to take it.
And I would say, I totally agree with that statement.
Yes.
What are some of the regular supplements
that you would recommend?
I just think that everybody needs a failsafe.
So I've studied organic foods and conventional based foods.
People are all over saying,
like, there's no need to eat organic.
You're missing the point.
Like, you're just missing the point
that it has nothing to do with the macros.
Yes, an almond has somewhere around five, six grams
of protein, 13 grams of fat, six to eight grams
or so of carbs, whether it's organic or conventional.
Like, that's what it is in a quarter of a drop.
Like, it doesn't change the molecular structure.
Where you're looking at an organic is that you hope
that the soil contains more of the nutrients
that's then uptaken into the food.
Like, that's how it happens.
And then also, you don't have all of the glyphosate based sprays on it.
And glyphosate on conventional based food has been shown to actually
potential. Now, again, there is a case that was just awarded
or close to $200 million.
I never saw that.
I mean, like, that's proven now.
It causes cancer.
But the other thing is, no one's talking about that.
It's an antibacterial.
It's an antipesticide.
Well, your gut has a hundred trillion of those pests in there, right?
And so that glyphosate over time very well may start to cause a dysfunction
in that microbiome, which affects your immune system, and then who knows what else it causes.
Yeah, it doesn't interrupt the, is it the shikamadi pathway, and the bacteria have that pathway,
don't they? I actually, I don't know that that's not.
I might have just made that word up. I like that.
That's gonna be on the checklist.
Shake them out.
Shake them out.
Yeah, we'll see what happens.
So I don't know about that.
But getting back to the so foundational.
But even organic based foods, since the 1960s,
there'll be anywhere from 13% to something
percent less of the minerals,
potentially that they have before.
So I do like a functional medicine multivitamin.
How do you know if it's functional medicine based?
Well, it's third party tested
and it contains the methylated form of the B vitamins
so like the methylcoballamine free B12,
the methyl folate for your folic acid.
It's just that's a smart way to do it.
Like your B6 is a paradoxical five-phosphate.
It's just those the absorbable forms
that are gonna build up and become toxic.
So I recommend that, not super high dose,
it's just a normal overall multi,
and I recommend that most people supplement
once they've rebounds they're gutted.
Now remember, a probiotic is not for everyone.
If you have bloating, you have gas, you have acid reflux,
you have burping, you most likely
of some type of overgrowth, figure out what it is,
eliminate first, because if you have
small intestine bacterial overgrowth,
and you add more bacteria to a gut that's full of bacteria
You're making it worse. Yeah, you're making it worse
So get your gut healthy then you can use a multi-strain probiotic. I'm a big believer in
some type of fruit and vegetable blend so that most people eat vegetables and you should I believe that most people should eat
Seven and nine servings or seven nine cups of vegetables every day a lot of vegetables
It's a lot right but we look at is this two cups of vegetables every day. A lot. A lot, right?
But we look at it as this.
Two cups of berries in the smoothie,
or you can do some greens if you want.
Two to three cups with lunch,
two to three cups of dinner.
You're good.
It can be cooked if you have trouble digesting raw ones.
But for most people, my go-to everyday at lunch is broccoli.
So I don't have a varied selection all the time.
I just don't have access to it.
So I like a greens base as well to give you a varied selection as well.
I think that's important.
And then just a couple others, most people would do well at Magnesia, but just have to
run in as many labs as I have.
Vitamin D is a must, even for people in California, even for people getting sunlight.
In Boston, we certainly don't get it for eight months of the year.
And Omega 3 is for most people.
Not a super high dose, but a dose to be able to get you adequate.
You've mentioned heavy metals a few times
and you've also mentioned how saunas
help the body eliminate heavy metals.
Would you say that that's one of the best ways
independent of or besides eliminating what meet,
the way you're getting those heavy metals in the first place?
Would you say that's one of the best single ways
of getting your body to detoxify itself from metals or other methods?
So I love the heavy metal sauna.
I mean, it's the sauna for the heavy metals, and we work with a lot of people.
Yeah, cool.
And I was just about to say, we recommend people get the Mercury of Malgum's,
the silver malgum's taken out of their mouth, but only by biological dentist, not your regular dentist.
Oh, you don't want to spray that shit through your mouth,
man, that's good.
They'll just cut it in half.
They'll literally cut it in half
with no masks already, they can just take it out of your mouth.
And it passes you when a biohazard container makes no sense.
But I was saying, that would be great
if you could actually do an in and in for a sauna.
So we do a lot of those recommendations.
And, but I did a podcast on this,
and it was 42 days.
Scientific research shows that in 90 to 93%
of all iron, lead and heavy metals
could be removed from the body in 42 days.
If you're using crack cell clorella, vitamin C and cilantro.
Absolutely amazing.
Ooh, what?
And that eliminates 90%.
And we did this.
We did this for 40.
Please just take it.
Take it two to three times per day, correct?
So, Clorella, cilantro, and vitamin C.
And vitamin C.
We use one more, we added, this is not in the literature,
but we added it because there's these things
called biofilms that develop in the gut.
And those biofilms have a large amount of heavy metals.
You have to dissolve those biofilms
to actually release the heavy metals
and access a lot of times that back to overgrowth, the parasites, whatever it might be.
So, but those biofilm disruptors are easy. Those are just high level proteases,
like proteate, protelect enzymes to break it down.
Wow, wow. But the sauna also helps with that.
So, but so that's the thing is like, a lot of times we just try to heal a person with one modality
when we have so many great modalities that work great together.
Their synergists is like like my former medicine's better
than your former medicine.
I'm like, why don't we just relax?
We do what's best for the patient or the client,
whatever's best for them.
And so doing it in Fred Sanna,
yes, getting the mercury malgum's taken out of your mouth
and by a biological dentist,
a-i-a-o-m.org, I believe, is the association
that will show you if the dentist is the person
that can do it.
It's a special certification.
They have special equipment.
And then doing the inference on us.
So like use them all.
They would all be great.
Excellent.
Wow.
Well, this has been very informative.
I'm not gonna listen to this.
Yeah, this one.
Anybody ever tell you look like Michael Corleone
from the Godfather?
Never heard that before.
Yeah, bro.
You got to want a part two especially.
Could it be because I'm jet lagging?
Oh, I'm like, hey, what are we saying right now? What. Could it be because I'm jet lagging the whole day? Yeah, I'm saying right now.
What are you talking about?
How long have we been chatting?
I don't know.
It's been a good, it's been a minute.
Yeah, it's been a long podcast.
No, very informative.
I've really appreciated you answering all of our questions
and very informative podcasts.
I know a lot of our audiences can enjoy this podcast
quite a bit, so.
Definitely.
Yeah, it's been a pleasure chatting with you guys,
but the other thing is too,
your message is exactly what we're looking for.
I mean, you guys are bringing in people
from different viewpoints that aren't the norm,
and so I really appreciate that you're having me
and then just being able to share my message.
Yeah, definitely.
Our goal really is to elevate the entire fitness
and health industry so that it can become the solution
for the health problems that are plaguing western society i think you're a
part
of that and so the more you can get your voice out the better
and the better we can drown out all the other bullshit that uh... it's probably
that's a good idea
excellent thank you
thank you for listening to mine pump
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