Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Ben Greenfield on How to Live a Longer, Healthier, and More Enjoyable Life
Episode Date: August 10, 2018In this podcast I interview bestselling author and competitive triathlete Ben Greenfield, and we talk about how strength training, muscle building, exercise, and diet affect aging, longevity, and heal...th. If you follow Ben and his work, you know that this is his primary hobbyhorse. He’s obsessed with figuring out innovative and cutting-edge ways to improve his body and mind, and in this show, he shares some of his most recent thoughts and strategies for optimizing his life. Here are some of the things we talk about in this episode… The role of muscle mass and strength in aging and longevity. The effect of protein intake and intermittent fasting on health. The ketogenic diet for performance and health. And more... 11:12 - What are your thoughts on muscle mass and longevity? 16:56 - What about the research showing an association between longevity and total lean mass? 23:53 - If you have sleep, diet, training, and stress under control, how much does it matter if you don't fast, or eat protein daily? 24:41 - Is moderate drinking helpful or hurtful? 27:27 - What is hormesis? 30:23 - How important is exercise? 32:56 - What are your thoughts on the ketogenic diet? 41:37 - Does everyone wake up in ketosis? How long does it take to become fat-adapted? 45:18 - What about the saturated fat and the paleo craze? 49:13 - Do you have any projects you're working on? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
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So, ultimately, small amounts of extremely functional muscle and a very high power-to-mass
ratio is what you should shoot for if your goal in training muscle is longevity.
Hello, hello. Mike Matthews here from Muscle for Life and Legion Athletics,
back with another interview for the Muscle for Life podcast. And this time around, I talk with
the one and only Ben Greenfield, who is a best-selling author and competitive triathlete,
and also a podcaster, content producer, entrepreneur, all around
neat guy doing a lot of neat things.
And we actually didn't really know what we were going to talk about going into this interview,
but ended up on the subjects of strength training, muscle building, exercise, diet, and how they
affect aging, longevity, and all around health and wellbeing.
aging, longevity, and all around health and well-being. And if you follow Ben and his work,
you know that that kind of stuff is his primary hobby horse. He is obsessed with figuring out innovative and cutting edge ways to improve his body and mind. And he is not afraid to experiment
on himself. And in this show, he shares some of his most recent thoughts
and his most recent strategies for optimizing his life. So here are a few of the things that
we talk about in this episode. We talk about the role of muscle mass and strength in aging and
longevity, the effect of protein intake and intermittent fasting on health,
the ketogenic diet for performance and health, and more. Oh, and for those of you who are wondering
how the third editions of Bigger, Leaner, Stronger and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger are coming along,
they are coming along very well. I'm actually done with my second draft. I'm working with the
editors, which I guess that's the third draft.
And then next week I will start recording the audio books. I expect that to take
two to three weeks and that will serve as the fourth and final draft. And then it's really
just a sprint to produce the publish ready files, the ebook files, the audio book files, the print files, the files
the printer needs to start printing the new books. And I expect that everything will be out
by early December. I am going to release the ebooks and the audio books first, and those should
be out live, ready to go in October or November.
And by the way, if you've already bought one of the eBooks or audio books, you are going to get
the new edition for free because I'm simply going to be replacing the existing files with the new
stuff, which means you will get a notification. I think you get notification, that a new edition is available and that you can update
what is sitting on your device, on your phone, your Kindle, whatever. And if you don't get the
notification, you'll be able to simply manually update the books. So that's where those projects
stand. Oh, by the way, I'm also updating the year one challenges, the workout journals for men and
women as well. Excited to get the new ones
out because not only are the programs changing a little bit for men and women, but the journals
are also going to contain more helpful information. They're going to be more of a reference guide than
they currently are. And the journals will be coming out at the same time as the new books.
time as the new books. So that's the update. And I have a couple, two, three weeks of intense audio book recording ahead. And then I will be back to my normal schedule of writing for the
blogs and recording the podcast and so forth. I decided to put everything on hold so I could get
through these new books as quickly as possible because it meant the difference of doing it all
in about six weeks versus probably what would have taken four months if I would have tried to
squeeze all this stuff in in between all the normal work that I do. So I decided to put all
the normal stuff on hold and just get through this third edition project as quickly as possible.
And I think it was the right decision because I'm very
happy with how these new books are coming together. And I'm very curious what you and
everyone else who is going to read them thinks. And lastly, this episode is brought to you by
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Mr. Greenfield, welcome, welcome.
Thanks for taking the time.
I think this is the first time have we spoken?
I mean, yeah, I think so is the first time have we spoken i mean yeah
the first time we've ever spoken on my show could be thanks matthews i've had you on my show
and uh yeah i don't know if i ever have been on muscle for life muscle for life
that's me yeah you know what's interesting, though? You could argue that muscle might confer decreased longevity.
Really? Because that's like the opposite of what people generally think. Why is that?
I know. I know. And there's a lot of especially gentlemen attempting to get jacked, you know, as they go into old age. But fact is, and Paul
Jaminet actually wrote about this a long time ago in his old book, The Perfect Health Diet.
And since then, there have been plenty of studies. I mean, you could even go to PubMed and do a
search on muscle quality longevity. And it turns out that because muscle takes a lot of energy to carry and cool and requires you to have a ventricular hypertrophy, enlargement of that left ventricle of the heart.
could cause a decrease in longevity compared to a fast twitch muscle that's kind of like the small,
compact, powerful, wiry muscle, such as you would find in say like a power lifter.
So ultimately, small amounts of extremely functional muscle and a very high power to mass ratio is what you should shoot for if your goal in training muscle is longevity.
I mean, yeah, I could see that. Although I would say your average power lifter is not small,
maybe small by like Instagram narcissistic. Yeah, it depends on the power lifter, right?
Yeah. I mean, there's some guys, some power lifters that are, of course, the stereotypical
Russian with the enormous belly powerlifter who can
rip 500 pounds off the floor and hoist it overhead.
But then there are very small, kind of wiry powerlifters that kind of are not the ones
that you see on TV or on YouTube as much.
But I've talked to a lot of these small, wiry guys that are just like
super duper strong. You shake their hand, they've got an iron grip, but they don't necessarily,
they don't look like the guys who'd have like biceps bulging out. They're welcome to the gun
show t-shirt. So it's kind of interesting. Yeah. I mean, you have obviously anatomy is
in play in there. Some people's bodies are just built to be strong. Yeah. Muscle insertions and so forth.
And then it also, of course, depends how you train.
What would you say if you were to, this might be just stretching, but if you were to extrapolate
that to some sort of FFMI, right?
So like once you start getting, once you start getting upward of 25, you're pretty, you're
pretty huge and you're probably reaching about the top of, let's say,
25 to 27 being probably the top of what is naturally achievable for the vast majority
of people, at least. I think I'm around 23 or so, and I really don't have any desire to be bigger
than I am. Wait, what are you talking about? BMI? No, no. FFMI, free fat mass index, right? So,
like the relationship between your height and your total muscle mass, which is, it's
usually used as a proxy for, is he natty bro?
Right?
So how high is his FFMI?
When you see somebody with like a 29 FFMI claiming natty, like, no, never.
It's just not possible.
You only can get so muscular unless you're talking about like a six foot eight dude who
has nine inch wrists and
has just been a freak show his entire life. But for the average person, you only can get so big
naturally. So with what you're talking about with- Yeah. Above 25 is considered to be like
mildly sterodal, right? Yeah. Yeah. You're huge. Again, I'm maybe 23. I'm in the 23s and I'm
big by, I guess, maybe normal standards. I'm kind of small
and whatever by Instagram standards. But as far as longevity goes, what are your thoughts there?
Take me, for example. I don't consider myself a bodybuilder. I've never competed. I don't think
I would do well because I would be scrawny by bodybuilding standards, but I look like a fitness
guy. You know what I mean? Right. Exactly. I haven't seen many correlates between FFMI and
aging, but I haven't looked much either at what's out there in PubMed, for example, as far as
anything that's been looked at correlated to that. But what I can tell you is that a lot of the
popular theories of aging are based on maintenance versus reproduction,
meaning in an ideal scenario, you would strike a sweet spot between having a body that does not
require a great deal of maintenance and a great deal of antioxidants to actually take care of
and repair and recover. And at the same time, you achieve a sweet spot for reproductive capacity,
meaning you maintain a certain amount of reproductive usefulness and studies that
have looked at women and their age of childbearing and their number of children. For example,
it confers a significant improvement in longevity when you have A, had a lot of kids at an early age
and B, continue to have kids later into life.
And interesting when, when we look at men and women, fertility is of course affected by hormone
status, by cell membranes and by, you know, available fat stores. So of course, you know,
as FFMI increases, if the increase were due to, you know, for example, a significant decrease in body fat percentage to the extent to where you might reach, you know, andropause or progest it either is making babies or is capable of making
babies frequently and into old age. And that based off of the, this theory of reproductive
usefulness, uh, is, is a pretty good idea if you want to keep yourself around for a long period of
time. And you look at a lot of these blue zones, right? Like the last one that I believe was a story in the New York Times, this little village in Acirelli, Italy, they're known for eating high amounts of rosemary, specifically a form of rosemary that's very high in rosamarinic acid, which is this stuff that has a really, really good antioxidant effect and a little bit
of a natural built-in plant defense mechanism. So your body responds with this hormesis response
of stepping up its own antioxidant production. But then the men who live in that village are
having sex up to a very old age, like 90 a hundred years old and still having sex two to three times a week, which is a lot for somebody that age. So it appears that, uh, that, uh, it's not necessarily
just about being swole and may not even be about being that swole as much as it is about being
fertile, sexy. Yeah, exactly. Sexy and sexual. And honestly, it's kind of weird because those two often contradict one another. You look at the cover of many popular health magazines and the way that sexy is defined often confers andropause and the female athletic triad syndrome and all these issues correlated to very low
body fat percentages or overtraining or both. Yeah. I mean, the same thing goes for guys,
right? You only can be so lean for so long and train so hard before you start to feel
the effects of it. And. Oh yeah. I mean, I've, I've been there as, you know,
from, you know, I, I used to do bodybuilding and maintain very low levels of body fat percentage, you know, by eating tuna with relish stirred into it for dinner every night.
And, you know, then I moved on to Ironman Triathlon, where I also competed for 10 years at a very lean body fat percentage and more of a chronic cardio approach.
But neither lent itself very well at all to thyroid optimization, testosterone optimization, really any hormones
whatsoever. I mean, across the board, neuroendocrine issues with both of those sports, whether,
you know, one was focused more on mass building, one more on staying lean for a good power to
weight ratio, but ultimately, you know, neither are a healthy sport. Yeah. Yeah. You know,
something just what you're saying with fertility is, I forget who it was. It was a doctor, one of the, one of these more
prominent doctors who whose work I like, I don't remember who, but was saying that fertility is,
is a good general indicator overall health. So just what you were saying in terms of remaining
sexual and sending that message to your body that, Hey, uh, biologically speaking, I'm worth having around. It makes sense.
Yeah, exactly. I mean, a lot of the studies on it, interestingly enough, are done in fruit flies,
but there's actually pretty good data that you can extrapolate from fruit flies to humans. And
a lot of these aging labs, because fruit flies can produce another generation so quickly. I mean,
you can study, I don't know how many dozens of generations of fruit flies over just a few years
in a lab, but you can get through a lot more than you can like rodent models or human models. So
ultimately you can learn a lot about aging from these fruit fly populations. There's some, some,
uh, conclusions that you probably can't extend to humans, but this reproductive one seems to make sense.
It just makes logical evolutionary ancestral sense, and it also seems to flesh itself out when we look at a lot of these blue zones.
Interesting.
And what are your thoughts on the research that's out there that shows an association between longevity and – I mean, it really is just total lean mass, right? So like,
as you get older, if you don't do whatever, starting in your 20s for most guys, right?
If you don't do anything about it, you're going to start losing lean mass. And that just kind of
carries on throughout your life and your metabolism dwindles with it to some degree,
which it seems like loss of muscle is the primary driver of that.
And by at least halting that, which of course requires some sort of resistance training,
it doesn't require bodybuilding or weightlifting. I mean, you could probably do it with bodyweight training, but at least not losing lean mass as you get older is associated with longer
life and reduced all cause mortality. At that at least that's my understanding of the
research that I've read. Yeah. I mean, more particularly some of the more compelling
research seems to, seems to look at some variables that are a little bit more nuanced,
you know, particularly hand grip strength. You know, that that's one.
Yeah. I was going to say like grip strength, having your body work.
Exactly. Grip strength across the board.
Poor grip strength is an independent risk factor for type two diabetes, for cardiovascular disease.
Another one is walking speed.
And that's another interesting one.
Like the fastest walking speed has an inverse correlation to mortality.
And so you tend to see.
And what is that?
What does that mean?
Exactly.
That means just in your day-to-day living? So basically, what the most recent study found was that rapid declines in walking speed actually predicts early death.
So as soon as you start to slow down in walking speed, it means that you're not necessarily nearing death's door, but it's a pretty good sign that you're aging more quickly.
So hand grip and walking speed, muscle definitely has been correlated in many cases with longevity. But again, I think it's
more the quality of the muscle than the quantity of the muscle. And those do go hand in hand to
some degree, right? Yeah. Yeah. And there's one longevity protein that's pretty dependent on the
strength of skeletal muscle. I forget the name of the protein, but essentially it's much more dependent on strength than the actual number of fibers or
the mass of the muscle itself. So I think that the, yeah, the corollary with muscle mass is more
the strength that the muscle confers than it is just the, you know, the amount of muscle itself,
because, you know, muscle, unless it's actually producing some kind of functional usefulness,
is just extra maintenance.
And then we go back to that maintenance versus reproduction argument.
It'd be better to focus on your reproductive capacity and your fertility
than it would be your actual muscle.
But yeah, from a fitness standpoint, it usually comes down to hand grip strength, walking speed, and then muscle quality, muscle strength, more or less.
Yeah, that makes sense. I mean, but there is obviously a relationship between
muscle quality, muscle strength, and muscle size. I mean, if you're going to be strong,
you're probably going to be a bit bigger than the average person, right?
Yeah. Most strength training programs confer a pretty significant increase
in mass. I just think there's a law of diminishing returns. But again, part of this comes down to the
nutritional component too. I mean, I was recently at a mastermind with a bunch of physicians
and many of them were focused on longevity. And when we look at anything from, you know, like a pulsing approach to management of
cancer, to anabolic catabolic cycles, to ensure that you have enough mTOR and enough insulin-like
growth factor and enough insulin to maintain some amount of anabolism, but then not so much that you
just have undifferentiated cell growth and accelerated aging. It seems to come down to a pretty good balance between the two and specifically
related to this discussion, not being in a constant anabolic state, not having mTOR
constantly activated. And so in a situation like that, it would mean, well, focus on strength
training, but don't necessarily
face stuff all the time. Look at like a protein restricted diet on specific days or alternate
day fasting or an intermittent fasting approach or macronutrient adjustments based on how heavy
your strength training or your training in general is for that day. And accept the fact that you're
not going to eat the same thing every day, the same amount every day. And instead you're going to have certain days
where you enter more of a catabolic cycle, or at least certain periods where you enter more of a
catabolic cycle and certain periods where you enter a more anabolic cycle, you know, and, uh,
you know, that, that can manifest in a variety of scenarios. It could mean that you're going to eat
red meat, but you're going to only have like large portions of red meat two to three times a week. Or you're going to have certain
workouts where you fast after the workout, which may actually cause a slight improvement in growth
hormone and testosterone. And then you're going to have some workouts where you feed after the
workout. Some days where you fast, I typically fast once a week for 24
hours. That's a pretty catabolic 24 hours. I've just got water and minerals and multivitamin. I'm
not training hard during that time, but the amount of cellular autophagy, cellular cleanup,
and even the decrease in the amount of stress and throughput on the gut is pretty significant by me entering
that cycle. So I think a big part of it is, you know, if you're pairing an intelligent strength
training program along with certain days where you have macronutrient adjustments or protein
restriction, or at least you're going out of your way to not be constantly triggering insulin and IGF-1 and excess anabolism, then you're probably not going to get
so huge that it begins to confer a decrease in longevity.
Yeah. I mean, I think having worked with many, many people, most guys, and certainly most women
who obviously can build muscle just fine, but start with a lot less of it than guys,
who obviously can build muscle just fine, but start with a lot less of it than guys.
And so are kind of hamstrung from the beginning.
It's very hard to get jacked like that is without drugs takes a tremendous amount of not just hard work, but smart work, not only in the gym in terms of programming and
continuing to accelerate volume, continuing to accelerate intensity over
time. But also, like you said, on the nutritional side of things, it takes very strict, well,
fairly strict dieting when you are in a surplus, as well as when you're in a deficit. Many people
are strict when they want to lose fat and they get it done and then kind of just go back to an
intuitive eat by feel approach,
which obviously isn't, isn't, isn't optimal for trying to gain muscle and strength as quickly as
possible. Um, but I wonder how much all of that matters. And that's, this is, and this is may,
may come from just my, my ignorance and not having read enough research, but you know, when I just
coming from what I have, what, from what I have read and the
understandings that have come to, I just wonder how much minor things like this matter when
you get all the major things, right?
Like you are exercising several times per week.
You are not overweight.
You do not smoke.
You do not drink.
You do, you have good sleep hygiene.
You're not stressing yourself out, you know out just in life and in general. And if you have those big
things in place, I wonder how much does it really matter that you don't have any fasting in your
routine or you just eat protein every day? You know what I mean? Well, when you look at things
like blue zone data or longevity data, I mean, some of the things that you just said, we could almost argue against, right?
Like, for example, not drinking, right?
Well, it turns out that one to two drinks a day is associated with decreased mortality risk, specifically like tannin and antioxidant-rich beverages such as red, you know, or, or ferments, you know,
like, like a kvass with alcohol, you know, we see a lot of these in these longevity hotspots.
So it appears that it's not, not drinking. It's actually drinking in moderate amounts,
the same with stress or like low level hormetic. Well, I mean that, that, that correlation though,
again, that's not an area that I have read much up on. I've listened to, there was somebody in
particular, I want to say
he headed up a research board. It might've been for Life Extension, which is a supplement company
and that's fine, but they have a big board of researchers, MDs, PhDs, smart guy was talking
about alcohol. And this was like his pet project for, I forget his name because it was over a year
ago that I listened to the interview, but alcohol was his pet project. And he had read an
absurd amount of the literature looking for what he considered convincing evidence that alcohol was
healthful in any amount at all. And again, I'm passing this along more as a, I'm saying it for
what it's worth because I haven't done the direct research that he has. But his conclusion was that alcohol is a poison in any amount.
And the long story short is some people's bodies just deal with it well.
It's not really a positive for anybody.
They're not missing anything if they don't have it.
But some people's bodies deal with it better than others.
So some people can drink and you really don't see as long as they don't go overboard, you don't see any negative effects, whereas other people could
drink the same amounts and experience negative effects. Again, I can't vouch for one way or
the other. There's just something that's stuck in my mind because of who the guy was and the
amount of research he had done. And it was interesting. There's certainly some genetic
differences, you know, for example, Asian populations and their alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme results in a lot more acetaldehyde, you know, metabolic poison hanging around the system after they've drank.
So there's certainly that, but, you know, a couple of things.
First of all, yeah, alcohol is bad for you, but so is kale, so is quinoa, you know, so a lot of these plants with natural built-in defense mechanisms that seems to
confer a hormetic response that allows you to actually bounce back stronger, just like
solar radiation. And interestingly, in some cases, nuclear radiation and heat and cold all in mild
to moderate amounts seem to confer longevity. So there could be the fact that it is a slight poison.
Can you just clarify hormesis just so the people listening know what you're talking about?
Hormesis, I mean, in a nutshell, it's this idea that things that would be bad for you and
excessively stressful in large amounts actually confer increased cellular resilience in small
amounts. They equip your body to be able to, to bounce back stronger, which means that
living your life in a bubble and never eating wild plants. And some would say even, you know,
avoiding things like grains and dairy, or never subjecting yourself to a heavy load or not going
out in the UVA and UVB radiation you get from sunshine, like you're gonna get pretty weak.
If, if that's, if that's your approach to life, you know, to be living in a, in a digestive bubble or in an environmental bubble, it appears that
you do have to, to get out and, and do hard things in small amounts, which is of course,
you know, most people would, would nod their heads in agreement. And then there's, you know,
when it comes to the nutritional component, that's probably the one that's, that's the most
argued over, you know, should you eat, um, should, should you eat wheat? that's the most argued over. Should you eat wheat that's
like a non-GMO good wheat from a natural source and not worry about the gluten because frankly,
those trace amounts of glutens that the wheat has as a defense mechanism could actually make
your gut stronger and more resilient. People will argue over a lot of the plant-based things.
There's books like Plant Paradox by Stephen Gundry, for example, that kind of gets into that.
But ultimately, the idea of hormesis is that you try to do some things that are just kind of sort
of a little bit bad for you, but are good for you in small amounts. The idea though with alcohol
could also be, and I'll certainly grant this, just imagine if you got around with all your friends for one to two hours in the evening and you drank water and laughed and socialized and hung out and you were surrounded by friends and family and this relaxed, de-stressed environment, well, there's never been a study that has actually
looked at, you know, does it matter then if you're holding a glass of wine versus a glass of water,
right? There are all those things that go along with a nightly consumption of alcohol from a
social and a de-stressing standpoint that may actually be some pretty big confounding variables.
I like to think that some of the natural hormetic defense mechanisms and some
of the tannins and resveratrols and things like that and alcoholic beverages actually do give you
a little bit of that hormetic response. But ultimately, I think part of it is just the fact
that social drinking to a certain extent can confer longevity just because we know that one
of the top things a lot of these blue zones are doing is engaging in friendships and social relationships and hanging out with family
and just being in those type of situations where you're de-stressing at the end of the day.
But yeah, I mean, we got on this kick as you were talking about some of these more important
things. And another thing would be exercise. We don't see exercise as a prevailing
characteristic in any of these areas where people are living for a disproportionately long period of
time. We don't see a lot of CrossFit wads or triathlons or Spartan races or bodybuilding or
much of any of that. You see low level physical activity all day long, typically in nature.
And I realize that's a very difficult thing for someone living in a post-industrial era or westernized society to
actually pull off. I mean, you can hack your environment though. I'm walking on a treadmill
right now. I'll probably walk like five or six miles today, just low-level physical activity as
I'm dictating emails and as I'm talking on podcasts and as I'm writing and reviewing and reading, I'm often either walking or standing or kneeling or lunging or balancing on this little fluid stance board next to my desk or doing something that kind of tricks my body into thinking that I'm gardening or gathering or hunting.
There's a kettlebell over by the door, right?
When I step over that thing, I got to do about 30 seconds of kettlebell swings. So I'm doing a little bit of high intensity
speed work throughout the day. There's also a bar, a pull-up bar in the door of the office.
And my rule is I got to do three pull-ups when I walk underneath that. And then there's a hex bar
right outside in the room next to my office. And I go in there three to five times a day and just lift it five times.
All right. So, so I'm, I'm kind of engaging in this low level physical activity with a little
bit of sprinting and a little bit of heavy lifting throughout the day to simulate what those blue
zones do, because there really is not much of, of an exercise in a pill that we see in those
environments. And, you know, there, there's even some evidence that it doesn't matter how hard hard you exercise the beginning of the day or the end of the day, if you have your butt planted
in a chair for eight hours the rest of the day. So, you know, ultimately, I think that your
statement that maybe a lot of this stuff doesn't matter if you're doing the little things is right.
Assuming that those little things are, you know, low level physical activity throughout the day,
getting out in nature, fresh air, good sunshine, good water. We all know those have a profound
effect on the mitochondria specifically, and then family, love, life, social relationships,
perhaps with alcohol, perhaps without, who knows, but just that, that de-stressful time at the end
of the day. Yeah. I think all those things are probably far
more important than figuring out exactly how high you're going to spike your insulin post-workout.
Yeah. No argument there. What are your thoughts on the ketogenic diet? All the rage these days.
Yeah. I'm amazed at how well some of these ketogenic cookbooks are selling. I mean,
they're like, go look at the top 10 on Amazon and you know what that means.
Like, dude, number one on Amazon means you're moving like 5,000 to 6,000 copies per day.
It's nuts.
And I'll even name some of my podcasts like Keto, This About Ketosis, That About Ketogenesis,
Ketone, Esther's Keto, but because they freaking get downloaded like hotcakes.
Anything that says keto, it's nuts.
downloaded like hotcakes, anything that says keto, it's nuts. I delved into ketosis in 2013.
So I guess about at the time of this recording, five, five and a half years ago when I was racing Ironman and I was looking for a good fuel for brain, for liver, for diaphragm, for heart during
long-term endurance activities. And ketosis was kind of
a new thing, especially amongst athletes, amongst folks like, I guess, Terry Walls or people who
are managing epilepsy and seizures and things like that. Ketosis was already a hot topic,
but among athletes, it wasn't being used very much. And so I began to use MCTs. I didn't have access to ketone salts or ketone
esters at the time, but I would use MCTs. I would use essential amino acids, a little bit of like a
really slow release starch. Like at the time I was using the UCAN super starch, like a very kind of
slow release starch that causes a lot of fermentation and bloating,
I think, because a lot of it remains undigested, but ultimately it doesn't spike blood sugar.
So it's like a slow bleed carbohydrate you can use during exercise.
And then just electrolytes, right?
Because I found, as most people do, that my mineral and electrolyte needs went through
the roof as soon as I started dumping all the glycogen I was dumping.
And your potassium needs particularly go very high up when you're in ketosis.
So I raced like that in a couple of races in Canada and then after that in Ironman Hawaii and just felt like it was rocket fuel to be in ketosis for these long endurance bouts, you know, where you're out there for 9 or 10 or 11 hours.
long endurance bouts, you know, where you're out there for nine or 10 or 11 hours. And then the next year after that, I actually followed 12 months of strict ketosis, meaning that I was
eating like five to 10% carbohydrates max. And that was for Jeff Volokh's faster study in which
he took athletes who rather than as they do in a lot of these studies, you know, follow a ketotic
high fat diet for just like four days or two weeks leading into the study. He had people get what a lot of folks will call
fat-adapted or turn to fat-burning machines, at least theoretically, by following a ketotic diet
for six to 12 months. I did this for a year going into that study, and then they took the group that
followed a high-fat diet, a ketotic diet, and compared
it to a traditionally fueled 55% to 75% carbohydrate-based diet.
And they did VO2 max tests.
They did a three-hour treadmill test, which was horrible.
You just kind of stare at a white wall in the lab and run on the treadmill for three
hours.
And they collected muscle biopsy, fat biopsy, resting metabolic rate, exercise metabolic
rate, blood microbiome, whole bunch of stuff.
The biggest takeaway though was that they found that people who followed the high fat
diet were burning 1.6 to 1.7 grams of fat per minute.
When up to that point, most exercise physiology textbooks would say the maximum amount of
fat one could burn
during exercise is like one gram a minute. So essentially, at rest and during exercise,
the group that followed the high fat diet became very well adapted to burning fats as a fuel.
And so it appeared to be from a performance standpoint, especially an endurance performance standpoint, a good hack. Now, at the same time, compared to following a traditional endurance-based diet of 55% to 75% carbohydrate, I had less gut distress and I had better endurance, but I had a horrible thyroid. I was getting cold. I was watching my TSH go through the roof.
It got up to about between six and seven, which for clinical hypothyroidism, that might
not be high enough, but it's definitely enough to cause concern for healthy people.
I think it should be between about 0.5 to two for their thyroid stimulating hormone,
their TSH.
My testosterone plummeted.
I mean, my, my total T, uh, went below 200 and kind of started to get down towards like
low one fifties.
And, and again, like pretty sure my, uh, my five-year-old son might've had you beat.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or your five-year-old daughter.
Uh, the, the thing is though, you know you know, there was a tradeoff, right?
Like enhanced endurance performance, but at the cost of either metabolic downregulation
or neuroendocrine downregulation or both because of a lack of available glucose for everything
from, you know, glycoprotein formation to glucans to, you know, to insulin receptors to thyroid receptors to, you know, to, to insulin receptors, to thyroid receptors,
to, you know, everything that's necessary, you know, even, you know, enough for the
cells to produce testosterone, obviously. So, um, since then I've been able to maintain,
uh, ketosis, maintain a very low RQ, uh, a resting metabolic rate that relies primarily upon fat,
but get my testosterone back up and my TSH back down along with adequate T3 and T4 by adopting
a more cyclic approach, meaning that essentially I just eat a lot of plants, a lot of vegetables,
a lot of oils, a lot of fats, seeds, nuts, cold water fish, small amounts of protein, and even include,
especially pre-workout, like a ketone salt or a ketone ester throughout the day.
And then at the end of the day, I will eat ad libitum carbohydrates. Like last night,
I had coconut ice cream in a waffle cone for dinner with a
sweet potato mash and some sea salt. It was just like almost all carbohydrate. Tonight, I'll be
taking my kids out to sushi. I do 100 to 200 grams of carbohydrate at the end of each day,
tops off my energy stores. I wear a continuous blood glucose monitor. My glucose
stays elevated for a very, very sane and normal amount of time after the meal. I also have ketone
monitors in my office so I can duck down and check that if I want to. And I'm well into ketosis by
the time I wake up in the morning again. So I'm kind of able to have my cake and eat it too with
that type of cyclic ketogenic approach.
That's the way I coach most of the athletes that I work with as well, assuming they don't have familial hypercholesterolemia or they don't have some type of a gallbladder issue or anything else that might interfere with oil or fat metabolism.
fat metabolism. But ultimately, that's the approach I take now after experimenting with ketosis for a while as a strict approach and finding it to be very unfriendly from a neuroendocrine
standpoint, hormonal standpoint, overall energy standpoint. And we, of course, know that multiple
studies have backed up this fact that it harms anaerobic performance, that it might not be all that great for the hormones, especially when combined with high
levels of physical activity. So, I think that a ketogenic diet needs to be modified,
especially for an active population. Yeah. And that's, I think, spot on. And that's the
key takeaway of people listening. So, I'm sure a lot of people listening, I mean, you just hear
about it so much now and you have some
very strong proponents of it who basically say it's, it's the next thing. Like this is, this is
the next evolution of the human diet. And this is how we should all be eating regardless of our
circumstances, our physiologies, our lifestyles, our goals. This is it. And yeah, I don't, I don't
agree. You clearly don't agree either um now the do you find
that the with what you're able to do now and with how quickly you're able to get into ketosis is
that something that was you had to develop so to speak or yeah because i mean to somebody else to
somebody listening that'd be like oh so it's kind of like uh just car you know it's kind of like
intermittent fasting but it's with carbs
instead where you wake up. Sure, we all wake up. We stop eating whatever when we stop eating,
depending on when we go to bed. We sleep for seven, eight hours and we wake up. That doesn't
necessarily mean though that I'm not waking up in ketosis like you are. I would assume, right?
You might be, but ultimately it takes one to two years for your body to become fat adapted, especially if you, like most westernized kids, at some point switch from breast milk, which is actually pretty high in ketone producing bodies, to Cheerios and Gerber sweet potato mash, and then cornflakes and cereal. I mean, we spend in America, at least, you know, from the time we're
about two until we discover a healthy diet, if that ever happens, eating an extremely high amount
of carbohydrate, really downregulating our ability to be able to efficiently burn fats as a fuel and,
you know, rely instead upon glucose and everything. That's where everything from like keto
flu to, you know, poor energy levels to what typically causes someone after about two weeks to two months to drop off of a
low carbohydrate approach to do so is because they don't give it enough time. One theory is that part
of it comes out of mitochondrial density and that high amount of fatty acid oxidation could actually
improve mitochondrial density. And you have to get to the point where your
mitochondria are efficiently burning fat as a fuel and have increase in density to the point where
you can feel really damn good on a high amount of fat and lower amounts of that, you know,
that fast burning kindling versus the slow burning log. So, uh, you know, there are so many issues
though, you know, you talked about genetic individuality and, and, you know, there are so many issues, though, you know, you talked about genetic individuality and and, you know, we touched on that regarding alcohol.
But you could also say the same thing of like, you know, starch digesting genes.
You know, there are certain people I think it's the AM.
It's like the AMY1 gene, something like that.
But ultimately, some people do a really good job at producing salivary amylase, breakdown are very efficiently without a steep insulin response. And these would be like, you know, uh, some Pacific Islanders, some sub-Saharan populations,
some Asian populations. And, uh, those people are people with, like I mentioned earlier,
familial hypercholesterolemia, um, the, the APOE44 gene. There's a lot of people who have
an inflammatory response or a digestive distress response or an elevated triglyceride and LP little a response to high amounts of fat, particularly saturated fats.
And so there are some people for whom a ketogenic diet would not only not be a good choice, but it could kind of kind of increase your risk of dying an early death. So I think that in an ideal scenario, you go out and you get like a 23andMe
and feed that through a couple of analyses like Ben Lynch has a good program called Stratagene.
There's a good one from Dr. Rhonda Patrick.
I don't remember the name of hers.
There's one called Genetic Genie.
Patrick. I don't remember the name of hers. There's one called Genetic Genie. You want to look for SNPs that particularly affect your ability to be able to digest carbohydrate or
to be able to digest fat or that reflect your ability to be able to handle high amounts of
saturated fat, for example, along with your omega-3, omega-6 fatty acid ratios, and use that to
determine whether you would be a good candidate for something like a ketogenic diet.
Because I would say there's a good, just an estimate, this is a total rough estimate,
not based on science, just based on me looking at blood and biomarkers of some of the folks
I work with and looking over genetic data, about a 10 to 15%
at least portion of the population who do not do well on a ketogenic diet, or for that matter,
even an intake of saturated fats that goes much above 10%.
Yeah, I mean, I remember reading some saturated fat research a little bit ago, I was writing an
article on dietary fat. and this is more in
response to the paleo craze, but the paleo craze has now kind of morphed into the ketogenic craze,
it seems, from a marketing standpoint. And they're selling similar approaches,
at least in terms of the high fat. And yeah, I've just had this discussion via email with a lot of
people saying in simple words, you may do fine with a lot of saturated saying in simple words, like you may, you may do fine with a lot of
saturated fat. You may do very not fine with a lot of saturated fat. And I, it's not, you know,
I just can't in good conscience recommend just saying, yeah, sure. Cause you're not necessarily
going to, going to know it right away. There could be things going on in your body, negative things that are accumulating
and are happening that you're not aware of until I wouldn't, you don't have to catastrophize it,
but until you do become aware of it because it has gotten at least bad enough to where it's on
your radar. And maybe there are things that have happened since paleo times. And I realized saying
paleo times, like paleo diet isn't necessarily eat what your caveman ancestors would have eaten. But I mean, like when I look at the paleo movement,
it's not just about, you know, shunning of modern agriculture, which I think actually lent a great
deal to societal stability and defeating the world's population. But, you know, it also,
But it also tends to now be heavily skewed towards polyamory and plant-based medicine trips that are just like ayahuasca and psilocybin, but not in stoic amounts, but like these big heroic hedonistic trips into plant medicine journeys. And you see this whole kind of like,
I hang out in a lot of these paleo sectors and I love many, many aspects of the paleo movement. But I think that things like agriculture and monogamy and trading off deep hedonistic trips into plant-based medicine with a more stoic approach
to drugs, I think all of this provided more societal stability and perhaps even conferred
greater longevity to the human race compared to just the whole, I realize we're opening up a huge
can of worms here, but this whole plant medicine, polyamory, all agriculture is bad type of approach that a strict paleo enthusiast would endorse.
I didn't know that that's part of the ethos because I don't – I mean, I'm just – I'm not active and I just sit in my cave and write stuff.
Yeah.
I don't interact with –
You should dig into it sometime.
and write stuff.
Yeah.
I don't interact.
You should dig into it sometime.
It's,
it's,
um,
yeah, I,
I catch a lot of flack in,
in,
uh,
especially the paleo movement because,
you know,
I,
I,
I'm a,
I'm a Christian monogamist guy who uses plant-based medicine in moderation,
but turns down,
you know,
all these invitations to go on ayahuasca trips.
And,
um,
and, and, and I love to
eat my wife's slow fermented sourdough bread and I've got little pygmy goats out back and,
and, uh, I realized that this is blasphemous, but we milk them and drink their milk. Uh,
which is horrible because no, no, no mammal drinks the milk of other mammals. No mammal also flies spaceships through the sky and invents computers.
We happen to have a large brain for a reason.
So, I mean, probably a bad time considering I know we only have a couple minutes left for us to open that can of worms.
Yeah, maybe for another discussion because that'd be fun.
Yeah, yeah.
I'd love to hear more about your bigoted fascistic views.
So, you have a few more minutes. Let's wrap up with, I'm curious myself,
what are, do you have any interesting projects that you're working on that you want to tell
people about? Do you have another book coming? You had mentioned writing, is that more articles
or like what's what's on your plate right now? I am working on a book and the book really is more
focused on some of the topics at hand, you know, on this podcast, like particularly
longevity, you know, more of a focus on longevity and spirituality and even mental optimization
than physical optimization, because I've written about that before. I have a book I'm very proud of. It's called Beyond Training, shameless plug. It's like 500 pages
of how to biohack yourself physically, from digestion to sleep to muscle to endurance and
beyond. But I feel as though I left a lot on the table when it comes to living a long time and being
happy while you live a long time.
So everything from purpose to happiness to spirituality to a lot of these woo-woo concepts
like quantum physics and movement of protons and their effect on epigenetics and also what
we can learn from a lot of these blue zones, for example, that we were talking about earlier, I've filled a lot of the book, which is 900 pages long.
A lot's going to go to the cutting room floor here when I finish, but that'll get published next year.
If you go to bengreenfieldfitness.com, I will certainly send my newsletter list and an email once that bad boy is ready.
my newsletter list and an email once that bad boy is ready. The other thing I'm working on right now, I guess if I could name one other thing I'm most excited about is this chocolatey,
coconutty, gooey mess of mouth orgasm that I've been developing the past year and a half
that is like this clean fueled bar that's got, you know, organic almonds and sesame seeds and coconut flakes and
chocolate liqueur and cacao nibs. And it's, it's just like a melt in your mouth. Amazing,
mind blowing bar. And I'm launching that in a couple of weeks. I had the first few boxes
arrive at my house a few weeks ago, my kids and my wife and I've been mowing through them.
And so again, another shameless plug, but I would, I would say the book that I'm working
on and also this new clean energy bar that I'm working on.
Those, those are the two things I'm most excited about right now.
The bar is called the, the Keon bar, by the way, that's, that's the name of my supplements
company is Keon, K-I-O-N.
So, so I'm excited about that too.
It's not ketogenic,
by the way. Sorry to disappoint. I think we got that from the ingredients.
And I'm going to humbly request a box because I and the guys here eat bars. I don't eat bars too much these days, but the guys- I'll send you a box along with our coffee.
Our coffee is like you make a cup of coffee with our coffee and the crema on your espresso is like twice as high as you'd get from
a normal, even my French press that I make with this stuff. The crema is like an inch high. The
coffee tastes like, it tastes like chocolate and cherry. It's also amazing. Deliver the goods.
I'm tooting my own horn. Deliver the goods. I will send you a box of bars and a couple of wonderful bags of coffee from Keon.
Great, great.
They'll get used.
We are coffee enthusiasts here.
The espresso machine just gets pounded all day.
All right.
I'm writing a note to myself right now.
Awesome.
We'll ship it out.
Well, thanks for taking the time, Ben.
This was a fun talk, fun talk.
And I'd be happy to bring you back on whenever your schedule permits to go into the other
stuff, which is really, it sounds like it's right in line with the book that you are researching
and writing right now.
So it might also be fun just from that perspective to, I don't know, that's for me in terms of
the process.
It's always helpful to go over your content and just have free flowing discussions about it.
Cause sometimes new cool ideas come to you, you know? Yeah. I'd love to, man. It'd be fun.
Cool, man. Well, that's it for this time. Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed
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All right, that's it.
Thanks again for listening to this episode
and I hope to hear from you soon.
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