Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Dr. William Li on Eating to “Beat Your Diet”
Episode Date: May 17, 2023Most diets, especially fad diets, are about restriction and what you can’t eat. Of course, losing weight requires being in a calorie deficit, but what if there were specific foods you could eat mo...re of that actually boost fat loss? That’s the idea behind Dr. William Li’s new anti-diet book, Eat to Beat Your Diet, which explores the relationship between body fat and metabolism, and why the food choices we make matter. In this episode, you’ll learn how specific foods can help burn excess body fat, why body fat plays a crucial role in our health and how it influences our hormones, the importance of micronutrients, the benefits of various vegetables, the impact of dietary choices on overall health, and a lot more. In case you’re not familiar with Dr. Li, he’s an internationally renowned physician, scientist, and author of the New York Times bestseller Eat to Beat Disease, which I interviewed him about previously on the podcast. He’s also the president and medical director of the Angiogenesis Foundation, which is a nonprofit organization that works to promote medical innovation and breakthrough technology to disrupt disease and improve world health. In our metabolic masterclass, Dr. Li and I discuss . . . - The crucial relationship between metabolism and overall health and the role our body fat plays in it - Challenging conventional wisdom about "fast" or "slow" metabolism - The role of specific foods in burning excess body fat - The importance of hormones, muscle gain, and the four phases of metabolism in our lifespan - Groundbreaking and surprising studies on human metabolism and their practical implications - The significance of food choices and micronutrients, and their impact on metabolism - And more . . . So, if you want to gain a better understanding of your metabolism and why your food choices matter, as well as specific foods you can eat more of to enhance your metabolic health, you’re going to enjoy this interview with Dr. Li! Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (1:30) - Why did you write this book? (2:43) - How do you define dieting? (4:18) What are some discoveries you made while researching more into metabolism? (12:49) - Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip (14:27) - What do you mean that calories are not all the same? (18:38) - How do the calories in broccoli and mushrooms fight off unhealthy body fat? (39:56) - Can muscle gain impact metabolism? (42:08) - By staying active and eating enough protein do my nutritional choices even matter? (51:51) - What are your thoughts on supplementation? And how can someone benefit from supplements? (01:00:06) - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on the Show:Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip Dr. Li’s Website: https://drwilliamli.com/ Dr. Li’s Eat to Beat Your Diet: https://www.amazon.com/Eat-Beat-Your-Diet-Activate/dp/1538753901/?tag=mflweb-20
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there, I am Mr. Muscle for Life, Mike Matthews, and this is my podcast.
Thank you for joining me today to learn about the relationship between body fat and metabolism
and why the specific foods that we eat matter, how our food choices affect both of those
things.
And in this episode, you will be hearing from Dr. William Lee, who is an internationally
renowned physician,
scientist, and author of the New York Times bestseller, Eat to Beat Disease. And in this
interview, Dr. Lee is going to talk about how specific foods can help you lose excess body fat,
why body fat plays a crucial role in our health. Many people don't know that body fat is an organ,
and there are very good reasons
to maintain healthy types of body fat and healthy body fat levels. Dr. Lee also helps dispel some
common myths about metabolism, one related to metabolic rate as we age, another related to
fast versus slow metabolisms. In this interview, Dr. Lee also talks about specific foods and micronutrients that we
can ensure we are including in our diet to improve our metabolism, or I suppose you could say support
a healthy metabolism and more. Hey, William, good afternoon. Thank you for taking the time to come
and talk nutrition again with me. Thanks, Mike. Always a pleasure to be on. Yeah, yeah. So you
have a new book. And the first question I wanted to ask you,
I like to ask this question just as a fellow writing person. Why this book? What made you
want to write this book? And how does it differ from your first book or your previous book?
Right. Well, a few years ago, I published a book called Eat to Beat Disease. And that was a book
that was not so much about food, but how your body
responds to what we feed it. And from that point, knowing what can you feed it in order to be able
to activate our body's health defenses. And that was published and did really well, became a New
York Times bestseller. And my research, because I'm a scientist and a doctor, my research continued on
to look at how our body's health defenses can work together to take us to the next level.
And that next level of health has to do with metabolism, which is something that I thought
I knew a lot about. But as I did more research, I realized how much we actually don't know yet
about our metabolism and then dive in into it, discovering all these amazing new facts.
There's a new science to the metabolism. And that's what I write about in my book,
Eat to Beat Your Diet. That's my new book. And it's a trick title because although it has the
word diet on the title, it's not a diet book. It's in fact, an anti-diet book that teaches you how
the new science of the metabolism shows us why we don't need to go on a diet at all, not only to
improve body composition, but also to improve inner fitness, health, and longevity.
And so what do you mean by that? Because many listeners now are wondering, well, I guess,
how do you define dieting? Like, let me give you some context. So a lot of people listening,
when they think of going on a diet or dieting, and they think of improving body composition,
which let's say that's reducing body fat percentage and maintaining or gaining muscle,
that's the goal. They're thinking, okay, I'm going to ensure that I am consistently eating fewer calories than I'm burning. I'm going
to eat enough protein to support my lean mass. I'm going to eat nutritious foods. And I would say
maybe to the kind of informed, evidence-based lifestyle fitness person, that's what they think
of when they hear the word diet. Is that what you mean, or are you referring to something else? What I'm referring to in my title,
Eat to Beat Your Diet, is really the kind of dieting that most people actually go on,
which are extreme diets, fad diets, trend diets, you know, the things that you hear about or see
that a celebrity endorses, and then everybody races towards it. I think the advantage of
somebody who's a serious fitness person who reads the literature and wants to look at the signs for
body composition, it's much more informed. And I mean, you know, broadly speaking, diet is really
just the pattern of eating and it could mean a lot of things to a lot of people. Everything you
just said, which is to reduce excess body fat, maintain or improve muscle mass. Those are sort of very, very critical
goals that we want to aim for. And yes, we can use nutrition, exercise, and a whole host of other
lifestyle factors in order to be able to attain that. In fact, eating food is only one dimension
of that. When you mentioned just a few minutes ago that you thought you knew a lot about metabolism,
you really start diving into literature, you realize that there's a lot that you don't know and that just there are
so many questions because it's so complex, really, right? You look at everything that
falls under metabolism and that you made some surprising to you discoveries in your research.
What are some of those things? Well, there are three basic areas where there are surprises. One
first area is really the assumptions that many of us make about what metabolism is and what what it must be like, and metabolism goes up, and your fat goes down. And so there's
some really amazing and counterintuitive relationships I discovered. And the third
thing really has to do with the fact that most people would assume that if you want to lose
body fat, you want to eat less food. But in fact, it turns out that that's not categorically true either.
There are specific foods that you can choose that if you eat more of those foods, you can actually
burn down excess body fat. And so these three areas I felt were just so practical and yet
surprising that it was worthy writing another book on it. And that's what Eat to Beat Your
Diet is about. Can you talk more about those three things? Sure. Well, first of all, I'm going to throw out some of the common myths and misperceptions about
metabolism based on what I learned. So many people, including myself, used to think that,
you know, people are born, individuals are born with either a slow metabolism or a fast metabolism.
And that's why some people struggle with food and their weight throughout the course of their lives and other people don't. You know, I mean, how many
of you have heard that, oh, my sister was so lucky. She was born with the fast metabolism. She could
eat anything. Me, I've had to struggle and I've had everything. If I look at food, I actually gain
weight. That's actually a one myth. Turns out to be completely not true. Turns out that every human
is born with the exact same metabolism. Metabolism is like an
operating system in a laptop that you buy out of the computer store. So Mike, if you went to your
local computer store and I went to mine, we bought the same model of laptop, plugged it in, booted it
up, the operating system in our laptops would work exactly the same way out of the box. And that's
exactly how humans are. And it makes a lot of sense because, for example, out of the box when we're born, our heart works the same way, our brains work the same way, kidneys work the same way.
Turns out our metabolism is kind of an operating system in our body.
And then this leads then to say, well, what do you mean by operating system?
Isn't it sort of infinitely complex in terms of what metabolism is and all the factors that can influence it?
Yes, it is.
But I think the deeper we understand a
system in the body, the clearer it is, we sort of on a macro level, how it works, and then how do
you actually think about it? It's a structure and function in an operational way. So here's what
we're really beginning to understand. Our metabolism is simply put a way that our body takes energy that is introduced and stored in our body and converts it into power to drive the engine of our body to go do our activities of daily living to specific types of activity, whether you're working out, whether you're training or frankly, any goal running to catch an airplane.
It's very similar to I use the analogy when I'm teaching now about this,
like driving a car. You know, most of us drive cars. We don't think about it, but our car has
a very complicated process to take fuel in our gas tank and power up our engine so we can actually
get from point A to point B. And we generally don't think about our fuel except in one situation.
And that is when the fuel tank runs low, the fuel gauge runs low, we pull our car over to the gas
station, we fill up the tank,
tank is filled, clicker goes on in the nozzle, get back in the car, don't think about it again until the next time. Well, it turns out that our body actually, our metabolism runs in a very
similar way. We put food in our body in the form of, which is fuel, that there's a name for the
fuel. It happens to be calories. The fuel that we store are used to power the engine of our body.
Whenever we have excess fuel, which is a good thing to have fuel, it actually gets stored in our adipocytes
or our body fat, the cells of our body fat. So as long as we don't overeat, our fat cells actually
are really useful because not only are they a cushion in our body, but they're actually fuel
tanks. And there's more to that story of what fat actually does. We don't have a tank, a physical tank that we can follow the meter. That'd be useful, though. If somebody ever wants
to invent a little device that, you know, that'd be that'd be like the next thing you download as
an app or whatever. But if we actually had something that would actually show that our
fuel tank was down, what do we actually do is we pull over not to the filling station,
but we pull over to the kitchen table, the refrigerator, the restaurant pantry in order to get something to eat. What's really interesting in a simplified way is when we put food in our
mouth, our pancreas makes insulin. Insulin is the hormone in our body that allows us to take
the energy from the food that we eat and put it into the gas tank. Use it as we need to,
and then anything else you put into the gas tank. But here's the catch with metabolism.
When our insulin is elevated, which means any time that we're eating and our insulin levels, the hormones elevated, our metabolism focuses on storing fuel.
It focuses on storing, not burning fuel.
It's kind of like when you fill up your gas state, your car at a filling station, turn
off your engine, fill up your tank.
You're not burning the gas while you're filling up on it, right?
So that's how our metabolism works. When we're not eating, okay, our insulin levels go
down. And when our insulin levels are down, our metabolism switches gears to say, all right,
we're not storing anymore. Let's burn. And when we're burning, we can actually burn down extra
fuel, including the fuel that was stored in our body fat. In a very simple way, using the analogy of the car,
like a car, we need to fill up periodically. The quality of the fuel matters. If you put
really crummy fuel in your car, it'll survive. It'll be drived just fine for a few times if you
do it every now and then. But if every single day, week after week, month after month, year after
year, you are continuously putting crappy fuel in your car, your car is not going to run as well as somebody who takes the time to maintain their car with high quality fuel.
So the quality of your calories does really matter.
Not all calories are created the same as the old saying, but that's where the type of food that you eat actually makes a big difference. Number two, just like a car, if you overflow your gas tank and the fuel comes running down the side, around the tires, around your feet, you got a problem
at a gas station. You're standing in a dangerous, toxic, flammable mess. Now in our body, you know,
we don't have a clicker to stop the fuel from going into our body. We just keep eating. And
that's why overeating can be very, very dangerous because when we overeat, our metabolism is in fuel storing mode. It'll store it into a fat cell. And a single fat cell, which is microscopic normally,
can grow a hundred times in size when you stretch it out with fuel. And if you keep eating,
your body will go, oh, you're not done eating yet? All right, let's stuff some more a hundred
times. Oh, still more food? Let's go stuff that up. Now you run out of fat in your body,
and all the fat you already have.
If you keep eating, your body will say,
guess what, we have a trick here.
We can use our stem cells to create more fat cells,
and now let's go load it up again, and again, and again.
So as we challenge our body with more fuel,
especially if it's poor quality fuel,
not only do we store crappy fuel in our body
into our fat cells, but we actually have to grow more fat cells to accommodate it. Eventually,
if you overeat, and I'm giving you the extremes here, eventually if you overeat, what will happen
is that you'll run out of, frankly, the ability to create more fat. And now, just like in your car,
the fat will actually leak out of the fat cells, out of the fuel tanks, get into your bloodstream, and it accumulates in your liver and it poisons your liver. And that's actually what
we call non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, which is a huge, it's really an epidemic disease that's
lifestyle driven. Now, people who are like really mindful of their body and trying to stay in shape
and want to live a long time, you know, I'm sort of in that category where, look, we're probably not going to go out of our way
to overeat and do that all the time.
But I would say it's really amazing
how many people do live their lives that way.
And even for those of us who are very mindful
of our fitness, it's easy to slip into that.
If not now, then down the line,
because that's a habit that is really vulnerable to
when we get distracted and when we live in a society of abundance.
Do you want to transform your body, but you just can't seem to break out of the rut?
Have you read books and articles, watched videos, listened to podcasts, but still just aren't sure exactly how to put all the pieces together for you?
Or maybe you know what to do, but you're still struggling to stay motivated
and on track and do the things that you know you should do.
Well, if you are nodding your head, I understand.
Getting into great shape is pretty straightforward when you know what to do,
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You mentioned that not all calories are the same. Could you talk more about that,
specifically in the context of somebody who does a good job maintaining a healthy body composition?
Doesn't necessarily have to be somebody trying to step on a stage in board shorts, but somebody who they're not having fat spill over out into their blood.
They keep themselves in pretty good shape. Yeah. I'd love to hear some more details. And I think
a lot of listeners would find that interesting because I think if people ask me about food
choices in particular, like, yeah, they understand eat some vegetables, eat some grains, eat some fruit, eat some lean protein.
That's fine advice, but I feel like
you can take that a bit further
to kind of make more optimal decisions
than just, I guess I'll just grab some random vegetables.
Right, right.
Well, look, for the audience listening to this,
I probably don't need to say that, you know,
if you were to say X number of calories in a candy bar and take X number of candy bars in a salad, that there's a difference,
a qualitative difference between the character, the quality of the calories between a candy bar
and a salad, right? That's kind of a no-brainer. However, here's where it gets more interesting.
Even within that salad, if you were to pick apart the pieces of the salad and lay them out on the table and start comparing, even within healthy foods, you can actually say
that the same number of calories have different properties.
They're not all created equal.
So if you were to pick a number of calories that you want to take a look at and you were
to say, how about let's eat broccoli with that number of calories, okay, a broccoli
dish versus let's eat a dish with mushrooms with those calories.
Now, I'll tell you what's really interesting is that the same number of calories, two different
vegetables as just an example, I can tell you the science of food and medicine is now revealing,
and this is my work of research, that in addition to the calories, because that's just a unit of
measure that you're using, but looking deeper into the broccoli, broccoli contains sulforaphane.
These are natural sulfurous chemicals that activate our body's metabolism.
They activate our body's health defenses, can activate your immune system.
And we know even how it activates your immune system.
It causes your body to produce more protective antibodies that line your nose and your throat.
So whatever you're breathing in,
inhaling, is less likely to cause an infection. That's one of the unique properties of, say,
broccoli. And it's actually that whole category of foods like broccoli, Brussels sprouts,
bok choy, and so on and so forth, Swiss chard. Now, same number of calories, okay? Same calorie number. Let's look at mushrooms. Mushrooms don't have those sulforaphanes. Mushrooms have something
called beta-D-glucan, foodist medicine research, okay? What you need to know, don't worry about
memorizing all the different substances, but beta-D-glucan does something really amazing.
It feeds your gut health, all right? It feeds the gut bacteria. Your gut microbiome becomes
healthier, and that's good because when your gut is healthy, your gut bacteria is healthy,
it lowers inflammation in your body. Inflammation actually can accumulate when you've got too much
body fat. It can also, it can actually counter your own efforts in order to become fitter.
And so you, by lowering inflammation, you do something good for you. The other thing that
beta-D-glucan goes for a group that's interested in fitness, for example, is that beta-D-glucan, in addition to supporting gut health, stimulates stem cells in your body to grow. So it'll call out stem cells
like bees coming out of a hive, and those stem cells will then start to repair, regenerate,
and rebuild muscle. It does it by growing blood vessels to feed new muscle cells. After you're
working out, you're breaking down muscle. It has to repair and rebuild itself. The more stem cells you put out there,
better it's actually going to regrow. So in fact, it enhances your fitness.
So we just talked about two different foods, okay, that are healthy, not unhealthy,
that have the same number of calories by an example. Okay, I didn't pick a number because
that's not what we're talking about, but they have two inherently different properties that
do different things. Now, the one commonality, by the way, that both of these foods do is both the beta-D-glucan and the
sulforaphanes in broccoli, they can turn on your metabolism. They light up your metabolism by
fighting extra harmful body fat. And how does that work? Because I know that people listening,
again, that's one of those things I'm sure they're like, tell me more about that. Yeah. So, and this is by the way, why I love being on your podcast,
because your audience is sort of engaged listeners who really think about the, like what they're
hearing, like, okay, wait a minute, let's see how that makes sense. It doesn't matter if you
have a large body size or a small body size. It doesn't matter if you are obese, overweight,
or whether you're slender,
lean, okay? The fact of the matter is we all have body fat, and the body fat that we develop
started when we were still in our mom's womb. So although many people kind of pay super attention
to the body fat that they have as an adult, usually curse it if they're not happy with how
they look, the reality is that that body fat is one of the critical organs,
and that's right. I said an organ of the human body that forms in the womb. So when your mom's
egg met your dad's sperm and turned into a ball of cells that became the future you, all right,
what happened is that blood vessels got laid down because every tissue, including your muscles,
need blood flow, circulation. Nerves got laid down because they formed the instructions for your organs later on and
for your muscles to do what they were supposed to do.
And the third tissue that gets laid down is body fat.
Now, the body fat in the womb looks like bubble wrap.
Now, you know the bubble wrap that you use to wrap packages for your shipping, right?
Delicate packages.
Well, a sheet of bubble wraps that my kids always want to grab and jump on for three
hours straight. Exactly. Well, the bubble wrap, actually, imagine each of those little bubbles
is actually a fat cell. And the reason that the bubble wrap forms in a womb around blood vessels
is because, we just talked about this a little earlier, fat cells are storage tanks for fuel.
The fuel that you store into it comes from the blood. It's present in the blood.
It's in the blood because when you eat food, the food that's absorbed, the energy,
winds up in the bloodstream, has glucose and other nutrients, and then you store them right into the fuel tank. So it makes a lot of sense why fat cells are stored around blood vessels.
The reason I bring this up is because a lot of people go, well, isn't fat created around my
thighs or my butt or my waistline? And no, actually fat's first created around your blood vessels.
And a lot of people think that they think of body fat really only in negative terms.
They don't understand some of the stuff that you're talking about here.
It's a vital organ.
It's not something that you want to just exterminate down to the last ounce
to look as good as you can on social media.
Correct.
So what does our fat do? I mean, think about it. We might not like our bodies,
how our bodies look when we're adults and we see body fat, but body fat can't be all bad because when we see body fat on a baby, we smile, right? That's what's characteristic of every baby.
Pudgy pot belly, big cheeks, arms and legs that are fat. They look like the circus
balloons that a clown makes, you know, to make a poodle out of. If you saw a baby that was chiseled
with definition, you know, cheekbones, long, thin arms, long, thin legs, you know, rippling,
you'd be like freaked out. Like there's something wrong with that baby and you'd be right. Okay.
And so that's why I'm bringing this up because it allows you, it liberates you to rethink what body, the role of body fat is. So our body fat is a padding.
It actually protects us from injury. So we didn't have body fat inside the tube of our body. If we
tripped on the rug and fell down, our organs could burst. Not good. So it's padding. Our body fat
also is a fuel tank, like we discussed earlier. You have to have some fuel tank. You know, like you don't want to have like no fuel tanks.
Third thing is our fat is an organ.
It's an endocrine organ.
It makes healthy hormones.
In fact, it makes hormones critical for our metabolism.
How many hormones are there?
At least 15.
What are some of the most important of those 15 hormones when it comes to metabolism?
Well, I'll tell you three of them.
One is leptin. Leptin is a hormone that some people call satiety hormone. But the reason I
like to explain about leptin is that leptin isn't an on-off switch. It's not a toggle switch.
Leptin is more like a volume control switch where it can get a little louder or a little softer.
And when you actually turn the leptin switch down, actually you get more hungry. And when you turn the leptin
switch up louder, louder, louder, you actually get less hungry. And the reason that I call it a
volume switch, a rheostat, you know, kind of a little bit more, a little bit more, a little bit
less, a little bit less, is that a lot of people think about leptin as on-off. On-hungry, off-hungry,
not hungry, doesn't work that way. But the reason that that's so important is that number one,
leptin is made by our fat. In order to be hungry, to get that energy, to build muscle mass, you actually need
good fat to make the right amount of leptin and have that leptin work in the right ways.
Works in your brain. Number two, a second hormone is called adiponectin. Now, some of your listeners
may already know what adiponectin is, but I bet a lot of people don't. And here's basically the
surprising thing.
If you came to see me in a doctor's office and I wanted to do some blood, I suggested do some blood tests. And we take your blood tests. And in addition to all the usual things the doctor
would measure, you say to me, hey, can we measure my hormones? And I say, yes, let's go send your
blood off to the lab. And I check the box to say, measure every hormone in Mike's body.
All right. The results would come back and we'd find
a diponectin. And in fact, what we would find with a diponectin is that your diponectin is
1,000 times higher in your bloodstream than any other hormone, higher than testosterone,
higher than thyroid hormone, higher than cortisol, 1,000 times. What could be so important about a
fat hormone that it's that high in somebody who's
in good shape? Well, here's what the answer is. It turns out adiponectin made by fat allows insulin,
it collaborates with insulin in order to draw energy more efficiently into your cells. So when
you actually eat food and you want to get that glucose, you want to get all that energy into
your cells, okay, you need adiponectin to help your insulin do it better. If adiponectin is low, it doesn't
matter what your insulin is, it's not going to work very well. So you're not going to be
efficiently using your energy. So people who are like, you know, working out trying to, you know,
they really want to be fit. If you don't have your adiponectin sort of in good shape, no matter what
you do with your insulin, isn't going to work the same way. So that's the gas pedal for efficiency of energy for metabolism made by healthy, good fat. There's a
third one called resistant. So if adiponectin is the gas pedal, let's get into the fast lane. Let's
go fast for energy. Resistance, the brake pedal. All right. Oops, you got a truck coming up ahead.
Let's slow down. So adiponectin, more faster energy absorption. Resistance, slow it down just
a little bit. All right.
These three hormones, by the way, with normal, healthy amounts of body fat function perfectly.
This is the operating system.
Now, if you don't have enough body fat, if you go way low, like 3%, okay, or even lower,
what you do is you disturb the amount of fat's ability to make the leptin, make the adiponectin,
make the resistant. And now your the adiponectin, make
the resistant.
And now your metabolism is not going to function very efficiently.
You've just gone off the grid.
You know, that's like going into the sand trap.
On the other hand, if you actually grow too much body fat, the same problems actually
happen, but on the other direction.
Way too much fat mass, which you want to get rid of, actually makes the center of the fat die. It doesn't have
enough oxygen. When the center of the fat is oxygen starved, it behaves like a tumor,
like a cancer. Inflammation starts to happen because it's not as dying. And that inflammation
plus extra body fat screws up your hormonal function. Now, your body fat doesn't make
the leptin and diponectin
resistant the right way. And your body, your metabolism is going, wait a minute,
am I hungry or not hungry? I can't tell anymore. I don't know what my adult leptin is doing.
Your metabolism is going, should I be making more diponectin or should energy be more efficient or
not? They're so inflamed in here, I can't tell. And resistance goes, well, should I stop or start?
Should I be slowing down or not?
I don't know what to do.
So this orchestra of hormones that plays a symphony for health and for your energy, your metabolism goes out of whack on both sides of that equation, which is why, you know, you sort of want to tame your fat.
You want to get it down to lower levels while you're building muscle mass.
But you want to stay away.
You know, in bodybuilding, a lot of people go way low with their body fat muscle mass, but you want to stay away. You know,
in bodybuilding, a lot of people go way low with their body fat. That's where you actually tip
it aside. And this is an example of where the role of fat, we have to respect our fat. We need it to
do its thing. And so I'll pause there, but there's some other really interesting aspects about body
fat where you can use good body fat to burn down extra harmful body fat.
Yeah, I'd love to hear about that. But before I just I just want to follow up with a couple questions. One being correct me if I'm wrong, but my understanding of at least the research
I've read on leptin is those problems and adiponectin and resistant, like what you just
described that metabolic pell-mell that can develop that if it starts to become a problem,
and I just want to mention this for
listeners. And you can correct me if I'm misunderstanding something here, because
in the fitness, especially when people are really into fitness, you probably see more people
getting inappropriately, like getting too lean rather than remaining too fat for too long.
lean rather than remaining too fat for too long. And in men, for example, you really start to see these effects probably at somewhere between 7% and 8% body fat is when there is a now material
difference and things are materially worse. And certainly when you start getting down towards
stage lean 4% or 5%, your metabolism is almost broken compared to how it runs normally. Is that
correct? And the reason I want to say that is because I know that there are a lot of men,
they look at 7% body fat and they go, all right, that looks pretty cool. And I agree,
it looks pretty cool. And it's not necessarily wrong to do my opinion. Again, curious to hear
yours. If it's going to be a, okay, you want to
do it to do a photo shoot or for a short period of time, you're not going to cause long-term harm,
but to try to stay that lean is not smart. And in women, same thing. It's just probably,
my understanding is probably around 15, 16% body fat in women is when it starts to become a
problem. What's your opinion on that?
It's true. Men and women both have that problem if you go below the threshold for a healthy body
fat. I would say, you know, everyone always asks me about like, what's the number that people shame
for? Yeah. And that, of course, is going to be one of the next questions because people ask it.
Yeah. Well, you know, it actually has to do with a lot of factors. There's no one size or one number that fits all, even though it's our nature to want to know that
what that number actually is. But I'll tell you, you like in men who actually go to extreme low
levels of body fat, studies have shown not only does testosterone actually decrease,
which is one of the visible effects of going way low with your body fat. But the other thing is
your heart rate also lowers.
It actually lowers your heart rate. And so overall, your stamina, your ability to actually
do more work, stay into sort of functional fitness actually declines. In women, you know,
it actually also seriously, I mean, these are sort of the cardinal signs. Like, how do you know
something's wrong while you can't get your heart rate up? Or how do you know it's wrong? In women,
actually, they stop menstruating, like that fundamental hormonal cycle.
And if you stop menstruating, it means that your other organs are being affected too,
your uterus, your ovaries, your thyroid, your pituitary gland.
And so when you start affecting those other hormones, there's usually a domino effect
that can actually occur.
I think I'm on your same wavelength here, which is that, you know, we all get involved
with activities, things that we enjoy, where, you know, we all get involved with activities, things that
we enjoy, where, you know, I think it's like actually really natural and pretty cool that
people can pursue a passion to a really high level. And if you're doing it to actually get
on stage for a photo shoot, you know, to kind of get to peak performance, look, that's fine,
but it clearly isn't something you're going to be able to do for a long period of time. It's,
look, let's move outside of the bodybuilding world and fitness ship for a second. Let's talk
about piano. I used to play the piano. You know, if you're going to actually play a concert with
a symphony, like I have, you're going to be practicing, you know, like not an hour a day,
you're going to be practicing six or seven or eight hours a day. That is intense. That can't
be sustained. And frankly, that's not even
good for you. And so the bottom line is that, you know, when you talk about overall health,
when you talk about longevity, when you talk about long-term fitness, what we want to do is to sort
of get back into the range, want to have body fat. And for men and women, not only is it different
between the genders, it's also different between ages because what we might need to be able to sustain all those other functions of health
is going to change as we kind of get older. And this actually brings me to, you know, like how
another big surprise about how metabolism actually changes during aging. So here's myth,
gigantic myth number two, like, all right, when you're an adolescent and you might first get
interested in fitness, right? And so you start lifting or, all right, when you're an adolescent and you might first get interested in fitness,
right?
And so you start lifting or, you know, working out.
Your parents almost always think because you eat a couple of dinners, you're bouncing off
the wall with energy and you're growing tall and getting big that your metabolism is actually
going up.
All right.
Like that's what everybody assumes their teenagers metabolism is skyrocketing.
Wrong.
It turns out that between the ages of one year old and 20 years old, metabolism is going down, down, down, down,
down to adult levels. All right. How do we know this? We know this because there was a landmark
human research study on metabolism that was published just two years ago. And this publication,
so it's brand spanking
new. It's like smoking hot research. This research changed everything that we know about human
metabolism. Let me explain to you how it was done. So there's a guy named Herman Ponser that came
from Duke University. He worked with 90 colleagues, 90 researchers across 20 countries. They studied
6,000 people from 20 countries, different races, different foods,
different ethnicities, different cultural habits, different holidays, different body types,
all right, different genetics. And they lumped them all together and studied their metabolism
and said, hey, I wonder what human metabolism really looks like when you look globally,
all right? So here's one of the amazing things they did, is they studied all 6,000 people in exactly the same way. How do they do it? They gave everybody
a drink of water, okay, like this, and the water, which is H2O, right? H is hydrogen, O is oxygen.
That's the breaking down the chemistry of water, that's why you call it H2O. And what they did,
the research is they tweaked the hydrogen, they tweaked the oxygen so that when you drank the water, your metabolism cranks on those atoms,
the hydrogen and the oxygen, and they could measure your metabolism from the breath. They
could measure your metabolism from blood tests from your blood. And they could also measure
metabolism from your pee, how your body processed those atoms, the hydrogen and the oxygen.
And here's what they found. Oh, by the way, one additional thing before I tell you what they found.
The other remarkable thing about this 6,000-person study is they studied people that were ranging from two days old, newborns,
all the way to 90 years old and everything in between.
Largest human metabolism study that covered the entire human lifespan.
What they found is this. When they just looked at the first results, they found metabolism was all over the
map, just like you'd expect. Why do we bother doing that? Well, what they actually then did,
because we live in the world of supercomputers and numbers crunching, they developed an algorithm
that corrected every individual's metabolism for excess body fat. Remember, this is a real world study. This is people that were ordinary people. What they were able to do because they knew, the results they found was like pulling the cloak
off the statue of David to see what human metabolism, the beauty of human metabolism.
They saw for the first time just two years ago what our operating system of our metabolism
is like at different parts of our life.
So remember, I told you we're all born with the exact same metabolism.
That was established there.
Then it turns out that all humans go through four phases of the metabolism. That was established there. Then it turns out that all humans go through four phases of the metabolism. Phase number one is from zero to one year old, your metabolism skyrockets like
a rocket ship going up, up, up, up 50% higher than what adult metabolisms are going to look like
in the end. All right. Then from one to 20, we talked about this already, metabolism goes down,
down, down, down, down to adult levels,
even though you're eating two dinners and super active. And then here's the mic drop finding that people in your podcast probably won't have actually known about, which is that the third
phase is from age 20 to age 60. Human metabolism is hardwired to be rock stable.
It is flat as the horizon.
It does not change, all right?
And so our metabolism doesn't automatically slow when we hit our 40s or 45.
It doesn't actually slow,
automatically slow when we hit menopause.
That's not what actually happens.
What actually happens is that,
so this is where people go,
well, if I have a slow metabolism,
I'm gonna gain extra body fat and I'm to gain weight. This research showed just the opposite.
Metabolism is hardwired to be in a pattern, four phases, fourth phase is after 60 to 90,
it decreases a little bit by about 17% by the time you're 90. But between the ages of 20 and 40,
it's not that a slow metabolism causes you to gain extra body fat. It's actually that extra
body fat slows down your operating system, slows down your metabolism, completely the opposite of
what we thought. Okay. Now, why is that important? It's because in a fitness community, we'll
definitely know this. We can control our body fat. We can take steps to actually tame it,
right-size it, get it into a better position than we had before. So there's no more excuse to say, well, I'm mid-age, middle-aged, and so therefore,
never mind, it's all over. Yet people's body shape, weight do change between the ages of 20
and 60. And here's why. The reason that people change their body shape, body composition,
body fat mass, and struggle with weight when they reach middle age
is because life happens. When we're middle age, we suddenly have more concerns, more distractions,
more worries. You got a relationship, you got a family, you got kids you're worried about,
you got the economy, you've got, you know, you've got the world politics, you've got,
you know, pandemics, you got whatever, okay? We're worried about something. And because we
have all these distractions, it's harder to actually do the things that are very important that your
operating system needs for you to do to get optimal levels of healthy body fat. We don't sleep as well
when we're worried in middle age, okay? You need good sleep for your metabolism to burn down harmful
body fat while you're sleeping, while you're fasting. Okay. We actually also oftentimes don't have the same amount of time to be physically active. I'm
not talking about having a trainer to work out. I'm talking about just staying physically active.
I mean, a lot of people just go, oh, my day was so hard. Forget about it. I'm just going to hang
out. I got to rest. All right. Now you're actually taking away the physical activity,
the calorie burn that we always think about. The other thing that winds up actually happening is that stress. Stress causes this release of
low-grade chronic release of cortisol, all right, and norepinephrine. And then chronic stress
actually interferes with our metabolism as well. All these things conspire to less healthy
behaviors on eating, choosing poorer quality foods in terms of calories,
eating more, okay?
We're more prey to actually eating more.
Choosing the things, being more vulnerable to the marketing
that food companies actually try to sell us on their foods, okay?
I'm just going to hang out with my friend
and we're going to eat our favorite foods when we were kids.
You know, all that stuff can actually derange,
cause that kind of mayhem in
your metabolism. And then what happens, you start to grow body fat. And when you grow body fat,
it slows down your metabolism. And now you're into a spiral. That's actually what happens.
But the empowering thing that I write about my book, Eat to Beat Your Diet, is that once you
know that our body is hardwired to perform at a very optimal level, and what we do, the choices
that we make can
influence the amount of body fat to lower it so that we can actually elevate, unleash
our inner metabolism. That becomes a point of empowerment to be able to make good decisions.
And can you talk about muscle gain and how that impacts metabolism? Because that's very relevant
to a lot of people listening because we have, and I want to come back to another question
regarding nutrition metabolism, but we have,
okay, we can make good nutrition choices. We can regulate our energy balance to make sure that we
don't have excess body fat. And then we can also gain muscle though, right? You've mentioned that
a couple of times. Muscle is key to healthy physical functioning and probably healthy for
healthy mental functioning, brain function as well. You can't think about what's in muscle, all right? Muscle contains, first of all,
it's a protein mass, but more than that, it's also the source of our circulation. The more muscle we
have, the more circulation we have. The capillaries that we see, like if you cut your skin like a
paper cut and you have a little blood, that's nothing compared to when you cut into muscle. It bleeds like stink because it is so rich with blood. That's why muscle actually is red.
If you look at a steak, that's basically why the color of the steak is red. It is packed with
hemoglobin, very rich with blood flow. That blood flow is critical for healthy metabolism. Those
blood vessels help everything, all those energetics to actually function in completely in healthy ways.
Now, the other thing is that muscle also contains nerves, packed with nerves, which is why muscles
twitch.
And so the ability to actually have good response, agility, all those actually functions also
are found in your muscle.
The muscles also, by the way, an organ system that releases its own hormones. Those hormones feed back to our brain,
feed back to our body fat to help to maintain homeostasis. It's kind of like helps the gyroscope
of our metabolism run smoothly as well. So for all these reasons, particularly when we get older,
I mean, look, if you're talking about either a man or a woman over the age of 50, the reason
they should be focusing on muscle mass isn't stage performance.
It's really actually to be just to be able to maintain their physical fitness for the long haul.
You know, when you're 20 years old or 30 years old, you might want to look good in front of a
camera. When you're 50 or 60, you want to look good for the remainder, for the rest of your story.
And looking good is part of it. I have no problem with vanity. That's cool. Except that the thing that people don't realize is that losing extra body fat,
which has caused that mayhem in your metabolism, building and keeping strong muscle mass are
absolutely critical. By the way, one additional thing about building muscle mass, a lot of people
don't realize this, but when you're building muscle mass, remember we talked about the stem
cells. Building muscle recruits stem cells. Where do your stem cells live? There are a lot of different
places, but a lot of them live, a lot of stem cells live in our bone marrow. When you actually
are building muscle mass, you're calling out stem cells from your bone marrow, go into your
bloodstream and they home in to that muscle mass to keep it nice and vibrant. Okay. And they're
very active and full. Those stem cells, same stem cells, flood out,
and they are able to repair other organs in your body as well. So the signal from the muscle,
this is part of the hormonal signal, causes stem cells to come out, and it actually prompts your
body to regenerate from the inside out. Not only grow the muscle and regenerate the muscle,
but also regenerate other organs as well, which includes, as we get older, healing those organs.
That's very cool.
Strength training, it's like a whole body therapy in that regard.
I want to pose another question to you.
And this is something I've seen, as is an argument I've seen some people make.
And it goes like this.
It's okay.
So I maintain a healthy body composition.
I do several hours of vigorous exercise every week.
I train my muscles and I eat enough protein.
several hours of vigorous exercise every week. I train my muscles and I eat enough protein.
Therefore, my nutritional choices just don't matter as much. The argument is by staying active,
maintaining a healthy body composition, eating enough protein, that's kind of the 20% that gives me 80% of let's say metabolic function, metabolic health. What are your thoughts on that? And if you disagree,
I'm curious then what your thoughts are on how much somebody who is physically active,
who does maintain a healthy body composition, who's doing a lot of things right, how much more
can they get from their lifestyle in terms of general health, well-being, physical function,
wherever you want to go with it
by paying more attention to nutrition, food choices, consistency, and so forth.
I agree that the macro calculation, the calculus that you described on a macro level
does make sense, that 80-20 rule, but that's macro. What we're moving now in this sort of
new era is getting down to the micronutrients. And that's where those rule, but that's macro. What we're moving now in this sort of new era is getting
down to the micronutrients. And that's where those differences, that's where the subtle
food choices actually can make a huge difference. And in ways that you may not have thought about,
you know, so you calculate, you do the calculation of your pie chart of what you want to get,
you know, from your protein, your carbs and your fats. Figure that out. But now take a look at your calories. And remember, we talked about like the broccoli and the mushrooms. Let's go a little bit
further. Same number of calories. Let's choose a tomato as opposed to a cucumber or something else.
Or these days, as opposed to butter. I mean, I get a lot of people pushing back on just eating
vegetables at all. Oh, vegetables, you need to eat those things. You just eat meat and you eat butter and you eat eggs.
Right.
Well, look, I mean, again, you can do anything you want when you're young for a little while,
but you're not going to be eating butter and eggs and steak for your whole life as a staple
and expecting that your engine is actually going to run that well.
Here's the thing.
Let's just go within the vegetables for a second to give it.
I told you that broccoli, broccoli sprouts can improve your immune system.
By the way, by threefold.
That's a big one.
I told you mushrooms actually can improve gut health as proper generation.
Look, that's the fine aspects.
And for people who really want to be fitness, that's fine tuning.
Don't you want even better muscle regeneration, muscle growth,
not just any muscle growth? Again, that's why it's macro versus micro. We can get to the micro now.
You want to be optimal? You want to think about that. What about tomatoes? Oh, well, I got lower
body mass. Let's sculpt that even further. Tomatoes contain something called lycopene.
Lycopene is a carotenoid. It's what makes tomatoes red. It makes watermelon red as
well. And lycopene happens to be a natural chemical that loves to dissolve in oil and fats.
In fact, we call it, it's a lipophilic. It likes to dissolve in fats. So when you're actually
cooking tomato sauce, if you cook it in olive oil and you eat the tomato sauce in olive oil,
your body will absorb more lycopene. So even how you eat it and how you
prepare it will make a difference in terms of those micros. I didn't quarrel with the macros
at all. It's the micros that I think are really, really interesting. And it's being shown in humans.
Lycopene into your body, you know where it goes? Lycopene, because it loves to dissolve in fat.
When you swallow it, it gets absorbed in your bloodstream. Lycopene will naturally
home in like a heat-seeking missile into your body fat. Like, in fact, this has been studied
in women at Tufts University. Where does the lycopene from food that you eat go first? It
goes into your belly fat. Then it goes into your thigh fat. Then it goes to your butt fat. And
once it's in your fat, it activates these processes to burn down harmful body fat and transform that
fat into a healthier. It takes
white fat and turn it into brown fat or Beijing. It actually starts to create healthier levels of
fat. Again, these are the fine points already now established in human research. This is not
theoretical. It's not, you know, in a lab with mice. This is actually, we're seeing this in
people. So on the fruits and vegetables alone, for example, that's how you get some of these
So on the fruits and vegetables alone, for example, that's how you get some of these fine points.
Now, let's just go beyond simple metabolism and muscle mass and regeneration.
Look, athletes who eat like a cup and a half of blueberries on a regular basis while they're
training.
Now, I don't know if you know this, but after you compete like on a marathon runner, when
you're done competing, an intense competition, intense
workout, there's a short period of time after the workout where your immune system takes a dip.
You actually become more vulnerable to getting sick after you do an intense workout. If you
want to actually protect yourself against that immune system dip, it's been shown in young
athletes that if you have a cup and a half of blueberries a day, even for three weeks before
your competition,
you'll actually keep up your baseline of immune defense that will actually protect you against
that dip at the end of performance. All right. Now you become less vulnerable. Now think about
what that means maybe outside of performance, but as you get later in life, not only are you
metabolically healthier, not only do you not only are you able to lose more fat
and keep up more muscle mass, but your immune system improves, your circulation improves.
Some of these bioactives, the lycopene, the sulforaphane, the beta-D-glucan, the anthocyanins
present in blueberries, they actually protect you against cancer by cutting off the blood supply,
extra blood vessels that might feed on microscopic
cancer in your body. Although when you're young and fit, you don't think about it. Here's the
statistic. One in three women, no matter how fit you are when you're younger, are going to develop
cancer based on current statistics because of the dietary choices we make. Even people who eat,
you know, generally healthy. And one out of two men, 50% of us, that's either me or you,
okay? That's
Russia. That's the kind of Russian we don't want to play, all right? Are going to develop, one out
of two men are going to develop some form of cancer. Oh, wait a minute. I forgot to tell you.
Lycopene is in tomatoes. And a research study of 35,000 men, middle-aged, found that those who eat
two to three servings of cooked tomatoes per week, each serving being only a half a cup large. That's
not very much tomato sauce. I'd want another one of those if I was eating it on pasta,
that just that small amount, two to three servings of cooked tomatoes, a half a cup each serving,
will decrease the risk of prostate cancer by 30% by cutting off the blood supply to your tumors.
Now, all of a sudden, maybe you and I will be on the same side.
You see what I'm saying?
And so this is how the more refined food choices we make
can actually make a difference.
We're going from the macro,
which, you know, I don't have a problem
with that macro algorithm,
going into the micro,
and that's where the differences are being made.
That's where the new research is.
That's where the exciting things are.
So if you want to actually thrive
sort of as you get older for longevity and long-term fitness, this is the
direction, this is the reason to go into that direction. I totally agree. And this is one of
the reasons why I have micromanaged my own diet to some degree, just to make sure that I'm eating
certain foods that have special molecules that I wouldn't otherwise get if I weren't to eat those
foods. And I'm sure you also agree with me in that I disagree with people who dismiss that and say,
oh, well, I'll just take supplements that have at least the most important things that I've heard of
simply because there are cofactors and other things in food that we just don't even fully
understand yet. And I do not equate getting nutrients from whole food with getting nutrients from pills and powders. As
somebody who has a sports nutrition company, I think supplementation has a role, but I do not
agree with that. And if I'm hearing you correctly, because I've seen people also, I think this is an
incorrect way of looking at it, where they might take one benefit of eating one type of food and
look at it just in a vacuum and say well that's not that exciting it's not as cool as some of
the things that you just shared so it's not really necessary and then maybe take another individual
ingredient and dismiss that because it doesn't wow them with whatever research is available. But if you look
at the cumulative effect of doing these things you're talking about, adding a lot of these
different foods, and you describe many more, I know in eat to beat disease, and I'm sure that
there are, you've expanded on that in eat to beat your diet. And so when you look at the cumulative
effect of eating, strategically eating, intentionally eating a lot of these foods,
my argument would be you are much healthier. Your body is your metabolism and really every
important physiological process in your body running at a significantly better rate or in
a significantly better way. Would you agree with that? 100% period. That is actually so spot on in terms of everything that all the science has shown us.
It's impossible to replicate the complexity of whole foods. Supplements can be really valuable,
but how I look at supplements is really to be true to the actual definition
of the term supplement is to top off. I mean, I say that as somebody who sells
something, they are supplemental by definition. Let's just start there.
Exactly. Exactly. They're top offs. They're supplemental whole foods plus supplements.
You get the whole package. That's actually what you really want to go for. I mean, you know,
it's just exactly where everything is going.
So no, I think you're absolutely correct about that.
Can we finish off with supplementation and hear your thoughts on?
So, well, I mean, let's say given the context of somebody who is eating a variety of nutritious
foods, maybe they've even like us, they've specifically chosen certain ones,
but where can someone like that, who's really trying to be conscientious,
benefit from supplementation? All right. The range of supplements that are being sold is legion.
There are so many supplements out there. And one of the simplest examples of supplements that were
lifesaving going back almost 100 years were vitamins.
You know, before we actually knew how to create vitamins, vitamin deficiency was a major cause of rickets and people's teeth falling off and their bones were weak.
I mean, forget about, you know, staying in physical fitness and actually getting into great shape.
People couldn't even maintain their vitamin stature, you know, their essential vitamins in the body.
So that's at the most elemental stage, a useful kind of supplement to take. People couldn't even maintain their vitamin stature, their essential vitamins in the body.
So that's at the most elemental stage, a useful kind of supplement to take.
Multi-vitamins are just sort of an insurance policy to top off whatever it is that your food might not have actually given you.
But we've actually gone a little bit further now to take a look at things that actually
can do a little bit more.
We know that vitamin C, which has a lot of lore around building
up your immune system, probably has its greatest impact for lowering inflammation in the body.
Now, inflammation, look, we want a little bit of inflammation. If you want to heal your wound,
you want to get rid of some infections in your body, of course, but you don't want to actually
have chronic inflammation out there. Chronic inflammation is like a forest fire that is burning just on the bottom parts of the forest. It's going to, at some point,
it's going to rear up and turn into a gigantic problem for you. And so vitamin C is a great
supplement, as an example, to be able to lower inflammation in the body. So you work out,
you're actually getting some inflammation, your muscles are growing, stem cells are coming out,
all those good things. Maybe have some mushrooms or beta-D-glucan food containing foods, chocolate, dark chocolate,
cacao will also do something beneficial like that.
Black tea will also do the same, something similar for regeneration of muscle.
But now what you do is you take some vitamin C to lower some inflammation.
Another vitamin that you will do, something really powerful, is vitamin D3.
And it turns out D3, which is made actually in our body when sunlight hits our skin, a
lot of us living in our world don't get enough sunshine.
Now, if you live in the Southeast, you live in South America, live in California or live
in Colorado, you might actually get a lot of sunshine.
But the fact of the matter is that many people don't.
And we live now in our human culture is mostly indoors, right? So we're not getting as
much as our relatives, you know, 10,000 years ago used to get by being outside all the time.
So many people are deficient in D3. We're beginning to understand D3 has some powerful
impacts to protect us, improves our immunity against bacteria infections. By the way,
even at the very beginning of COVID, of the pandemic, when people were dropping dead like flies, I mean, you remember seeing those videos of people at bus stops that
are falling over and dying. Almost all of those people went in large studies and looking back,
they were vitamin D3 deficient. They were just more vulnerable. So for long-term health,
vitamin D3 is actually really, really important. Now, it turns out that dietary fiber is something
we're also not often
eating enough of. And you can actually get dietary fiber in supplementation, and you can actually
have probiotics that contain good bacteria. And although there's a big probiotic market out there,
I study the microbiome. So I know a little bit about this space. You know, it's, you know,
many probiotic products kind of come across like,
I'm the one, that's the only one you need. And the reality is you've got 39 trillion bacteria.
We are at the beginning of this incredible exploration of the microbiome. I do think that we know certain bacteria or certain groups of bacteria are incredibly useful for lowering
inflammation, building up strength, you know, all kinds of aspects of health for lowering inflammation, building up strength, all kinds of aspects of
health for probiotics, including improving mood, I do think that there is actually a good role for
probiotics as well, but as a complement to a regular healthy diet as well. So those are some
of the things that I think of off the bat when you want to do supplementation. And yeah, if you
want to get green tea polyphenols, but you absolutely hate green tea, you could try some of those things because green tea is
shown to be actually really, really beneficial. So supplements are, you know, I would say also,
you asked at the very beginning, you're like, we had this conversation about what's the definition
of diet? Well, what's the definition of a supplement? Because if you dry up a whole food,
crush it into a powder and put it into a capsule, it's not whole anymore, but you've actually got everything in there. And that's
different than weightlifters, DNP, or some other, you know, DMA or some of these other like really
intense, hardcore types of dietary supplements that have been actually used in, you know,
for weightlifting as an example. You mentioned that that's one of my contentions with greens
supplements, which are very popular and which are often sold as a replacement for eating vegetables.
Like that's often the pitch basically like, oh, you don't like vegetables here, take a scoop or
two of this. And that's the equivalent of 20 servings of greens and reds a day. I totally
disagree with that. It's a well-intentioned idea. I feel like it's important to give credit
to the people that come up with these ideas.
Maybe you're just more charitable than I am.
I just, I'm too cynical, maybe.
I've been in the industry for too long.
Yeah, but look, you and I are on the same page.
I'm with you on this.
It doesn't substitute for eating a healthy meal
because, by the way, the act of eating
is confer so much more benefit from eating whole foods,
confer so much more benefits than, you know,
shucking down a bunch of powder or a drink.
That's still supplementation.
You know, the one thing that our body,
our health loves is diversity of ingredients.
And so what we want actually is to be able to
have this stew of good things cooked together
that tastes really great. And if
we practice eating the right way, you know, we're eating foods that we enjoy, taste great, that are
prepared in healthy ways, that we're eating together with other people. That's actually part
of the human food tradition is sharing meals and not just at holidays and taking the time to savor,
which is code for saying not eating too fast.
Not eating in front of the screen, scrolling.
By yourself, right? In a corner someplace. But you know, like, so one of the things I write about
Eat to Beat Your Diet, 150 foods supported by evidence that you can find in the grocery store,
and that you can actually prepare, and lots of choice, lots of diversity. But I actually have
this concept that's actually called the Mediterranean way of eating, which is how I eat.
It's sort of like the natural way I gravitate.
But if you take a look at all these ingredients that I write about, they're all ingredients that are found in traditional Mediterranean or traditional Asian cuisines, culinary history.
And people in those cultures get together, cook whole foods, lots of plant-based foods.
They take their time to savor their food. And when they're
eating together, you know, they're not talking about their problems. I mean, think about it.
Usually when we sit down in America to eat, even if we eat with somebody else, unless it's a holiday,
what do you do? You're sitting there talking about your work or bitching about something you can't
get done or something in the news that's like, you know, ramping you up. And the reality is if
you go to Italy or you go to China or you go to Thailand,
when families or friends sit down for their meals, they take their time to eat. They pause to reflect
on, you know, they're grateful for the food that they actually have. But when they have a
conversation, what they talk about, they talk about their food. This is how my mom used to make it. No,
no, this is how my mom used to make it. And so, you know, it's one of these things that makes us
more human. And I think the further and further we get away from being in touch with
our foods, ironically, we're also getting away from being in touch with our bodies. So all these
people that sort of try to engineer like these very extreme ways of being healthy and fit,
what we're beginning to realize from our research is that it actually takes us away from our
humanity, but it also takes us away from like the wholeness of being able to be fit with the foods that we eat.
I love it. Great message. I think that we can wrap up on that. I've kept you a little bit longer
than normal. So I hope that I haven't spilled over into something else, but I really appreciate
the extra time. This was very informative. I enjoyed it just as I enjoyed our first talk.
And so again, the book is Eat to Beat
Your Diet. Is there anything else? Why don't we tell people where they can find you online if
there's anything else you want them to know about? Yeah, well, sure. Well, first of all, you can buy
Eat to Beat Your Diet anywhere books are sold. And if you want to come learn more about what I do,
the science I'm working on, just come to my website. It's drwilliamlee.com. Dr. William Lee. And my handle is the same,
at Dr. William Lee. Sign up for my free newsletter. Check me out on my social Instagram,
TikTok. I'm putting as much information out as I can. That's part of my mission is to get
information out that people can use. So look forward to seeing people. I also do masterclasses
that are free. I also teach online courses for people who want to do a deep dive along with me to kind
of like just change their life using the kind of information that can be transformative.
I love it.
Well, thanks again, William.
And I look forward to the next discussion.
Thanks, Mike.
Well, I hope you liked this episode.
I hope you found it helpful.
And if you did, subscribe to the show because it makes sure that you don't miss new episodes.
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And if you didn't like something about this episode or about the show in general, or if
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share, shoot me an email, mike at muscleforlife.com, muscleforlife.com, and let me know what I could do
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I read everything myself. I'm always looking for new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks
again for
listening to this episode and I hope to hear from you soon.