Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Max Lugavere on “Genius Foods” and Lifestyle for Better Brain Health
Episode Date: March 11, 2020What’s the best way to eat for optimal health—and brain health in particular—and longevity? That’s a question Max Lugavere is working to answer. When Max’s mother’s mental health began to ...decline, he became obsessed with how it could have been prevented. And that culminated in his first book, Genius Foods, which was a New York Times best-seller all about using diet and nutrition to help prevent dementia. Unfortunately, Max’s mother developed pancreatic cancer, which she died from shortly after. Max’s determination didn’t wane, though, and he’s since gone on to write his newest book, Genius Life, which expands on the premise of his first book to go beyond food and build a healthy lifestyle. In this episode, Max and I talk about . . . - Why many people don’t need to eat so many carbs - Misconceptions about olive oil for cooking - The effect of late-night eating on hunger hormones - Blue light blocking and magnesium for better sleep - And more . . . So, if you want to live a longer, healthier life while avoiding disease and optimizing your brain, listen to this episode! 12:49 - What are some of the big takeaways that you discussed in your book? 34:21 - Why is eating at night not healthy? 51:57 - How much time outside should you spend to increase better sleep? 53:45 - Can you simulate natural light with artificial light? 1:00:01 - What are some toxic chemicals that we are constantly exposed to and how can we avoid them? --- Mentioned on The Show: Max’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maxlugavere/ Max’s New Book: https://geniuslifebook.com/ Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ --- 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.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome back, hopefully. Hopefully, you're a regular around here. And if you're not,
hopefully, you're going to become a regular. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life.
And in this episode, we're going to be talking about the best way to eat for optimal health
and optimal brain health in particular, as well as longevity and vitality. Because those are the topics that
Max Lugavere's work focuses on. And if that name sounds familiar, Max is a New York Times best
selling author of a book that you've probably heard of called Genius Foods. And that was a
project that Max embarked upon after his mom's mental health began to decline. He became obsessed
with how it could be improved and how it could be prevented in other people. And that culminated in
the book Genius Foods, which was all about using diet and nutrition to help prevent dementia in
particular. Now, unfortunately, Max's mother's situation got even worse. She developed pancreatic
cancer, which she died from shortly after. And that was devastating to Max, of course,
but it also lit a fire under him to expand on the premise of his first book and to go beyond food
and look at what it takes to really build a healthy lifestyle that is healthy for not just
your brain, but your entire body. And that's what we talk about in this episode. So Max and I chat
about why many people don't need to eat so many carbs. And that's certainly true of the average
person who is sedentary, who is not only not in the gym exercising regularly,
they're not even moving much at all. And that's actually a bigger problem than the carbs. But
again, this is something we talk about in the interview. We also talk about misconceptions
about olive oil for cooking. We talk about the effect of late night eating on hunger hormones.
We talk about blue light blocking and magnesium for getting better sleep and more.
So if you want to live a longer, healthier life while doing your best to avoid disease and
dysfunction and to optimize your brain in particular, this episode's for you.
Now, before we get to the show, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
please consider picking up one of my best-selling health and fitness books.
I have Bigger Leaner Stronger for Men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for Women.
I have a flexible dieting cookbook called The Shredded Chef, as well as a 100% practical hands-on blueprint for personal transformation called
The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation. These books have sold well over a million copies
and have helped thousands of people build their best body ever. And you can find them on all major online retailers like
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So again, that's Bigger Leaner Stronger for men, Thinner Leaner Stronger for women,
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Hey, Max, thanks for taking the time to do this.
Mike, thanks so much for having me.
You're one of the few people who actually followed through on a,
hey, let me put you in touch with somebody who would be a great guest for your show.
So kudos to you.
Yeah, well, I appreciate it, man.
We connected through our mutual friends, David Nurse and the guys over at Mind Pump.
And those are just like some of the most solid people I know in the health and wellness and
fitness world.
So, you know, you already had strong social proof and you seem like a nice guy. So what can I say?
Yeah. See, I fake it well, you know? Yeah. No, just, just on that point, it's just funny for
anybody listening that it's funny how hard it is to, to even to get guests or to even get on other
shows. Like there've been so many times where, and I'll share details,
not to brag, but so the person knows, I'm not trying to waste your time. A good episode can
get 30 or 40,000 plays. That's a fair amount of people. And I'm just surprised at how that
doesn't work well at all with many people. And it's baffling to me. I'd be like,
if somebody were to reach out to me and say, hey, do you want to come on my pretty popular podcast and talk about stuff that you like to
talk about? I'd be like, yes, sure. A thousand percent.
I don't know. Free promotion. I don't know. It's strange. But that's not what we're here
to talk about. We're here to talk about you and your next book, which is called The Genius Life.
And depending on when this episode comes out, it's either going to be
in its final week of pre-order or it's going to be just available.
This is your second book, right?
Second book.
Second book, yeah.
First book was Genius Foods, right?
Indeed.
And that book did quite well.
And here you are now with your next one, which is exciting.
And why this?
Why did you want to write? I mean, it seems like a logical progression, you know, taking the genius brand, so to speak, and finding a new and bigger concept for it.
That's how it looks from a marketing perspective. But that obviously wasn't the only consideration
of why you wanted to write this book. Yeah. Well, for anybody that's not familiar with my story,
I have a background in journalism, so I didn't go the academic medical route.
But for six years out of college, I was working for a news and information network that co-founded by former USVP Al Gore.
And I got to investigate topics that ranged from sort of light and fluffy to pretty heady and serious.
After doing that and getting to work with some of the best of the best journalists in the field, you know, people who people who have honed the skills and talents of reporters that are no doubt household names. I left that and I
was trying to figure out where I was going to go with my career. At that point in my personal life,
my mom became sick. I started spending more and more time with her in New York City,
which is where I'm from. I went around the country with her to try to understand what was going on. And, you know,
what we were able to subjectively observe was that my mom had a change to her gait and there was a
distinct change to her cognitive abilities. Suddenly it seemed as if, you know, her brain
power had just downshifted, you know, almost as if she had had a brain transplant with somebody
who was 30 years her senior. It was unsettling to me and everybody else in my family
because I had no prior family history of any kind of neurodegenerative condition. And so we ended up
visiting clinics in New York City, again, which is where I'm from, ultimately to Johns Hopkins
in Baltimore. And because we couldn't get answers in any of those cities, we ended up going to the
Cleveland Clinic, which is where, you know, the Cleveland Clinic is known for taking on complex medical cases. And it was there for
the first time that my mom was diagnosed with a neurodegenerative condition. And at that point,
I basically became obsessed with trying to understand why this would have happened to my mom
at such a young age. You know, my mom was in her late late 50s, about 58 at the time, which is not old. She had
all the pigments in her hair. She was a young and vibrant woman. I began to investigate as an
independent journalist through the medical literature, what's called the primary literature,
studies and trials that are published in our most respected peer-reviewed journals.
But then ultimately, I found a way to exploit my media credentials that I had had, which I found to be a very powerful advantage. And I was able
to go around the world and interview researchers that are ushering in this notion of dementia
prevention. And I became, initially, I was very focused on diet because I've always had an
interest, more than an interest, a passion for nutrition and health. And in fact, the first two
years of my college, I was pre-med because I thought that I was going to go into that as a
profession. So when my mom got sick, you know, I started really looking at the foods and the food
environment and what it could be, what it was about my mom's dietary pattern over the years
that might have predisposed her to developing this strange and niche form of dementia. And so I wrote Genius Foods, which is my
first book, which is really sort of a nutritional care manual to the human brain based on everything
that we currently know about dementia prevention and this burgeoning field that's being referred
to as nutritional psychiatry. And actually, Genius Foods isn't the only thing I've published. I've
been able to publish, I've been privileged to be able to collaborate with one of the leading
researchers in the field of dementia prevention on a chapter in a clinician's textbook, which is a peer-reviewed,
obviously, piece of literature. And so I've been able to do, I think, things that have been very
sort of humbling, but that have also been really crucial in terms of helping get this message out
to a broader audience, the topic of dementia prevention, the notion that we
have some sort of agency over our cognitive destiny and that the choices that we make with
every meal might weigh in on the health of our brains. Ultimately, brain health and the health
of our body, our bodies don't stop at nutrition, as you know. The Genius Life really is about
going beyond food, although there is a
strong nutritional sort of backbone to it. But in it, I talk about all the other aspects of modern
life that have just mutated and become dysfunctional from the standpoint of the biological
needs of the human animal. And I got the opportunity to write the book just after the
Genius Foods came out. So, you know, Genius Foods,
obviously, I'm very grateful that it's been successful. It's, you know, been published
around the world. But shortly after I was able to get the opportunity to write a second follow-up
book, my mother was actually diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. And this was in Labor Day,
just after Labor Day of 2018, last year.
Or I guess when this podcast goes up, it might be a year and a half prior.
But from the point at which she was diagnosed, the disease just ravaged her and it took three months and she was gone.
It's hard for me to talk about, but I just became even more dedicated to understanding why the modern world has become so toxic and what could have led to my mom being struck down at such a young age and I've gotten so sick.
What kinds of exposures could be potentially indicted in the heartbreaking health that my mom experienced. And, you know,
part of it has to do with the fact that it, I feel in many ways, like my mom was robbed from me and the rest of my family, but in other ways, I want to prevent it from happening to myself and others
that I care about. So the genius life is really just a continuation on my research. And it's all,
you know, based on peer reviewed evidence and conversations and interviews that I've conducted
with researchers.
A lot of them I do on my own podcast, which is also called The Genius Life.
And so, yeah, it's a never-ending journey.
And this is sort of my latest work.
And I hope it resonates.
What can I say?
Yeah.
Wow.
I can't even imagine what that must have been like to go through.
But I can say that I admire you're turning it into something positive instead of just
allowing it to ruin your life, even if it's just for a period of time.
Yeah. I mean, everybody, you know, I'm not alone in this. Everybody
has dealt with issues related to illness. And, you know, if there's one thing that's
among the most powerful motivators that we know of, it's when a loved one gets sick. I mean,
it motivates you or when you get sick, Many people who are now in the fitness industry, I think are in it because at one point,
perhaps they were unhealthy or they were overweight. I've been very blessed to have not
really had any major medical problems and I've never been overweight other than a little bit of
like baby fat that I carried with me through adolescence. But I've really always believed
in the power of nutrition and
lifestyle and exercise to make a person feel better from the standpoint of mental health and
to, you know, improve body composition and all that. But when my mom became sick, it really,
it was sort of like a record stopping, you know, that sound effect that they use in movies
sometimes. Yeah. Yeah. And just everything kind of zeroing in on health
and longevity and what we can do to procure better health for ourselves and for our loved ones.
And what were some of the big takeaways that you discuss in the book? Because as far as nutrition
goes, I mean, I'll just quickly share what I generally promote and I'll be curious how that
matches up with, because the lens that you're viewing it through in Genius Foods is a bit more specific
and a bit different than what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about just general health,
not specifically just brain health.
Now, of course, brain health comes along with general health,
but if you get most of your calories
from mostly unprocessed foods,
if you eat plenty of fruits and mostly vegetables,
but plenty of plant foods and healthy fats and throw in some
lean protein as well. If you're going to eat an omnivorous diet, if you're going to go
100% plant-based, you can make it work. It's a bit trickier because of protein needs and
nutritional needs, but you can make it work. You might have to supplement a little bit.
And pretty simple, kind of speaking of moms moms kind of like how our moms always wanted us
to eat and always told us to eat and if you want to get very specific and include certain quote
unquote super foods i don't really like that term but let's just say highly nutritious foods or
foods that contain unique properties or unique molecules that you're not going to get elsewhere
you can do that like eat a clove of raw garlic every day if you can do it because it has allicin. You're not going to get that
anywhere else. So eat some cruciferous vegetables every day and it might be good for helping
maintain hormonal health and some stuff like that. Eat some mushrooms every day. You don't
necessarily have to micromanage it that much if we're talking about just maintaining general
health. So as far as nutrition goes, that's what a lot of people listening to this are going to be thinking with.
And quickly, I'd just be curious to hear how that lines up with what is in your existing book,
Ingenious Foods. And then where does it go from there in genius life? What else did you find?
Because yes, if you don't eat well, your body is not going to do
well. If you're young, you can get away with it for a while because you're essentially invincible,
but eventually it catches up with you. And many people listening know that. They also know that
exercise is important, but you talk about some things that aren't generally discussed, or at
least it's not just the super obvious stuff in genius life Yeah
so I mean I think like
I've coined the term genius foods to describe foods that I think are among the most nutrient dense foods in the supermarket and that
Do provide value in terms of whether it's protective molecules or building block molecules
To the brain specifically because you know
You might consider the body having evolved to chart the brain around, right? Like the brain is really the organ that it's the battery of our lives,
essentially. And without the brain, if the brain goes, we've got nothing. So,
and on the flip side of that coin, you know, it's convenient that what's good for the brain is good
for the rest of the body and what's good for the body is good for the brain. So, there's this
bi-directional communication that happens between the brain and the body they're completely connected and and eating for the brain i think is going to benefit
the body and eating in a way that fosters the optimal body composition for you and the optimal
metabolic health for you whatever is going to make you healthier in your body is going to benefit
your brain so i talk talk about, you know,
eating primarily whole foods, like you mentioned, I think for most people have a bias towards low
carb, you know, foods that are going to minimize glycemic variability throughout the day with the
caveat that I don't believe in a one size fits all dietary pattern. If you are engaging with
resistance training, high intensity interval
training, for example, you definitely have not only a higher tolerance for dietary carbohydrates,
but a necessity for it even. So that I think is, you know, undebatable. Like, you know,
you need carbs to supply energy for explosive lifts and things like that. The problem is that
most people are so sedentary, Mike. I mean,
you look at statistically around the country, two thirds of people are either overweight or obese.
Half of the population is either diabetic or pre-diabetic. And most people who are diabetic
actually don't even know that they're diabetics. I completely agree. Most people would benefit
greatly from just eliminating all forms of, you could say, processed carbs.
And they're going to get carbs if they eat fruit and vegetables. Obviously, it's not.
But their carbohydrate intake might go from like 300 grams a day to 80 or 90 or something.
That would be very healthy and it'd be very beneficial. But to that point of, okay,
if you take that person though, and they do that and they go, oh, I feel better. Maybe I should do
something else for my body. Maybe I should start exercising. They start doing that. And then particularly if
they start training their muscles, then yes, not only now is their body now, I wouldn't recommend
that they go back to eating. Well, what do people even eat these days? I don't even, my diet has
been so the same so long, but go back to eating like, I don't know, Lucky Charms and like Pop-Tarts and
shit for their carbs. But now they have a use for more carbohydrate and their body can tolerate it
much better. Of course, their insulin sensitivity is gonna be much better. So now maybe they're
going to be adding some whole grains into their diet or they're going to be adding, I mean,
I would say not that the average person would want to avoid legumes, but maybe they're going
to be eating more of them. Or maybe even there is some process like, oh, they're going to have some pita bread with their lunch, with their salad.
Okay, fine, whatever.
But yeah, certainly for the average sedentary person, their diet is all out of whack.
And that's a different discussion.
But look at what was promoted, though, by the government and just mainstream media and just health quote unquote experts for so long,
which it was eat a shitload of carbs, a shitload of grains and, you know, some vegetables, maybe
whatever, and very little protein. That's what people did. And, you know, it didn't do them very
well. No load up on grains, avoid, you know, cut the fat, avoid saturated fat in particular. And
what that did was that allowed food manufacturers basically to exploit those guidelines, which were based on not very solid science at the time that they were,
you know, released into the world. When you said earlier, you know, that we should be eating like
our moms taught us. Well, I mean, my mom taught me some very good things about nutrition, but she
also taught me some very bad things about nutrition. She was always very afraid of developing heart
disease. The irony that she developed the other two of humanity's most feared conditions and her
heart was fine the entire time. But she was raised at a time when the prevailing messaging
surrounding heart disease prevention was to avoid fat and dietary cholesterol. And so growing up,
when looking back and thinking back over the dietary pattern of my mom throughout the years,
I never saw her eat eggs. She never ate eggs, but she never ate red meat. She was a strict
meat avoider. The only time she ever ate any kind of animal protein was explicitly for that,
for the protein. And it was usually lean chicken breast, you know,
without the skin and fish. My mom was not a big believer in organic ever. She never purchased
organic anything. We were not privy at the time to grass fed this or grain fed that, you know,
the fish that we bought was, you know, surely farmed. And always in my kitchen to avoid the saturated fat in butter,
we had those pale yellow tubs of margarine. And we always had the jug of corn oil sitting out by
the stove in the plastic tub, you know, getting warmed over and over and over again by the stove,
which it sat next to in that plastic, no less, you know, so you have the unhealthy corn oil,
which we know is predominantly, you know, highly damage prone, polyunsaturated omega-6 dominant fat, which no human being really
should be consuming. It's not only they're sitting, you know, by the, in the warm environment
of the stove, which catalyzes, you know, this oxidative process and creates all these dangerous
compounds like aldehydes, but it's sitting in plastic, no less, which leaches endocrine
disrupting compounds into the oil. And so that's like, you know, on the surface, our dietary pattern during that period would have been
like the gold star patient of a nutritionist, you know, of a dietician of the 90s and 80s
or 70s, right? But we now know in retrospect that that's like, those were some of the worst
offenses that you could be doing to your body, you know, eating those kinds of things, you know, the margarines, which, you know,
were probably filled with partially hydrogenated oils, you know, the grain and seed oils that my
mom's diet was built on. We know that now dietary cholesterol has very little impact on blood
cholesterol, you know, except for a few minority people, people that are hyper absorbers, for
example, which make up a small minority of the population. I can't help but think that that dietary pattern had some impact on my mom's health. And in many
ways, it informed the research that I did and continue to do. And, you know, we could talk
about red meat for a little bit. I don't want to go too far into it because I know that it's kind
of controversial, but I'm a big advocate of consuming
properly raised grass-fed red meat. My mom never ate any of it, for example, and I think that
it's one of the most nutrient-dense foods that we have in terms of the bioavailability of nutrients,
the fact that it's a highly protein-dense food, and the like. In terms of brain health,
researchers speculate that it was access to not just meat, but cooked meat that catalyzed the growth of our brains.
So if you think from an evolutionary standpoint, not to romanticize sort of like the ancestral diet too much, but we ate for a certain way for millions of years that led to the evolution of the modern human brain.
We've been anatomically modern human beings for the past 200,000 years. And then about 10,000 years ago, we turned our backs on that diet and
our diets went from being built on whatever land animals or, you know, sea animals we could catch,
plants that we could forage. There are 50,000 edible plant species around the world to just a
handful of animals and crops that we could domesticate. And that paved the way for the
fact that today, most of the calories that people are consuming come from just three plants,
wheat, corn, and rice. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, a lot to unpack there. I mean, quickly, good point with
how your mom, I mean, just what she knew, right? And so maybe I should rethink my little quip.
So I'd say then maybe how some of our moms, a lot of moms wanted at least to eat our vegetables and
most people don't even do that. So we could start there, but you know, something to consider with that point of like, well,
this is what nutritionists would have once recommended. And this would have really been
the weight of the evidence, so to speak at the, at the time and how that changes.
I think we should also though, be careful to not to think that we have it all figured out now
either though, because yeah, now the pendulum
has swung hard in the other direction and the carbohydrate is the boogeyman now and dietary fat
is the darling. And there are many people with credentials and people who sound smart, who would
say that you should just have a fat orgy every day. You should eat all the fat you want. You
should eat all the saturated fat you want. You should eat all the fat you want. You should eat all the saturated fat you want. You should eat all the butter you want. You should eat all the red meat you want.
That's silly as well. That's not what the weight of the evidence would suggest at all. But also,
when you look at really, when you look at how much dietary fat does our body need and in what types
to be healthy and functional and let's say even to thrive, not just to survive.
It's not that much. Like, you know, if you get, let's say 30 ish percent of your daily calories
from fat and you get some monounsaturated fat in there and some polyunsaturated fat and some
saturated fat, like maybe you eat some avocado and you eat some nuts and you have maybe some
meat as well, although you're going to get some saturated from the avocado and you eat some nuts and you have maybe some meat as well, although you're going to
get some saturated from the avocado and nuts and some olive oil, right? Just a simple, it's very
easy to do. Like eating a salad could actually do all of those things for you. Then you're going to
be good. You don't need to be getting 50, 60% of your calories every day from fat. And if you're
going to do that, you should watch out with your saturated fat,
because we do know that there are a lot of people out there who LDL, like it is going to be an
issue. Their LDL levels are going to rise if they're eating, let's say they start getting 20
or 30% of their daily calories from saturated fat. I just don't see how that's good advice
and how that is just based on not just my understanding,
but haven't spoken to a lot of smart people, scientists who this is what they live.
This is their world where they're just like, that's just irresponsible.
So I do agree that I think on the whole, we're learning more and more and things are improving,
but we have similar problems today as your mom had in her day.
Yeah.
Just to go into that a little bit,
I don't recommend very high fat diet. I think that now that dietary fat has been exonerated,
the pendulum has swung in the other direction where now, because people love black or white
thinking when it comes to nutrition, that we should just be having a fat free-for-all.
And you're absolutely right in that some people respond differently to saturated fats and
might have an exaggerated, for example, LDL response.
And I don't think that having an exaggerated LDL response is necessarily a good thing,
right?
And of course, you don't want to look only at LDL when assessing heart disease risk.
I think LDL should be looked at in the context of your your overall health, you know, inflammatory markers, insulin resistance, things like that.
But yeah, so I mean, I think that's one of the things that sets me apart in this space. Like,
you know, my book, certainly I talk about the potential applications for keto. You can't not
talk about keto if you're talking about brain health, because it's very, it is interesting,
and they are studying the ketogenic diet for its potential application and in treating conditions like mild cognitive impairment or
Alzheimer's disease. And certainly it's been used for over a century now to treat certain types of
epilepsy. So, I mean, it is certainly relevant to the brain, but there are different ways of
even executing a ketogenic diet. In the classic medical literature, what you have is a ketogenic diet that is based on
heavy cream and hard cheeses and meat and oils and things like that. But you could easily reach
ketosis by eating a diet that's predominantly fibrous vegetables and lean protein. So there
are different ways to execute it. The recommendation that I make in the book is not to go crazy with
the added oils, which are not particularly nutrient dense.
But if you are going to use an oil, extra virgin olive oil really should be that.
It's the oil that I think is probably going to do the most good for the most people.
And we have a good amount of research to back that up from animal studies to in vitro studies to in vivo human clinical trials using extra virgin olive oil.
It seems to be the most sort of benevolent oil that we have.
Yep.
Good for cooking too.
Yeah.
It's a myth that you can't cook with extra virgin olive oil.
And when it comes to carbs, I'm pretty, I think, moderate there as well.
As I mentioned, you know, I don't think, I think that if you have visceral fat, if you're
insulin resistant, if you're overweight, which by the way, many
people are, then I think you probably should go on a grain-free diet and focus more on fibers,
vegetables, dark leafy greens, protein, and things like that. On the one hand, you know, it's going
to be the most satiating. It's not going to mess with your blood sugar if you're insulin resistant,
which, you know, insulin resistance is essentially glucose intolerance. So you really, you know,
if you're in that state, you really have no business consuming those kinds of foods and
also regaining metabolic flexibility, which is basically the pipeline that allows your body to
burn fat. But if you're not somebody who has that type of health situation, then, you know,
do I think grains are toxic or necessary to be avoided? I mean, you know, I'll eat white rice every now and then.
I definitely eat it on my sushi.
I like oatmeal, like personally and just as a food.
Yeah.
I mean, oatmeal is great.
Speaking in terms of nutrient density, I don't think that grains are very nutrient dense.
I think they're actually very energy dense.
Which of course, I mean, that is the point, right?
Carbohydrates are primarily energetic and you can get some fiber too. If you pick the right ones, you can get some, ideally some soluble fiber as well. Although I guess if you're eating enough vegetables, you probably, carbs are essential to refill that muscle glycogen so that
you can gain strength. I mean, I had my own end of one experience recently. I went through about
a month and a half, two month period of just bulking, eating whatever I can get my hands on,
all super healthy, quote unquote, clean foods, not foods that were processed, still avoiding the
unhealthy oils and things like that, but just eating a lot, like really pushing my caloric intake up. And I was eating a lot of carbs. I
would like be polishing off a bag of popcorn at night pretty much. And I was eating white rice
and things like that just because I wanted to see how much stronger I could get by doing that.
So I was like in a hyper caloric state. I was eating lots of carbs, not tracking anything,
but just eating a lot more than my baseline. I was getting really strong, really fast. And then after about two months in, I cut back on the carbs and I started eating less,
like going back to my baseline, just levels of appetite, like not pushing it. And I noticed that
I was just like running out of steam in the gym. So it was a very sort of quick AB test for me to
really experience the value of carbs when trying to build strength, when you're trained athlete,
you know, not that I'm, I don't really like to use the term athlete to describe myself because
I'm the least athletic person there is, but I do love to lift. So we can pretend like weightlifting
can pretend like we're athletes because we pick things up and put them down. Totally. I'm happy
to do it. But yeah, so I mean, I'm not dogmatic. That's basically the point is that I think that
there's no such thing as a one size fits all diet. You know, everybody has different health, comes from a different place of health,
different fitness levels, different genders, different ages, different activity levels.
And also I'd say what they enjoy too. I mean, I talk about that fairly often and why it's
important to do a workout program that you like, even if it's maybe not scientifically optimal.
like, even if it's maybe not scientifically optimal. If you know, like this is deficient in some way, but I just like it more than the most optimized approach. And the same thing with
diet where there are definitely boundaries and there are rules of thumb that you should be
following. But this maybe is, well, I could say it could be with food choices. Like, so you don't
have to eat certain foods just because so-and-so says, this is a super food. You have to be eating. No, it's not. That's not
true. There are some things though, like leafy greens, it'd be very smart for you to get in a
couple of servings per day. Even if you have to do what the kids call the cow method, where
it's just grab spinach and shove it into your mouth and chew it and drink water and move on
with your life. I've never heard of that. Yeah, yeah.
There's somebody that he had come on my podcast some time ago and he's like a guy from Twitch
and he had a lot of health problems
and he came across my stuff.
And then now he doesn't have health problems
and he has like this following on Twitch
and he does not like leafy greens at all.
So he doesn't care to try to turn them into a salad
or make them palatable at all.
He just eats them dry and he calls it cow method.
And I thought it's pretty funny. It's stuck in my head because it actually is kind of effective. I
mean, all you need, right? Is a couple of handfuls. Just do it. Just slam it in your mouth,
chew the shit, drink the water, and you're done. You just got in your leafy greens.
But so there are some things that are smart, but let's say like intermittent fasting, for example,
a lot of people ask me, should I do intermittent fasting?
And my answer is, if you like it, and if you don't like it, don't do it because you're not really missing out on anything.
And so, again, that's a point of where other people would say, oh, this is the next thing.
You should be doing this if you really want to be healthy.
And then people try it, they hate it, and then they give
up on it. And maybe from there, that leads into feeling guilty and then totally throws them off
track and into unhealthy habits. And so as far as diet goes, I also talk about that,
that make sure that you've worked out when you're eating and what you're eating and how
large your meals are
and when those meals are. Just make sure that it's something you actually enjoy. You should be
looking forward to the meals that you eat. You should be looking forward to your diet should
not be a source of distress. Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
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In terms of the intermittent fasting thing, I agree that it's not a magic solution to anything,
but I do think that the research on circadian biology, and this is where, you know, I start to talk about this in the genius life. I do think it's compelling enough to warrant not
eating too late at night. Let's talk about that. That's something that I guess I always
have tended to do. Like I just never really liked eating at night, but I'm curious as to
what you found on that point specifically. Yeah. I mean, look, let's be honest, you know,
something, you know, a food has a hundred calories at 7 PM. Is it going to have more calories somehow at 8 PM or 9 PM?
No. Overall, obviously energy balance is when it comes to your weight, I think obviously reigns
supreme, but eating too late at night can mess with the hormones that regulate energy expenditure
and hunger levels. So circadian
disruption can negatively affect hormones like leptin and ghrelin, which can affect the calories
outside of the calories in calories out equation, right? Over time. Does one meal, you know, late
at night necessarily, is that going to have any detrimental effect on your health or on your
weight? No, not at all. Just to jump in there, quite a few people listening probably, just so you can think with this, you might want to comment on it, probably have, and I've written about this, and this is something I have done for a while.
They'll have probably a serving of like slower burning protein later at night.
Maybe it's right before bed or an hour or so before bed.
So that's going to be probably 20 or 25 grams of protein from maybe some high protein yogurt or maybe some casein protein. And the idea there is
there, there've been three or four studies now done, and this makes sense mechanistically. It's
not surprising. This is what was found, but that by having a serving of protein before you go to
bed, you gain more muscle over time. This was once thought that it was like, oh, sleeping is
catabolic. Your body breaks down, you know, you're breaking down muscle when you sleep.
Well, we know that's not true, but what we do know is let's say you stop eating protein at 6 PM
and it takes your body, I don't know, three or four, maybe five hours to finish processing that
food. Your muscle building machinery, so to speak, shuts down at that point because it doesn't have
the raw materials. It has no amino acids left to to process so it just kind of sits there waiting for its next feeding and by having
some protein before you go to bed you give it some raw materials to work with so it goes okay well
it's kick into gear for another three or four hours i mean depending on what you're having it
might be a little bit longer and so that's the idea behind it and that's something that i've
recommended as it's not vital but if you don't mind it, do it kind of thing. Yeah. I mean,
I would agree with that. And I think it's, it all comes down to, again, like everybody being
different and it depends on your goals. If your goal is to maximize hypertrophy, then yeah,
it probably makes sense to, you know, spread out your protein evenly throughout the day and to get
some before bed, you know, to maximize muscle protein synthesis. But when it comes to just overall health, you know, I think probably
not eating carbs or starchy foods to be more specific just before bed. I think that's probably
not a good idea because to be clear, I think it's probably not a good idea to eat starchy
foods before bed because you're less insulin sensitive at night. Anyway, they call that
afternoon diabetes as the day wanes, your insulin sensitivity sort of declines. They've found that a single late night mixed meal,
11 p.m. compared to 6 p.m. actually can make you worse at handling glucose the next day. So it
makes you more insulin resistant the next day, similar to being underslept. So it's all about
figuring out what your goals are and setting healthy patterns. And again,
sticking to what's like going to be the most sustainable for you in accordance with your goals.
But, you know, there are other aspects of eating late at night that I think are worth taking into
account. So for example, you know, we know that we have our largest pulse of growth hormone
occurs soon after we fall asleep. And insulin, which is the hormone that is primarily expressed
when we consume carbohydrates, is in opposition to growth hormone. And so, you know, we can affect
that. We also have an enzyme in the brain called insulin degrading enzyme, which I go into detail
in Genius Foods, actually, which is involved in deconstructing the proteins that can clump
together and form the plaques associated with conditions like Alzheimer's disease. And insulin degrading enzyme, it's there to degrade insulin as the name implies, but it also
does double duty and works on this amyloid beta protein. But it preferentially will work to
degrade insulin when it's around. And we know that the brain is cleaning itself when we sleep,
thanks to the glymphatic system. This is a fairly recent discovery, but we know that the
brain during sleep, these ducts in the brain swell to make room for cerebrospinal fluid,
which every 20 minutes swooshes throughout the brain, cleansing itself of proteins like amyloid
and tau, which are associated with neurodegeneration. So insulin, you know, might
actually be in opposition to the brain's sort of custodial processes. I think more research
needs to be done on foods and how they relate to the functioning of the glymphatic system. So I'm
not going to say that I have all the answers, but I think it makes sense from a circadian standpoint
that digestion, metabolism, and things like that would not be as optimal late at night as they
would be during the day. Because during the day, our bodies are prioritizing daylight associated activity. Our metabolism is tuned in a way to
support that. We also have, in terms of digestion, peristalsis slows, which is a sign that, you know,
we're not digesting things as well late at night. I have a hypothesis that eating late at night can
allow food actually to spend more time in the small intestine than it should. And from the standpoint of the microbiome, the vast majority of bacteria
that reside within us hang out in the large intestine. We have a small amount of bacteria
in the small intestine, but that's really the site of nutrient absorption for us. And so it's a
little volatile. It's also kind of acidic. So food bacteria don't really like
to hang out that far north in the digestive tract, but allowing food to ferment there
when peristalsis has slowed overnight, I think can potentially be not the best thing. Could
predispose one to small intestinal bacterial overgrowth and things like that. So, and then,
you know, when it comes to human trials, they've done a number of studies where they found that early time-restricted feeding has had a number of benefits on people.
More research needs to be done, certainly, but eating earlier dinners seems to lead to
better blood pressure, better metabolic health, and these are all things that occur
independent of weight loss. So even though time-restricted feeding is a great way to control
calories, there seems to be a number of benefits that occur independent of any potential weight
that's lost. Interesting. Yeah, that's something that I haven't looked much into. So unfortunately,
I can't comment much on probably because I've never been one to eat large meals late at night
and I've never recommended it. It would seem
almost commonsensical to do the opposite. You know, I personally, how I like to eat is
I like to eat lighter in the day. I get a fair amount of calories throughout the day,
but I do like to eat lighter in the day as far as my individual meals go and then have a larger
dinner, maybe around seven or so. But even that is, it's really,
it's not that big of a dinner. It's probably, I don't know, eight, 900 calories. And that's just
how I've always liked to eat. And probably just because I'm working in the day and it requires,
you know, that I focus and concentrate. I'm either writing or recording or doing something that I
want to be like maximally there for. If I eat, for example, 150 grams of carbs in one sitting,
then you just notice that. Or even just, it doesn't have to be a carb heavy meal,
just a high volume of food. I just, it just, I feel like it slows me down a little bit,
but all of what you were saying makes sense again, just from how have our bodies been wired
from an evolutionary perspective and what is the body trying to do
when sleeping and take carbs, for example, as they are primarily energetic, we don't need a
bunch of carbs to sleep. We're going to need a bunch of carbs if we want to go be active and
do something. So I would also note that still even following the general guidelines that you're
sharing in terms of meal timing is not intermittent fasting per se.
It's just finishing your food at a normal time and not eating much after that.
It probably doesn't have to be nothing after that.
So, you know, when I think of intermittent fasting, I think of something a bit more
structured, even if it's skipping breakfast, right?
That's the lean gains, really.
It's just skipping breakfast.
That's how you get to the, what is it? It's 16 hours fasting and then eight hours is your eating
window. So really for most people, that means that they just skip breakfast and they eat lunch
and then they stop eating at the time, whatever the cutoff is for most people, whatever, 8 p.m.
or so, right? Yeah. I eat a big dinner. I eat until I'm fully satiated and I go to sleep at around
midnight every night. So, you know, I'll eat my dinner at about 9 PM or probably earlier. Actually,
I try to eat my dinner at seven lately after dinner. I mean, I try not to snack very much,
or if I do snack, I try to really cut it off by 9 PM so that I'm getting a good three hours before,
before I go to sleep where I'm just not eating anything. And I do find that I tend to sleep great that way. Now carbs do, you know,
for somebody who's on a very low carbohydrate diet, I mean, it is a common complaint that
people who are initiating a ketogenic diet tend to experience insomnia. And part of that has to
do with the fact that, you know, a ketogenic diet is essentially a fasting mimetic. It mimics
fasting. So you're basically, it's a diet that allows you to eat
food, but many of the sort of pathways that sort of light up are conserved through fasting. And so
that's a stress on the body. So you can experience an elevation of evening cortisol, which you don't
want, you know, and cortisol is an energizing hormone. It's sort of like the body's caffeine,
endogenous caffeine in a way.
And so that can keep people awake. People find that when they add a little more carbs,
they actually sleep better. Carbohydrates, you know, part of how that works is carbs
boost the ability of the amino acid tryptophan to enter the brain. And tryptophan is not only
the precursor molecule to serotonin, which makes you feel good, right? But it's also,
it plays a role in melatonin synthesis.
And insulin also counteracts cortisol. So, you've probably come across research on having
a carbohydrate-rich meal before bed. I can see there was a paper I looked at. I just don't
remember the exact protocol. It might've been an hour or so before bed did improve sleep quality
in people who are having trouble sleeping.
Yeah.
I mean, I think it depends on why you're having trouble sleeping.
Sure, sure.
Not.
I'm just saying.
I'm sure you came across.
That's why I didn't even mention it because it's really not that interesting.
But yeah, I mean, sleep is crucial.
I think there's probably a lot of reasons why somebody would be having poor sleep today. I mean, I'm lucky in that I sleep well, but I recognize that
we're just inundated with distraction and blue light, which is something that I talk also a lot
about in the book. Blue light sends the signal to your brain that it's daytime. And so your brain
doesn't want to wind down when it's daytime. It wants to jumpstart the processes that are
going to support daylight associated activity. So I think that's one of the reasons why people
could be sleeping poorly. I think just overall, you know, eating a pro-inflammatory
diet can affect sleep negatively. Many people are magnesium, don't consume adequate magnesium.
Magnesium deficiency actually can manifest as insomnia. It's one of the reasons why I think
a handful of studies, limited research, but there's a suggestion in the literature that
magnesium supplementation can help with sleep. I think part of the reason has to do with we don't consume
enough foods that are rich in magnesium. There are a few studies that have shown that it was,
I want to say around 300 milligrams probably, I think it was before sleep, especially with,
I believe it was with sleep quality and wakings in particular, which is something that I've
actually had issues with in the past and now fortunately don't.
I'm a lighter sleeper than I was 10 years ago.
And I think that's just a natural consequence of getting older.
But still today, I have three to 500 milligrams of magnesium before about 30 minutes before
I go to bed because it was one of the things I had added
into my regimen. It's hard to say exactly what ultimately resolved the sleep issues I was having
because they're also there. It can be psychological in nature. It's hard to exactly know,
but they're like you mentioned, there is some research showing that if you have some magnesium
before you go to bed, it can help you relax, can help you sleep better. And it's hard to get enough through diet alone, even if you are conscientious about what you eat.
It's super difficult.
Yeah, I mean, part of that has to do with the fact that our soils are becoming depleted, but you're 100% right.
So, I mean, I supplement with magnesium glycinate.
I take about 300 milligrams.
You get the bolt powder?
I don't get the powder, no.
Oh, okay.
I do the pills and I wash it down.
Lately, I've been kind of obsessed with glycine. So I get bulk powders. I have bulk glycine,
I have bulk magnesium glycinate, and I have bulk lemon balm. And ironically, I have a sleep
supplement that has exactly those ingredients, but I'm using the bulk powders because I don't
like the taste of that supplement. We need to fix the taste. And I'm just, some people like it.
I personally do not.
And that's funny that I say that, but that's the truth.
So I basically recreated the supplement
as one other ingredient called rudicarbine,
but I'm just taking the main ingredients
that are improving sleep,
or actually it doesn't have magnesium.
That's in our multivitamins.
So I'm adding the magnesium,
but it has glycine and it has lemon balm,
and I just mix it up in water and drink it down.
That sounds great. Yeah, I'm a big fan of glycine. You mentioned not sleeping like you used to. I think, you know, part of that has to do with the fact that we're spending more and more
time indoors. And I think when it comes to good sleep later on in the, like at night, I think we
set ourselves up for good sleep actually beginning the morning of. And part of that, I think one of the most
important things to do is to make sure that you're getting good, adequate, bright light in through
your eyes in the daytime. And that's something that I think few of us are able to do today.
Part of that has to do with the fact that now 92% of the time that we spend our waking hours are
spent indoors. But, you know, we have light sensing proteins in the eye that are involved in setting our body's circadian clock. That this sort of entrainment is what sort of guides our body's
many functions over the following 24 hours. And that light sensing protein, it's called melanopsin.
It speaks to a little chocolate chip sized region of the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus,
which is in a very primitive area of the brain called the hypothalamus. And, you know, this protein in the eye, it's very interesting
because it's not involved in vision. It's there purely to set your body's circadian clock, which
of course involves, you know, wakefulness and alertness, but it also primes you for sleep
later on in the day. And the problem is our eyes are less sensitive to light as we get older.
They just, there's sort of a yellowing that occurs. And by the age of 45, a person has roughly
half the circadian anchoring light sensitivity as their 10 year old self. So I think it becomes
a lot of, you know, older people, they complain about not getting the sleep that they used to
get. Right. I think that's a problem that might be able to
be solved with just making more of an effort to get out and spend more time outdoors where you
get that beautiful ambient light of the day. And it doesn't really take that much light. It takes
about a half an hour. Yeah. That's what people are wondering right now. And just to that point,
I actually, I mean, we're coming into winter now, obviously, and I live in Virginia, so there's not much in the way of good sunlight and it's getting pretty
cold. But when it's warmer, I would make a point of going out 15 minutes every day in the sun.
I go and take my shirt off and go stand in the parking lot near my building and people wonder
what the hell is this guy doing? But there I am. And I supplement with vitamin D, so I guess that
doesn't really matter. But I always would try to make a point of getting outside. That's interesting.
I didn't know about that with the special proteins in the eye. I just knew that, I guess that makes
sense. I mean, I knew the body had a way of, and it would be through the eyes of knowing like,
oh, sunlight, it's daytime. Yeah. I mean, the eyes are the window to the brain,
essentially, not just the soul, but light is the major time
setter that the body uses to know what time of day it is. You can, you know, argue that food is a
time setter. It is exercise is also a time setter, but by and large, light is powerfully important.
And so it's crucial that you spend the morning getting that light. And all it takes is about a thousand
lux, which just to put that into perspective, you know, that's like, you know, outside on an
overcast day, you're getting at least a thousand lux of light. So it doesn't have to be like bright
sun, a super bright day, like with no clouds in the sky, you're going to get about a hundred
thousand lux of light. So it doesn't take that much light, but the, I guess, you know, one of the major problems I mentioned earlier, the fact that now we're just inundated
with bright light, is that you can easily walk into a drugstore or supermarket and the lights
overhead can easily reach 1000 lux, which is that sort of like sweet spot at which point your brain,
that super charismatic nucleus gets entrained. And so that's a problem. If you're doing a late
night snack run to the to the drugstore or the supermarket, literally the light inside the store can be light enough
to set off those proteins in the eye, which then tells your body and your brain that it's daytime,
when it could be nine o'clock at night. And ideally, how much time would you spend
outside? And I'm assuming this would be in the morning. And then from there,
it's similar to research on showing that exercising first thing in the morning,
like you're talking about, like that has been associated with better sleep again,
probably because it's just in line with how that's naturally programmed to operate.
Yeah. I think a general guideline is a half an hour.
And for people who can't do that, because there are a lot of people listening to like,
as much as I would like to be able to just go walk around for a half an hour, it's just not going to happen.
Yeah. I mean, if you're by an open window or if you're driving in your car, I mean,
there's a good chance that you're going to be exposed to that degree of light. And actually,
there's an app that you can get on your phone. I believe it's called Lux. I recently upgraded my
iPhone, so I don't have it on my phone at the moment. But there is an app that you can use
that gives you a general sense of the light intensity measured in lux of your ambient environment.
There are probably quite a few for photography, I'm assuming, right?
Yeah, I don't know how accurate they are because I know that it's like, I don't know how accurate they are on the iPhone, but I think it can be accurate.
Just a general relative sense of light intensity.
You know, you can run the app in your apartment with all your
lights on. You'll notice that the light intensity is actually pretty low. Living room light is about
200 lux. So all your lights can be on. You're only getting about 200 lux, which is not really enough
to, you know, to entrain your circadian rhythm. So it's fine. But if you take that app to a
supermarket or if you take it to your gym, for example, or if you put it by your open window, you'll get a sense relative to like your living room as to how bright the light coming in is.
And yeah, so I think it's useful, I think, for people just to get a sense.
So yeah, a thousand lux, whether it's like doing work by your window, standing out on your terrace, driving to work, you know, and I don't know, opening your sunroof or I don't even
know if you need to do that necessarily, but. Can you simulate the natural light with artificial?
Like, you know, I've seen products that that's what they claim to do. At least they say, Hey,
the pitch is basically everything that you kind of just talked about and saying, you know, yeah,
but who has the time to go outside for 30, 45 minutes here, just pop this light in front of
you instead. Yeah. I mean, I think light therapy definitely has application for this, but I mean, I think if you have a dog and you refuse to walk
your dog ever, it's animal abuse, right? And so for some reason we keep ourselves in confinement
that I think is really unkind to ourselves. And I think we should owe it to ourselves to make the
effort to get outside or to at least stand by a window and meditate for a few minutes every morning. I think it's just a,
it's a crucial part of the equation. We're designed to move. And you know, when you think
about the human eyeball, how elegant and incredible it is to be able to, you know,
instantaneously zoom in on things that are super far away and look at things that are up close.
We spend so much of our time in this sort of myopic world where we're looking at screens and things that are just inches from our face.
I had a brilliant neuroscientist, Andrew Huberman on my podcast recently, and he was talking about
the fact, you know, his lab, some of the things that they're finding is that when using a narrow
field of vision, when looking at things that are like really close to you, you're basically kind of
stimulating, whether you're aware of it or not, your sympathetic nervous system, which is
responsible for that sort of fight or flight feeling. But panoramic vision, which is something
that the eye doesn't do during a stress response, for example, because you're focused on, you know,
a potential predator coming after you. If you're able to just consciously sort of zoom out and
switch, you know, your vision to a panoramic view, you can actually calm yourself down in a major way
and activate more of that parasympathetic side of the autonomic nervous system. And so, you know,
so many of us are struggling with issues related to mental health, depression, anxiety, things like
that, stress, you know, chronic stresses through the roof. I think you owe it to yourself to, you know, to get out there every day and allow some of that ambient light in through
your eyes. You know, you mentioned supplementing with vitamin D. Vitamin D is a huge part of,
I think, the equation, living a better life. But, you know, even vitamin D, that's not the only
benefit that we get from exposing our skin to the sun. You know, it's thought that the sun's UVA rays, which are the non-vitamin D producing rays emitted by the sun are responsible for
boosting nitric oxide under the skin, which is important for cardiovascular health. So there are
all these benefits to being outside and exposed to nature. And yeah, so I would implore each of
you, you know, anybody listening to try to find the time in your day just to, maybe it's not every day, but to get outside and to, you know, breathe in fresh air, take a few deep breaths,
allow your eyes to soften out to panoramic gaze and get in that bright, beautiful blue light.
And that's really the underlying theme of your new book, right? Is we've just become disconnected,
or at least it's one of the primary themes in the book, right? We've just become so disconnected
from nature. And so that applies to us partially in how our bodies were naturally
designed to operate and then out in the world and how we're supposed to interface with the world.
Because as you said, we spend whatever it was, 92%. The vast majority of us spend the vast
majority of our time doing stuff like this, just sitting at a desk, looking at a screen and speaking
into a microphone or
typing on a keyboard or whatever. And we're going to do that. We're not going to completely stop.
And we can't completely go back, obviously, to how things were, but we don't need to. It's just
a point of what are kind of the key levers that we can pull and the big buttons we can push to
mitigate some of these pretty negative side effects of living very unnaturally, right?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, they've found that just a 20-minute nature experience can reduce
levels of cortisol. And you've probably seen this, but they've even found that simply looking
at pictures of nature has a similar effect. Like, yes, it's best to get out there, but if you just
simply looked at pictures of nature, it can actually have a slight beneficial effect on your physiology.
Yeah.
I grew up in New York City, which is the least natural environment to, you know, to grow up in and spend your time in.
And now I live in Los Angeles, which is, I think, somewhat better in terms of its proximity to nature.
But, yeah, the modern world has changed in so many ways, and many of those ways are for the better.
Los Angeles, though, you have pollution out of control, something you talk about in the book, right?
I talk about air pollution and what air pollution does to the brain and cardiovascular system and ways to protect yourself.
The pollution in LA is actually not as bad as I think it's been historically, but I've spent a good amount of time, especially over the past year traveling. I was in Hong Kong and I got to tell you the air, I felt like I was choking just walking around there and more
recently been to South America and I love South America. Certain parts of Columbia that I was in
just really bad air pollution, you know? So I think we're pretty lucky in the US because we
have strong regulation. Parts of the world like China, you know, they're really working on that
because the regulation hasn't been as good. But just to give you a sense, you know, with stronger regulation in China, they suspect that it could actually, it could be a boost to the cognitive ability of the entire population to the degree of having one extra year of schooling under their belts, which is fascinating.
Air pollution is, it's a problem.
You know, we breathe in these particles, fine particulate matter, for example.
And some of these particles, like magnetite, have been shown to be able to penetrate the
blood-brain barrier and accumulate in regions of the brain responsible for memory.
Strong air pollution affects your cardiovascular system.
It can affect, you know, aspects of your heart health, like heart rate variability.
It's a big problem, not to sound bleak or anything, but I think rather
than drive yourself crazy, I think it's important to arm yourself with knowledge so that you can
act appropriately so that you can, you know, so that you'll be more inclined to eat a nutrient
dense diet, which protects you from a lot of this stuff, actually. So just eating a healthy
nutrient dense diet. And exercising regularly, probably the two best things you can do, right?
Exercising regularly, yes. Sweating. I mean, your skin is a major site of detoxification.
You release through your sweat all kinds of potentially toxic compounds ranging from heavy
metals like mercury to BPA and phthalates and parabens and things like that, which have the
potential to disrupt your hormones in a powerful way. That's something you mentioned earlier is toxic chemicals that we are exposed to. Do you want to
talk about that briefly? And just because it's something that I have mentioned a number of times
I had, I forget his name, he's a PhD on, he wrote a book about estrogen mimicking chemicals and just
all the different ways that we're exposed to them. And the book was a very
in-depth review of really the literature and just showing that the total load of exposure is
definitely a cause for concern. So what some people will do is they'll look at one individual
type of chemical and maybe even just one sector of exposure and be like, well, that's not a big
deal. Look, it's such a small amount. It's so below the safe levels.
Who cares?
Yeah, but the problem is we're exposed to many different types of chemicals in many
different ways.
And when you zoom out and look at the total exposure, it can be quite a bit higher than
what is recognized as safe, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
So, I mean, in my book, I provide basically a crash course on endocrine disruption and
why we need to be weary of these chemicals.
And it's not a comprehensive guide to all of the 1,400 suspected endocrine disruptors in the environment, but it's a guide to the most common of them.
And the problem with these chemicals is that without sounding like I'm a chemophobic, generally with toxins, the dose makes the poison.
So everything can be toxic with, uh,
at a high enough dose water, you know, which we require for life. You know, you drink enough
water too fast. It could kill you. But the problem with endocrine disrupting compounds,
the reason why they're suspected to be so treacherous is that they don't follow that
typical linear dose response that other toxins basically are beholden to. So basically that dose makes the poison
might not apply to compounds like BPA or phthalates, which are common in everything
from baby bottles to disposable water bottles to our carpets and our furniture and our clothing
and fragrances that we douse on ourselves and in our environments. These compounds,
one of the reasons why they're suspected to be dangerous is because they can have a dose
response that's more of like a U-shaped curve, and they call this non-monotonicity.
This sort of low dose response, they might be toxic at a high enough dose, but then they might
go quiet at a more moderate dose, but then they might actually start to tinker with your hormones
at a dose that's very low, in a way that's very difficult to measure. And this sort of low dose response has
been one of the, you know, problems with, it's one of the reasons why studying these chemicals
out in the wild is so difficult. But what they're able to do is they're able to sometimes
block receptors from receiving your own endogenous hormones, sex hormones being the most common,
like estrogen, for example. But they're also able to mimic hormones in your body. And this is
dangerous because hormones are basically the marionette strings that guide nearly every aspect
of your life, from how you feel moment to moment, to your predisposition to disease and weight gain,
and also development. So, I mean,
the Environmental Working Group has identified about 286 industrial chemicals, including some
of these chemicals that we're talking about, endocrine disruptors, in utero. And at that
point, you know, I mean, if you're an adult exposed to endocrine disrupting chemicals,
that's one thing. But if you're developing hormones, again, guide development, this can
have lifelong effects. You know, I think
that's probably one of the reasons why people are so sick today. And the fact that we're seeing
certain cancers at incidents that are just unprecedented in history. Take breast cancer,
for example. So breast cancer is a cancer that is influenced by hormones. Not all cancers are
necessarily, but breast cancer is one of them. And, you know, in the 1960s, a woman's lifetime
risk of developing breast cancer was about one in 20. Today it's between it's one in six or one
in eight. I don't remember the exact number, but it's a major increased risk. And that can't just
be explained right by better diagnosis or better record keeping. I mean, we've certainly gotten
better at diagnostics. You are, you're correct about that. Because that's the standard go-to whenever there's any sort of statistic like that mentioned.
In some cases, there's validity to it.
And this is an area that I myself haven't looked much into.
But from what I have read, it wouldn't explain the increase entirely.
Similar to the whole autism debate where yes, there's certainly,
that's certainly a factor, but apparently it doesn't fully explain the increase.
Yeah. I don't think so. I think that environment plays a huge role.
The fact that so many of us are overweight now, being overweight is a driver of about 40%
of modern cancers. So I think that there's a huge environmental component to it.
We have yet to discover all of the answers, you know, what causes cancer for each person. And I'm not going to claim to know,
but I do think that it's scary the degree to which we are exposed to these kinds of chemicals.
And we haven't been given informed consent and yet somehow we've all opted in a great film for anybody who
and you know with the caveat that of course it's a film so it's a narrative it's meant to stir
emotion but i saw a movie recently with mark ruffalo called dark waters which is all about
dupont and how dupont was putting some of these chemicals into into water in uh in a small town
i forget what state it was, but it's basically like...
Was it because it would have just been very expensive to dispose of them correctly? So
they're just like, yeah, whatever, dump it in the...
It just wasn't. It was a chemical that wasn't being regulated. It wasn't being regulated,
and they had done internal studies to... The chemical is PFOA. PFOA is involved in the
creation of Teflon, which is a coating used to create nonstick pans.
So you definitely want to avoid Teflon. Teflon.
Just use cast iron.
I think cast iron is the best to use. It's probably the safest. You do accumulate iron from a cast iron pan, which if you're at risk for hereditary hemochromatosis, or if you're
a male or postmenopausal woman, I think you want to be concerned about excessive iron consumption
in your diet. But yeah, generally cast iron is, I would say the best. It's like the safest bet,
that and stainless steel, maybe certain types of ceramic if they're nickel free. But anyway,
this movie basically is all about the fact that, you know, so many of these chemicals are just
assumed to be innocent until proven guilty. And the stance that I take is that they should be
guilty until proven innocent.
You know, sometimes depending on what the industrial use is for a given compound,
they might not be tested. You know, like a compound like BPA, it's not meant to be ingested.
So it's not tested the way a drug would be tested, for example.
Especially when you consider the potential harm can be so high. So there should be a lot of additional scrutiny given to,
I had somebody on the podcast recently to talk about GMO foods. It was a good discussion. And that was just kind of one of the points was with some things we know it's not an issue. Golden
rice. Cool. That was great. Other things though, like the killer corn. Yeah, that's probably an
issue. You're talking about in utero, like finding that pregnant women who are eating this stuff, they would then find the pesticide that is now genetically woven into this corn in their babies. Yeah both sides of it and you go, okay, we know what the traditional narrative is and what is the counter narrative. And so
there's some interesting back and forth where there are prominent climate scientists who have
acknowledged that the chances of global catastrophe, global meltdown occurring are not as the media
is necessarily leading you to believe or Greta
or whatever, just random people are leading you to believe.
But even if the likelihood is low, the potential harm is we're all gone.
So we should take this very seriously.
Now that's a whole different discussion.
And I don't even necessarily entirely like that line of thinking is a little bit interesting to me, but it just, this is a similar situation where, and I think it's a lot
clearer in terms of the science that these chemicals are certainly harmful. They could be
way more harmful than we know. So why have we embraced them? Like, why have we been so nonchalant
and so cavalier about just flooding our environment with them? Right. I just think, yeah, I mean, I think money has something to do
with it. And I'm glad you brought up GMO because I'm not actually, I'm not afraid of GMO. The
reason why I choose to eat most of the produce that I buy and, you know, mind you, not all of
it. Like I don't buy organic avocados because you don't need to, because you have a skin on the
avocado. But if I'm buying dark leafy greens, cruciferous vegetables and things like
that, I buy organic because they have, not only is the organic system better for the environment,
but they have less pesticide residue in the produce. And generally more nutrition, right? I
mean, that's kind of what we're eating it for. Yeah. They might not have more necessarily
vitamins and minerals, which I think sometimes some of these studies focus on, but they do have more antioxidant value because of the
polyphenols they contain. For example, organic extra virgin olive oil has about 30% more of the
valuable phenolic compounds that make extra virgin olive oil so healthy than non-organic
extra virgin olive oil. I don't think that we should romanticize organic either because organic
is not necessarily a perfect system, but I think it's the best system that we have.
And if you can afford it, I think, you know, you're voting for a system that is better for the environment, better for you and your family.
And not everything needs to be organic, right?
But yeah, I think it's about just arming yourself with knowledge and not being a black or white thinker, not being dogmatic about it, but just making choices that make sense.
I agree.
And looking at what the,
you'd say big corporations via advertising
and just via mainstream media in general,
just because of how effective it is
for spreading ideas and persuading people,
whatever they're wanting you to do,
consider doing the opposite. Whatever they say you should eat, whatever they're wanting you to do, consider doing the opposite.
Whatever they say you should eat, whatever they're promoting on TV, the commercials,
you should consider eating literally the exact opposite of what they're running commercials on.
I joke about that as being like a useful heuristic for living, but I actually do think it is.
Whatever most people are doing, thinking, you should first consider the opposite and think about and think,
should I do that? Actually, should I believe literally the exact opposite of what these
people believe? I'm going to go look over there and see if that's more fruitful.
Yeah. I mean, that's good advice in a way because people are not well,
like you don't want to be the average, especially in the United States, you know,
averages is not well, you know, eating a more nutrient dense diet or spending more time
in nature. I think the way to, you know, what you can take from this episode of your show,
you know, pick the one thing and start with that. I mean, I think it could be overwhelming. We've
covered so many topics just already over the course of, you know, the last hour and we're
barely scratching the surface, but it's about progress, not perfection. You know, there's
always going to be things that you can improve, but take that to the place that's like going to be the most easy, sustainable, and begin
there and really like own it. You know, whether that means revamping your diet to include more,
you know, foods with higher nutrient density or spending more time, you know, that half an hour,
the ambient light of the sun every morning, or that 20 minutes in nature, that's going to reduce
your, you know, the levels of your stress hormone, getting better sleep, not eating that 11 o'clock
meal or raiding the fridge late at night as frequently as maybe you wouldn't have in the
past. These are all going to have, I think, incremental improvements on your health and
health is all you got, you know, not to sound cliche, but health is wealth.
I totally agree. And Hey, thanks for taking the time for doing this. I really appreciate this. It was a great discussion
and let's just wrap up quickly with where people can find you and your work. And then of course,
the new book is the genius life. And depending on when this podcast goes live, it's either going to
be in its last week of pre-order for people listening, or it's going to be available,
but you'll be able to find if it's in pre-order, you'll be able to find it everywhere you find books online.
And if it's out, I assume it'll also be in bookstores.
Yeah. As you mentioned, The Genius Life is available anywhere books are sold,
but you can find me on Instagram. I'm at Max Lugavere. That's L-U-G-A-V-E-R-E. And I have
a podcast too, if you like listening to podcasts, it's also called The Genius Life. But yeah,
pick up The Genius Life, the book.
I'm super excited about it.
And thank you, Mike, for having me on.
This was a real treat.
Absolutely.
I enjoyed it.
All right.
Well, that's it for today's episode.
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