The Mel Robbins Podcast - The Science of Your Gut: 3 Easy Steps to Reduce Bloating, Improve Digestion, and Feel Better Today
Episode Date: November 27, 2023What is bloating, and why don’t your pants fit after just one meal?What are the 10 foods to avoid when you feel bloated?What is gut health, and how can you improve yours?Today Mel is joined by doubl...e-board certified Dr. Amy Shah, who is here to explain bloating and optimal gut health in a way that you can understand and easily apply to your life.Dr. Shah, a medical doctor trained at Harvard, Cornell, and Columbia University, is an immunologist and leading expert in women’s hormonal health and nutrition.She is giving you all the tools you need, including her 3-step plan to get long-term relief from bloating. In this episode, Dr. Amy discusses:What bloating is; why and when it happens.3 symptoms of being bloated.10 foods notorious for causing bloating.The one food that bloats everyone.Why bloating can be worse during menopause or menstruation.How to tell if you are bloated vs. gaining weight.What “water weight” is and how to avoid it.What a “distended belly” is and where it comes from.2 everyday (non-food) things that cause bloating and how to avoid them.3 foods you should not eat when you are bloated.The pill you are taking that surprisingly may make you bloated.One type of food that 68% of the world is intolerant of and doesn’t know.Why alcohol bloats most of us.Why you shouldn’t take Advil after a night of drinking.Why sleep is so essential for reducing bloating.What gut bacteria are and how to know when they’re upset.What a food elimination diet is, why you need one, and how to safely try it.Why fasting for 12 hours is essential for a gut reset.Dr. Shah’s 3-F plan and why you should start your day this way to reduce bloating.What the best probiotic is. (Hint: you can’t buy it.)The surprising experience Mel’s daughter had with “bad” gut bacteria.How anxiety and depression can be tied to gut health. You can purchase Dr. Shah’s book, ‘I'm So Effing Hungry: Why We Crave What We Crave – and What to Do About It’, here: https://a.co/d/7mTXT2F Follow Dr. Shah:Instagram: instagram.com/fastingmdWebpage: amymdwellness.com Watch the episodes on YouTube: https://bit.ly/45OWCNrCheck out my book, The High 5 Habit: https://a.co/d/g1DQ8Pt Follow me:Instagram: https://bit.ly/3QfG8bbThe Mel Robbins Podcast Instagram: https://bit.ly/49bg4GPLinkedIn: https://bit.ly/46Mh0QBTikTok: https://bit.ly/46Kpw2vSign up for my newsletter: https://bit.ly/46PVnPs Want more resources? Go to my podcast page at melrobbins.com/podcast.Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend, Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Today, you and I are going to talk about something that we have all experienced.
Maybe you're experiencing it at this very moment.
What is the topic?
We're talking about bloating.
And there's a particular reason why I wanted to talk about bloating today, and the reason
is simple.
I am so freaking bloated right
now. I'm uncomfortable. See, here's what happened. The last couple weeks I have been on the road for work
and I've been going from one city to the next city and I've been giving speeches and having business
meetings and it's been really great. And I want to tell you a little secret. This is like a travel
secret, little travel tip. When I travel for work, I always just travel with a carry-on.
And you may be asking yourself, well, Mel, if you have been traveling for two weeks, how
the heck can you go to multiple cities with a carry-on?
Well, the secret is simple.
I wear the same outfit.
Every speech and every business meeting, I swear to God, I travel with a uniform.
And if you ever look at any of the stories on Instagram, you will notice, well, Mel always
has on the same pair of red pants in the black shirt whenever she's giving your speech.
It's true.
I have this stretchy pair of red pants that I love that are made out of polyester.
And I have this great black Oxford shirt that is also made out of polyester and I have this great black Oxford shirt that is
also made out of polyester. And I wear it on stage and I wear it to business meetings and it looks
fantastic. And the other thing that's fantastic about polyester is that when you get to a hotel
room, if you hang a polyester pair of pants up in a shower and you run a shower within about 15
minutes, the steam of a shower in a hotel room
cleans it like a dry cleaner. Absolutely fabulous. So here I am, I'm on the road, and I've got my
red polyester pants. And on Monday, I put the red pants on. They felt great. On Tuesday, I'm in
Nashville to give a speech, put the red polyester pants. They felt great Wednesday, put the red
polyester pants on in Chicago. They felt great. On Thursday, I put the red polyester pants on in Orlando
for a speech. They felt great. Friday, when I put the red polyester pants on, that's
a great everybody. I mean, I couldn't button them. And when I looked down, I realized I have the pants here. You can see them if you look at you too.
This poor button is hanging on by a thread for dear life. Like I'm talking, it has a singular thread
because the tension on the waistband, on this poor little button over the course of the
last week has basically acted like a saw, slowly sawing apart the threads that were attaching
the button to the pants.
That button was the hardest working person in my company for the last five days.
And I don't know what happened
because I take care of myself when I'm on the road.
It's not like I'm downing Jim Beam
or I'm like out late, I get a great night's sleep.
I travel with friends, we're having a lot of fun.
I love what I'm doing, but I kid you not.
I will show you photos of me on that Friday.
I look like I'm in the second trimester
of a pregnancy. I have a food baby that looks like a basket ball right in my stomach. And here's
a thing. I know that I didn't gain weight. I mean, because you can't gain seven to 10 pounds in five days.
But somehow I gained the equivalent of that in bloating.
And so I finally got home here.
And I'm like, I have to figure out what to do
because I am either gonna be belching for two weeks
or farting this out.
And neither one is a great option.
And I feel terrible.
And I don't want to wear sweatpants for the next four weeks. Well, I'm waiting for the bloating to go down.
And so I was just about to Google, how do you get rid of a bloat? Five day reset. And
I thought, Mel, what are you doing? Why don't you call Dr. Amy Shaw? I mean, Dr. Amy Shaw,
as you probably know, if you're a listener to the Mel Robbins podcast, she's been on this twice before. She is a double-board certified medical doctor in the field of allergies, immunology, and
internal medicine.
She graduated Magna Cum Laude from Cornell University's World Renowned School of Nutrition.
She went on to receive her doctorate with distinction.
She's trained at Harvard at Columbia and she is on the front line of
nutritional and medical science. She's been on the show before. She's incredible. And her
bestselling book, I'm so effing hungry, why we crave, what we crave, and what to do about it.
It is the manual on trying to balance your hormones and understand the science of nutrition so that
you can curve your cravings.
And I'm like, what are you doing?
Why are you going to Google when you can get Dr. Shaw on?
And Dr. Shaw can explain what is bloating?
Why does it happen?
And more importantly, what is the protocol?
Like what could you do in, let's say, five days?
Is there a five day reset
that you and I could follow so that whenever you feel bloated because of what you ate or
because of stress or because of whatever the heck is going on, you know what to do. And
so that's what we're doing today. And I also know that this conversation, we're planning
on releasing it right during the holidays. And so you're gonna be in the thick of it.
You're gonna be in the thick of all those amazing meals
and the stress of the holidays and the drinking
and the travel and the this and the that.
And so wherever it is that you're coming
to this conversation, we gotta see
at the table for you.
And you can have your pants buttoned or not.
You can have on your red pants with your food baby.
You can have your sweat pants on.
Everybody is welcome here,
because every single one of us at some point in our lives feels bloated, and for me it's today.
And what we're going to do today is we're going to hear from the amazing Dr. Amy Shaw.
What are we going to do about this? So please help me welcome Dr. Amy Shaw back to the Mel Robbins podcast. So grateful to be here with you Mel.
Dr. Amy Shaw, can you start by just explaining what the heck is bloating?
Bloating is that feeling of distinction in your body, but
bloating is just a sign, it's just a symptom of really a larger issue here.
It's that our gut microbiome.
It makes us bloated or gives us symptoms
when it's unhappy.
Our goal is to make our gut bacteria happy
because we will get less bloating
and we'll feel healthier overall.
So bloating is just a symptom of a larger problem.
Everybody thinks it's just from gas.
Yes, it is from gas, but it can also be
from your hormones. It can be like water retention. It can be from medications causing discomfort. It can
be just from being constipated. You know, we all go through that where we're bloated, not because there's
gas, but there's actual stool in there. And then menopause bloating, right? That's like even more so than the regular PMS bloating.
There's a whole menopause bloating.
And there's so many other causes of bloating.
So it's not just you ate too much
or you ate too many Brussels sprouts or broccoli,
which we can talk about.
It's also, it can be from so many other things.
Well, you said a big word just a minute ago.
You said, distended.
That bloating is when your stomach is distended.
What does that word mean?
So when your belly is pushing out, so from the inside.
So you can have, like I said, it can be from stool.
It can be from air.
It can be from hormones causing water retention.
And I don't know about you about when right before my period, I look like I'm pregnant.
Okay, so all of that is distension in sex.
So that could be the wall of the intestines like swollen, or it could be there's gas inside,
or it could be there's stool or food inside.
And that's why it's distended.
There's so many different ways, but it feels kind of the same.
That makes a lot of sense.
Thank you for explaining that because I'm trying to really help myself and anyone listening
tease out the difference between, oh, my habits have changed and I'm gaining a lot of weight
versus, oh, I've got something going on.
We're from the inside out. It's almost
like I feel like somebody has blown a balloon up inside of me full of something. Well, I know
this might sound like an insensitive question, but I have to ask this. How do you know if
you're bloated versus you've just let your eating slide and your gaining weight.
Yeah, it's hard to tell sometimes a difference, right? Because you know, you go on a week-long
binge, it's say that holidays or your on vacation and you come back and it's almost like a
combination of multiple things. You're retaining water because you travel a lot, you drink a lot, maybe you eat a lot of salt,
and then your gut bacteria are mad at you. Remember, there is this world that lives inside
your gut called the microbiome, and they're just mad, and they're producing all this gas
to let you know that they're mad. And then you probably ate a lot of excess calories for that period of time.
So it could be a combination of all three,
and you won't know until you start to reset your gut.
What is actually happening?
Because the water weight will go away pretty quick.
If you're concentrated, pretty much hopefully can resolve that.
And then once you get your diet back on track,
you might notice that the scale is starting to go down. So all of these things start to resolve themselves together. pretty much hopefully can resolve that. And then once you get your diet back on track,
you might notice that the scale is starting to go down.
So all of these things start to resolve themselves together.
You know, why don't I back up a minute?
Because here's what I'm starting to wonder.
In reaching out to you, Dr. Shaw, I had a food baby.
I could not button my pants.
And it happened so fast over the course of five days that I knew that this was bloating.
But can you explain.
What are these symptoms that might surprise someone to hear that you may be bloated and dealing with extra gas or really mad got bacteria.
extra gas or really mad gut bacteria.
You're burping a lot.
Obviously farting because farting and bloating go really hand in hand. You're constipated.
That's a good, that's not a good sign, but that's a sign that you
are bloated because often when you have a lot of gas in your
intestines, you can't push that stool out.
And you might not just be bloated in your gut.
You might be one of those people
who's retaining fluid everywhere.
Have you ever had that issue where your rings
don't fit anymore or your bracelets get tight
or your shoes feel like they're getting tight?
That's basically what's happening in your test ends
is happening all over your body.
So that's another sign that this could be bloating
and water retention and not necessarily
like you gained a bunch of weight.
Huh.
Well, I wanna tell you a couple of things.
Number one, I don't ever sleep with Juliana
because my hands swell so much. And same thing when I
exercise, like if I'm going to go out for a long walk, I don't
wear my rings because my hands swell. And at the end of the
day, my feet are typically like a half size larger. I never
thought that that could be a sign of bloating. And or a sign
that my body is inflamed.
And then the other thing I'll tell you is just a quick story because it might help you
listening to start to discern what you may be dealing with.
I'd say about six years ago when our daughter Candle was in high school, she always was a big burper. Like just these deep, just loud kind of burps
and she was such a little thing
that it was so shocking how loud these burps were.
And it was almost like a joke in her family,
like, can, no!
And then she started to say, Dr. Shaw,
she would go, I feel so fat.
She was not using the B word, she was using,
I feel so fat, so fat. And because she was so thin, I thought, oh my God, she's got body
dysmorphia. So I took her to a therapist because I thought as she is, you know, saying she
feels fat and I'm looking at her and I'm like, you don't look fat to me. You look pretty darn
skinny. This therapist said, I think you should get her gut tested.
Because I think she's dealing with disordered eating. I think she's got body dysmorphia.
She says, no, no, no, you should get her gut tested. It turns out when they tested her
gut that she was missing all of the good bacteria in her gut and that what was happening
is the food
would go down her mouth and down her esophage
and down into the stomach and all of a sudden,
it would hit her stomach and because she had literally
no good gut bacteria, the food sat and rotted.
And so the burping was from rotting food,
and it was disgusting, and the constant belching
was her trying to relieve the pressure and her saying,
I feel fat, I feel fat, I feel fat,
was really her trying to explain, I am bloated.
And so we went and did this protocol
of resetting her gut microbiome
and all the symptoms disappeared.
And so this is a very real thing
that you may be dealing with and be feeling symptoms other
than a food baby, and your gut health is really the issue that's causing all this.
Because I was explaining earlier that I really wanted to talk to you because I had been
traveling for the last couple of weeks, and I wear the same pair of pants.
That's my little travel secret. I wear the same pair of pants. That's my little travel secret.
I wear the same outfit everywhere I go.
And so the pants that I was wearing on Monday fit,
they fit on Tuesday, they fit on Wednesday,
they fit on Thursday, although I'll tell you
that poor little button holding my red pants together
was the hardest working person in the room.
I had my little red pants right here.
Oh, not that.
But by Friday, I had a food baby.
Like, I literally looked like I was six to seven months pregnant.
It was a balloon coming out.
And I had to do the trick where you shovate you,
unbutton your pants and you stick a rubber band
through the opening and hook it to extend your pants.
And I thought, okay, I can't gain seven pounds in five days because I can't lose seven
pounds in five days.
So maybe what we should talk about since you're basically saying when you're bloated, your
gut bacteria is mad at you, right?
Is that the basic thing that's going on here?
It is the basic thing that's going on here? It is the basic thing that's going on.
That got hormone immune connection.
I mean, when that's off balance,
you get all these symptoms. People think,
oh my god, it's hormone bloating or oh my god,
it's coming from something else,
but really it's because your gut bacteria are not happy.
It's not that it's not only related to food,
it can be related to other things,
but when they're not happy, they're gonna let you know.
Dr. Shaw, I feel better already, even though I'm still bloated,
and I'm really grateful that you are grounding all of us
in the science and you are elevating this
beyond how uncomfortable our waste bans are.
Because this does matter.
That's what I'm gathering,
that there's so much more to care about.
And I have a lot more questions about what causes this
and what we can do to change it.
We're gonna get to your five day reset.
But let's take a quick pause
because our sponsor's bringing this to us at zero cost.
And Dr. Amy Shaw and I are gonna be waiting for you right after a quick word from those sponsors to this to us at zero cost. And Dr. Amy Shaw and I are going to be waiting for you
right after a quick word from those sponsors to stay with us.
Welcome back. Thank you for still being here.
I'm with Dr. Amy Shaw. We're talking about bloating
and the science of creating a happy and healthy gut and why that matters.
So Dr. Shaw, what foods actually could bloat you?
Okay, well, first of all, I want to give you the biggest tip. Just take a step back.
The biggest tip when you're feeling bloated or distended is don't wear those red pants with the
button on them. I can't tell
you how many times I've traveled
and you know, you get bloated
because of the change in the
air pressure. You're not you're
not able to go to the bathroom
for a couple days. It's like all
of these things. You need stretchy
pants for your child. You need
to swap those red pants out
for something a little with a little more give.
And I get it, like it's nice to wear
some tight fitted pants, especially if like, you know,
you wanna look cute, but for the travel day,
where are the stretch pants, okay?
Got it, okay.
First of all, ladies and gentlemen,
let's give a round of applause for Dr. Amy Shaw,
who just told us all soft pants people soft pants
You're traveling you're feeling bloated. Let's get rid of the zippers and the buttons soft pants
So I got it. I'm taking it away. I am following it and yeah
Where where like you talked about the intestines and the stomach is that where this is happening or are there other parts of your body involved when bloat is happening to you? Yeah, from the minute you take food in, right? You're
chewing your food. The bloating can start to happen there. You know, we all know with gum,
with sparkling drinks. These are foods that can cause bloating because you're swallowing a lot of
air. Wait, what? From the time you put it in your mouth.
Did you get your causes bloating?
Yeah.
Did you not know this?
No.
So, bubbling beverages causes bloating?
Yeah.
What?
So, yeah, you need to know this.
This is why I took, I'm telling you, this is the reset.
So, sugar free gum, which is all gum now, right?
You can't really get gum.
I think bazooka used to be like our gum
when we were younger than that had real sugar,
but now it's all sugar substitute gum.
And those sugar substitutes are very irritating
to our gut bacteria.
And just the act of swallowing a lot of air,
you know, or chewing gum,
can kind of push that air down into all the way.
It's one, two, right?
So from your mouth to the soft gas, to the stomach, to the small intestine, and the large intestine.
So it's all one tube, so it can start from up there.
Then you have people like us who are always in a rush and always eating too fast.
And so it can even be an issue with just eating too fast.
And it's going through that one system,
that one tube from your mouth to your anus too fast.
And you're not taking breaks and you're not chewing enough.
And so it's not just a particular food,
it's just that you're eating food too fast, right?
And then you have foods like the foods
that when you consider super healthy, brosal sprouts,
broccoli, cauliflower,
cabbage, and mel, you're being a great
student, you're like, I want to eat
all the fiber in one day.
Yeah.
And that is going to create a
havoc in your gut because your
gut bacteria are going to be like,
we love this fiber, but not all it
wants. It's like giving them too
much work in one day, especially
when they're not used to it.
And so you're going to get a lot of gas production
while they're trying to digest this.
So it can happen in your mouth.
It can happen in your esophagus
because you're eating too fast.
It can happen in your stomach
because you ate too many really hard to digest
fibrous foods.
It can happen in your small intestine
and then in your large intestine too.
So it's like all the way through, you can get bloating from different causes.
Okay.
Can we just stop on that?
Because now you've sparked my interest because all those things you ticked off, I did not
know that sparkling beverages gum or eating all these things that I would say are super healthy foods like
broccoli and Brussels sprouts and cabbage and that kind of stuff that that actually can
contribute to blow. So thank you for explaining that. I want to focus on the foods that you
just mentioned. Cabbage, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts. Just let's just call the trifecta
right there because if I hear you correctly
you're basically saying if you're already bloated and you throw that into your
system you're going to literally inflate the balloon even more.
However, when you de-blow and you get your gut back into balance so that your
gut bacteria aren't mad at you anymore, introducing those into your diet not as a schmorgasborg,
but as part of what you're eating is part of keeping the gut bacteria healthy.
Is that correct?
That's right.
So, if you're at a party and there's this raw cruciferous vegetable play, I don't know
if you've ever seen like, I don't know how it's quite serious.
What is that word?
Those are, those are the, that are the family that we're talking about.
The cauliflower, the broccoli, the Brussels sprouts, the cabbage.
So a lot of times those four are related.
So they're like siblings, the kerfrisso frices.
They're siblings.
They're the first family.
And they have these amazing sulfur compounds that are so good for cancer reduction and
inflammation reduction.
So they're like powerhouse vegetables.
But often at a party, they're like on a tray like raw, right?
Yes.
And I don't know about you, but I have had a few too many of those at once.
Yes.
And you definitely feel it. So what I would say, someone, if you're already bloated,
don't go to the raw vegetable tray and pick up the cauliflower and the broccoli because
you're just going to really hate yourself later that night because it's going to start
to digest and produce all this gas.
And I'll tell you who else is going to hate you.
The person you're sleeping next to because you're going to be lifting the sheets up as
you're farting so you don't create like a hot box in there.
But you know what's great about you telling us that is because if I'm feeling uncomfortable
in my pants and if I'm feeling bloated, especially if you're in like wedding season or the
holiday seasons or your on a vacation, I would walk up to a raw vegetable plate and I would
go, oh, I should clearly have some broccoli and some cauliflower because I feel bloated right now.
And I didn't know until you just said it,
that that would literally stoke the flames
and make me feel worse if I'm already feeling bloated
and my gut bacteria is mad.
So what do I get instead?
Okay, and then I wanna tell you another one
that will do the same thing.
So say you're at a party and you wake up the next day
and you're like, oh, I feel so bloated,
I feel hungover or whatever, I feel bad.
And you take a whole bunch of ibuprofen or aspirin, right?
That is going to make you more bloated.
And a lot of people, this is my morning routine
after a party.
What are you talking about?
So medications are a big cause of bloating, especially NSAIDs.
So for what's NSAID?
What do you mean NSAID?
I'd be profan and motrin and naproxen.
Those are kind of a class, again, cousins in a group of medications called NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication.
So NSAIDs all have kind of the same mechanism of action.
So you know, some people like naperson, some people like ibuprofen, some people like motrin
and all these different versions, but they're all the same parent medications, same with
aspirin, aspirin's very similar to all of them.
But their side effect is bloating.
And so you ate a bunch of cruciferous vegetables.
You took a bunch of ibuprofen, and now,
and it's the week before your period.
And then you wake up and you're like, oh my god,
I look six months pregnant.
And that's what is happening.
And so I'm going to tell you what you need to do
to kind of reset that.
Thank God.
I hear a lot about gluten and bloating.
So is there a connection, like, what are the foods other than the cruciferouss that you
just explained?
What are the foods that tend to cause bloating in people?
Gluten is definitely one of them.
I mean, we all know there's so many people out there
who feel bloated when after pizza and bread and pasta.
And sometimes it's not necessarily a gluten
like you can have a sourdough bread and be okay,
but you have pizza and you're not.
So it's not necessarily the gluten itself,
but the way it's prepared.
There's also, I think 68% of the world population is lactose intolerant.
What does that mean? That means that when you eat dairy foods, you get bloated because your
body can't break down the lactose sugar. Oh, I don't know. Are you one of those people? So
everybody's different. I know idea. So 68% of the world population can't digest a glass of milk or a big scoop of ice cream
that they get bloated from it.
What are some other symptoms or things that you've seen in helping people to reset their
gut, Dr. Shaw?
Well, you know, I talk about this all the time, but your mood and cravings has a huge connection to your gut.
So we talk about this gut brain connection.
And so just to bring it back to hormones again,
is like, you know, when you're bloated,
or it's right before your period,
you feel bloated or you're in metapods, you feel bloated,
but you also feel really like sad, and you feel like, you know, you're craving metapods, you feel bloated, but you also feel really like sad and you feel like,
you know, you're craving certain foods. What we're learning now is that this disorder got bacteria
that's happening and for that, it's, you know, hormone-based situational, but is disrupting things
in our brain. And we have this gut brain connection. And so if you're feeling kind of down, fatigued,
having cravings for strange things, that could be your gut bacteria talking to you and saying,
like, you know, I don't feel good and we're sending signals to your brain that we need to be healed.
And I'm not, nobody even in modern medicine. This is not talked about very few people
when they go to the doctor and they say I'm depressed, I'm anxious, I'm you know, I'm
feeling tired all the time. Very few doctors are going to be like, let's look into your
gut health, you know, like it's not even it's like, go here's some medicine, you know, he's
here some anti-depressants or who go talk to someone.
They don't even think that it's related, but it's completely related.
I mean, we have a study after study after study saying like, okay, take some
fiber and all of a sudden people get improved cravings and mood and, you know,
eat some fermented food and all of a sudden they feel better.
So there's a huge connection with mood and feelings of anxiety.
So Dr. Shaw, what are some other foods
that can make you feel bloated?
So we talked about cruciferous vegetables,
including your broccoli, brussels, sprouts, cabbage, okay?
We talked about artificial sweeteners,
like in your diet coke and in your gum, et cetera.
Those are huge causes of bloating.
We talked about sparkling drinks, being a cause of bloating.
We've talked about dairy for so many people, gluten
for so many people, high amounts of sugar for so many people.
I actually, in my gut reset plan,
I have every single person take out the foods that they
think are triggering like gluten dairy white sugar and put themselves on a food elimination
diet at least for a week if not four weeks to identify which foods are triggering your
bloating.
So for me, it was gluten and dairy and sugar. And for a lot of people, it is all three.
But for some people, it's just one of the two. So you have to do a food elimination diet. Did you know,
Mel, that food sensitivity testing is not validated. And all those tests that people get for food
sensitivity, it's in 2023, we don't have a validated food sensitivity test. We can tell food
allergies, like if you're going to have anaphylaxis to peanut, we have a have a validated food sensitivity test. We can tell food allergies,
like if you're gonna have anaphylaxis to peanut,
we have a test for that.
But there's no test that's better than a food elimination diet
for checking for your food sensitivities,
the foods that are causing you to blow.
Let me see if I'm following you.
Because I was about to ask you,
how would you know if you're lactose intolerant?
How would you know if you are sensitive to gluten?
Because you asked me, Mel, are you lactose intolerant?
I'm like, I have no idea.
I have whole milk on my coffee every morning.
I eat cottage cheese.
I love the, you know, that SKY are yogurt.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I'm just, I'm ingesting this stuff.
I don't burp afterwards.
I don't fart afterwards that I know of.
But I'd like so am I bloated by it?
I don't know. So are you saying that the only way to determine whether or not you are
getting bloated or
triggered by certain foods is to eliminate them from your diet and then to see what happens when you add them back in?
diet and then to see what happens when you add them back in.
Yes, the gold standard for food related gut discomfort is to eliminate the foods and to add it back. When you add it back,
that's really the test. I don't know if you've ever gone a long
time without eating, say, you know, certain food and then you
add it back to your diet and then you get like this huge bloating
reaction, that's the sensitive food that you are eating. So you're only
going to know if you're lactose intolerant or if you're not tolerant to dairy, if you
stop eating it and then you add it back and see what happens to you. That's like the
gold standard for checking which foods that trigger you. So there's certain foods that trigger
everyone, but there's some sort of groups
that trigger only few people.
Like the insoluble fiber is like a thing that bloats everyone.
What is insoluble fiber?
So, you know those vegetables that I was talking to you
about the raw vegetables.
Yes. So they're made up of insoluble fiber.
Okay.
There's soluble fiber.
So for example, things like baby spinach that's cooked really well, right?
That's has a lot of like soft fiber is how I would think about it.
And it's easier to digest for the body, whereas a raw broccoli or a cauliflower has a lot
of insoluble fiber.
It's really hard for the body to digest and it takes a lot of insoluble fiber. It's really hard for the body to digest.
And it takes a lot of work. It's like marathon training. Like eventually you'll get there,
but you don't want to start with huge amounts in the beginning. So, and then alcohol.
Let's talk about-
Oh, do we have to?
You know, come on. This is coming out during the holidays, Dr. Shal.
You know, come on, this is coming out during the holidays, Dr. Shaw. No, I'm not saying anything.
No, let's talk about alcohol because the truth is I have this love hate relationship
with alcohol where I tend to go for periods where I don't drink at all and I feel a thousand
times better and I sleep better and I know it's better for my health and then particularly
around the holidays or in the summer,
or when we're celebrating something,
I'll have a drink and the next thing you know,
I'm kind of sliding into drinking a little bit more frequently.
And I definitely notice, I don't sleep as well.
I definitely notice that I'm tired in the morning.
I have not really noticed bloating, but maybe I'm not understanding the signs
or the symptoms to look for.
Well, let me tell you the problem with alcohol.
Dr. Shaw, I cannot wait to hear the problem with alcohol,
but first I want to make a drink.
No, I'm just kidding.
I do really want to understand the connection between alcohol
and your gut and why it's problematic.
So how about this? Let's take a quick break.
Here are a word from our sponsors.
And when we come back, Dr. Shaw will explain the problem with drinking alcohol and how it impacts our gut bacteria.
Stay with us.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel and you and I are here with a private session with the amazing Dr.
Amy Shaw.
And we're talking all things bloating, perfect for right now, right?
We're in the thick of the holidays.
We're talking bloating, healthy gut bacteria, and now we're adding alcohol to the mix,
just like you did over the holidays.
So Dr. Shaw, what is the problem with alcohol as it relates to your gut health?
The problem with alcohol is that number one, a lot of us are ingesting it later in the
evening.
And so I told you that our body, just like our brain needs sleep, our gut bacteria needs sleep as well. They need rest.
If we're eating big meals and lots of drinks late into the night, you're already short-changing,
you're a growth hormone, you're cleaning, you know, all the things that happen during the night
in your gut. And so you're just more likely to be bloated
in general. Doesn't mean that every single person is going to wake up the next day bloated.
It's just contributing to this overall circadian rhythm, misalignment that we have in our
world. People are going days without seeing natural light. And then they're eating really
late at night with bright lights, right?
We're in this world where our circadian rhythms
are getting thrown off all the time.
And one of the biggest causes of bloating
is that we're eating late at night
and we're drinking alcohol late at night.
So not only does alcohol cause bloating,
it also is usually consumed later in the evening, closer to bedtime for a lot of us.
Now there are people who have it earlier in the day, and I would say if you are going to have alcohol
around the holidays and you are trying to manage your bloating and just in general better health,
start earlier in the day. And that way your body has time to kind of metabolize it. It's not
going to disturb your sleep as much and it's not going to disturb your gut health as much.
So, what would be your recommendation for how much time you need between your last meal
and your last drink with calories or sparkle in it, right?
Whether it's alcoholic or not.
And when you fall asleep, like do you need like three hours, two hours, five hours?
Like what is going to help your gut process what you ate and drank?
And then also get the rest that it needs, which helps your gut bacteria not be so mad
at you.
Yeah, exactly.
Our culture are our biggest allies, right?
We want them to be our friends.
And we don't want to starve them to death and kill them in all these ways that we're doing.
Fasting at least for a Canadian style. So something natural, like, you know, taking a break
from food for 12 hours, which sounds like it's nothing, but most Americans are eating 16
hours a day and just taking a quick break for eight hours
or less.
So we want to extend the time that your gut gets rest.
So it might be two to three hours before bed.
You stop eating and you're only drinking water or decaffeinated tea, you know, that kind
of thing, clear liquids.
And then go 12, 13, 14. So it may be 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. 7 p.m. 7 a.m.
That would be ideal on timies according to circadian rhythms. You just said that the
average person is eating for 16 hours a day. And I stopped for a second and thought, oh
my God, you're right. Because you start eating the second you wake up
and you eat until you go to bed.
And I've never heard anybody talk about the fact
that we're eating for that long of a period of time.
And I've noticed that whenever we talk about intermittent
fasting or fasting for a 12 hour window
as a health and digestion and a gut bacteria tool.
People go crazy, right?
But when you focus on the fact that it's not healthy to eat for 16 hours a day either,
I mean, that was sort of a aha moment for me.
Me too. I, you know, I, when I read the circadian rhythm data that says,
basically, the Nobel Prize in medicine a few years ago went to the scientists that were looking
into how circadian rhythms actually run our bodies that 80% of our bodies functions work on circadian
rhythms. This means that our gut needs rats, our bacteria needs rats,
like when it's dark outside,
that is a time that our body switches into a different mode.
And when I understood that, I was like,
wow, why is it that we're eating so late into the night?
And then we're not giving our gut a break.
We know we need sleep.
So why don't we ever talk about giving your gut a rest, which is just as important as giving your brain a rest. And the
fact can improve so many things in our body that, you know, you know, and I know like you
have an early dinner, you have a great night sleep because now you have your growth hormone
that is pumping, it's repairing everything. You wake up and you feel like a different person, like a million bucks, right? And we know that, but we still don't do it.
And America, at least we don't do it. And so I think the circadian rhythm side is just going to
get stronger and stronger because people just still are starting to understand what an impact
that's going to have. Taking a break, just a break, it's not intermittent fasting per se. It's just being, you know, it's how our bodies were designed.
I mean, thousands of years ago,
you didn't have Uber Eats to call at midnight.
You know, I just laughing because I'm sitting here going,
it's not like we call sleep intermittent wakefulness, you know?
It's like, it makes a lot of sense
that your medical recommendation based on your expertise is that
your gut needs 12 hours of not having to digest food in order to have your gut bacteria remain
healthy and have your gut in balance.
I mean, it makes sense.
Yeah.
And we know that how much poor sleep we talk about all the
time, right? Poor sleep makes you depressed. Poor sleep makes you eat more. Poor sleep makes
it's the same thing when you get poor gut rest and you're eating all the time. The studies are very
clear. Now, why intermittent fasting got such a bad rap is because the colloquial science, you
know, I, I don't want to say bro science, but the science, like the fitness world said,
oh, if you want to do intermittent
fasting, the way to do it is,
you know, eat, relate into the night
and then don't eat all day,
don't eat till 12 or one or two.
And that's actually,
that's not been shown in the science
to be helpful in weight loss.
It's not been shown to be the way to do it in optimal health
because our bodies don't work on that cycle. We are supposed to be eating during the waitful hours.
Now that can be delayed. We don't need to eat first thing in the morning, but eating an early
dinner and having the fasting start in the evening is something that I don't see a lot of fitness and health influencers
talk about, which is the way it's supposed to be done. We're supposed to give our body
a time to digest. So we get better sleep, better growth hormone production,
more rest or gut so that we can wake up less bloated and we can be happier and healthier.
I have this morning routine so that I'm not as bloated, the three Fs. Fantastic.
And you know what? That's F number four. And Dr. Shaw, if you've got a simple morning routine
that can help us not be bloated, I'm all ears. But I also just want to take a quick pause and be
sure that before we learn your three F morning routine, that you and I are properly digesting
everything that we've already learned from you, Dr. Shaw.
So why don't I try to recap what we've learned,
and then you can jump into your 3F morning routine?
Yeah.
So number one, bloating means that your gut bacteria
is mad at you.
Number two, bloating can be caused
by a ton of different things, not just what we eat over
the holidays, not the stress, not just hormones, but a ton of different things.
And that's important to know because when you feel bloated, what I've learned so far
is that it's a symptom that your gut is out of whack and those bacteria in your gut are
mad at you.
Now, you've told us what food to avoid,
and I realized I was making a major mistake
because I was belining it for the broccoli
and the cauliflower on the crudite platter,
and I'm not gonna do that anymore.
And I don't know about you,
but as I've been listening to Dr. Amy Shaw,
I'm here in the tough love,
and I am starting to take this very seriously.
Number one, we gotta get the comfortable pants whenever we're bloated, so don't torture
yourself.
But number two, I really get why it's important to prioritize your microbiome health and
to take it seriously.
And so Dr. Shaw, thank you for just sharing all that with us.
And knowing all of that, I'm excited to learn this 3F morning routine formula
because I know you say that you kind of pull it all together
in these 3Fs and you do it every morning.
So tell us about it.
Every morning, I wake up and I'm like,
okay, fasting is number one.
Have I fasted for 12 hours?
If I have it, I'm not gonna have my first meal yet, okay?
Because I might have stopped on some days later,
7 or 8 and I might say, I wake up at 6
and I'm like, okay, I'm not gonna eat yet.
I'm actually gonna go exercise.
So fitness is in second half.
So fasting, fitness, and then when I'm ready to eat,
it's fermented and fiber food.
So those three Fs, fasting, fitness and the food,
those make up my morning routine so that I'm not as bloated,
I fix my circadian rhythm.
So our gut bacteria are happy with us.
And we start our day with something that is nourishing
for that microbiome.
So that over days and weeks time,
we can experience less bloating,
we can have better body composition,
who doesn't want that, and better hormone health.
First of all, I love it.
It's super simple.
Secondly, I love the fact that when you said fasting,
you basically wake up when you wake up
and you go, okay, wait a minute.
I'm just not gonna eat until I give my gut a 12-hour rest.
And so even if you were at, like, let's say you were at a wedding,
you're at a party last night, and you were out,
and you stopped on the way home for some pizza.
It was 11 o'clock at night.
You're sound asleep by midnight.
When you wake up at nine o'clock in the morning,
ask yourself, okay, first half is fasting.
12 hours would be that I don't have my first
meal until 11 o'clock this morning. And then you said fitness, which is how much fitness,
how long do you need to exercise? Can it be a 10 minute walk? Can it be anything like
what is fitness for you? Fitness for me, the more for the morning routine is anything,
anything. So total in the day, I want to get about 30 minutes.
You want to get 30 minutes of sunlight, of movement.
So the best way to get this done and over with and checked off is go for 30 minute walk
and you're done.
And it makes so much sense because our bodies are designed to see light in the morning.
We're seeing now, you see all these research coming out about how important it is to get
natural light.
You just check it all off in one walk.
Did you know that the best probiotic, the best deep bloating, is actually exercise.
No.
Because exercise makes it.
I did not know that.
I did not know that.
I did not know that.
I did not know that.
I did not know that.
I did not know that.
I did not know that. I did not know that. I did not know that. I did not know that. I did not know that. like because I was just about to ask you, yeah, how does taking a walk for 30 minutes outside,
stop loading and help my gut bacteria be happy?
How does that help?
So just like your gut bacteria need sleep, like I said, they're like organisms, live organisms
and they need rest.
They also love when you get sunlight and when you exercise, it makes them very happy. They do this like crazy
dance that produces these chemicals in your body called short-chain fatty acids. They
go all over the body, they calm your inflammation, they make you happy. It is the best probiotic
you could ever take. That's so cool.
That is so cool. And we're trying to produce short-chain fatty acids.
So there was so many different things like everyone's like,
take this pill to produce short-chain fatty acids.
Do this.
All we have to do is exercise in sunlight
and look all of a sudden our body produces it for ourselves.
Well, the other thing that I like about what you're saying
is the second that you said,
your gut bacteria is mad at you.
And if I think in simple terms, which I like to do
because if a concept is simple,
I can apply it to my life, right?
Yeah.
When you tell me the game here everybody
is make your gut bacteria happy. And when you tell me the game here everybody is make your gut bacteria happy.
And when you tell me that okay, there are some things that you can do every single day
to just make your gut bacteria happy, which is going to help with bloating, which is going
to help with how you feel, which is going to help with your mood, Mel, one of which is
getting good sleep and getting rest from needing to digest, which you just said is about
fasting. The other one is take your gut bacteria for a walk, 30 minutes outside, and all of a sudden
it's like doing its happy dance and it's making you feel better and we all know this to be true.
And then you said the third F is fiber and something else. So what does that mean?
Fermented and fiber-spoot. So, you know, the first meal of your day is your best chance.
Research shows that the first meal of the day is statistically shown to be our best chance
at improving our health in general, but definitely our gut and hormone health.
And what I want to tell every woman out there is use this opportunity to improve your hormone and
got health. So a perfect breakfast would be something like yogurt,
nuts, berries, and maybe some ginger tea on the side, okay?
Like a chai or because ginger and peppermint are two things
that you can really do take to really make your gut back
sure to happy. You know, we know that a tofu scramble or an egg and peppermint are two things that you can really take to really make your gut back
sure to happy. You know, uh, we
know that a tofu scramble or
an egg scramble with veggies.
So you want high protein, so
30 grams of protein. You got your
fiber in there with your vegetables
and if you're having a yogurt or
probiotic cottage cheese or you're
going to have a little spoon of
sourcrout or a little, uh, glass of water with some raw apple cider vinegar, you're going to get your fermented food.
Use your breakfast as your chance to kill it.
Like, this is my hormones and my gut bacteria are so happy,
because I started my morning with a high protein,
high fiber, high fermented food breakfast.
It makes sense, because if you apply this advice, everybody,
around making your gut bacteria happy.
You just gave the 12 hours arrest of needing to just take a break from the constant needing.
You then made it do a happy dance with the walk, right, and the sunlight.
And now the first thing that you're putting in your stomach is not something that is going to cause
all kind of gases, I don't even know if that's a word, but you know what I mean. something that is going to cause all kind of gases.
I don't even know if that's a word, but you know what I mean.
It's not going to make a balloon inflate.
You're dropping into your stomach, the things that it needs to work properly for you
and stay happy.
And that makes a lot of sense.
Isn't that pretty amazing what you and I just learned from Dr. Amy Shaw and you know
what?
What you've listened to so far, it isn't the whole conversation.
We were only just 40 minutes in with Dr. Amy Shaw and there was already so much information
that she threw at you and me.
And so here's what I decided to do while I was in the studio with her.
I decided, let's just was in the studio with her. I decided,
let's just hit the pause button right here. I want to give you a chance to digest this information about bloating, about how your gut works. I want you to try the three F morning routine because
that's a great place to start. And we had a lot more to cover with Dr. Amy Shaw. And you and I
don't have time to listen to it to our episode. That's why we're dividing this into two different amazing episodes.
And in the next episode, which is dropping right after this one,
we are going to cover so many more essential questions about your gut health.
We're going to cover, do probiotics work?
Should you take one?
How can you do the probiotic thing naturally?
What are the steps to creating a healthy microbiome naturally in terms of like ongoing?
Distress?
Impact your gut health.
Yeah, and what can you do about it?
And the burning question, which is why I reached out to Dr. Amy Shaw in the first place.
Dr. Amy, what is your medical recommendation knowing that this is not medical advice,
but you know what I mean as a doctor?
How do I do a five-day gut reset that I can follow any time I feel bloated?
So guess what?
The very next episode of the Mel Robbins podcast is Dr. Amy Shaw walking you through that step
by step, walking you through the five day gut reset.
And right now you got what you need.
Try the three F morning routine, follow all the advice you just heard, stay away from the
crudite and the alcohol, get your sleep and by God, make sure you forward this to all
your friends who are bloated and complaining about it and be right back here when the next
episode drops so we can walk through that five-day reset.
And in case nobody else tells you, I'm going to tell you, I love you, I believe in you,
and I believe in your ability to create a better life.
Thank you for investing this time in yourself and in your health.
Thank you for spending your time with me.
I love you and I will see you and all that gorgeous gut bacteria inside you with Dr. Amy Shaw
When this conversation continues in the very next episode. See you there
Are we rolling oh
Oh god. Oh my god.
Are you a Instagram?
Okay, here we go. Okay.
Okay, I am so bloated there.
I said it. Wait, how do I want to?
And how do I actually, I'm trying to request access.
It's not doing it. This just doesn't feel right.
Okay. Okay, great.
Let me see if there's one other thing that I wanted to say. Let me think about this.
Okay, let me try this. I have so many questions. I'm trying not to go all over the place. Hold on
a second. I just lost her on screen. I don't know what I did. Can you bring her back?
I thought what you went.
And oh, I can go down to Zoom, hold on.
Oh, there you are, okay, great.
Awesome, anything else?
All right, I think we're amazing.
Really?
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Oh, and one more thing. I no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyer's right and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended
as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other
qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode.
Stitcher
Stitcher.