Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Gary Brecka: I Can Predict How Long You Have Left to Live! 10X Your Health With These 3 No-Cost Bio Hacks | E250
Episode Date: October 16, 2023For more than two decades, Gary Brecka worked in the life insurance business, using medical records and demographic data to predict life expectancy. One day he had an epiphany: there were human beings... on the other sides of his spreadsheets and he wasn’t going to spend one more day of his own life predicting death. Instead, he would use his knowledge to help people live healthier, happier, and longer lives. Gary Brecka is now a biohacker, human biologist, and one of the world’s foremost experts on how thinking differently about nutrition can protect us against aging and disease. In this episode, Gary shares how we can optimize human life, slow down the aging process, and become superhuman versions of ourselves. Gary Brecka is the co-founder of 10X Health System and the CEO of Streamline Medical Group. He works with a hand-picked clinical team of Board-Certified physicians, Ph.D. researchers, business leaders, functional medicine experts, motivators, and scientists with one relentless mission to uncover the safest and fastest way to optimize your mind, body, and spirit through modern science.  In this episode, Hala and Gary will discuss: - Working in life insurance to predict when people will die - Why the presence of oxygen is the absence of disease - Why most of us operate at 60% of our physiological selves - The importance of the right raw materials to health - How you can boost your oxygen levels - Using genetic testing to identify your body’s deficiencies - Ways to improve your hormonal balance - Why aging is the aggressive pursuit of comfort - Ways to improve your health through discomfort - Helping Dana White and others improve their performance - And other topics…  Gary Brecka is the co-founder of 10X Health System and the CEO of Streamline Medical Group. He is a human biologist and researcher who spent 20 years working in life insurance predicting when people were going to die to the nearest month. He is now on a mission to extend people's lives by identifying missing raw materials in their bodies and telling them how to put them back in. He works with a hand-picked clinical team of Board-Certified physicians, Ph.D. researchers, business leaders, functional medicine experts, motivators, and scientists with one relentless mission to uncover the safest and fastest way to optimize your mind, body, and spirit through modern science.  Resources Mentioned: Gary’s Website: https://www.garybrecka.com/ Gary’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gary-brecka/ Gary’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/garybrecka/ Gary’s TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@garybreckatv Gary’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@gary_brecka/featured  LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course.  Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify CoPilot - Head to go.mycopilot.com/PROFITING to get a 14-day FREE trial MasterClass - Get 15% off right now at masterclass.com/profiting Pipedrive - Go to youngandprofiting.co/pipedrive and get 20% off Pipedrive for 1 year! Relay - Sign up for FREE! Go to relayfi.com/profiting **Relay is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services and FDIC insurance provided through Evolve Bank & Trust and Thread Bank; Members FDIC. The Relay Visa® Debit Card is issued by Thread Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and may be used everywhere Visa® debit cards are accepted.  More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review -  ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting  Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala  Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We know now that modern medicine kills more people than morbid obesity and diabetes combined.
The industry designed to prevent death is the third leading cause of death.
If we translated that to any other industry, it would be laughable.
If you sold home security systems and you were the third leading cause of home invasion,
you'd probably be out of business.
We are excellent at crisis management, but we are terrible at
bio optimization. More than 90% of your listeners are walking around at about 60% of their true
state of norm. They have forgotten what normal feels like. And the difference between where they
are now and where they could be is simply knowing what deficiencies are going on in your body
and supplementing for those deficiencies rather than supplementing for the sake of supplementing.
Once you unlock that deficiency, you're on your way to a state of optimization that you never thought possible.
What is up, young and profitors?
You're listening to YAP, Young and Profiting podcasts where we interview the brightest
minds in the world and unpack their wisdom into actionable advice that you can use in
your daily life.
I'm your host, Halitaha.
Thanks for tuning in and get ready to listen, learn, and profit. [♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing. Gary Brekkah is a biohacker, human biologist, and one of the world's foremost experts on how thinking
differently about nutrition can protect us against aging and disease and make us the best
version of ourselves. For years, Gary worked for insurance companies, helping them predict how long
it was going to be before their clients were going to die. Now he helps people learn how long they can really live for.
Gary, thanks for joining us for this super important conversation
and welcome to Young & Profiting Podcast.
So excited to be here.
I am very excited for this conversation.
I love talking about biohacking and you are so experienced.
And when I was doing research for this podcast,
I found out that you spent
20 years in the life insurance industry and you basically would predict when people
would die to the nearest month. And first of all, I didn't even know a job like this existed.
So it was so fascinating to me. How did you end up in the life insurance industry to start
with?
You know, what's amazing is how much of this science is actually done on an annual basis.
I mean, there's more than $30 billion of these types of policies issued every single year.
And remember, in the life insurance industry, when a life insurance company is getting
ready to put $5 million or $10 million or $25 million worth of risk on your life. There's only one variable that matters, right?
I mean, and it's how many more months do you have left
on earth?
And so some of the most accurate science in the world
is actually held by life insurance companies.
I always used to say that if that database
that I had access to could see the light of day,
and unfortunately, it never will.
But if it could, it would permanently change the face of humanity.
I mean, it would upend modern medicine in a way that would be catastrophic.
And I made my way there because, you know, in my undergraduate degrees,
were in biology, my postgraduate degrees were human biology.
So I'm a human biologist by trade.
I had another concentration in neuroscience.
And when I graduated, I went into
this industry, I thought temporarily to work as a mortality expert because I was just fascinated by
the data. And if they got five years of medical records on you and five years of demographic data,
you know, we could tell the insurance company how long you had to live to the month. And
after doing this for more than two decades, I really began to realize
that these were not just spreadsheets, right? This was not just data. There were human beings on
the other side of these spreadsheets. And you know, I was prohibited by law from contacting the
patients. So even if I saw life-threatening drug interactions, I could not contact the patient to warn them. And it became glaringly apparent to me that the reason why people
were not living longer, healthier, happier lives was not pathology, was not disease, was
not some catastrophic illness that they had. It was for things that we called modifiable
risk factors. Right? I mean, if I had been able to just pick up the phone and talk to that patient
I could have added on average
Seven years to their health span not just their lifespan, but how many healthy years they had left on earth and
one day I had a massive epiphany and and over a case that I was working on that they prohibited me from contacting the patient and
I just decided that I wasn't gonna spend one more day in my life predicting death.
I was going to spend the balance in my lifetime trying to help people live healthier, happier,
longer lives.
I always say if I was to boil that entire career down to a single sense, it would be that
the presence of oxygen is the absence of disease.
Nothing is more truthful than that statement.
We did not find a single disease
etiological pathway, not one,
that did not have its roots in what we call hypoxia,
lack of blood oxygen, or was not exacerbated
by a lack of blood oxygen.
And this includes every form of cancer,
autoimmune disease, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's,
early onset dementia, type 2 diabetes,
waking, water retention,
hormone imbalance, all of these things
because the body is in a hypoxic state.
In fact, all human beings leave this planet the same way.
We all die of the same thing.
The definition of death is lack of oxygen to the brain, hypoxia.
Only we tend to think of it as an event,
right? A gunshot wound, a car, a boss, a stroke, a heart attack.
But the truth is this is a predictable curve.
You are either managing oxygen well
or you are managing oxygen poorly.
The more poorly you manage oxygen,
the faster you are accelerating towards the grave.
The better you manage oxygen, the less quickly
you are accelerating towards the grave
and all forms of pathology and disease.
Well, this is gonna be a juicy, juicy interview
because I have so much to dig into.
There's some interviews where I'm always excited
to interview guests, but there's some topics
where I'm like, man, this is so interesting
and nobody talks about it.
And this is one of those interviews
where I'm like, this is just so interesting.
But before we dig into a lot of the things
that you just said, because you just rattled off a lot of information that I into a lot of the things that you just said,
because you just rattled off a lot of information
that I have a lot of follow up questions for.
But let's take it back to your childhood for a minute.
What was your first childhood memory
of getting interested in human biology?
So I grew up on a 300-acre tobacco farm in Southern Maryland,
upper Marlboro, Maryland, the Marlboro man.
Never smoked tobacco, never chewed tobacco.
My parents owned the land and they leased it to a farmer to grow agriculturally.
And I was an only child.
And you couldn't even see another house from my parents home.
So I spent actually a lot of my time alone in the woods, you know, I would, you know,
go into the woods during the day.
I would ride my bike eight miles to my best friends house.
There was a lot of animals on the adjoining farm next to me. I got really fascinated by nature and animals, you know, and I was always fascinated when cattle or horses or livestock got sick.
As a little young child, and they would call this veterinarian out and the veterinarianian would show up and do some magic stuff, and then all of a sudden this animal would heal.
And I just thought that that was really, really cool.
And when I got into school, I found out in the eighth grade, I was tested as clinically
photographic.
For a while, they thought I was borderline savant, or maybe maybe on the autism spectrum,
because I had such a hyper concentrated photographic memory,
which I later, you know, I've learned to use as a superpower.
And so I naturally gravitated towards science because science is a lot of road memorization.
So chemistry, anatomy, science came very, very easy to me.
You know, I've learned to manage being clinically photographic.
Now I don't, I can't read for pleasure, for example, so I don't read menus
in restaurants, trying not to look at street signs, things like that because I record all the
information that I see. But in terms of building a basis for a future in science, it was sort of
especially well crafted for a voluminous amount of storage of detailed information.
And so my grade school years, in my high school years, were all full of science experiments.
I was a super, super science geek.
And then when I went to college, I chose biology as a major chemistry as a minor.
And then I took, you know, I'm on for four more years of just human biology.
You talk about everybody can unlock their superhuman and it's clear with this photographic
memory, you literally are superhuman.
And I thought it was very interesting to find out that there's disadvantages to you having
this photographic memory.
Like you were just saying, you don't read menus or read anything for pleasure because essentially you can memorize anything,
like anything that you see, you can just memorize. Yeah, so like I don't take the seat back
magazine out of the pocket in front of me on a flight because three months later I'll tell you where
the, you know, sales center is for a condo project in Sao Paulo, you know, just so you can store
senseless information as well. But I've learned to cultivate
that, you know, I'm I am obsessed with the human body and its form and its function. And when
I was in the insurance industry, I had access to this database of 370 million lives. And remember
that insurance companies have data that no other enterprise has, no other medical enterprise,
not even the federal government, the CDC, the National Institute of Health, because an insurance company knows the day, the date, the time,
the location, and the cause of death for 370 million lives. We know exactly the disease,
ideological progression of things like statins, all forms of pharmaceuticals, narcotics,
cortical steroids,
commonity depressants, antibiotics,
we know exactly what happens and what the impact is
on mortality when people are subjected
to these kind of chemicals or synthetics or pharmaceuticals.
And if you really wanna look at health trends,
follow the life insurance industry,
because they have data on what terminates people's lives and
they have voluminous amounts of that data.
Remember, they bet tens of millions of dollars on a single risk factor.
And so that was naturally fascinating to me until I really had this sort of moral epiphany
about wasting my life predicting death instead of spending my life impacting
life. Do you ever think that this data would become available publicly or that there could
be some sort of regulation to make that data available publicly so that we could save
more lives? Do you think that would ever happen? Unfortunately, no. I mean, the insurance lobby
is the second most powerful lobby to Congress,
first being big pharma, and then right behind them, you have big oil. So it's very unlikely
that something that they're able to use to profiteer from in these financial services products,
because remember, there are a lot of financial services products that are based on when you're
going to die. Anuities, reverse mortgages, life insurance, these are all products that are based
on human mortality. And so that database is highly, highly, highly guarded by that industry.
You know, we knew, for example, in the 90s that opioids had an addictive amyloid long before
you heard about the pain medication crisis. And we thought that they were just pain amyloids, but we realized
that there was mixed in there. There was an amyloid that not only could cause a cardiac
event, but also created an addictive quality, which from pharmaceutical standpoint is a
home run, right? Because if I can, I can create something that's addictive and toxic,
then I can actually get patent protection and I can become a prescriptive pharmaceutical.
As soon as something's toxic and addictive, it's prescribed and patented.
And if it's prescribed and patented, then it's covered by health insurance.
If it's covered by health insurance and it's patented, you have a monopoly.
And so a lot of these compounds that we put into our bodies that are seeking to reduce inflammation or to elevate serotonin or reduce
the use of serotonin or elevate thyroid function are actually also designed to create dependency
reliance and what we call tachafalaxis, a desensitization response.
And that's all built in so that they can create the longevity and the patent protection,
the prescription protection, the prescription
protection of it.
The truth is, I think the second big thing that I learned in studying mortality for 22
years is that the majority of the reason why people are affected by aging, for example,
and we chalk all these things up to a consequence of aging, weight gain, water retention, brain fog, porous lee, poor focus and concentration, lack of waking energy.
These things that we accept as a consequence of aging, they are not a consequence of aging
at all.
They are a consequence of missing raw material in the human body.
You deprive the human body of certain raw material, certain nutrients, minerals, vitamins,
amino acids.
You get the expression of that disease.
Then we label this as a disease, and we treat it chronically as a disease.
When the truth is, there are a lot of myths about how disease travels in families.
For example, we say that people have genetically inherited hypertension.
They have genetically inherited hypothyroid,
genetically inherited depression, anxiety,
alcohol addiction, you know, all of these things
that run in families.
But what's fascinating about quote unquote
genetically inherited disease is that we've mapped
the entire human biome.
We know every single gene in the human body
and no physician can tell you what gene causes any of those diseases.
The reason why they can't tell you what gene causes those diseases, like hypertension, hypothyroid, hypercholesterolemia, hypertrageless rademia, all these genetically inherited diseases, is because that gene does not exist.
And if that gene does not exist, then it means that those diseases do not exist.
We do not pass disease from generation to generation.
What we pass from generation to generation
is the inability for the body to refine a raw material.
This causes a deficiency, which leads to that disease.
So for example, if I was able to magically go into your body and
deplete vitamin D3, the single most important nutrient in the human body. If I could go in
and magically deplete vitamin D3, you would eventually develop rheumatoid arthritis like symptoms.
Now, you don't have rheumatoid arthritis, but you would develop those parallel symptoms
amongst other things, hormone imbalance, you know, brittal bones. But if you went to the wrong physician and you started talking about
your medical history and said, listen, doc, I get out of the bed in the morning, my
my feet and ankles are sore when they touch the ground in the morning, I wake up
sore and achy like I had a workout the night before.
Lately, you know, my neck is really stiff and so is my low back and it's kind of
hard to make a fist. The wrong physician is going to go, you know what?
That's exactly what rheumatoid arthritis does.
You have rheumatoid arthritis.
I'm going to put you on a corticosteroid on any inflammatory to help you manage these symptoms.
You start on corticosteroids, but what you don't tell the patient is that once you start
a corticosteroid, you have six years and one day until you're having a joint replacement.
Then you have a joint replacement, your mobility begins to reduce.
So for example, if you were a 55 year old female, 60 year old female, and you applied for
life insurance policy, and I saw that you had been misdiagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis,
even though I knew you only had a vitamin D3 deficiency, and I saw that you were put on
corticosteroids.
I would artificially advance your age six years and one day,
I would schedule the joint replacement for you,
and then after the joint replacement surgery,
I would reduce what's called your ambulatory profile.
How well you emulate, how well you move.
And as I reduce your mobility, I can bring in all of the diseases
that exacerbate with reduced mobility.
We know now, for example, that sitting is the new smoking.
Sedentary lifestyle is the leading cause of all cause mortality.
And so, now that I advanced those diseases that you never would have had,
now you end up succumbing to a disease you never would have had
because you were diagnosed with a condition that you didn't have
but on a medication that was not required,
which caused a surgery that you didn't have, but on a medication that was not required, which caused a surgery
that was unnecessary and led for you, your passing seven years earlier than you should have passed.
And I can give you hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of examples like this.
And the truth is there's such a positive understanding of basic human physiology and
the majority of the medical community that we have stopped.
We just don't have faith in human beings and mankind and humanity
and the ability of this to heal this and how powerful frequency
and how powerful how basic exercise and sunlight and grounding and hydration
and simple things back to the basics, how much this could entirely change the trajectory of somebody's life.
They're listeners right now listening to your podcast, I and I bet more than 90% of your
listeners right now are walking around at about 60% of their true state of norm.
They have forgotten what normal feels like.
They have accepted this baseline sense of normalcy.
They might think they feel great.
They have no idea how good normal could feel.
And the difference between where they are now
and where they could be
is simply knowing what deficiencies are going on in your body
and supplementing for those deficiencies
rather than supplementing for the sake of supplementing.
This is so crazy.
Hearing this information to me is almost shocking.
It's overwhelming because you think about everything's working against us.
It's like your health insurance is working against you.
The pharmaceutical companies are working against you.
The life insurance companies are working against you.
The doctors, I think, have good intentions, but they don't know enough.
They believe medicine is good because they have to, because otherwise it makes what they do evil.
Don't get me wrong. I hit a windshield at 25 miles an hour. I mean, I want to surge in, I want pain killers.
I'm going to the ER, but when you realize, you know, there was a 2016 Harvard University study,
it was repeated again by Johns Hopkins in 2019. We know now that modern medicine, medical error, is the third leading cause of death.
So modern medicine kills more people
than morbid obesity and diabetes combined.
And when you start to think that only cardiovascular disease
and cancer kill more people than modern medicine,
it's astounding, but when you really process the fact
that the industry designed to prevent death
is the third leading cause of death. That is just mind-blowing.
If we translated that to any other industry, it would be laughable, right? I mean, if you
sold home security systems and you were the third leading cause of home invasion, you'd probably
be out of business, right? Are you a rougher and you were the third leading cause of roof collapse.
Probably wouldn't sell a lot of roofs. But we accept this in modern medicine,
but we are excellent at crisis management,
but we are terrible at bio-optimization.
And there are 32,000 named diseases,
you know, in the PDR and the physician's death reference,
32,000.
Nearly every single one of these can be traced back
to nutrient deficiencies in the human body.
You know, sometimes when I speak on stage, I will make a bold statement and say, I will
take any disease, any ailment that you or a loved one is suffering from 80, 80, 80,
HD, OCD, manic depression, drug and alcohol addiction, poor sleep.
And I will tell you exactly what raw material is
missing from that person's body so that you can replace it and have that condition
of this rate.
Let's hold that thought and take a quick break with our sponsors.
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You need indeed. It's so incredible and so you always use this analogy. Our bodies
are beautiful machines. We need the right raw materials. You mentioned that D3 is a big
one. What are some other raw materials that are commonly missing from people that cause
disease? So we have to think about the body, the human body this way. Remember that there
is not a single compound. This is the most important concept. If anybody takes anything away from this podcast, this is the takeaway. The most
important concept to understanding really good human optimization is understanding that there's
not a single compound known to mankind, not one. There's no vitamin, there's no mineral, there's
no amino acid, there's no protein carbohydrate, no nutrient of any kind that enters the human
body and is used in the format that we put it in.
Without exception, everything that we put into our bodies gets converted by the body into
the usable form.
This process is called methylation.
So it's like we pull crude oil out of the ground, right?
But you cannot put
crude oil into your gas tank because the car doesn't understand that fuel source. Once crude oil is
refined into gasoline, now the car can run because it understands that fuel source. Human things
are no different. So we put all kinds of compounds into our body. Let's take the number one nutrient,
the human diet, folic acid, for example. So folic acid for the record is an entirely man-made chemical,
right? It is a synthetic chemical. We make it in a laboratory. It does not occur anywhere
naturally on the surface of the earth. You cannot find folic acid anywhere in nature,
but we've been thought to believe that folic acid is a necessary nutrient. It's the most
prevalent nutrient in the human diet, by the way.
It's in all white flour, all white rice, all white bread, all white pasta.
It's in all greens of any kind.
And we don't call these foods sprayed with folic acid.
We call them fortified or enriched.
Let's take just folic acid for a moment.
Well, we know that when folic acid enters the body, it's useless until the body converts
it into something called methylfolate.
Now the body can use it.
Well, what if, like, 44% of the population, you have a gene mutation called MTHFR.
I don't want to cost one your podcast, but it's affectionately called the motherfucker
gene.
It actually stands for methylene tetrahedral folate reductase, but everyone calls it the motherfucker
gene because it's MTHFR.
And 44% of the population, including 44% of your listeners, have this gene mutation.
Well, if you have this gene mutation, you cannot convert the most prevalent nutrient in
the human diet into the form your body can use.
So what does this mean?
This means that the level of folic acid skyrockets and the level of necessary methylfolate to carnins.
Now you have a deficiency. What are some of the expressions of that deficiency? Well,
depending on how severe this gene mutation is, nearly everyone that has this gene mutation
reports some form of anxiety. So if you either suffer from anxiety or you know somebody that's suffering from anxiety,
if you ask them these three questions, you can prove very quickly that it is not coming
from a cluster of symptoms in their outside environment.
It is coming from their physiology.
And the first question is, you know, have you had this on and off throughout your lifetime?
Most people will say yes.
The second question is, can you point to the specific trigger that causes it?
Most people that suffer from chronic anxiety will tell you, no, I cannot point to the specific
trigger that causes it.
I can be driving home from work on an otherwise innocuous day.
I can be overwhelmed with anxiety.
I can be at dinner with my friends and start having just these feelings of anxiety as
your second clue that it's coming from your physiology
and not your outside environment.
And the third question is,
if you've tried anti-anxiety medications, did they work?
And they'll say no, they made me feel like a zombie.
So now, how could this deficiency in methylfolate
cause this anxiety condition?
And it is, by the way, it's the same with depression,
it is the same with ADD and ADHD, which are not attention deficits at all.
They're attention overload disorders.
They are not attention deficit disorders.
And so when you break down the physiology of what is anxiety, well, it's an excess rise
of something called catecholamines.
These are fight or flight neurotransmitters.
And we think that we need to have the presence of a fear
in order to feel fear.
That's absolutely not true, right?
If you drove home tonight and you got out of your car,
and somebody was standing in front of you with a knife.
That's not obvious, very real fear.
You would have a fight or flight response.
Your pupils would dilate your heart rate,
you would increase your extremities,
you would flood with blood. But I'm here in would dilate, your heart rate would increase, your extremities would flood
with blood.
But I'm here in my log cabin, and as you can't tell, I'm in taking Colorado at 10,500 feet.
I could be laying in that bunk bed right there, and I could start thinking about getting
eaten by shark.
Now, the chances of a shark making a 10,500 feet up into the mountains, inviting me in
that bed are zero,
but I could have the exact same response.
So how is it that I can have fight or flight response to the presence of a fear and a fight
or flight response without the presence of a fear?
In fact, without even the chance that that fear would come true.
This is because of a rise in something called catacolomines. Deficit in methylfolate
does not allow us to metabolize these phytoflight neurotransmitters, and so they rise and fall
seemingly without trigger, and they can go all the way to the point where they trigger a panic
attack. If you actually look up this gene mutation, MTHFR, and anxiety, you will read a hordes of peer-reviewed published clinical literature
that link this simple, fully, methylpholate deficiency to these conditions. And it is the same
link to attention deficit disorder. We've sort of labeled ADD as an attention deficit or attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder. It's not a deficit of attention at all. It's an attention overload disorder.
It's too many windows open at the same time.
And why does that happen?
Because in the human brain,
we don't just create thought.
We also dismantle thought.
And if you don't break thought down
at the rate that you create thought,
the mind gets very clouded.
Now, you are paying attention to too many things.
It's not that you can't pay attention,
it's that you can't pay attention to so many things.
I mean, a lot of peace can come to these people
by using the right balance of B vitamins,
the right balance of specific forms of B12,
and using methylfolate.
That's why I think everybody, once in their lifetime, should do a gene test and
look for five actionable genes. It's only a test you do once, you'll never repeat it.
Once you know exactly what your body can convert and what it can't, now you supplement for
that deficiency and just watch the magic happen.
This is pretty interesting. So you're saying in order to understand what raw materials
you need or what you need
to change with your body, you've got to do some sort of genetic testing.
And not because you want to figure out what diseases you've inherited, you actually want
to figure out what genes.
What deficiencies you have.
What deficiencies you have.
Stop supplementing for the sake of supplementing and you can start supplementing for deficiency.
The question we should ask when we're about to supplement is not what's the quality of the supplement?
Where was it manufactured? What's the reputation of the manufacturer or the person that's pushing this?
The first question we should say is does my body need it?
Then go down the road of the quality of the supplement because there are a lot of phenomenal supplements on the market,
pure encapsulations, born, symbiotic, I mean, these are amazing supplement companies,
and the products that they manufacture, including my own at 10X Health,
are products lots of people need, but not everyone needs the same thing.
And so once you unlock that deficiency in your body,
you're on your way to a state of optimization
that you never thought possible.
I mean, clients of mine tell me all the time, they're like, oh my God, Gary, I feel amazing.
And I just remind them, you actually don't feel amazing, not to burst your bubble.
That's what normal is supposed to feel like.
You just forgot how normal is supposed to feel.
It's so fascinating.
So I want to talk about oxygen because I know that oxygen is a really important topic.
Like you mentioned earlier, the definition of death is
hypoxia, which is a lack of oxygen to the brain.
You also mentioned that if you could boil your entire career down into one sentence, it would be that the presence of oxygen
is the absence of disease.
So talk to us about why oxygen is so important.
Obviously, we all know about breathing, right?
We can't go very long without breathing, but it's more important than that.
You know, we know that aging aside from being the aggressive pursuit of comfort is a mitochondrial
disease.
So inside of every cell in your body, you have thousands of these little motors called
mitochondria.
Human beings are not powered by the air we breathe, the water we drink or the supplements
we take or the food we eat.
We're powered by one energy source.
It's called ATP.
And this adenosine triphosphate is made in a battery inside the cell called the mitochondria.
And inside the mitochondria, there is a motor, right?
It is spinning around and it's creating this energy.
Well, every time this motor makes one revolution,
it has two choices.
It can either create two units of energy, two ATP,
or it can create 36 units of energy.
Same term, it's either 16 times more powerful or 16 times less powerful.
It's a really hard concept to grasp. It's like walking onto a car light and the salesman says,
hey, there's two choices here. It's the same car. It comes in a 1600 horsepower version or a 100 horsepower version.
or a 100 horsepower version. 100 horsepower is like a lawn mower,
and 1,600 horsepower is like a professional NASCAR.
And so this is what's going on inside the cell of our body.
10% of your body weight, by the way, is mitochondria.
You have 110 trillion of these in your body.
Anything that down regulates the mitochondria
or harms the function of the mitochondria
accelerates aging and makes
fertile ground for all forms of pathology and disease.
So now we're kind of inside the cell, inside the mitochondria, talking about this little
motor called the CREP cycle.
We're going to talk about aging in performance.
We have to talk about mitochondrial function, right?
We know that the dysregulation of mitochondria is linked to every form of disease and pathology
in the human body, including Alzheimer's and dementia.
You know, there's so many myths about these disease.
For example, we know that Alzheimer's now is not Alzheimer's disease at all.
It's type three diabetes.
The big lie, the big myth about Alzheimer's is that patients are losing their memory.
That's actually not true.
They're losing access to their memory.
losing their memory. That's actually not true. They're losing access to their memory.
And the access to this memory is disabled in large part because of down regulation in the mitochondria. So we know that this mitochondria can produce 16 times more energy or 16 times less energy.
So what determines whether or not it's 1600 horsepower or 100 horsepower? The presence of oxygen.
horsepower or 100 horsepower, the presence of oxygen. If oxygen enters that cycle, it creates 16 times more energy. If oxygen doesn't enter that cycle, it creates 16 times less
energy. And so here is where the importance of oxygen comes into play. And when you start
talking about, well, how can I better manage oxygen? Well, I'll give you some free ways to do it right now.
And all this is doing is getting back to the basics, right?
So if you've ever heard of Earthing or grounding, which is where you take bare feet and touch
barissoil.
And think about that.
If you're listening to this podcast, think about the last time that you had bare feet
touching barissoil.
I mean, like dirt and grass and sand.
Okay, that was the last time
that you actually discharged into the earth.
Human beings, we build up a charge in our body.
You know, we all know about the acid alkaline scale.
Well, pH stands for potential hydrogen.
It is a charge.
If you wanna change the pH of the body,
you don't drink alkaline water.
That was the biggest marketing myth ever sold to the public.
You cannot make the body alkaline by drinking alkaline water.
If you want to make the body alkaline, you change the charge.
How do you change the charge?
You run a low-gouse current through the body.
There's two ways to do this.
There's a way that you can pay for, and there's a way that it's free.
If you want to pay for it and you buy a
PEMF mat pulse electromagnetic field, right and you lay on that mat
16 to 30 minutes a day you just put it in your bed and every morning that you wake up you will wake up alcholina It will alkalize all 32 trillion cells in your body
If you don't want to spend five grand on a PEMF mat then take your shoes off six minutes a day and come in contact with the surface of the earth.
Right?
Magnetism in the earth will change the polarity in your body.
It will change the polarity of the surface of every cell in the body and what will happen
is instead of cells sticking together because they have opposite charges, they will repel
because they have the same charge.
Why is that important? Because if I can increase the surface area of the cell,
now the cell can exchange with its environment,
eliminate waste, repair, detoxify, regenerate.
And this also increases the surface area
to absorb oxygen from the bloodstream.
So, magnetism is one way to improve the oxidative state of the body.
The second is oxygen itself.
This is why sedentary lifestyle is the leading cause of all-cause mortality because we are
getting less oxygen and therefore less circulation.
The majority of these pathologies and diseases too have a circulation component.
So I tell people that to learn to do an eight-minute breathwork technique, I borrowed it from Wim Hof.
I'm not the purveyor of this technique.
You know, he's the father of modern breathwork.
You go to my Instagram, I do tutorials on Instagram all the time about breathwork, but you can
wake up in the morning.
You can do eight minutes of breathwork, three rounds of thirty breaths with a breath hold
in between.
And this does two things. Number one, the number one
vasodilator in the human body is not nitric oxide. Nitric oxide, by the way, is toxic. So
if you're listening to this podcast and you're taking nitric oxide supplement because you're
an exercise enthusiast or you're a bodybuilder, you want to meet more vascular, please stop.
That is toxic to the mitochondria. It actually completes four oxygen in the mitochondria. Something called cytochrome-seoxidase. It pulls oxygen out
and forces itself to dock. The major phasodilator in the human body is carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide causes our veins to dilate. So by doing breath work and flooding the blood with oxygen,
and then holding our breath for a prolonged period of time and dilating our blood vessels.
We actually, when we breathe in again,
we get more oxygen to the tissues.
We can actually change the oxygen tension in our tissues.
Now, I use something called a hypermax oxygen system,
a multi-step oxygen system.
Again, it's about five grand,
but it's an oxygen mask.
You put it on, you breathe 93 to 95% or 2 for 10 minutes, while you're mildly exercising,
but you do not have to spend money on that system.
You can learn to do breath work.
And then the third thing is to expose your skin to natural sunlight.
And the truth is, most of us are not getting enough sun.
It's not that we're getting too much sun.
And the safest time to expose your skin to sunlight is the first 45 minutes of the day,
well, during first light, because there's a very special type of light during that 45 minutes.
It's there's no UVA, there's no UVB rays, so nothing that can damage your skin,
nothing that can burn your skin. And, you know, I sit out on my porch with my shirt off,
I'm in a pair of shorts, even when it's cold outside. And I do three rounds of 30 breaths.
I expose my skin to sunlight. Sunlight, certain wavelengths of sunlight, when they pass through
the skin, they will go into the mitochondria. They will go into the motor of the crebsicle.
They will kick out nitric oxide and force oxygen to dock just by exposing yourself to sunlight. Now I also have a
red light therapy bed and red light therapy as you may or may not know is the rage in sports
recovery and anti-aging and healthy skin now. But if you don't want to go out and spend money
on a red light therapy bed, you can expose your skin to sunlight. So those are three things your
listeners could do for free starting tomorrow, grounding, sunlight,
breathwork to absolutely change the trajectory of their life.
And reason why most people will not do it is because it's too easy.
It's because they're like, it can't be that simple, but it is.
And, you know, I really try to impress upon people how these tiny little habits could completely change the trajectory of their life
This has been such valuable
Information and so I interviewed Wim Hof on this podcast. Oh, I'm one of certain slide. Yeah, I'm going to the period films with him this year
Oh really, he's awesome. Yeah, I loved him. He was an inspiration
So let's talk about hormone balance because
loved him. He was an inspiration. So let's talk about hormone balance because hormone balance is a topic that I think is starting to
bubble up more in society and culture. I'm seeing a lot more like Instagram
reels about hormone balance, especially for women. Why is hormone balance
something that we need to understand more and what are some key tips that you
have to improve our hormone balance? So let's talk about basic human physiology for a moment
and where hormones fit into physiology, right?
So I would say the greatest single reason
why people walk through the door of one of my clinics
at Tenex Health is because the biggest complaint is,
I just don't have the same energy I used to have.
I just lack energy.
You know, my waking energy,
I feel like my short-term recall is not what it used to have. I just lack energy. You know, my waking energy, I feel like my short-term recalls
not what it used to be. And I just basically lack energy. So when you say you lack energy, if we
convert that to physiology, basically what you're saying is, I'm not low on energy, I'm low on oxygen,
because everything that you perceive about energy is nothing more than oxygen in your blood. So I
want you to imagine a tree for a moment.
Now, let's start in the leaves, and I'm going to walk you all the way down into the roots
below the soil.
So up in the leaves, you're saying, I lack energy.
So when you say you lack energy to me, I know that you're low on oxygen.
What transports oxygen around the blood?
A red blood cell?
And the fluid inside the red blood cell called hemoglobin.
So that means I want to raise the number of red blood cells
and I want to raise the amount of hemoglobin they have.
So let's move down the tree.
Where do I go to get more red blood cells and more hemoglobin?
Well, I go to the factory that makes red blood cells
and hemoglobin, and that's the bone marrow.
So now I get to the factory,
and I want to increase its production.
How do I increase its production?
Well, the boss of the bone marrow is the hormone testosterone.
In men and women, the primary role of testosterone is not male characteristics.
It's not deep voice, aggression, facial hair, muscles.
It's none of those things.
In men and women, the primary role of testosterone is to put pressure on the bone marrow to increase red blood cells.
It's called urythropoesis.
So if I'm deficient in testosterone, I'm very likely deficient in red blood cells in
hemoglobin.
So how do I raise testosterone?
Why don't you start taking testosterone?
I go further down the tree and I find out what is testosterone made from.
It's made from something called DHAA, and you can get your DHEA tested.
If you are clinically deficient in DHEA, you will be deficient in testosterone.
If you are deficient in testosterone, your bone marrow will produce less red blood cells
in hemoglobin.
If you produce less red blood cells in hemoglobin, you will be low in oxygen.
If you are low in oxygen, you will be low in oxygen. If you're low in oxygen, you'll be low in energy.
So that now let's just go right through the soil
into the root.
What is DHA mod from?
Vitamin D3.
So the first thing we wanna do
before we start talking about taking hormones
is we want to make sure that our D3
is in the optimal range and our DHA is in the optimal range.
Because 70% of the clients that we see that are deficient in hormones do not need hormones,
they need the raw material for the body to make hormones.
So D3 and DHA will raise testosterone, raise the pressure on the bone marrow, improve red blood tone hemoglobin levels, and improve your oxidative state.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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So let's switch gears and talk about sugar for a minute. Is sugar our crypto-knight?
Rook, I'll call you over. Yeah, it's our crypto-knight when
come from being becoming superhuman.
So the truth about sugar is that, you know,
first of all, we have to understand that the brain
has sophisticated as we'd like to think it is.
It's actually not.
The brain is very primal.
And you know what the brain cares about?
The brain cares about survival, right?
If the brain wants calcium, it will
leach it from the bones.
If it needs amino acids, it'll strip it from lean muscle. And if it wants sugar, it will leach it from the bones. If it needs amino acids, it'll strip it from lean muscle.
And if it wants sugar, it will activate a receptor
on the back of the tongue, called the RF-1A2 receptor.
This is a very special receptor
because things have to be swallowed
to trigger this receptor.
And when it passes by this receptor,
this receptor doesn't register sweet.
It releases dopamine. And this is why most
people are not don't just like sugar, they are addicted to sugar. In fact, the entire synthetic
sugar industry, Aspartame, Stukerloose, all of these synthetic sugars or sugar substitutes.
The majority of their chemical component is not designed to taste sweet. It is designed to ding the dopamine receptor.
It is designed to cause your brain to release dopamine, which gives you a pleasure response,
which is why people are addicted to sodas, artificial sweeteners, and sodas, which is why people
are addicted to all kinds of sugar because they don't just like the taste of sugar, they are addicted to the dopamine.
And in the mortality space, we used to say
the absence of dopamine is the presence of addiction.
The reason why most addiction has a tendency to shift,
if you've ever been an addict or ever known a true addict,
drug addicts become alcoholics, alcoholics become
work out of holics, work out of holics become work of
a holics, why does addiction have a tendency to shift because we never address the dopamine deficiency?
If I was able to magically go into your body right now and deplete dopamine
You would begin to engage in dopamine seeking behaviors, right?
Dopamine is the primary driver of behavior. So our tone in is the primary driver of mood
so is the primary driver of behavior, serotonin is the primary driver of mood. So when we talk about
sugars, we really have to talk about this dopamine cycle. And that's why sugar addiction is right
up there with drug and alcohol addiction. We have increased the intake of sugar 400 fold in this
country since 1964. The worst thing that ever happened to humanity was the war on fat in the 90s
and where they started to replace everything with high sugars.
We know now, for example, that Alzheimer's is type three diabetes.
It's insulin resistance in the brain.
So sugar is really the root of all evil.
So when it comes to sugar, then, are you suggesting that we should like completely
remove sugars?
Is it something that we don't need as a raw material?
No, I'm just saying that we should eat when we eat whole foods and we eat less processed
sugar, and this is where we get into trouble, right?
Processed foods and high glycemic sugars, especially your white sugars, and these are really
dangerous for you.
The majority of my sugar intake comes from three sources, natural honey, natural maple
sorbs, and fruits that end in berry.
The problem with the majority of sugars is that they don't only do they dig the dopamine
receptor and then fall off, which makes you crave the next sugar ding, but what sugar does
is it raises
our insulin level. And most people think that the primary role of insulin is to lower blood
sugar. And that's actually not true. The primary role of insulin is to block any other
form of energy use in the body. So if insulin is high, the body cannot burn fat. So what
happens when insulin is high?
We store fat in an accelerated rate.
The first place that fat builds up is in the blood.
So people that eat the most sugar have the highest blood fat.
So the heaviest people eat the most sugar because high sugar causes high insulin, high insulin,
forces fat storage.
Your body does not have the choice to use fat as an energy source.
One of the healthiest things you can do for a lot of my patients that are sugar addicted
or they have high triglycerides, high fat in the blood, I do what's called a keto reset.
I put them on a prescription keto genic diet for 10 weeks.
It's a very easy diet to get used to.
And at the end of that, you start to reintroduce sugars and you give their pancreas a break. You make
them insulin-sensitive again. High levels of insulin is one of the signs of something called metabolic
syndrome. And high insulin leads to another symptom of metabolic syndrome called high triglyceride.
leads to another symptom of metabolic syndrome called high triglyceride. So high insulin, high blood sugar, high blood fat, mild abdominal obesity.
This is what we call metabolic syndrome.
It's the leading cause of cardiovascular disease, which is the leading cause of death worldwide.
And all of this can be traced back to sugar.
And so when people say, well, what diet should I be on?
It should be on a whole food diet? It doesn't matter, keto, paleo, carnivore, raw food, vegan, vegetarian.
You need to be eating clean whole foods.
Wild caught salmon, pasture raised chickens, free-range eggs, organic grass-fed meats.
These are excellent sources of nutrition for you.
And organic fruits and vegetables.
More processed foods, especially processed sugars we have, the higher the incidence of
all disease pathways.
So I know we were talking about Wim Hof previously, and one of his big core concepts is this
need to make sure that we're uncomfortable, right?
That we're always so used to like air conditioning and all these things that just make us comfortable,
comfortable and kind of complacent.
You also agree that aging is the aggressive pursuit
of comfort, the more we aggressively see comfort,
the faster that we age as something that you say.
Talk to us about the need to be uncomfortable sometimes.
There is a process in the human body called hormesis. Hormesis is a stress strengthening response. So for
example, we know that if you don't load a bone, it won't strengthen. If you
don't actually tear a muscle, it won't grow. If you don't challenge the immune
system, it will weaken. And so we've got to stop telling grandma not to go
outside. It's too hot, not to go outside. It's too cold, just to lay down, just to relax,
to eat at the very first pang of hunger.
This is collapsing all of our defense mechanisms.
Not to get political or alienate half your audience
or anything, but one of the worst things
that happened to us during the pandemic
was social distancing, residential quarantining, and masking.
Those were so antithetical to human survival
and our basic human physiology that we are seeing now
the outcome of a global collapse of the immune system.
So when you take human beings out of contact
with other human beings, when you've forced them
into the residences, when you mask them up,
when you social distance them,
when you don't expose them to daily pathogens,
and viruses, and bacteria, what happens is the immune system starts to weaken. We're on our
eighth variant of Omnichron. So why is our immune system so weak? Why are we so susceptible? Because
we actually stopped challenging the immune system. This is why things like cold water exposure are
so good for you.
I know Wim Hof is a major fan of that.
Remember, we're not trying to become cold adapted.
We're trying to cold shock the body.
So what happens, for example,
when we expose the body to cold water,
when we get a peripheral vasoconstriction,
we actually get an increase in the release of endorphins
like dopamine that actually give us a pleasure response.
We force all the oxygen into the core to our liver, lungs, pancreas, our kidneys up to
our brain.
We activate brown fat, which is our thermostat in the body.
We improve our metabolic rate.
And you can do this by getting in cold water three minutes a day or taking a three minute
cold shower.
Now, why won't most people do that?
Because it's uncomfortable. We don't like to go outside because it's's uncomfortable. We don't like to go outside, because it's too hot.
We don't like to go outside, because it's too cold.
We like to just lay down and relax,
because that's comfortable.
We stress the body.
It has a whor-medic response and it strengthens.
And so, the reason why I say aging
is the aggressive pursuit of comfort
is that most people just, they avoid exercise
or high temperatures or low temperatures
or cold exposure or all of these things because they just don't want to be uncomfortable.
I would love to close out with a few of your favorite stories of how you've basically transformed
people's lives. I know that you have a lot of celebrity clients like the UFC president Dana White,
but whatever examples you want to give of how you've actually transformed people's lives through all
that you work with human biology.
Well, you know, my favorite stories are where you're taking myriad of seemingly unrelated
symptoms, right?
So think about all these symptoms people have as like spokes on a wheel, waking, water
retention, poor sleep,
hormone imbalance, lack of focus, lack of concentration, low waking energy, poor libido.
It seems like the whole world's going to hell in a hand basket.
What I always try to do is I look for the hub.
Where do all of these things meet?
So for example, the only white just disclosed on my podcast, very publicly, my work with his mother-in-law.
She's 79-year-old woman, beautiful woman, who was diagnosed with three very significant
conditions, early onset dementia, peripheral neuropathy, and congestive heart failure.
When you ask yourself, where do all of these meet?
So the clinical team and I sit around, remember, I'm not licensed to practice medicine,
so eventually there is a physician involved that is licensed to practice medicine.
Where do all these things meet?
They all meet at circulation.
If I reduce circulation to periphery, I get the symptoms of peripheral neuropathy.
If I reduce circulation to the brain, I get these symptoms of early onset memory loss or
an early onset dementia.
If I reduce circulation to the heart, I get the expression of congestive heart failure.
And so these are not independent of one another.
They all meet at this core of circulation.
So we use things like oxjumbas, hydrogen water filtration systems
for her drink hydrogen water,
resveratrol to increase blood flow,
and simple raw materials in nutrients
to improve the blood flow and simple raw materials and nutrients to improve the blood flow
and circulation.
Sixty-five days later, after she was diagnosed with these conditions, she no longer qualified
for those diagnoses.
There's so many people that are listening to this program right now that have some kind
of condition going on in their body, and they've been told they have hypothyroid, or they've
been told they have hypertension, and they've just accepted that diagnosis, and they've been told they have hypothyroid, or they've been told they have hypertension,
and they've just accepted that diagnosis,
and now they've subscribed to a lifetime medication.
I would really encourage them to get that one-time
genetic test on.
You do it once in your lifetime.
You never guess again on what you need to supplement with,
and it could permanently change the trajectory of your life.
So most of the listeners that are tuning into the show,
they're probably in their 30s. Where can we go to learn from you? What books do you have? What websites do
you have? What services products? Like, how can we further work with you to learn
from you on how to optimize our bodies?
I just started a podcast on human optimization called the ultimate human.
Amy Whiten was a guest on there.
You'll see Stephen A Smith, Steve Harvey, Steve O. Key, lots of Steve's.
And you'll see lots of average patients.
But I also interview the leading PhDs and MDs and researchers in the world on bio optimization,
longevity, optimal health.
On my Instagram, I don't do anything but teach.
So if you just go to
add Gary Brekka, just my first and last name, you'll see tons of videos on breathwork,
morning routine, cold plunging, oxygen, light, magnetism. You'll see all of the different
topics that I lecture on. I put all of my staged talks onto my Instagram. And then finally,
you can go to 10X, the number 10, the letter X, healthtest.com
and order that gene test. You can see the supplements that I've manufactured myself
and I have tons of information on that site on bio optimization.
Awesome. Are you in business with Brent Cardone? He also came on this podcast. 10X Health,
is he an investor or something?
Yes. It was Streamline Medical, was my company eight years ago.
Grant acquired it, and now he and I, and my wife and Brandon Dawson are partners in 10X Health.
Oh, awesome.
He's been looking amazing.
Oh, yeah, he was my way different.
He was on my early success stories, right?
One of my earliest clients, and you know, Grant does not look, act, or perform like a 65-year-old man. No. Right. One circles around most 25-year-olds.
The last two questions I ask all my guests are the same, and then we do something fun at the end
of the year. So the first one is, what is one actionable thing our young and profitors can do to
become more profitable tomorrow? Find something that you would otherwise do for free and monetize it.
And what is your secret to profiting in life? And this can go beyond business
financial, but what is your secret to profiting in life? My secret to profiting
in life is really kind of aligning my purpose with my passion. I'm passionate
about the human body and human physiology and my purpose is to change the face
of humanity. And because those two are so aligned,
I really, I know this sounds so altruistic and cheesy,
but it's true.
I don't feel like I work a day in my life.
This podcast did not feel like work.
I really enjoyed this podcast.
And when I go off the phone,
I've got a dozen calls lined up with clients
and patients and my clinical team.
And none of that feels,
like I'm excited to get off of this podcast
and get on those calls. I feel like most people have a passion, some people have a purpose.
If they don't align their passion, their purpose, what really lights your fire, wakes you up in the
morning. What would you otherwise do for free? And then when you have a purpose like,
you know, which is by the way linked to longevity, all of the blue zones in the world isolated the
fact that the elderly people still felt like they had a purpose.
So when you have a purpose, meaning, you know, minus to change the face of humanity, this
information that I have does not belong to me.
It belongs to your listeners, it belongs to mankind.
I'm just blessed enough to have it flow through me.
Since I'm so almost economically passionate about the human body and I read voraciously
and I study voraciously and my purpose is to touch the face of humanity.
Those two aligned and I'm telling you it's like, I feel like I won the lottery every day.
Yeah, I can feel the passion through you and I'm totally aligned.
I totally agree with everything you're saying and Gary, even a wealth of information, I can't
wait to have you back on the podcast.
Thank you so much for your time.
Where can everybody learn more about you and everything that you do? What are your
main channels?
My Instagram at Gary Breka.
Amazing. Thank you so much, Gary.
You're so welcome. Thank you for having me on.
I really liked this conversation with Gary Breka. It was so eye-opening and I found
it so moving
what he said about not wanting to waste his life predicting death when instead he could spend
it impacting life for the better of humanity. I think that's something we can all strive to do,
whether a biohackers or not. Gary offered us so many actionable biohacks but I wanted to flag
a few that he emphasized. He told us that his entire career boils down to this one sentence.
The presence of oxygen is the absence of disease. So how can we better manage the oxygen levels in
our body? The easiest way to do so, says Gary, is an activity cult grounding, which basically means
take off your socks and shoes occasionally and just let your feet connect with the earth.
The second technique is breathing. He recommends the 8-minute routine pioneered by Wim Hof, who we also had on the show in episode
number 175.
Better breathing helps boost our oxygen levels and offsets the sedentary lifestyles that
so many of us have today.
And the third way to help your oxygen levels is exposing your skin to natural sunlight.
This is the safest to do in the first 45 minutes of the day.
Gary kills two oxygen birds with one stone
by sitting on his porch in the morning sun
to do his breath work.
Finally, I was really struck by Gary's emphasis
on seeking discomfort.
Aging, as he puts it, is the aggressive pursuit of comfort,
something we're all guilty of.
But if we want to slow down aging,
we need to make ourselves uncomfortable. So seek out
good stress, whether it's a cold shower, fasting, or intense exercise. Just like you have to tear a
muscle to build it, you have to challenge your immune system and your body to strengthen them.
And that means embracing discomfort. Thanks so much for listening to this episode of Young
and Profiting Podcast. If you listen, learned and profited from this conversation with the fascinating Gary Breka, then please share this episode with your friends
and family. It would really mean a lot to me if you helped spread this podcast by word of mouth.
And if you did enjoy this show and you learned something new, then why not drop us a 5-star
review on Apple Podcast. We have over 4500 reviews because we have such incredible listeners
like you. You can also find me on Instagram at YappwithHalla or LinkedIn by searching my name,
it's Halataha. Before we wrap up, I want to give a big shout out to my incredible Yapp
production team. Thank you for all you do behind the scenes. This is your host, Halataha, Nino.