Barbell Shrugged - Physiology Friday: [Testosterone + Gut Health] How to Avoid TRT by Healing Your Gut w/ Anders Varner, Doug Larson, Travis Mash and Dan Garner Barbell Shrugged

Episode Date: July 19, 2024

In today’s episode of Barbell Shrugged you will learn: Understanding the theory of constraints in your physiology Why doctors use testosterone as a catch all for so many symptoms Why TRT is not the... answer to low testosterone in your labs Why alcohol can be detrimental to long term gut health and leaky gut How alcohol affects testosterone Why low testosterone is not the root cause of low energy, brain fog, and decreased libido Why testosterone is a system dysfunction and quick fixes will not solve the root cause of the problem To learn more, please go to https://rapidhealthreport.com Connect with our guests: Anders Varner on Instagram Doug Larson on Instagram Coach Travis Mash on Instagram Dan Garner on Instagram

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Shrugged Family, this week on Barbell Shrugged Physiology Friday is back. We're hanging out with our boy Dan Garner talking testosterone and gut health, which is a very cool conversation because most people, including myself many times, can't truly understand the depth of physiology. To think that testosterone, gut health, your immune system, and all these things are linked together. That is why we have Dan Garner on the team to draw these connections, help us understand how they are all linked together in the action steps that you can take to improve your health and physiology. As always, friends, make sure you get over to rapidhealthreport.com. That is where Dr. Andy Galpin has a free eight
Starting point is 00:00:39 minute video on the three-step process we use to unlock your true physiological potential. And you can access that free video over at rapidealthreport.com. Friends, let's get into the show. Welcome to Barbell Shrugged. I'm Andrew Varner. Doug Larson. Travis Mash. And Dan Garner.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Big pre-show today that is going to make the podcast. But, yo, before we get into testosterone and gut health travis mash three gold medals yeah brew ryan grimsland he dominated uh sean o'malley number one uh fighter in the world right now impressive weekend fellas their dudes are crushing is that what you're saying you're. If you are interested in playing life at the highest level, I'm just saying you should get Dan Garner to read your labs and get you some nutrition. I think that's kind of the bottom line.
Starting point is 00:01:36 Yeah. And get Travis Mast to do your program. Yeah, and then Travis can write your strength program and game over. You get good. Just like that, you'll be the strongest in the world yeah just like that to be in the right mindset keep keep the prequel to these episodes always edit it out and don't don't ever get on the boats hold on how close was the competition for Ryan Grimson? I saw he won, of course, but I didn't see how everybody else did.
Starting point is 00:02:08 Was it close? Did he smash? Or what was the situation there? He won on his openers. But I will say that there's a young American, though, Caden, who is on the up and coming. So be aware. There's a young dude up and coming. Like, so don't like, like, be aware. There's a young dude that's coming, like, in the next squad probably.
Starting point is 00:02:30 That's Caden Cahoy, who's really good. It's just, you know, in a year or two, he'll be up there. Is that in Ryan's weight class? Yeah. Yeah, he was, I mean, so America got first and second. So it was really cool to be at the end of Clean and Jerks. I got a picture of just two Americans sitting there. that's all it's left it's two americans i was like so it just was like it really was a big reality for me that how far that we've come as a sport you know like you know
Starting point is 00:02:57 five years ago you would never see that you wouldn't even dream that to be possible 10 years ago wait hold on yeah it was like 10 years ago now that they had usa weightlifting nationals and like a roller skating rink roller skating rink yeah and everybody was thinking how terrible we are as a sport and then they were right and so then a few people decided not to take that anymore and here we are so before we get into uh the real show today uh dan dude how cool is it taking taking some some kid from arizona turn him into uh number one in the world you guys are on like what seven or eight fights something like that now yeah that was our eighth fight and it's been a heck of a ride man he uh you know though it's like um i'm sure travis knew with ryan a long time ago that ryan was
Starting point is 00:03:43 gonna be ryan um and the same thing with o'malley we started working together eight fights ago but I'm sure Travis knew with Ryan a long time ago that Ryan was going to be Ryan. And the same thing with O'Malley. We started working together eight fights ago, but it's like someone's already famous and then you're just waiting for the world to find out. And I've been along for that ride. I'm grateful to be along for that ride. He's like one of my favorite athletes I've ever worked with by a long shot because like he, he looks kind of like silly and playful on Instagram and social media. And that's because he can be, but he is the most disciplined athlete I've ever worked with.
Starting point is 00:04:16 Arguably like he, if I put something on a piece of paper, I don't have to check in with them. It's done. He's doing it. It's done. There's no complaining. He is an input output machine. He's, and that's why he's, he's doing it it's done there's no complaining he is an input output machine he's and that's why he's he's absolutely crushing it man is his discipline and consistency and just
Starting point is 00:04:31 his intention and everything he does i love working with the dude yeah when you go from what it was he was ranked like 12th and now he's number one in one fight like um i feel like i was talking to a buddy of mine about, it's like if you played AAA baseball and you were hitting like 400, you still aren't prepared for a fastball in the big leagues. There's a different speed. There's a different look.
Starting point is 00:04:55 There's a different confidence in that pitcher. There's a whole, you go and step in the ring with the dude that's number two in the world. And I would imagine there's just a speed that you have to catch up to on the spot that you can't train for and to come out and win that's wild man yeah came out win showed his heart showed his conditioning um showed that he belongs man a lot of people that thought that he was all hype no he just beat the number one guy in the world and the former champ and a guy who many consider to still be the champ.
Starting point is 00:05:27 There's a lot of people who thought Jan was the best guy in the world. And we just went in there and got it done and jumped 10 spots of the ranking. I love it. Yeah, I read where a ref, an outside ref who showed why he won. It was just like his strikes,
Starting point is 00:05:44 you know, just caused more damage. It was just like his strikes, you know, just cause more damage. It was like, he just inflicted more damage consistently. He said it was actually pretty, he thought it was like more than just a split decision. He thought it was pretty conclusive that he won, you know,
Starting point is 00:05:58 and he explained it in a way where I'm like, yeah, you know, that's what I would have thought. Wait, more, more comprehensive than Instagram comments? Way more.
Starting point is 00:06:06 Yeah, yeah. These dudes are just like, probably lost all their money on Yan. I did learn something in the Instagram comments about people that watch fighting, that if you would like to have your opinion be more important than someone else's, you call that person that you want below you a casual like a casual fan that doesn't understand what it's like to fight at the highest level of the sport
Starting point is 00:06:32 like all the people in the comments I couldn't believe the other person does yeah yeah yeah I never didn't get punched in the face yeah go in that cage hear the door shut and see how much shrinkage you get you know yeah that's the segue into testosterone and gut health today um
Starting point is 00:06:53 what's super i'm excited about this because uh it's one of the things that i feel like i've learned really the most over the last year being in in rapid uh because we we have many people that are coming into the program right now that are either on TRT, want to get off TRT, having testosterone, libido issues, energy issues. And they go to their primary care physician and the doctor just doesn't really have an answer. And what do they say? They go, well, go get on some TRT and you'll have more testosterone. Then you'll have more energy. And I think we've done a great job over the last couple episodes and talking about testosterone of like, maybe that isn't the best thing to be doing. And one of the biggest reasons is because we don't understand and figure out the gut health side
Starting point is 00:07:43 of things. We're never really fixing the biggest constraint that's holding your physiology back from becoming what it should be so that there isn't a testosterone issue. And I think it's really important, Dan, I wanna start this at the very top, which is like your theory of constraints when it comes to physiology, performance, health,
Starting point is 00:08:02 we haven't done it in a while. And actually laying out what that theory looks like and the basis for everything that we do in our coaching program. Shrug family, I want to take a quick break. If you are enjoying today's conversation, I want to invite you to come over to rapidhealthreport.com. When you get to rapidhealthreport.com, you will see an area for you to opt in, in which you can see Dan Garner read through my lab work. Now, you know that we've been working at Rapid Health Optimization on programs for optimizing health. Now, what does that actually mean? It means in three parts, we're going to be doing a ton of deep dive into
Starting point is 00:08:42 your labs. That means the inside out approach. So we're not going to be guessing your macros. We're not going to be guessing the total calories that you need. We're actually going to be doing all the work to uncover everything that you have going on inside you. Nutrition, supplementation, sleep. And then we're going to go through and analyze your lifestyle. Dr. Andy Galpin is going to build out a lifestyle protocol based on the severity of your concerns. And then we're going to also build out all the programs out a lifestyle protocol based on the severity of your concerns. And then we're going to also build out all the programs that go into that based on the most severe things first. This truly is a world-class program. And we invite you to see step one of this process
Starting point is 00:09:16 by going over to rapidhealthreport.com. You can see Dan reading my labs, the nutrition and supplementation that he has recommended that has radically shifted the way that I sleep, the energy that I have during the day, my total testosterone level, and my ability to trust and have confidence in my health going forward. I really, really hope that you're able to go over to rapidhealthreport.com, watch the video of my labs, and see what is possible. And if it is something that you are interested in, please schedule a call with me on that page. Once again, it's rapid health report dot com. And let's get back to the show. So when it comes to the theory of constraint,
Starting point is 00:09:55 that is a coaching philosophy that I've developed over the course of my career, really being in the trenches. Like one thing I found with educators in the industry is that a lot of them are kind of just self-proclaimed excellent coaches. They're just like an excellent coach and now educator. A lot of times that's self-proclaimed. And then what can happen is an educator can kind of just stay an educator and they get out of the coaching game, but they really end up losing touch with reality and what really works on the battlefield of high performance. And I've always made sure, like, yes, I'll do podcasts. Yes, I've come out with some courses in the past,
Starting point is 00:10:33 but these courses are very few and far between. And the podcast topics we do is never at the expense of like how we opened this show, Sean O'Malley becoming the number one fighter in the world after us doing eight fights together in the trenches shit is how you learn the most in the fastest way of the stuff that actually works so this is a philosophy that's not new it's something I've been working on for 10 years and it's the theory of constraints and one thing that you find out very quickly when you're in the trenches is that everything connects to everything in physiology. Organs never work in isolation.
Starting point is 00:11:12 The human body doesn't work in isolation from the mind. Your behaviors impact your physiology. Your physiology impacts your behaviors. All of your organ systems work together. So to truly identify what's going to take someone to the next level is to identify their current constraint. So the theory of constraint, basically the way in which I apply it is that you will only ever be as healthy to the degree that you are constrained. Identifying that constraint is a coach's best quality. So for example, if you are a CEO in business,
Starting point is 00:11:48 you're gonna look down at your organizational chart. Why? Because a business will only scale to the degree that it is constrained. So you're gonna look down at your organizational chart and you'll be like, where is the bottleneck in my business? Is it in sales? Is it in marketing?
Starting point is 00:12:02 Is it in company culture? Is it in management? Where is it in product quality? I need to identify that bottleneck, remove that bottleneck in my business structure so that the business can scale to the next level. A business will only scale to the degree that is constrained. When you identify and remove that constraint, the business can scale to the next level. That's exactly how I view physiology. And that's exactly when you look at a business and you identify bottlenecks across every single department. Well, guess what? In physiology, you have to identify bottlenecks across every single department. That means organ, organ system, mind, body, cells, hormones, inflammation, micronutrients, you freaking name it. We need to identify that constraint. Why? Because you only be healthy to the degree that you are constrained. So when somebody thinks about testosterone, they might think about the hormone department. And when someone thinks gut health, they might think the gastrointestinal system and maybe the microbiome
Starting point is 00:13:02 and things like that. But it's crazy to me that people don't continue to connect these things. A real good exercise that all of the listeners could do is type in one organ and then type in another organ and then type in axis. There's going to be an axis between everything. There is the thyroid liver axis, the brain gut axis, the hypothalamus pituitary, pretty much pick any axis, adrenal, gonadal, it is absolutely everywhere. There's axes for everything. And that's because everything is connected to everything. So this constraint identification has a rippling effect across all physiology, because when you identify what's holding the system back,
Starting point is 00:13:45 you'd be amazed at the ripple effect that that can have, say, for example, in testosterone. So to stay in the pocket of today's topic, gut health can absolutely impact testosterone in a major way. Why is testosterone, and maybe it isn't the only downrange effect, but it seems to be one of the leading downrange men, 35 to 45 years old, that it's like, you have energy's off. Oh, it's got to be testosterone. It's libido's off. Got to be testosterone. Whatever all of these things are, testosterone just seems to be the catch-all because it's
Starting point is 00:14:39 easy to pour it into your body and make things better. But are there other things? Is testosterone really like the first one that seems to go that has such a massive impact on many different aspects of life from energy, libido, muscle mass, just on and on really, but is testosterone really just the easiest catch all? I do think it's the easiest catch all number one, because everyone knows it. And people like to act upon what they understand. A lot of people don't know prolactin, catch all? I do think it's the easiest catch all number one, because everyone knows it. And people like to act upon what they understand. A lot of people don't know prolactin,
Starting point is 00:15:13 they don't know progesterone, they don't understand the importance of estrogen in male physiology, it's very complicated to understand neurotransmitters. So like when you can just kind of hone in on this one thing that you know about, then it's a lot easier to comprehend and apply in your life. So I do think it's easy in that respect in terms of self perceived known application. But also the the symptoms of low testosterone are also so non specific, that I think that it's an easy catch all there to low libido, low energy, low muscle mass, increased body fat is explained like 90% of dudes, you know, in a certain age range, who don't take care of themselves. Like these are just a catch all symptom. For a root cause that may not even be testosterone, like, like I've mentioned many times on the podcast, it's not,
Starting point is 00:15:57 hey, you have low testosterone, let's take testosterone. It's why is your testosterone low to begin with? So that that overall simplicity of application in their own mind, and the overall complexity of actually answering the root cause question of why testosterone is low, is kind of everybody's scapegoat not to go this route, but just like anything else in life. What when you work hard for something to truly find the real answer, it's so much more worth it in the end. Yeah. And the other thing that on the other side of it, if testosterone is like the catch all for all of the symptoms, and people point to that gut health actually turns into like a very large catch all for root causes. Why is it? Why is gut health so critical in really like the system of health?
Starting point is 00:16:48 It's critical in the system of health because it feeds the systems of health. Nothing is free in physiology, right? Like if you want some dopamine, you're going to need phenylalanine and vitamin B6. And then if you want to convert that dopamine into adrenaline, noradrenaline, you're going to need some vitamin C and copper. If you want to make thyroid hormone, you're going to need tyrosine, selenium, zinc, and iodine. If you want to make the precursor hormone for all hormones, which is pregnenolone, you're going to need some dietary fats and some vitamin B5. Like this all is stuff that we get from our diet and you aren't what you eat. You only are what you eat and actually absorb.
Starting point is 00:17:28 So if you don't have the stuff to make the other stuff, then everything else fails. Like everything is connected to everything. So I don't like to over glorify one organ system over another because they all depend upon and leverage upon each other for optimal function. But when one organ is the feeder for everything else, feeding the thyroid, feeding the pancreas, feeding the liver, feeding the brain, feeding everything, then it's very easy to begin to comprehend in the mind the right limiting step that can take place. And that if we have a whole lot of supply, well, then we can increase the demand a lot more. More input equals more output in the sense of brain chemicals,
Starting point is 00:18:12 for example. We've got a lot of raw material. Well, then we can make a lot of brain chemicals for a lot of memory, concentration, focus, and attention span. But if we don't have a lot of this stuff, well, the body's the ultimate efficiency machine. It's not going to outshoot its gut bridge. It is going to only make what it currently has access to. So the gut is a major root cause for a lot of issues from a raw material perspective. But it's also a root cause for a lot of issues simply because of its role in inflammation. When you do a lot of research in the world of inflammation, you really start to uncover how many things and systems that impacts
Starting point is 00:18:51 testosterone definitely being one of them. Yeah. When we first had the idea for the show, gut health and testosterone, I kind of assumed that we were going to talk about how poor gut health can influence testosterone and likely decrease testosterone. But then the more I thought about it, I was like, oh, well, it's not really a one way street here, like poor or low testosterone likely has a detrimental effect to gut health as well. Is that is that accurate? I think that's absolutely accurate, because the behaviors that would lead one to low testosterone would also be the behaviors that would lead one to poor gut health. The behaviors are always the root of everything that's that's going on in physiology. And if you
Starting point is 00:19:30 have the behaviors, for example, of procrastination, a lack of preparation, poor scheduling, not having the tough conversations that you need to have in your life, maintaining a shitty relationship or a shitty job, well, all of these things are going to drive up stress hormones and stress hormones work antagonistic with testosterone. You're going to lower testosterone, but then that same byproduct of that life and those stress hormones are undeniably going to create a negative impact in your gut as well. So all of that is absolutely a two way street. So really your job then is to be, you're like a detective. Like you got to figure out what is a symptom and what is a cause? Because sometimes a cause can be a symptom and a symptom could be a cause.
Starting point is 00:20:14 Absolutely. Yes. You have to really identify that chicken and the egg thing. Where did it start? Why is it starting? What is the symptom? How does that relationship work together? And that's the majority of the education that I go through these days.
Starting point is 00:20:27 I get so many people who message me on, say, social media. What course are you doing right now? What do you recommend? And I'm kind of lost for words a lot because the majority of my education now comes from being a detective, being a problem solver, because my clients, they'll come to me with a set of variables and say i need this accomplished in this time and then i'm the guy i get it done so then i'm given these variables and then my education comes from jesus this physiology these biomarkers aren't really
Starting point is 00:20:58 making sense right now so i've got to look into the literature on this i gotta buy some papers and then i learn i'm like wow that has this half-life this has this excretion this pathogen impacts that organ i never knew that so then you kind of learn through case studies at this point and being a detective is a great way to put it yeah i think like um whether you're like you i mean like it's just like being a coach is like you learn all these things like you learn about physiology but then you only really learn about the application once you start doing once you have a you know you have an athlete and they have challenges you figure that challenge out
Starting point is 00:21:36 so then you start to learn the application of all this mess you've learned while you know studying or in school or whatever you're doing a hundred percent mess is not a good word all this information yeah but then that that information can be utilized to to pull on emotional triggers too so like let's say you get um a test like a young kid who he's he's proud of saying like his testosterone right like a strength muscle mass you you know what it's like to be the young football player or athlete right but then um but then they also really love drinking a lot on the weekend and then you know that's detrimental to them but because of their hard nose mentality and because they're still getting results you're it's very hard to actually get through to that
Starting point is 00:22:23 person but then you can actually through this process of um being a detective and identifying uh new research that adds to your toolkit yes that helps your program design but like for example um alcohol it's been it's already demonstrated that four shots of vodka even in a non-drinkerces leaky gut. So it's a there's something known as leaky gut. And this is we'll tie this all back to testosterone, something known as leaky gut. There's tight junctions in the cell lining. And this the lining of this of the of the gastrointestinal tract is only one cell thick, it's enormously thin. So when we insult that lining, these little cells can open up and create microscopic holes in the intestines. And this is an opening of the tight junction.
Starting point is 00:23:13 It's known online as leaky gut. It's known in the literature as intestinal permeability. But there is a bacteria in the gut called lipopolysaccharide or LPS. You'll see it quite a bit when you have an opening or an impermeable intestine and that microscopic hole opens up a little bit and lipopolysaccharides sneak into circulation that creates a massive inflammatory effect. And this has been demonstrated to reduce testosterone in humans, by the way, twofold. Number one, it directly reduces testosterone production in the labia cells in the testes. So it's making its way all the way down to the testes and blocking testosterone production. But on top of that, it reduces serum LH secretion from the pituitary. So the brain is reducing its signal to tell the testosterone to
Starting point is 00:24:07 tell, sorry, tell the testes to make testosterone. But even if it got down there, the latex cells that receive that receptor signal from the brain aren't functioning optimally. So this came from four shots of vodka, led to intestinal permeability, led to a reduction in LH and latex cell function, led to low testosterone. So do you need TRT or do you need to stop being an asshole when it comes to vodka, right? That's a very quick thing too. This literature, it was fascinating when I went through that for the first time because blood alcohol concentration peaked after 60 minutes, but lipopolysaccharides were detectable
Starting point is 00:24:46 in the blood after only 30 minutes. So intestinal permeability happened very, very fast. And it was a placebo controlled trial too. So the placebo group only drank pure orange juice and they had 20 times less inflammatory cytokines in their bloodstream than the alcohol group. 20 times difference. So when I'm a coach, and I don't really I'm going to tie this all the way back to that, that young athlete, when I'm a coach, and I'm saying, yo, stop drinking on the weekend, he's gonna say, why I'm getting results, I better than everybody else, shut up. But if I come and
Starting point is 00:25:23 tell him, you're going to have low testosterone, testes aren't going to be working, brain's not going to be working optimally, and you got holes in your gut. You shut up and stop drinking on the weekend so we can win this gold medal. Got it? Good. That's brilliant.
Starting point is 00:25:37 So I know when I hurt my back and they told me that I could possibly be crippled, didn't scare me at all. But then they started telling me, look, your penis might stop working. They got my attention. I was like, all right. Time out. Time out.
Starting point is 00:25:53 No, hold on. We'll do what you say. You got my attention. You mentioned the lipopolysaccharides showed up after 30 minutes. Do you remember how long they were after the drinking session was over how long it stuck around i'm so glad you asked yes yes yes yeah i remember yeah this is these are the questions like i wish my wife would ask me i go upstairs after i read a study and i'm like bouncing i'm so freaking ready and she's like, yeah, okay, the voice is on. I don't care. Shut up.
Starting point is 00:26:25 Empty the dishwasher. Be quiet. Hallie's sleeping. Shut up. My wife just said, shut up and get naked. I'm like, okay. I'll do it. Shut up and keep all of your clothes on. That's it.
Starting point is 00:26:43 To address the question that lipopolysaccharides did not return to baseline until 24 hours after the vodka shot 24 hours so you can imagine you know if you have a few drinks a day well that kind of just never ever stops right so it's very important to care about those kinds of things. And you were castrating yourself. So what about like, like, um, so that was like in four vodka shots, right? Now we said, what about a drink? Like, like, like at what point do things start to happen? Is it one, two, three, four?
Starting point is 00:27:22 Well, at one drink, your brain begins to shrink. So I would already be pulling off. Yeah, yeah. So your brain literally, I mean, physically shrinks. That research came out this year. It was the UK Biobank that collected that data on like 5,000 different people. And there was no low threshold. One drink shrunk your brain. So that was incredibly fascinating data to identify in that respect.
Starting point is 00:27:51 So that alone would deter my decision making. But in my world, there is no, hey, how much of this can I have? Because you're fighting the number one ranked UFC fighter in eight weeks or so. So it's not even really a conversation in my world. And by the way, I don't, I'm not, I don't have any ill will or any negative thoughts about anybody who chooses to do those things. It's just,
Starting point is 00:28:20 don't do those things and then talk out of both sides of your mouth and say you also want to accomplish your goals. That's always been very and probably why I gravitated a lot to athletes, because I would lay out logic to them and then connect it to their performance. And then it would just simply be done. But then in the world of general population, there are a lot of people who talk about the things that they want to accomplish, and they absolutely never change their their habits and that's just it's not what i'm about collect your labs to get exact answers to your exact questions for an exact protocol if you're in
Starting point is 00:28:53 let's go you know i was proud of of ryan ryan we were because normally what i tell my athletes is like zero except once every two you know six months when they compete they do well i'm like that's your time to go out but we were out and the dude still did not dream you know he just bettered everybody on this side of the world easily and then still chose not to do anything that would negative you know could negatively affect even acutely negatively affect his performance so i was definitely watching a 20 yearyear-old boy grow up this past week. Made me proud of him. Nice. That's awesome.
Starting point is 00:29:32 The boy thing actually just reminded me of something. I saw other papers where women, if they have lipopolysaccharides detectable within their bloodstream during pregnancy, if there is a male fetus in the female body, it reduces his testosterone. So that actually impacts the fetus during pregnancy as well. Yeah, there's real fascinating stuff out there. Lipopolysaccharides and inflammation as a whole really takes a toll on male hormone production. Let me ask you, like, you know, with your dude, like, like, um, O'Malley is one of my favorite, maybe because he's your guy. It's like, makes me feel like I know him, but like, so would you tell him zero tolerance for any kind of alcohol or anything or like once you you know when you win something big like you
Starting point is 00:30:26 just did is it okay for to go out one time or zero i actually told him to go have some drinks after the fight yeah yeah yeah so he's actually he's sponsored uh he's sponsored by happy dad which is a beer company um and i believe that's a great name yeah um so yeah he's sponsored by happy dad and he texted me he was still in abu dhabi he said bro i'm so sore and i said all right get a mountain of protein find some curcumin and wash it down with some happy dads you earned it yeah yeah so obviously it was a joking exchange but um and in the real world i'll typically uh phasically bring him into fight camp so uh about i'll actually just give him time off like i'm gonna let him do american thanksgiving and christmas um he's been in fight camp for like seven months now it was two 12-week fight camps
Starting point is 00:31:26 back to back with like the shortest break in the world uh before and in between um so i'm just gonna he eats healthy anyways i don't need to monitor him so i'm gonna give him some time off and then about 16 weeks out from his next fight um i'll begin his off season and then from about 12 weeks out to six weeks out i call it a bridging phase and then six weeks out to fight day is extreme fight camp so things typically start getting a lot more serious and he really does not a drinker anyways but starting about 16 weeks out and definitely 12 weeks out um things things get dialed in and then at six weeks out they're extreme dialed in to to make them the best in the world sure i got it i have so many questions this this is not about that but someday i would like to have a show all about like you know prepping an mma
Starting point is 00:32:19 especially you know sugar case study shows it would be pretty cool too. That would be really fun. Anyway, but back to leaky gut. Well, alcohol isn't just about leaky gut on the testosterone side of things too. Like it has a massive impact like as an acute stressor to the body. And then it sounds like that one's more of like a chronic over time is going to happen in the leaky gut side of things, right? Because like just every all of the side
Starting point is 00:32:49 effects of alcohol being poor sleep, your brain shrinking, the dehydration, all of that stuff also has a massive effect on what your testosterone levels are going to do as well, correct? Yeah, absolutely. Like I think that, uh, the leaky gut thing, well, it does happen that day. Technically I remember the, the lipopolysaccharides are detectable in only 30 minutes. So that is acute. The brain shrinkage is, is acute. Um, it reduces, uh, REM sleep, which reduces testosterone. Um, so that as those, all three of those are connected to testosterone. But then in some way, shape or form, and this isn't a statement to represent all the listeners, but humans are amazing at escapism.
Starting point is 00:33:32 We do a really good job at not meeting our problems. And a lot of them feel a lot better when you have some alcohol to kind of take the edge off. So sometimes the lifestyle that we've chose or are currently trapped in can can lead us into the direction of self medication. And then we call it a I'm just taking the edge off. But ultimately, it's a it's a larger situation that impacts a larger set of organ systems that create a large impact on your health. Yeah. Coming back, like, maybe just transitioning away from alcohol specific, when it comes to gut health,
Starting point is 00:34:10 are we always kind of under attack from bacteria getting into our gut and parasites coming in? Obviously, they're very small. They come in like water, however they get in. Is there, is it because our immune system is weakened that some people then have issues with gut health and that everyone is drinking bacteria, whether you know it or not. But if your immune
Starting point is 00:34:43 system is being overtaxed by other things, by lack of sleep, lifestyle choices, whatever that is, that that is when you become more vulnerable to having some sort of downrange effect because your body just isn't handling those things. When that bacteria gets in, when that parasite gets in there, or is just the having those things get into your gut at all, is now a big problem. And we don't have some sort of natural defense mechanism to be able to go and, and fight whatever parasite gets in there. Yeah, yeah, there's a lot of things at play here. So, you know, there's a resiliency score that I
Starting point is 00:35:22 like to utilize in rapid. And it's a it. And it's a combination of immunity, inflammation, hormones, your CO2 tolerance. And that type of balance really represents one's resiliency to incoming issues. Gut health is a major part of that because the gut, a lot of people forget, houses 70% of your immune tissue. So we have an enormous amount of immune tissue all hanging out in the gut, a lot of it hanging out in the mucus layer of the gut. There's tons of immune tissue in there. And that's really what is protecting us from, like you're suggesting here, the modern day onslaught. There's basically no escape. When you actually do research into real
Starting point is 00:36:02 evidence-based environmental pollutant exposure, heavy metal exposure, pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, insecticides, plastics, like there's so much that we're, and I haven't even included the parasites, the bacteria, the fungus, like there's so much that we're exposed to and it is what it is. So then you just have to be a more resilient dude or more resilient girl. Like you just have to actually create. That's like a part of my philosophy is a lot of people who kind of try to do what I do. They eliminate the root cause and then if they even find the root cause, but they eliminate the root cause and then say they're done with it.
Starting point is 00:36:38 I've always had the mindset that a root cause existed in you because you allowed it to. So I always want to eliminate the root cause and then create a system with such a high amount of resilience that that root cause has such a low percentage chance of probability of ever coming back into the system again. And one like so we can actually just run through an example of how this can play out in real time. So you mentioned immunity being resilience and us taking in bacteria. Cool. Got it. Stress by itself reduces hydrochloric acid secretion in the stomach. Hydrochloric acid does a lot of really important things. It closes the esophageal sphincter so we don't get acid
Starting point is 00:37:17 reflux. It helps us break down proteins into peptides and amino acids so we can properly absorb them. But in the context of this conversation, hydrochloric acid is a bath of acid. So when a lot of pathogens inevitably come through the esophagus, they don't survive the hydrochloric acid vat that is our stomach acid, which helps protect everything self. There's a reason why the first digestive organ is the stomach. And there's a reason why it contains an inhabitable environment for basically anything that comes through, because that is you come through the protector before you're allowed to go anywhere else.
Starting point is 00:37:58 The problem is the first thing I said, stress reduces hydrochloric acid secretion. So if we're under a lot of stress, well, then we're going to have low acid production. We have very low acid production, we increase our chance of pathogens getting into the gastrointestinal tract, which is a stressor, which can lower testosterone. But we also create another big problem as well with undigested protein. So this is something you can actually pick up in the stool and in the urine. But if you have, let's say, for example, you ate a chicken breast, and then because you're stressed, you only secreted enough hydrochloric acid to break down 90% of that
Starting point is 00:38:35 chicken breast. Well, 90% of that chicken breast got broken down, digested, and absorbed. What happened to the remaining 10%? Well, bacteria are alive and bacteria need to eat too. So if you have undigested protein in the gastrointestinal tract, bacteria is going to feed upon that protein. That process is called putrefaction. If protein gets eaten by bacteria, it putrefies. If carbs get eaten by bacteria, it ferments. If fats get eaten by bacteria it ferments if fats get eaten by bacteria it goes rancid these are all it's rancidification putrefaction fermentation this can happen in any section of the gut by the way i'm just using protein as an example for communication if we have this bacteria eating this protein then that creates massive indigestion a lot lot of water retention, and it actually spits out
Starting point is 00:39:25 something known as indecan, which is quite toxic for the system. So that is going to create inflammation within the gastrointestinal tract, damage within the gastrointestinal tract, lipopolysaccharides within the intestinal tract that end up in circulation that also give you bloating, distension, farts, probably loose stools. Wait, am I describing the over 40 crowd a lot low testosterone with gastrointestinal symptoms? I think we're on to something right now. I don't think that's a mistake. I really don't wait like when you have two combined symptoms often like, hey, you think we should probably address those or look into that instead of just look at your blood work and say you've got low T yeah take this like well that's like dude that is like the
Starting point is 00:40:10 the number one thing that has come through with so many clients right now is like low testosterone is a thing that they're super concerned about because it's like we always yeah or like it affects so many things and it's it's such a number that like kind of like hits the ego more than like you've got gut health you're like okay cool but i still get it up and still get it done so who cares uh when you start messing with that phase of life uh all of a sudden everyone's ears perk up a little bit more and they want to they want to learn more but it's also i have low testosterone oh and I've got this like constipation issue or, oh, and I've got loose stools or, and my energy sucks. Like, why do I have this brain fog thing? And it's,
Starting point is 00:40:53 it's, they're all related. Uh, and that's really like the, the, the fun part about really digging into the lab work that I've learned so much and, and, and really like being a part of the program and talking to all these people about it. And, and, you know, for the doctors, like they're so used to having non-compliant patients. So they're just giving the information what they're used to. Like most people, you know, most people, they go and they find out they have type two diabetes. They're gonna do anything about it and the doctor knows it that 99 won't do anything about it so here take this take this um insulin because you're gonna do what you need to do and so same thing you got low testosterone it doesn't matter if i tell you what's causing it here's some testosterone but like with you guys
Starting point is 00:41:41 if people come into you no they're not the 99 they're going to be the people who want to do the right thing so you know yeah definitely not hating on the doctors they're just no dude could you imagine being a like a pcp in 2022 yeah when your job is to get sick people to unsick all you say all day long is lose weight don't eat processed foods because that's everyone you see all day long it's people that are doing all the right things and still don't understand why they don't feel good they're already doing the work now they're already eating well they're already putting they should have the energy they're worried about their sleep they've got some sort of tracker that they're following they They've done all the pieces, but there's this last piece that just doesn't make sense.
Starting point is 00:42:28 Why do I still deal with this even though I'm following everything that I'm supposed to do? All these other things. And everyone that comes to you, they want insurance to pay for whatever you're going to tell them to do. They don't want to pay out of pocket for anything. And so the insurance model is a big component here where the doctor says okay hey you know like we we have like on the fitness side of things like people expect to pay for fitness things but in the medical world everyone wants my insurance to cover it like yeah your co-pay which is kind of annoying but outside of that like you don't want to pay anything
Starting point is 00:42:58 out of pocket so whatever's covered by insurance that's what i want and then the doctors know that and so they they they play to the insurance model it's actually they just kind of have to dan i have a failed model yeah with uh with the way insurance works in canada do you guys have testosterone clinics at the same like speed that they are growing in the united states we have testosterone clinics but nothing grows faster than American pharmaceuticals. Thanks, Dan. Yeah. We're all drug addicts.
Starting point is 00:43:32 You guys, your guys' TV commercials are insane. I'm going to just tell you, when I'm in the US, we don't have any drug commercials ever. But when I'm in my hotel in the USs watching tv for 10 minutes like something will pop on usually yeah yeah it's it's always something um this drug to make your life great except it's got 99 issues yeah don't worry if you have your heart stops all these anal leakage but your penis will work but you'll die i'll do it i'll totally do it yeah um so back back to the gut health piece like so would you if someone had chronic has a chronic constipation or irritable bowel syndrome or um you know opportunistic bacterial overgrowth and dysbiosis is also likely to would you assume that
Starting point is 00:44:26 they also have hormonal issues in those cases if those if those conditions are a chronic issue for them? Absolutely. Yeah. So they would absolutely. They would absolutely not be optimal. That's what I will say. So a lot of people actually don't know how good the human body is designed to feel. So symptoms are kind of funny because they're subjective. You don't really know that you had low testosterone until you feel what good testosterone feels like. They're like, holy crap, my mind's different. My body's different. My wiener's different.
Starting point is 00:44:58 Everything starts changing to a huge degree. I haven't heard anyone say the word wiener in a while for the record yeah my boy's got pp so yeah but for real that's just one example to articulate how anything can make you feel thyroid hormone neurotransmitters microbiome digestion your, your inflammation, all of your other hormones that create so many different other effects that aren't called testosterone, like that many people, if you have a ton of if you have any gut issues, I'm not going to say a ton, if you have any gut issues, your hormones will not be optimal. Whether or not you have symptoms depends upon your subjective feeling of what you perceive to be as optimal. I get one of the biggest things that comes our way. And actually, he's a lot he's given me
Starting point is 00:45:50 permission to say that's one of our clients, Ben Hicks. I was just recently in Costa Rica at a XPT experience, and did some lab based nutrition lecturing there. And my client was there. And he was telling other people there, I thought it was fine. And then I felt so much better after I did the lab-based protocol. And a lot of people think they're fine because they've lived 30, 40 years in their body and they're not fine. They're just adapted to their current state. But when you actually get rid of, to bring it all the way back to the beginning, when you get rid of those constraints, you realize what your true potential actually is.
Starting point is 00:46:28 Totally. Yeah, you know, I think one of those examples, you know, you talk about sleep and about, you know, everybody tells you turn off your phone hour before bed at least. And all the blue lights, you know, machines that you might have. But when you do it, it's crazy what it takes you to. And then you see what a huge – man, I've heard you say it, Dan, so many times. And I'm always like, well, how much difference will it make? But it's pretty crazy if you've ever been at the heightened level of an athlete and then you do one little thing and it
Starting point is 00:47:06 moves you closer to what you used to feel it was it was pretty exceptional like what one little bitty thing you've told people to do when you do it it's it's a pretty big on that and i wrote an article about about that lately it was insane yes because like i just thought let me try it i didn't expect i figured it would take me months before i started experiencing something like literally the next day it was like it's been dramatic as far as me beginning back in shape like that's the number one thing that's helping me get back in shape is like put my stupid phone down it's like it's amazing yeah yeah that's incredible dude i love it um dan garner where can the people find you you can find me at dan garner nutrition on instagram uh you can find my corches uh courses you can you can find all my courses over at
Starting point is 00:48:03 courtsgarner.com and, uh, and Canadians. I know it's a hassle to get blood work in Canada, but I got a deal set up for you guys to get it done. Hassle free inside tracker.com slash garner. Sign up to get 20% off and it won't be a hassle. There you go. Coach Travis mash. Mashly.com Instagram.
Starting point is 00:48:23 Mashly performance. When are you, uh, when are you lifting weights and powerlifting? Next year. Like, I want to train for about 12. Who was talking shit to you? Oh, just some dude. How old was he? Like, half your age?
Starting point is 00:48:35 No, no. Coming after you, trying to eat your lunch? No, he's my age. He did beat me once. But, like. Once. It was just what he said. It was, yeah. It was a lot more. What did he say?. Once. It was just what he said. It was, yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:46 It was a lot more. What did he say? What did he say? What did he say? He said, like, not only that he had, like, called me out and that he was trying to fight me, and I've always said he's such a nice guy. And I'm like, he never talked.
Starting point is 00:49:01 I never heard him say a word until on that podcast. So now I'm like, all right. He was on Westside Barbell's podcast talking. That's a good place to talk. That's real. It was good to know that Westside Barbell was driven by me. Like their whole goal was to beat me because I beat Chuck so many times. Good to know.
Starting point is 00:49:25 You're in the head. I'm going to come back and beat him one more time. What are the numbers that you think you can put up here? I mean, I think I could get close to 800 squat. This is raw. Not quit, but 800, 500, 800. I think I can get back there.
Starting point is 00:49:40 It just takes me a little while. We'll be. I'm probably going to have to become one of your clients. I'm not spotting you. We'll run blood work, but we will not be spotting you. Wait, so 800, 500, 800, and for the audience, how old are you, and what weight class will that be in? Well, I'll be 50 next year. And I'm assuming it'll be – that would be at 220, you know, or 100 kilos.
Starting point is 00:50:12 But if I go down to 90 kilos, 198, then, you know, I'll probably take those to like mid-7s, mid-4s, mid-7s. So it depends on which I do. That'd be a lean Travis Mast, 198. You look lean right now. I think that would make more sense if I went 198. It'd be healthier.
Starting point is 00:50:33 I could do that and maybe not die. Yeah, it'd give you a reason to get extra lean. Right. Then, yeah, I would need the Rabbit Hill team. There you go. Doug Larson. You bet. I'm on Instagram. Health team. There you go. Doug Larson. You bet.
Starting point is 00:50:47 I'm on Instagram. Douglas E. Larson. I'm Anders Varner at Anders Varner. We are Barbell Shrugged at Barbell underscore Shrugged. Friends, if you want to see all of this stuff in real time and what it looks like when you're actually getting your labs read by Dan, you should go over to RapidHealthReport.com because that's exactly what's there. Dan, reading my labs, talking about my low testosterone and my gut health issues and plastic toxicity,
Starting point is 00:51:10 which he also mentioned in this, because I'm basically the poster child for low testosterone. Congratulations. You get to go make fun of me. Laugh at me while you watch my video and watch the man himself read through my labs. Rapidhealthreport.com. Friends, see you guys next week.

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