Digital Social Hour - Are We Medicating Kids TOO Early? The Shocking Reality | Brooke Siem DSH #845
Episode Date: October 30, 2024Are We Medicating Kids TOO Early? The Shocking Reality of Mental Health Treatments! 🌟 Are you ready to dive into a controversial topic that's making waves? Tune in now as Sean Kelly hosts Brook Sie...m on the Digital Social Hour to discuss the urgent issue of medicating children with antidepressants. 😲 Packed with valuable insights, this episode explores the alarming reality of prescribing drugs like Lexapro to kids as young as seven. Join the conversation and discover eye-opening stories about the hidden challenges of psychiatric medications and their long-term effects. 🧠💥 With personal anecdotes and expert analysis, this episode is a must-watch for anyone concerned about mental health and the well-being of future generations. Don't miss out—watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🚀 #suicideprevention #healthawareness #cognitivebehavioraltherapy #mindfulness #mentalhealth #leveluprn #socialanxietydisorder #cathyparkes #mentalhealth #ssri CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:25 - Current World Events 02:30 - Personal Experience with Antidepressants 06:40 - Medical Industry Incentives 09:05 - Holistic Health Approach 10:20 - Accutane and Liver Damage Risks 12:34 - Depression in Teenage Girls 15:24 - Writing a Book Journey 19:00 - Starting a Podcast 21:18 - Cooking for Professional Athletes 22:59 - Diet's Importance for Athletes 24:29 - Feeling Healthier Than Ever 27:28 - Brian Johnson’s Olive Oil Benefits 29:00 - Tapering Off Medication Safely 31:00 - Understanding Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines 34:35 - Tapering Off Medication (Continued) 40:46 - Where to Find Brooks 41:18 - Thanks for Watching APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Spencer@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Brooke Siem https://www.instagram.com/brookesiem/ https://www.brookesiem.com/ LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think just what's going on in the world if you have to put a seven-year-old on Lexpro
Then maybe we should look at what's going on in the home
All right before tossing them on a drug that we don't have any idea what the long-term effects are
Not a bad idea, right? Not a bad idea. So what is that? Is that an antidepressant? Yeah, Lexpros and antidepressant
Seven years old. I can't believe kids are getting depressed that early. I
Mean are they
I mean, are they?
All right guys, got Brooke Seam here. We're gonna talk depression
and all these medications going on.
Let's talk depression, Sean.
Yeah, let's talk about it.
Kids at seven getting prescribed a medication now.
Yeah, last year Lexapro was approved for use
in children and teens starting at seven years old,
which I just find
pretty disgusting. I mean, the study that was used to pass that approval
wasn't great, showed a six time increase in suicidality
within the group, the cohort that was being studied,
and they still added the approval.
And it doesn't really, I think just what's going on
in the world, if you have to put a seven year old on LexPro, then maybe we should look at what's going on in the home
before tossing them on a drug that we don't have any idea what the long-term effects are.
That's what I think.
Not a bad idea, right?
It's not a bad idea.
So what is that?
Is that an antidepressant?
Yeah, LexPro is an antidepressant.
Geez, seven years old.
I can't believe kids are getting depressed that early.
I mean, are they? That I think that's one of the big questions is you've got the criteria for yes,
you have the DSM, the diagnostics,
statistical manual of mental disorders that lays out what the,
what the criteria for depression is, but it's very loose.
You can have 10 people diagnosed with MDD,
major depressive disorder,
with 10 different sets of symptoms,
10 different manifestations of it,
and there's seven.
Again, what's going on in the home?
At what point is the parent responsible here?
I don't really think it's particularly ethical,
especially given that a seven-year-old has no agency
and no clue what emotions even are. They have no emotional regulation already.
And yet here you're putting them on a potentially life altering drug that's
definitely altering their brain and
wondering why it's not going very well. Like,
it's not a mystery why people can, why we have not,
it's not a mystery why we have not seen any improvement in mental health
despite more and more people being medicated.
This isn't working.
Yeah, this isn't working.
It's definitely not working.
And you were prescribed at 15, right?
Antidepressants?
So you were in high school?
Yes, my father had suddenly passed away.
And so this was 2001.
So we do have to look at the time and context
being quite different.
At the time only Zoloft and Prozac were approved for use in children and teens, but I managed to walk out of
a 15-minute appointment with a psychiatrist with a prescription for effects or XR and wellbutrin XL.
And so they were both given off label. They were put in combination. And then I stayed on that same
cocktail of drugs, along with four others that were added on over the course of about one to two years.
Wow.
Those, the other four drugs were actually to combat side effects that we didn't know were associated with the antidepressants. We thought they were something else because medicine is so segmented that, you know, if your stomach's upset, you go to a gastroenterologist. If your hormones are off, you go to an endocrinologist. No one ever stops and looks at the whole spectrum of a person and
says, well, actually, this drug can cause this effect. So maybe that's the issue, not that you
have a separate thyroid disorder. But I ended up on six different drugs and was on those for 15
years. And then at 30 was pulled off all of them pretty recklessly.
And that led to severe antidepressant withdrawal that led to a book.
Like it was so bad, I got a book deal out of it.
Holy crap.
So you just cold turkey cut them all?
Well, I was actually cold turkey'd under the care of a psychiatrist.
So don't recommend it.
Find a different psychiatrist if they do what mine did.
But at the time I was on 37.5 milligrams of effects or XR.
Geez.
That's the lowest dose on the market.
What?
That sounds high.
That is the lowest dose on the market.
So my psychiatrist decided that she couldn't taper me off in any way because
she couldn't prescribe me a drug for 20 milligrams or whatever.
So she just said to stop taking it.
Now that was 2016, the first systematic review
of antidepressant withdrawal,
which means that the first time somebody sat down
and looked at the landscape of the literature
and just kind of looked to see what was going on
in the world of antidepressant withdrawal,
that came out in 2015.
So this was 2016, there just wasn't too much chatter
about getting off of these drugs,
about tapering off of them.
And so she just told me to stop.
And I was just the patient.
So I followed her advice, just stopped,
and basically opened a portal to hell.
I bet.
Yeah.
Panic attacks, right?
There was some of that.
For me...
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The biggest issue, I mean, this lasted for well over a year. So it was, it's difficult to encapsulate in a few soundbites,
but they kind of tell you, you might feel like you have the flu or that the last
withdrawal effects might last a few days or a couple of weeks.
And they kind of just shoo you away.
But what we're not told when we are first prescribed
antidepressants, and this is especially true of children,
which is why I'm so mostly against medicating kids, because
their bodies are changing and they have no frame of reference
for who they are. And I had no frame of reference for who I was
as a fully formed adult because I was medicated at 15. So when
these drugs started to get pulled away and my body started to go nuts in
every, in every aspect, like physically, mentally, emotionally, visually,
my, my vision changed.
I literally saw colors brighten and the edges got sharper and the same thing
happened with my hearing like sounds got very, very, very, very intense.
And so I realized if these drugs were affecting something as simple as my vision,
what else in my whole world were they affecting that I wasn't told about? Because I just thought
they were making me less sad. The bitter irony, of course, was that I was suicidal at the time.
So it wasn't like they were doing anything to make me less sad.
In fact, I think they were exacerbating it.
But we're not told any of this when we go into a doctor's office.
And that is a big problem, and that's why I'm here.
And there are millions of people around the world suffering in psychiatric drug withdrawal,
or feel like they've effectively been duped.
It's so easy to get them to. I remember getting Xanax and Klinazepam first day
I met the doctor within 10 minutes. Just say it. Said I had anxiety.
Just say what you want. Yeah. My GP in New York, so I was on six drugs when I
went to him. My very first appointment, I had just graduated college. I had been on
the same cocktail for six years. I found him around the corner from my apartment
and he took my insurance. So I just walked in and I sat down and he basically said, why are you here?
I said, well, I just moved to New York. These are the drugs I'm on. And he said, okay. And he wrote
me a new script for everything that I was on, called it into the pharmacy. And about four years
later, I needed a refill and I called him up for it, and he looks at my chart.
I forget, four years.
And he goes, oh, I just realized we never did a physical.
We should probably do that.
Oh my gosh.
Four years, so you kept it for a while.
You weren't taking it daily.
Oh, no, no, no, no, it was just a standard refill.
Like, I was taking everything daily.
Oh.
And, you know, because sometimes you just,
they give you 10 refills or whatever it is.
And when you run out,
you're supposed to go back to your doctor for a new script.
But yeah, we had never done a physical,
but he was happy to prescribe me thousands of drugs for years.
You start wondering if they, what their incentive is to this.
Oh, there's not much to wonder.
I mean, they get paid through insurance.
That's what I think too.
It's not even what you think it's what happens.
So they get a kickback on each prescription?
Oh, you mean kickbacks.
Like the doctors?
That's a little fuzzier.
It used to be a lot more common back in the day.
There has been some things that have come down legally that make it more difficult,
or at least you can't get direct kickbacks, or it has to be public.
Like there's some websites where you can go and search and see if your doctor or researcher
has received any kickbacks.
And sometimes that comes in the form of speaking fees,
more than a percentage of a drug sold.
But you don't even really need that
to see where the incentives are.
Because to be a doctor right now,
I mean, my doctor was objectively bad,
but even really good doctors who care about their patients
are still stuck in a horrible insurance system
where the only way they get paid,
unless they're working out of network,
is to get as many people through the door as possible.
So it was, every time I went to go see this guy,
there were 20 people in the waiting room.
Yeah, and you were in there for five to seven minutes,
and he's just banging out codes,
and that's how he's getting paid.
He wasn't actually practicing medicine.
He didn't give a shit.
No, he was horrible though.
Damn.
So are you fully holistic now though?
I fall on the spectrum of functional
as opposed to holistic.
And I would say that I've had to actively work
to over-correct, to not over-correct.
I definitely over-corrected
and I'm trying to come back a little bit
because I actually am recovering from ACL surgery.
So look, if I am acutely ill,
if I'm in an accident, if I broke a bone, please take me straight to the nearest doctor.
Put me back together. But a chronic illness, I'm going to look everywhere before I'm going
to my GP who's going to see me for a minute and a half.
And I think that there's a wealth of information
on the internet and with functional medicine doctors
and I pay out of pocket, which is unfortunate.
Oh, you don't have insurance?
Oh, I have insurance.
But I have insurance for things like when I,
you know, do something stupid and break my leg.
But I still pay out of pocket for the doctors
I want to go see and the functional practitioners that I want to see.
Got it.
Because that's actually where I'm healing.
And insurance doesn't cover that?
No.
Yeah. That's crazy to me.
When you want to prevent something, they won't cover it.
No. So stupid.
But if you want to fix or temporary fix, band-aid it,
then they'll cover that maybe.
Yeah.
Broken system.
Yeah. Once I got off all the antidepressants,
I was in serious withdrawal for a year.
And then about another year of, I was still in
withdrawal, but I was starting to see that I
was coming out of it.
So it was easier to handle.
And I was kind of just looking around the
world saying, all right, who am I?
Um, what does life look like for me now?
Cause it definitely isn't what it was before.
But once I got through all that,
the biggest thing that I was left with
was my gut was completely, completely wrecked.
And I couldn't figure out what was going on.
I had seen a variety of doctors,
I'd gone to see the gastroenterologist,
and then you say, well, we can do a colonoscopy.
And I'm like, that's, no, not helpful.
But I ended up spending, you know,
I probably spent 10 grand just,
I finally went to functional medicine
and did dozens of tests all within a month
so we could see a whole picture of my health.
And that's the first time I started
to actually build this stuff back up.
Wow.
And it took five years to find the right people to do that.
It took, that was in 2021.
I just went through another round of blood tests.
So it's an ongoing process,
but I'm lucky that I was able to do that and to help myself.
But most people, or a lot of people aren't in that position
and worse than that, they don't even know
that it's an option.
No, they don't know at all.
Yeah, I had some liver damage from,
I personally think it was from Accutane.
Yeah.
And I've had that for years.
Like always had, because I do blood tests every year,
always some liver issues and I don't drink
or eat fried food or anything.
So I think it was from that, honestly.
Yeah, well, I remember I was also on Accutane.
That was one of the drugs I was on at some point,
which again, it just in combination with everything is nuts,
but they make you get your liver enzymes tested every month. It's poison. It's all poison. It's crazy. It's just is the risk
are the risks worth the benefit of some of the poisons and I think we've gotten it real wrong
with antidepressants. Yeah just to fix some facial acne I mean not what I know now you could treat
that shit pretty naturally. Yeah I mean change your diet diet first Yeah, they don't tell you that far. So I was eating the same shit, but on Accutane. Yeah, you know what I mean?
Yeah, didn't help. Yeah crazy. So crazy stat though one in four teenage girls dealing with suicidal thoughts according to the CDC now
Yeah, that is super high. Well one in four women
Specifically middle-aged women are on antidepressants, so I guess
that tracks.
I mean, look, when I talk about antidepressants in medicating kids, I'm not trying to say
that people aren't in pain.
They are, but throwing a blanket chemical solution at them with no coping skills, leaving
them in the same horrible environment that they're already in. And of course now with the internet and phones
and everything, I mean, it doesn't surprise me
that teenage girls are struggling so much.
There's a lot of things I'm grateful for in life,
but not being in high school right now is one of them.
Yeah, imagine comparing yourself
because of Instagram and TikTok.
It's bad enough anyway.
I'm looking at myself on this thing and I'm just like,
God, I don't look like the 20 year old influencers that sucks
Yeah, no, it must be tough
I mean I caught the tail end of it Instagram came out when I was in high school and there was a lot of
comparison and and you know self-identity issues from that I
I don't know how they're doing it. I mean it's baffling to me that they haven't just banned phones in schools
they tried I
Yeah, and then a couple parents bitch about it. I I like have a backbone. Yeah, and then a couple of parents bitch about it.
I like have a backbone.
Yeah.
Stand up for something.
Three second attention spans we have now.
Yeah, well, I'm also not a parent, so I get to very conveniently just stand on my little
pestle and be judgy.
I'm sure it's very hard.
Are you the Karen on the block?
Oh, I'm not really the Karen on the block.
I just sort of sit in my house and take stock of what's going on and just say,
God, it seems hard out there.
I'm kind of glad I just have my dog.
I feel that.
I love dogs.
Yeah, I do too.
I'd rather have-
Do you have dogs?
Yeah, I have two.
I want more.
Oh, how many?
I want, honestly, 10.
I want to be one of those people
who has like the senior dog compound.
Yeah, we've had many conversations about that.
Yeah.
I just don't know if I could take the emotional damage
from losing a dog a year or whatever.
So I usually, I've had a habit of rescuing older dogs.
Now all the dogs I've had are at least six or seven.
And there's just something, you kind of on the one hand
know you're signing up for Heartbreak earlier,
but I find it so fulfilling and rewarding.
And then they're a little calmer too.
So, you know, it's like you don't have to take care
of a puppy.
Yeah, I can see that.
You might've sold me on it.
I might have to try.
I highly recommend giving it a shot.
They love you so much.
I mean, all dogs love you, but the older ones especially.
And then I just see my little dog there
and she's on a pillow and I know that she was on the street
and it just, oh, warms my heart.
Yeah, you feel fulfilled at that.
I love that.
How many dogs you got?
Just one. Oh, just one? Oh just one. Yeah, okay
One little four seasons creature. No, I can barely feel one. You're probably traveling a lot, right? Yeah
Yeah, that's the tough part leaving them for a week. Yeah leaving them for a week. She doesn't like it
I don't like it. But on the other hand, I like to leave so
One's good. I feel that you working on anything else another book or you know, I'm not working on any other books
I kind of got burned out. I got really burned out on writing. I
I am NOT someone who you know, I have two books. I don't love writing
So that's a lot of work to put into something that doesn't fulfill you. I've transitioned into oil painting oil paint
Yes, which I love it's it very, it gives me the same creative itch.
It scratches that itch,
but I don't feel like it yells at me.
Like the words literally yell at me on the page
when they're wrong, whereas painting feels a bit more,
this is art, nobody cares, just, you know.
More relaxing.
Make a stroke, yeah.
Yeah, I've been offered a lot of book deals
and I just, it seems like a lot of work. It's a lot of work
I mean you could hire a ghostwriter. I suppose if you wanted to but then it won't feel authentic. Yeah, so that's my battle with it
Yeah, it's a lot of work and I think it's
Almost not worth it to have a medium book. You got to write a great book or don't write a book
Yeah, cuz the money is only good if it does well. And the money's shit even if you does do well.
You could probably self-publish it and do way better anyway
at this point.
Yeah, it's really just for purpose
if you're going to write one at this point.
Yeah, for a book like mine, it's nice to have the backing
of a publisher because it's on a tricky topic.
It can very easily get lost in the realm
of kind of crazy voices talking
and not really having anything rooted.
So for me, it was really important to write it really well,
have a traditional publisher, do all the traditional stuff,
but believe me, I'm not rich based on this book.
I think I've spent roughly 10 times more
than I've ever made on it.
Wow.
So a loss money.
Oh, of course, yeah. I mean, there's the lost income from all the years've ever made on it. Wow. So a lost money. Oh, of course, yeah.
I mean, there's the lost income from all the years
I was working on it.
Right.
There's the fact that my advanced was, you know,
roughly a couple months rent.
And then all the PR, all the travel, like some of that's
paid for by your publisher and whatnot.
But at the end of the day, you're just hustling by yourself
and selling it by yourself.
And then you get literal pennies on the dollar back from every retail.
Well, I love the honesty, for real. People don't really talk about this side of publishing.
Yeah, that's because they're either a best-selling author.
How do you get that? Because I see it in everyone's Instagram bios. Is there a certain amount of
copies you have to sell? Oh, for God sakes. At this point, you can buy it. You can literally buy it in the sense that,
okay, I think there was this article that went around the writing community a few years ago where
when Amazon was really pushing hard, still is on self-publishing,
he decided to write a best-selling book. So he picked the most obscure topic he could,
which I believe was foot health. He designed a cover in like two minutes.
I don't think there was any words written in this book.
What?
But it was just because it was the only book being sold
within this particular time in that category.
He became a number one new release bestseller in foot health.
So that's how people game Amazon
and then they put bestseller in there.
Wow, so no words were in the book, just photos.
Not this one.
Yeah.
Or maybe there was like one word or something, but it wasn't a book about foot health.
And there's no quality control.
So you can game the Amazon system that way really easily.
And people do that all the time to the point where I don't even bother if I see bestseller
in a title.
It's just like, yeah, this is just-
That used to mean something, but these days there's so many weird categories yeah and now even the New York Times list and
those lists they're not really about who has sold the most books it's very it's
curated oh it's curated and weighted Wow see that's why I like podcasting
because you can't fake that exactly like it's based off your downloads so like
you really can't be number one without having some data. Yeah so it actually means something.
Yeah.
And there's five million podcasts.
Well congratulations you've done very well.
Yeah that was a fun thing to hit.
Any TV shows?
I know you went on Chopped.
Yes I am a Chopped champion.
Are you going on again or?
No I have not been invited back.
I would go back occasionally people get brought back for a tournament of champions, but I was not.
I was actually in an antidepressant draw
when we filmed that.
Jeez, did they know?
No, they didn't.
Well, they knew something was up because I was a mess.
I was crying constantly.
Damn, how'd you win in that state of mind?
I have no idea.
I have no idea. I remember at one point the producer
So when you're on a show like chopped, it's not like you just show up and no one's ever heard of you
And you just go like someone has been part of your journey for a little while because you do various rounds of interviews
I had the same producer the whole time
Okay, so I had kind of been in contact and met in person
because I did an interview, an on-camera interview
with this producer.
So we had a little bit of a rapport.
She knew my personality, I knew her name.
There was a group of people who came to my bakery
that I owned and they did a little teaser.
So when I showed up, it's like she kind of was assigned
to me and me only.
And so at one point, she didn't know what was going on with me
But at one point I was just a complete emotional mess, and she just literally looked at me, and she was like you need to calm down
Okay, and so I
Just am so grateful to the editors of that show because they did not they could have edited me into a complete mess
And they didn't wow that is shocking for reality TV to not have that in there. I know, I don't know why they did that.
I'm- Probably prevent a lawsuit.
Extremely grateful.
I don't even know if it was that.
I think, honestly, I think they knew something was going on with me and they just didn't
feel the need to exploit it.
I feel that.
Because I was kind of a mumbling mess anyway, so I was already a good character.
Do you still have the bakery?
I don't.
The bakery got sold.
I sold my half in 2017. Nice. We still have the bakery? I don't. The bakery got sold. I sold my half in 2017.
Nice.
We still have the book.
It's called Prohibition Bakery and it's still a beautiful book and it sells and it's
boozy cupcakes and so you can learn to make them at home.
But the whole thing has now been shut down for many years and
it's kind of a time and place.
You're still cooking though or you're done?
I am still cooking.
I actually am a chef to pro athletes.
Whoa.
Yes.
That's cool.
It's very cool.
So I get to talk about antidepressant withdrawal and then go make cookies and it's pretty a chef to pro athletes. Whoa. That's cool. It's very cool.
So I get to talk about antidepressant withdrawal
and then go make cookies and it's pretty great.
What a balance.
Yeah.
Is cooking like your de-stressor?
It kind of is.
Yeah.
I've had a complicated relationship with it.
When you own your own food business,
it's very difficult not to grow to hate the thing
you once loved.
So I had to work my way back through that.
But now what I've done is I
I've spent a lot of years after the end of the antidepressant situation
Getting my health back and really learning about the type of nutrition that is not
You know part of the food pyramid and is not really you know government what the government is telling us to eat, right?
And that's what people learn about nutrition.
Right.
They're like, oh, the food pyramid greens, let's eat all those.
And what I've learned is that is really not the way to go.
If you want true health and wellness.
Eat some cheese.
Eat some good cheese, some raw cheese, organic grass.
I love raw cheese.
Yes.
But as I started healing myself and I've always had a really strong background in athletics,
I, you know, through a little bit of luck,
a little bit of knowing the right person,
being in the right place,
I got connected with some pro athletes
and I started working with them one on one.
So that's just evolved.
And now that's my primary day to day.
And then I do the advocacy on the side,
but it really is a nice balance to just go get to touch beautiful ingredients and work
with them and cook them and I can literally create an energetic transfer between the work
I do and the food I make and then go turn on the TV and watch my athlete, you know,
on Sunday night, crush it.
It's a very cool thing.
It's so important for athletes dieting
When the Lakers won three years ago, they cut seed oils out here. Oh, thank God
Yeah, that's that's why everyone played like amazing. It's it's such low-hanging fruit to do that, but it's not common
There's all the inflammation it causes. Oh, yeah
Yeah, meanwhile some of the players I worked are like, yeah
I will you know eat eat some chicken wings and onion rings them barfed before the game and
It's just like I can't help you. They could be so much better and it's crazy to me because in high school
I ran a mile in 440 which was decent but my diet was so bad
So bad if I eat what I eat now, I could probably run a mile in 420
It's insane and not only that the recovery and longevity. That's what
Really gets me when you're young you can get away with that stuff. But you know, when I work with my athletes very often, usually
not the 21 year olds who are coming to me because they still feel invincible. But I'm
getting, I'm getting your people who are nearing or at the end of their careers, but no, they're
not done. And you have to dial it in at that point. But if they had done that 10 years
ago,
they'd be dominating. Yeah. And your twenties, you could get away with like eating fast food and you have to dial it in at that point. But if they had done that 10 years ago.
They'd be dominating. Yeah, in your 20s you could get away
with like eating fast food and shit food,
but 30s that's where it starts piling up, right?
But the thing is people think that, okay, it's just age.
So they just attribute the fact
that they feel like shit to age when it's not.
It's a collection of choices that have been made.
But the thing is you can reverse that.
I feel better now than I've ever felt in my entire life. Really? Yeah. Wow. I
Mean Brian Johnson is aging backwards. So it's it's physically possible. He's fascinating. Yeah, he's coming on next week
I'm oh man. I should have come a week later. I'd love to have met him
Um, I am fascinated with what he's doing. I can say it's not for me. I can't do the vegan
I can't either. I need I need more vegan. I can't do that either. I
need more calories. I need, yeah, I straight up need meat. Yeah. I just do better. Grass-fed,
grass-finished meat. Yeah. What meat are you using these days? I like Snake River. I like
Colorado Kraft beef and oh, Force of Nature. I like Force of Nature. I use Force of Nature all
the time. Yeah, I love Force of Nature. Yeah, they're great. Yeah, I don't know how much that matters
when it gets down to that little nitty gritty, but.
Yeah, I think it's more of just where you,
kind of where you like.
I mean, my dream would be to buy a cow.
I would like to rent a dairy cow.
People do that.
They spend like two grand, get a whole cow.
No, I want to rent a live dairy cow.
Oh, a live?
Yeah, so I can go get milk.
This is in my fantasy.
It's going to live near me in the farmland that I don't have
where I can just go get the milk,
and other people can too.
And then to just, I researched how to rent a cow.
It was an amusing Google.
And then, yeah, I would love to just have
a direct relationship with ranchers
where I can get the beef I want.
I don't really have the volume of storage space for that,
but I feel so much better when I eat like that.
So much better.
So much better.
I even eat at restaurants now and I feel like shit.
I feel like shit.
Cause the meat is just injected with who knows what.
I pretty much stopped eating at restaurants.
I'm so picky.
Yeah, me too.
It has to be like no seed oils,
which then you're that annoying person asking about it, so I don't
really want to do that because I feel bad for the server.
Yeah.
I find it pretty easy just to ask them to make it
in butter.
They all have butter back there.
Yeah.
Especially like your kind of more fast casual places.
In some ways, it's actually easier.
I feel that.
Like a high end restaurant, like I used to work in high end Michelin star restaurants.
They'll do whatever you want most of the time,
but there's a lot of things
that they've just already prepared ahead of time
that you can't mess with,
or you're just not gonna get the same experience, but.
Even the high end ones use seed oils, I heard.
Oh yeah, we would use seed oils all the time.
Because not only do seed oils,
seed oils do a lot of things, they have a lot of function.
So it's not even just that, yeah, they're cheap to process,
but we used grape seed oil all the time
in one of the French restaurants I worked in,
because it has a neutral flavor.
So you can kind of impart anything into it.
So if you wanna make like a sorrel oil,
sorrel is this really lemony bright green.
We would just mix some grape seed oil into the sorrel.
Wow.
And it would, it was beautiful. And then we'd use that as a garnish on the plate.
But you couldn't do that with olive oil because then you're tasting olive oil.
Couldn't do it with butter because then it's cloudy.
Mm.
Can't do it with tallow because then it's going to taste like cow.
So that's part of the reason in high-end restaurants too,
you have different oils that have different purposes. Damn. I bought Brian Johnson's olive oil. like cow. So that's part of the reason in high end restaurants too,
you have different oils that have different purposes.
I bought Brian Johnson's olive oil.
He has olive oil?
Yeah.
He's selling a lot now.
I will say his marketing leading up to his launch
is brilliant.
Oh, well he's very good at what he's doing.
Yeah, and I heard he's doing millions of months.
I'm sure he is.
Yeah, that was a great marketing campaign.
I'm sure he is.
God bless him for selling olive oil.
What don't you agree with him on?
I just don't, I guess what I,
I think you just don't need to do that much to live well.
Okay, so you think he's too extreme?
I mean, he's definitely extreme.
I don't think anybody can argue with that.
He would say the opposite probably.
Well, we all have our biases, right?
But I think for me, a better life has come through addition by subtraction.
So I think that our bodies are designed to work most of the time and that if we just
give it what it needs, we can really do that.
But I'm glad he's out there doing it.
It's a fascinating experiment.
We'll see how it goes.
I tried the supplement stock. Oh my gosh. I felt my liver hurting because he takes 150 supplements
a day. Yeah, that's what I don't understand is how his body's like detoxing. Yeah, I only got up to
30-40 and I felt physical pain in my organs. It was bad. It's just so hard to know because he's
an N of one, right? So he may have the ability to process all this stuff and
move it through a system a lot faster than your average person he's also built
up to it yeah yeah shout out to him and Dave Asprey man 150 solvents a day both
of them shout out to both of them but I can barely manage to like remember to
take for real going back to how we started what what's the best way to
taper off let's say people watching this are on some sort of medication.
Like have you figured out a good system for leaning off it?
So I'm not a doctor.
However, most doctors don't know about this stuff anyway,
so I have to say that.
But the traditional way of pulling people off
psychiatric drugs isn't a linear taper.
Or you just kind of step down based on
the available dosages from the market. So we'll use
effects as an example. If I'm correct, the available doses are I think 150, 75, and
37.5. So that's it. You can't find 80 milligrams, or you can't find 5
milligrams. So traditionally what's happened is psychiatrists or doctors have just said, okay, well, either
go down to the next lowest dose or sometimes they'll say take it every other day.
Sometimes they'll say cut the pills in half.
A lot of that stuff is you really got to know the pharmacology of the drug because you cannot
cut all pills in half.
You cannot go every other day with some of them.
It's just kind of a crap shoot. All doctors do it differently and that's a problem. That's
part of the problem here. We have spent so much time and money putting people on
drugs and yet no one knows how to take them off and that's a big, big, big
problem. So some research has evolved around this. The most prominent research
is based on the work by Mark Horowitz, who's out of the University
of College London.
And so he just came out with a book co-authored with another professor, another doctor, who
actually they've both been through antidepressant withdrawal.
That in itself is really important because so many of these clinicians, they just don't
believe their patients.
They will misdiagnose withdrawal as relapse, And that's how you get put on something else.
It's why there are so many people who get diagnosed as bipolar or ADHD or
manic after they've been on a drug for a while and try and get off of it.
It's because they're getting misdiagnosed because people think
it's withdrawal, not relapse.
So the Maudsley D prescribingelines, it's a big book that came out
just this year in February. There's the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines. So that's a big fat
textbook about how to prescribe drugs. That's been out for years. I mean, I want to say probably
decades. The Deprescribing Guidelines only just came out in February 2024. And this book, it
outlines the most of the most common psych drugs are still
working on antipsychotics in a different volume, but it follows, the theory is, it follows what's
called a hyperbolic curve based on PET scans that show the serotonin, the CERT system, basically the
serotonin occupancy system in the brain. And so the idea is, and where people get a little mixed up, at least where we think the
science is today, this could be different in five years, how science works, right?
People think that, I'm going to use Prozac in like a hundred milligram dose because it'll
be easier with the math.
So let's say you're on a hundred milligrams of Prozac.
People think that if you drop down to 50 milligrams,
then you have 50% less Prozac in your body, right?
They think the brain will also respond 50% like that it will have a 50% reduced response to the Prozac because there's less of it in the brain, right?
And then same so on and so forth.
If you have 25 milligrams in the body and in the
brain, you'd think that you should be having a
quarter of the response as you would at a
hundred milligrams.
Yeah.
But that's really not how it's been, how we
think it works because what happens is when these
drugs go into the body, they change the way the
receptors work, they down-regulate the receptors.
There's more of the synthetic drug floating around. go into the body, they change the way the receptors work, they down-regulate the receptors,
there's more of the synthetic drug floating around.
And so the brain basically changes, it adapts to having more drugs in its system and it
does not adapt as quickly to having the drugs out of the system as we've been led to think.
So what can happen is if you look at these curves, it's called a hyperbolic curve because
it kind of goes flat and then they usually kind of drop off a cliff a little bit. And so it's that
cliff drop off that's really important for people to understand because that's usually the period
of time when people are more likely to have severe withdrawal symptoms. But what's very,
very frustrating about this is that if you look at the Prozac curve specifically, so you're going
around, you've got your 100, you've got your 80, 70 or whatever, then you kind of go down to the
point where you're going to go get 10 milligrams of Prozac, which is the lowest amount on the market.
That curve is still very high. The CERT occupancy is far higher than 10%. I want to say it's around
60%. I might be a little wrong in my number there, but it's significantly higher than 10%. I want to say it's around 60%. I might be a little wrong in my number there,
but it's significantly higher than 10%.
And so what happens then, right?
Someone's like, okay, I'm feeling, yeah, you know, okay,
but I think I'm going to pull off my next,
I'm going to stop the drug.
They go from 10 milligrams to zero
because they have no way to get the right dose.
And then they have, but they have the 60, whatever,
plus or minus 60% occupancy rate in their brain.
And then suddenly the drugs out of their system
and the system just goes haywire.
Because what they needed to do was step down
on this hyperbolic curve.
So that's where we think withdrawal happens.
It's basically the disconnect between
what the brain is doing and what the brain has
been conditioned to do based on having these synthetic drugs in the system and also the amount
of drugs that are actually in the system. Wow, that's fascinating. It's fascinating. So the way
around this, right? How do we get around it? The only way we can really get around it without having
more smaller doses on the market is to go to a compound
pharmacy and to understand hyperbolic tapering.
So if you're someone who's aware of this and you go to your doctor and your doctor is also
aware of this and willing to help you, which unfortunately not all of them are, but assuming
you got a good one, they can write a prescription for a compound pharmacy so you can have a
smaller dose. So the modestly prescribing guidelines recommend roughly a 10% cut per
time. So again, when we think about the way this works, if you're on 100 milligrams and
you cut down 10%, we're going to 90 milligrams. So we hang out on 90 for a while, 10% of 90
is nine. So now we go down to 81 milligrams.
And you can see how the dosage cut gets smaller and smaller every time.
And also how it gets more and more tedious.
It takes longer.
The longer to go off, the closer you get to the curve because you're making smaller and
smaller cuts.
Right.
Because 100 milligrams, that would take a year plus.
It could take a really long time and not everybody has to go that slow. Uh, it tends to become more important to make smaller cuts.
The closer you get to falling off that curve and towards dropping down to zero.
Some people can kind of go linearly and then start going down a curve.
It depends on the drug.
It ends up being very much an experiment of one.
People have to go at the speed of their own body.
The loose guidelines of 10% are just kind of where
they've found where there seems to be less likelihood
of having severe withdrawal.
That doesn't mean some people don't still have
severe withdrawal at 10% and it doesn't mean
that some people can't go faster.
But it's definitely a different strategy than going linear.
Yeah.
But of course then there's the additional problem
of okay, not everybody has a compound pharmacy.
I've never even heard of that actually.
Yeah, well if you don't have a compound pharmacy,
then you've got people literally being their own drug lords
in their home with Graham scales, with razor blades,
they're counting beads and capsules,
they're shaving off the edges of pills,
they are making solutions,
and titrating it through eye droppers. It's insane.
But the problem is that people have to do this because of a drug that they were told was safe
and non-addictive. And that's what pisses me off. And that's why it pisses me off when we're giving
this stuff to kids. And we don't know what they're signing them up for. Actually, we do know what
they're signing them up for. We're signing them up to be, to view themselves as broken, to have to manage a lifetime of medication, to never have their
brain and body develop in the way it should. And then one day when they decide to maybe get off
of these drugs, they have no knowledge of how to do it. None of the doctors know how to do it.
They don't know who they are. So when they start having different feelings and emotions,
they think there's something wrong with them and they're scared of it. Then there's like sexual side effects, there's gross side effects, like everything.
And no one's talking about it. I mean, Sean, I'm on your podcast. I'm a chef. Why am I the one here
talking about this? That's so frustrating to me. There should be doctors from every major hospital
talking about this. There should be lawmakers talking about this.
Yeah.
Not patient advocates who have been having to sound the bell
in order to get the attention on something that should have happened a long time ago.
Big Pharma has a lot of money and influence on social media platforms.
But the thing is they could also make more money.
Just like, I don't see how this isn't effectively a win-win.
Right?
Well, in their eyes, if they get people off the medication, they lose money.
Yes, but the amount of time and the amount of different drugs, like, things they could
make, because right now, if you go to a compound pharmacy, the compound pharmacy is taking
that money.
If they just provided smaller doses, that would be huge.
If there was a code for antidepressant withdrawal, insurance companies could start making money
and also the condition would become recognized. Oh, is it not recognized right now?
No.
Well, I mean, it's, you know, it's not, you can't find it in like the DSM.
You can't code for it.
Is that because it's new though, or is it because they don't want it?
Probably a little column A, a little column B. I mean, this is definitely a fairly new
discourse.
Yeah, not enough research yet.
You said the first research came out in 2015, right?
Well, there's been some research on it, but the first systematic review.
So the first time someone sat down and looked at the landscape and kind of said,
what's going on here was 2015.
Yeah, which is pretty recent.
Right.
But most of the research that has been done on antidepressants and all psychiatric drugs has not considered withdrawal.
So you got to think about how that impacts the whole landscape
of psychiatry, mental health, right? Because if you've had 60 years of giving people psychiatric
drugs of all kinds, all kinds, starting, you know, Valium in the 60s all the way up to Adderall,
whatever it is, and none of the research, because the research is going to look at, okay, we give
people these drugs, what happens?
And then sometimes it looks at,
well, do they relapse if they stop it, right?
And if none of the research looks at withdrawal
and considers that withdrawal was part of the problem
or that people were experiencing withdrawal,
then you have all this science that just says,
oh, all these people relapsed, the drug must be effective.
Not all these people are having withdrawal effects from the drug.
They're actually fine.
And we can't untangle that from history.
But we know now because it's been so long that you have people who've been on these
drugs for decades and they're not getting better and they're getting worse and you have
more and more people crying to get off of them and no way to get off of them.
Now we know we've created a problem.
So it's a matter of, I don't know if we're necessarily
rolling back the clock on any of this, that's for sure.
But the individual can certainly be empowered
to take charge of their own health.
And in a lot of cases to help educate their doctor.
And then the two people together can actually go forth
and help them get off these drugs if that's what they want.
Scary times. Yeah, isn't the average elderly person on like eight different medications? doctor and then the two people together can actually go forth and help them get off these drugs if that's what they want.
Scary times.
Yeah, isn't the average elderly person on like eight different medications?
I don't know how many the average is, but polypharmacy and amongst the elderly population
is very common.
Scary.
Yeah.
And I know you were on Michaela's show.
She dealt with this.
Her dad dealt with this.
Yep.
So it's-
You said you dealt with it.
I dealt with this.
Yeah.
I almost died from it. It's everywhere. It's everywhere.
And if you don't know what's happening,
you really run the risk of being misdiagnosed
and putting on more drugs
and your system's already compromised at that point.
Yeah, I love your message.
I think it's really important.
Brooke, where can people find you
and learn more about you?
Well, my name is Brooke Seam.
That's B-R-O-O-K-E-S-I-E-M.
You can find me all over the internet at Brooke Seam.
My book is May Cause Side Effects.
It's available wherever books are sold on audiobook.
And I have a newsletter that's on Substack.
So that's brookeseam.substack.com.
Awesome, we'll link below.
Thanks for coming on.
Thank you, Sean.
Thanks for watching guys, as always.
See you tomorrow.