Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - BITESIZE | What Hunter-Gatherers Can Teach Us About Movement, Exercise and Ageing Well | Professor Daniel Lieberman #624
Episode Date: February 13, 2026Why do we find it so hard to exercise despite knowing how good it is for us? Feel Better Live More Bitesize is my weekly podcast for your mind, body, and heart. Each week I’ll be featuring inspir...ational stories and practical tips from some of my former guests. Today’s clip is from episode 514 of the podcast with Professor of Biological Science and Professor in the Department of Human Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, Daniel Lieberman. Daniel is the author of the brilliant book Exercised: Why Something We Never Evolved To Do is Healthy and Rewarding. In this clip, he reveals a fascinating truth: we didn’t evolve to exercise, but movement is key to living well. He challenges some common beliefs that exist around exercise and we discuss simple, practical ways of building sustainable movement habits into our daily lives. Thanks to our sponsor https://drinkag1.com/livemore Show notes and the full podcast are available at https://drchatterjee.com/514 Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com. DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to constitute or be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
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Welcome to Feel Better Live More bite size, your weekly dose of positivity and optimism to get you ready for the weekend.
Today's clip is from episode 514 of the podcast with Professor Daniel Lieberman.
Daniel is the author of the brilliant book, Exercised, while something we never evolved to do is healthy and rewarding.
In this clip, he reveals a fascinating truth.
We didn't evolve to exercise, but movement is key to living well.
He challenges some common beliefs that exist around exercise
and shares simple ways of building sustainable movement habits into our daily lives.
Everyone listening, I'm sure, has been hammered with the message
that exercise, that physical activity is good for us, it's good for your body,
it's good for your brain, it's good for your long.
etc., etc., etc.
So we've all got the knowledge that we possibly, probably should be moving more.
Yet despite having that knowledge, so many of us are simply unable to put that into action regularly.
And they start to blame themselves.
They start to feel guilty, which is a huge problem that I see and have seen in practice for many years.
So I wanted to start with this apparent paradox, this idea that exercise is something that is
really, really good for us on so many levels.
Yet at the same time, it's not necessarily something that we have evolved to want to do.
Oh, I would say we didn't evolve to do it at all.
But yeah, that paradox is what really motivated my last book, Exercise.
And maybe to answer your question, I'll give an anecdote, right?
I was in Mexico doing some research, and we were studying, you know, runners and people who run
and actually discovered that most of the Taramara, famous for running, don't actually run very much.
But anyway, there was this one elder fellow who was a famous runner to these very long-distance races,
and I was being a good anthropologist, and I was asking what kinds of questions.
And one of the questions was about training, and I was beginning to realize that my concept of training was kind of alien to the Taramara.
and this guy just looked at me
and I could tell
without even the translator
saying anything
it's like
why would anybody run
if they didn't have to?
And I suddenly had this like
this little epiphany
right that our concept of exercise
is alien to most people
right?
And of course I work in parts of the world
where people are very physically active
they work hard
here I was in a part of the world
where people are hardworking farmers
they've got no machines
they've got no running water
they've got you know they're doing everything by hand
they occasionally do these
long-distance races, which, by the way, are a form of prayer. That's why they do them.
But the idea of going for a five-mile run in the morning is nuts. Nobody does that. And I had
this moment that, yes, we evolved to be physically active. But the kind of what we call
exercise, which I define as voluntary, discretional physical activity, it's planned for the
sake of health and fitness, is a completely modern idea. And furthermore, if you're struggling,
if you're a farmer or a hunter-gatherer,
of course we were hunter-gatherers
for most of our existence,
if you're struggling to get enough energy,
struggling to feed your family,
going for a five-mile run in the morning,
which is about 500 calories,
is a terrible idea, right?
Because those 500 calories
is energy that you could use
either on your own body
or on your family, right?
So the idea of doing unnecessary,
voluntary physical activity
for no reason other than for your health and fitness,
when you're already very physically active is nuts.
So we evolved to avoid physical activity except for two reasons,
when it's necessary or when it's rewarding.
So play is important and rewarding.
Work is rewarding.
A race might be rewarding.
But getting on a treadmill in the morning in a gym,
you know, with fluorescent lights in a room with no air, etc.,
working as hard as you can, getting absolutely nowhere,
there's a reason people dislike it.
We never evolved to do that.
Yeah.
I think that's a very powerful message today.
And, you know, we're having this conversation in London.
I'm rarely in London these days, but I came last week for a couple of days.
And I think the underground station where I took a photo and posted on social media really
illustrated your point, which was this beautiful flight of stairs.
And on one side was an escalator going down.
on the other side of an escalator going up,
and literally there was nobody on the stairs
and both sides of the escalators were full.
And the first thing I said is,
this is not a post about blame.
But I thought it just beautifully illustrated
the problem that we have in modern society,
which is, why would you choose to take the stairs
if you don't have to?
Of course, it's an instinct to take the escalator.
There are no escalators in the Stone Age.
I think I can say that with definitive knowledge.
There are actually a series of papers that have been now done in many different countries.
And it doesn't matter where you are on the planet, when there's a staircase next to an
escalator, only less than 5% of people take the staircase.
And it doesn't matter what culture you are, it's a universal.
Because it's an instinct to, if you can save energy, why wouldn't you?
And I imagine that our hunter-gatherer ancestors would also have taken the escalation.
later had that option been available to them.
Of course, and I think in addition to the fact that it's an instinct, not to, not to exercise,
right, not to be physically active when it's neither necessary nor rewarding, that we also engage
in this in this form of blame or shame, right? And you have to remember that we're asking
people to overcome a very deep-seated instinct, right? And then people feel bad about themselves
because they feel that, sure, I mean, they wake up in the morning and they think, well, yeah, I should
go for a run or I should do this or I should lift some weights or something and they don't do it
for one reason or another and then they feel really bad right and then they think that well they're lazy
there's something wrong with them they're actually normal right they're completely normal human beings
and we i think our job is to try to figure out how to help people be physically active to
maybe not even exercise but how to be physically active in a way that um that doesn't cause that
kind of you know do it in a positive way rather than a negative way and
And I think, and no offense, I know because you're a physician,
but you're a physician that cares seriously about prevention.
But I think one of the problems is that we've medicalized exercise.
We consider it a pill, right?
And nobody likes to take pills.
Nobody likes to, you know, it doesn't make it fun.
It doesn't solve that particular problem of overcoming that barrier.
I mean, I'm sure you know that most medications, people don't take their medications either.
So if people don't take their pills for diabetes or this, that, or the other,
why are they going to take the exercise pill?
Yeah, so perhaps a new PR angle is needed around exercise.
Because it's often called the magic pill, isn't it, exercise?
And, you know, anti-cancer, anti-aging, anti-mental health problems, anti-everything.
And I think we have this idea that you have to swim the English Channel or run a marathon
or do a full triathlon, you know, Iron Man, etc.
Absolutely not necessary.
Again, some exercise is better than none.
More is generally better, but the benefits tail.
off. It's interesting. The movements that, you know, our ancestors used to do regularly,
and you've detailed them in depth in exercised, but they're not doing those things for the purpose
of health and well-being. Like, that's a, that's a byproduct of doing what they need to do in
order to survive, right? So it's, it's a side effect. So it is a side. I mean, you're right. They do it
because they have to, right?
They don't have, if you want to have dinner that day, you have to go out, you have to be physically active
to get food, right?
There's no Uber Eats in the Paleolithic, right?
So it's true.
Physical activity was absolutely necessary.
But I think that it's not just a side effect.
I would argue that human beings, not only like every other animal, benefit from being physically active,
but there was special selection in human evolution for exercise to be unusually potent for enabling us to live
long and healthy lives. And that's something that makes us different from every other organism.
So to understand that, you have to recognize that we evolve from apes. Our closest living
relatives are chimpanzees. And, you know, those shows on TV where you watch chimpanzees
and they're doing all kinds of amazing, wonderful things. They do that, but very rarely. Most
of the time, chimpanzees just sit and eat. And then occasionally do some wild, crazy things,
have sex, run around, throw things, and then they go back to eating and digesting. And
So chimpanzees turn out to be basically couch potatoes.
They're incredibly inactive.
Typical chimpanzee walks two to three kilometers a day.
It takes as many steps per day as a sedentary American.
Sleeps 12 hours a night.
And that's kind of a chimpanzee life.
And then we evolved for two things that are very special in this regard.
One is that we evolved to be way more physically active.
So we've got data on hunter-gatherers and citizens as farmers.
These people are taking 15 to 20,000 steps a day.
They're running.
they're carrying, they're climbing, they're doing all kinds of things.
So we evolved to be extra active compared to our ape ancestors.
That's one thing.
But the other thing that's important is that we also evolved to live very long lives
after we stop reproducing.
So almost every species on the planet stops, you know,
basically doesn't last very long after they stop reproducing.
That's because natural selection, sadly, cares about only one thing,
and that's how many offspring we have, right?
So once you stop having offspring, you enter what's called,
the selective shadow. I love that term, right? It means that you're basically relevant, right?
There's no selection to keep you alive after you stop having babies. And humans are one of very few
species for which that's an exception. And that's because human grandparents actually play
an important role in helping their children and their grandchildren. And what are they doing?
Well, I mean, they're passing on knowledge and all that sort of thing, but they're also
hunting and gathering. They're foraging. Grandparents in hunter-gather societies are out there
every day. Grandmothers are digging up tubers and other sorts of things and bringing them back
for their children and their grandchildren. Grandfathers are out there hunting and bringing back honey
and all sorts of things like that. They're physically active. And so we evolved to live long
lives, not retiring, going to the beach and, you know, playing canasta or whatever it is. We evolved
to live long lives to be physically active. And in turn, I believe that there's been selection in our
revolutionary history for the effects of that physical activity to turn on the mechanisms in our
body that help us increase our health span, which means increases our lifespan. So physical activity
isn't just something you do to get the food, it is. But the reason that exercise or physical
activity is so healthy is that we've undergone selection for that physical activity to turn on
all kinds of repair and maintenance mechanisms that keep us healthy. And because we never evolved
not to be physically active, we never evolved to turn them on to the same extent when we're inactive.
So instead of thinking of exercise as medicine, I would think of inactivity as being like poison
or like not having air. Yeah, so it's not necessarily that exercise or physical activity is
good for us. It's that the lack of doing it is really harmful. Exactly. We call that a mismatch
in evolution. It's an evolutionary mismatch. Just like we never evolved not to breathe, right? That's a
problem, right? We never evolved not to be physically active. And when we stop being physically active,
everything goes wrong. I mean, literally, because physical activity affects every system in our body.
Yeah. It's so fascinating where you were even writing about how a nursing mother,
yes, she still does some gathering, I think, but you were sort of making the case that the
grandmas are way more active. I thought that was really, really interesting. Because that's
quite alien to the common belief, I would say, certainly in Western cultures, that you can
kind of slow down a bit as you get older. And we have this modern phenomena that's retirement,
right? Yeah. They're digging. They're carrying. They're walking. This is what you do. And it's
rewarding, of course, but it's also necessary. And I think, in turn, that physical activity
helps them live to be the, to live to be grandparents in the first place. Think about it this way.
In the West today, a lot of people as they get older
become less active.
We know that from lots and lots of studies.
And that we don't turn on those repair and maintenance mechanisms
that keep us healthy, so we're more likely to get heart disease
and diabetes and osteoporosis and Alzheimer's
and the list of diseases very long.
But now we have medicine, people like you,
can keep them going, right?
And so we can enable us to live,
we have reasonably long lifespans,
even with a lot of chronic disease.
So the average American, I think, their lifespan is 78, 79.
The average health span, the number of years
that average American lives without entering a period of chronic disability
is about 60 something, 63.
So the average American spends 16 years before they die
in a state of chronic disease.
Yeah. In terms of walking,
there's a maximism there that we should aim to have around 10,000 steps per day.
What's your take on that?
Oh, well, you know, that's kind of a funny story.
I don't sure if you've covered that on this on your podcast before,
but, you know, that 10,000 steps a day came from,
there was this accelerometer that was created for the, in Japan,
just before the Olympics in 64.
And the story is that apparently in this company,
they were sitting around the table and deciding what to call it.
And apparently 10,000 is an auspicious number in Japanese.
And they said, well, let's call it the 10,000 steps meter.
And it turns out it's actually not that bad, right?
It's a, you know, it's not bad as a recommendation, I mean, you know, it turns out to be okay.
So if that's a, if that'll help you get more steps in, so, you know, if you have one of those watches that makes sure you get 10,000 steps every day, fine.
But we've, again, we've kind of medicalized it, right?
We've turned it into a prescription.
And we often talk about optimizing health or whatever.
Well, it doesn't work that way.
right? If you look at, so my colleague, Iman Lee at Harvard, has done a lot of work on step
counts and health. And if you look at some of the graphs that she's published, for example,
for some of all, there's a lot of error around the mean, but if you're interested in, say,
heart disease, the more steps you take, the better.
3,000 steps is better than 0,000 steps and 5,000 steps is better than 3,000 steps.
Is there an upper limits?
So far, I don't think she sees a limit. This is for steps. It's just walking, right?
So like if you could get to 15,000 or 20,000 steps,
it's currently from what we know that's,
we think that's going to help decrease your risk of heart disease.
That's what her data show.
But again, there's a lot of variation around the mean.
So your benefit might not be the same as my benefit.
Of course.
But if you look at the data on step counts and say all cause mortality,
it kind of evens out starting around 7,000 steps.
So once you're hitting 7,000 steps a day,
it's kind of like, look, you've got most of the benefit.
Yeah. And if you did diabetes, you'd get a different curve, et cetera, et cetera. But again, there's a, there's a mean, but there's also incredible variance around the means. So what might be good for you is not going to be the same thing as for me or if you're 50 versus if you're 20 or if you've had knee injury or I could go on, right? So we prescribe it like, you know, how many aspirin you should take or how many milligrams of such and such you should take. And it doesn't work that way, right? So maybe that helps some people, but I think other people makes them confused and agitated it.
and stressed, right?
It's yet another source of stress in their life.
Did you say before
some of these hunter-gatherer populations
that you have studied,
they're taking, what, 15 to 20,000 steps a day-ish?
Yeah, but again, that doesn't mean
that that's best for them, right?
Just because hunter-gatherers do something
doesn't mean we should do it.
It's not a prescription, right?
Instead, these are populations
that tell us about the normal range of human variation
and how our world has changed,
enabling us to now understand what's a mismatch, right?
What is it that we're not adapted for, right?
Because a mismatched disease is a disease that is more common or more severe
because our bodies are inadequately or imperfectly adapted for this novel environment.
And so these are ways of helping us identify the mismatches in our world
and then addressing them.
So there is no one number of steps to take per day.
Look, the evidence on exercise is pretty darn clear, right?
which is that, or physical activity, I should say, right?
If anything is better than nothing, right?
If you're completely sedentary, just taking a few steps, you know, more steps a day,
climbing the stairs, you know, parking your car further away from the shopping,
anything is better than nothing.
More is better.
And at a certain point, the benefits seem to tail off, right?
And but trying to come up with a number, an optimum is not,
not only impossible, I think it actually sends an incorrect message, right?
That it's like a medicine which you can prescribe in a particular dose.
It just doesn't work that way.
And I think, and we also get this idea, it's like this magic pill, right?
I mean, exercise is good for you.
There's no question about it.
Physical activity is good for you because if you don't do it, it's bad for you.
But it won't prevent all disease, it decreases your vulnerability.
So people who are physically active are much less likely to get heart disease.
much less likely to get diabetes, but they're not prevented from getting them. You can still get
diabetes if you exercise. You can still get heart disease if you exercise. You can still get all these
disease if you're reducing risk. It reduces your risk. I would say it reduces your, that's the medical term.
The evolutionary term is it reduces your vulnerability. Yeah. So looking back to what you've been saying
throughout this conversation, the case you make in exercised, like we've evolved to to move
every day, right? We've evolved to, as you say, these populations walking 15 to 20,000 steps a day.
Again, you've made the point. It doesn't mean that we have to do that same level,
but it's hard to think that we can get away without doing some degree of kind of walking,
significant walking every day. And certainly if I just reflect on, you know,
you look at things through the lens of evolution, I look at things through the lens of
what have I seen in practice over two decades?
And, you know, yes, the research supports this,
but time and time again, like, you know,
the people who do well from a whole variety of different conditions,
whether they be physical health or mental well-being,
you know, a commonality is that they're moving regularly.
And if they're not, increasing it makes a big difference.
I've seen it time and time again.
And evolution explains why.
And evolution explains why.
So you have the data in the experience, but we have this famous expression.
You know, nothing makes sense in biology except in the light of evolution.
You could actually say nothing makes sense except in the light of evolution.
And so it's the evolutionary story which explains why this is the case.
And I think that the evolutionary perspective also helps us think creatively about it too.
Yeah.
Because we don't, we're not physically active.
I mean, I could have spent my entire day doing almost nothing.
and I'm sitting in a chair here.
I could have taken the subway here, et cetera, et cetera,
and the lift up and all that sort of stuff.
So we now created this weird thing called exercise
because it's good for us.
But when we do it, we're doing it.
There's no purpose for it other than for the sake of exercise.
And that is a kind of weird thing.
And because it's not fun,
we try to divert ourselves while we're doing it
to decrease how unpleasant it is, right?
Make it as minimally unpleasant as possible, right?
you know, we've industrialized it, we've commodified it, we've medicalized it, we've, you know, we've, and there's
nothing wrong with industrialization or medicalization or commodification, but that takes away the real
kind of the purpose for it that could make it much more, I mean, I think it's why people
enjoy sports, right? Because when you play a game of football or something, right, you're, you now have
a purpose that's, and most people don't think of,
or going for a walk with a friend or playing a game of sport.
They don't often think of it as exercise, right?
They think of it as you're playing a game of football,
or you're going for a walk with your friends.
And that gives it purpose.
And I think that's, I think, one of the arguments,
one of the tricks that we should be using
to try to help each other be more physically active.
Give, make it part of our lives.
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