Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - How To Support Your Immunity, Reduce Inflammation & Age Better with Dr Jenna Macciochi #648
Episode Date: April 14, 2026Most of us only think about our immune system when we're ill. But what if it's actually the single most important system shaping your health and longevity? In this episode, Dr Jenna Macciochi makes a ...powerful case for rethinking immunity. It’s not just a defence mechanism you call on to fight a cold. It’s your body's wellness system, quietly influencing everything from your mood and metabolism to your risk of heart disease, dementia and cancer. Jenna is one of the UK's leading immunologists and a bestselling author. Her latest book, Immune to Age: The Game-Changing Science of Lifetime Health, explores the deep connection between our immune system, how we live, and how well we age. Jenna combines robust science and personal honesty in everything she does and this, her second conversation for the podcast, is no exception. Jenna explains what the immune system actually is, what it does, and why ‘boosting’ it isn’t something you want to do on a regular basis. We explore the link between chronic stress and inflammation. And we discuss how your thoughts, relationships and daily habits are constantly sending signals to your immune system that either help or hinder it. She also reveals why midlife is a genuine biological turning point. It’s the moment when genes that protected you in the first half of life start working against you, with consequences for your gut health, bone density and long-term wellbeing. But if that sounds bleak, Jenna also shares plenty of practical advice, learned from the personal upheavals that shaped her fantastic book. From leaving a misaligned marriage and job, to discovering meditation, self-compassion – and jiu-jitsu! – she transformed not just her thinking but her nervous system, too. And I love her perceptive view that the current obsession with lifespan is missing something fundamental about living well: your soulspan. Whether you're in midlife and noticing changes in your body, or you simply want to learn about the incredible wellness system driving your long-term health, this is one episode you’ll want to bookmark. Fill out our audience survey via https://drchatterjee.com/survey 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. Thanks to our sponsors: https://vivobarefoot.com/livemore https://drinkag1.com/livemore Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/648 DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The nervous system and the immune system are completely integrated.
So if we're stressed every day, your immune system is primed for inflammation,
which is then causing more wear and tear on our bodies
and ultimately is feeding into chronic diseases.
But if we start to consider how the immune system plays a role in driving these conditions,
then we can start to get ahead of what is probably the biggest health crisis that we have.
Hey guys, how you doing?
I hope you're having a good week so far.
My name is Dr. Rongan Chatterjee,
and this is my podcast.
Feel Better, Live More.
I believe that today's conversation
will transform the way you think about your immune system,
what it really does, why it matters,
and what we could all be doing to support it.
My guest is Dr. Jenna Machoki,
one of the UK's leading immunologist
and someone whose work I've admired for years.
Since Jenna was last on my show, back in 2020,
she's been through some significant life changes,
and that depth of experience is woven beautifully into her latest book, Immune to Age.
Now, you might think it's strange to focus on the immune system
just as we're coming out of cold and flu season.
But that's the thing that most of us get wrong.
We think immunity is just about fighting in terms.
infections. In fact, as Jenna reveals, the immune system is a key player in how we age, how much energy we have, and whether we develop chronic disease.
Jenna calls it our wellness system, and once you hear why, you won't think about your longevity in quite the same way.
Jenna gives one of the clearest breakdowns I've heard of how stress works in the body.
She explains the close links between chronic stress, immunity and inflammation.
We talk about why midlife is such a critical turning point for your biology.
And we discuss what self-compassion, good oral hygiene and even martial arts can do for our immune health.
What I love most about this conversation, though, is where else it takes us.
Jenna and I go way beyond the basics, talking about identity, alignment, and even pondering the meaning of life.
It's both practical and philosophical, scientific and surprising.
And I think you're going to find it incredibly powerful.
So settle in, and let's get to know our body's all-important wellness system a little better.
I wanted to start off by talking about our immune system, our misunderstood immune systems.
Many of us think that our immune systems are solely there to defend us against infections.
But in your new book, you make the case that the immune system is one of the central systems within our bodies shaping how we age.
Why is this so misunderstood?
said. Yeah, I think this is going to be my life's work to try and rebrand the immune system as
much more than just infection. In fact, I like to think of it as the wellness system, and it's
kind of our arbiter of our health across the life course. So we only think about it when we get sick.
We're like, oh, I've got that fever, I've got a flu, I've got that seasonal lurgie that's going
around. And I think we have to think about it a bit differently now. And that's kind of where
my idea came for the book.
The immune system seems to be at the heart of so many of the things that people struggle
with these days.
Yeah.
Or so immune disease, asthma, heart disease, Alzheimer's, cancer.
And we're going to talk about that throughout this conversation.
But of course, as you point out in your book, one of the hot topics at the moment is longevity.
You know, how well we're going to age.
do you think that we can say that the health of our immune system
directly correlates with how well we're aging
and arguably can predict how long we're going to live?
I think quite possibly.
I think we're not quite there yet
and being able to do that as a consumer test, let's say,
but we do have ways to measure what we call immune resilience.
And this is a sort of research-based marker
that would allow us to determine
if somebody's immune system was functioning well.
And so I don't say, you know, something like boosted
because that's not quite the right word.
We have all these different components
of the immune system need to be balanced.
And it's kind of like a rubber band.
Like it can respond when it needs to,
but come back to baseline effectively
and not kind of get triggered unnecessarily
or in an unwanted fashion,
like an autoimmune disease or an allergy.
And you mentioned a few diseases
that people might not expect
to have an immune system component like cancer, heart disease.
We have things like metabolic syndrome.
Now, these all have components of immune dysfunction going on,
which I think has long been sort of misunderstood.
And if we start to consider how the immune system plays a role
in driving these conditions, where does it go awry,
then we can start to get ahead of what is probably the biggest health crisis that we have.
It's interesting.
if I reflect back on my medical school education,
I went to Edinburgh Medical School back in 95,
and in 98, I took a year out to do an immunology degree.
It strikes me as I look back
that there was a fundamental flaw.
That might be an understandable flaw,
but a fundamental flaw nonetheless,
which was to look at everything as separate.
Yes.
Right?
This is what's going on when the heart's not working.
This is what's not working well, when the lungs are not working, or the brain's not working.
And I think our understanding as clinicians, as researchers, as scientists, has really evolved over the years,
where we're now seeing this as a connected system.
And of course, the immune system lies at the very heart of it all.
Yes, exactly.
And I kind of see it as a network.
So we call it the immune system.
But unlike other systems in our body, you know, you would be able to tell me where anatomically your digestive system is
or your respiratory system because they're located in a specific anatomical area.
But your immune system is everywhere.
It's this network system that's sort of connecting all.
It's using your lymphatic vessels and your blood vessels to move around.
It's interwoven with the barriers to your body.
So the lining of your digestive tract, your skin.
It's in your brain.
It's everywhere.
It's in the gut.
And it's there because it's constantly sensing your outside world and your internal world.
and working together with your nervous system
to feed all that information back
and give you a sense of if there's danger,
what needs healing, what needs repairing,
and how well you feel day to day.
Yeah. I really love the introduction in your new book.
And I think in the introduction,
you make the case that the immune system is made, not born.
Which I think is something for us all to reflect on.
The immune system develops depending on our life experiences,
depending on the inputs we give our body,
that then shapes the immune system and how it functions.
First of all, have I got that right?
And secondly, if so,
can you give us some sort of practical examples
of what are the kinds of things that we can do
that positively shape our immune systems?
Yeah, I think it's broadly true to say it's made not born.
We are born with certain immune functions.
but then it develops much of their early life.
So a little bit like the nervous system.
Like we're born with a nervous system,
but a baby can't talk and think and articulate
in the way that an adult does.
It has to do a lot of learning and training after birth.
And so the immune system is kind of similar to that.
And because it's responsive to your environment,
it will respond to what inputs we get.
So I think childhood is a real window of opportunity.
And this was kind of what sparked.
partly sparked writing this book because I wanted to think about life course health.
And that's something we don't often do in research because it's really expensive to do a study
of someone's entire life course.
So we tend to get a snapshot of one point in time.
And then we'll say that 25-year-old male data is the same as someone in their 60s.
And it actually might not be.
But childhood is an interesting immune window because we have this rapid immune development that happens after birth.
and a lot of that is through exposures to germs.
Now we used to have this idea that we had to have this kind of hygienic environment.
So we have in the 80s the hygiene hypothesis emerged, whereby hygiene was associated with allergies.
And I think that was kind of misguided.
And the word hygiene is not the correct word.
That's later been updated to the old friend's hypothesis by someone called Graham Rupp.
at UCL and London.
And this posits that your old friends are the good microbes
that live in our environment.
So we used to kind of think germs are bad.
Like germs are always causing infection.
But actually, 99% of the microbes around us
in the air we're breathing on the surfaces we touch
are harmless.
They're part of our environmental microbiome.
And then inside our guts on our skin and our airways,
we have our own microbiomes on our body.
and these are at these barrier surfaces.
And as I mentioned, a lot of your immune cells are also at the barrier surfaces,
and they communicate.
So a baby's born relatively sterile and then is consequently sort of colonized by microbes,
healthy good microbes, that then train and educate the immune system.
So this is probably one of the biggest inputs we have to the sort of trajectory our immune system has throughout life.
But then I think we can continually nurture those microbes.
by the environments we go into, the food we eat, the things we do that we know from the latest research,
for example, gut microbiome research, which has exploded in the last 10 years,
to try and continually nurture that good immune health.
I mean, there's studies looking at frequency of cold and flu viruses in winter
when you use like a dietary fiber intervention because you're improving the microbes in the gut.
They're improving how the immune cells are functioning in the gut.
and then they're recirculating around the body
and providing better defense to infection.
Yeah.
So you're saying that there's some research showing us
that if we increase the right type of fiber in our diets,
we're going to get less infections?
Potentially, yes.
Yeah.
But that's really interesting, isn't it?
This more holistic look at the immune system,
which I guess takes us away or a little bit away from things like,
you know, when you have a cold, take vitamin C, right?
We can maybe unpack that later.
I guess the strong sense I get from your work
and in particular reading your latest book Immune to Age
is this idea that it's everything we do.
Yes.
Everything we do, the food that we eat,
how stress we are, how much movement,
is it the right kind of movement,
even the way we talk to ourselves
also impacts the health of our immune system.
And I guess just to sort of make the full link,
if someone has tuned into this conversation
because they want better longevity, right?
They want to live well for longer.
You can't go far wrong focusing on the health of your immune system, can you?
Yes, exactly.
And I think it's like not getting too worried about
the one night of bad sleep that you might have heard
can like deplete, you know, your ability to respond to infections.
And it's more thinking about in the UK the lifespan is around 80, depending on where you live.
Think about the life course and not just focusing on the one bad meal you had or the one, you know, bad night's sleep.
I think we have to, to me, we've already had a longevity revolution and everyone keeps speaking about it.
You know, we have people like Brian Johnson and these people who are like pushing the boundaries.
of lifespan.
But, you know, it wasn't that long ago
that people would barely live beyond 50.
That's really, really close
in our evolutionary history.
So we've already kind of gained all this extra time.
But then I don't know about you,
but everyone has not enough time.
Like whenever I want to see friends
or do things, we all feel like this time poor.
And I think partly that's why we have to think
about chronic diseases a little bit differently,
because these are now the biggest causes of pro-health
in the UK, whereas perhaps a few generations ago,
it would have been infections that would have truncated life.
And we know that things like heart disease,
one of the biggest killers globally,
actually starts much, much earlier in life,
like those changes, those tiny, tiny changes
that are happening in the arteries.
And we can, like, think, like, preventatively
instead of waiting until our doctor tells us
there's something up with their blood pressure.
And I think that there's a human mindset shift.
We're still living like our evolutionary past
where it might die tomorrow
because like, you know, there's lots of dangers around.
But we actually have a good chance of living quite long.
Yeah.
And it really tells us something about the human condition,
doesn't say this idea that, guys, we've already had it
or we've already had a certain part of it.
But are we maxing out what we've already got?
Exactly.
You know, you're talking in the book about health span and lifespan and soul span, which I love.
Yeah.
But can you sort of help us understand, you know, why did you come up with the term soul span?
And what is it about the current longevity of revolution that we're not fully realizing as humans?
Yeah, I think the way you put it, the human condition is quite interesting, isn't it?
Because we're like, oh, no, now we need to live much longer.
But no, wait, we're not enjoying the time we have.
And so as I mentioned in the UK, roughly depending on where you live and whether you're male or female, the lifespan is around 80.
But the actual health span, so that's years lived in good health, is 60.
So that's a 20-year delta.
And that for me was like a massive wake-up call.
When I got to my early 40s, I was like, shit, this could be half over already.
It's not the prelude anymore.
Like sometimes we live like this is the warm up.
and then life will start.
And it's kind of like, no, wait a minute, this is it, you know.
And I want to make the best of the second half of my life.
And I think that's where I kind of got into this idea of soul span,
which was my way of thinking about time differently.
We have two forms of time.
We have linear time, which we'd mark the days off the calendar
as we, you know, march through the years.
And then we have this more kind of sacred time,
which I felt quite inspired by nature.
because I wrote the book in seasons of life
because time is circular in nature.
You know, we're just going into spring now.
Things are starting to come out, plants,
things we haven't seen green on trees.
And I grew up on a farm and everything was driven by the seasons
and, you know, the harvest was only as good as the season before.
And there was elements in the, you know, things like weather
that would determine that.
And we forget that we've made this linear time,
but time is actually really relative.
and in nature time is circular
it's always breaking down and renewing
and we can tap into that
and I feel like Einstein was like time is relative
you go on holiday and time stretches forever
but I can go and sit in my back garden
with a nice cup of tea
and I can make time slow down
just by noticing
just by being aware
just by not scrolling on my phone
just by slowing everything down
and looking at little detail
that I maybe hadn't seen before.
And I found that quite amazing.
I know it sounds very simple,
but I got a bit fascinated by time after that.
No, I love it, Jenna.
It's exactly the kind of stuff I spend a lot of time
thinking about these days.
And it was quite striking.
I'd be thinking about reaching out to you for a few months.
I keep thinking, I must get Jenna back on at some point.
And then I got your latest book, Immune to Age.
and I was gripped from the introduction.
I thought, this feels like a different Jenna
to the Jenna who came into my studio back in 2020.
And then as I started reading and listening to some of your other more recent interviews,
I thought, wow, you've been through some quite significant life changes
since I last saw you, which I think is beautifully reflected in your writing.
Yeah.
Let's talk about that as much as you're open to share as to what,
has changed in you since our first conversation.
But also it makes me think of like almost the middle part of the book
where you talk about midlife.
And midlife being this really important, I guess, stage in our life
where you actually say, don't you, beyond the age of 40,
there's a meaningful change in your biology at 40 as well as perhaps your psychology.
So can we sort of go?
I was going to go into this a bit later,
but I think now seems like the right time to go in there.
Yeah, yeah.
I think it was when the queen died.
I can't remember exactly when that was.
And I was kind of just on my laptop.
And there was lots of news stories about it
and this little online calculator.
It was like a fun, playful.
You type in all this stuff about your age demographics, et cetera,
and a number would pop out to tell you about when you might live to.
Because obviously the queen lived a very long life.
so a lot of the news stories were around that.
So I was just mindlessly doing this.
And then this number popped out.
And I was like, oh, my God, my life's half over.
And it took something as silly as that for me to be like,
there's so much that it feels misaligned.
And I think that we only have time and energy.
Those are kind of the two units of stuff that we have to work with.
And when you're not, the only word I can think to describe it as alignment,
like when you're living in alignment,
you're what you believe in,
what you enjoy and your value system and it's all wrapped up in your day to day.
And I just felt really misaligned.
And I'm sort of from that point onwards.
I threw some grenades into my life and like left my job, left my marriage, like just blew up everything.
Which I don't know if it was the right thing to do or not.
But then kind of dug myself out of the debris.
And it was the biggest teacher, I think.
But it made me make changes that made me feel more aligned.
And then by virtue of that, I got more energy.
I felt more alive.
I had more space to slow down.
I had less need to mindlessly scroll or distract myself.
I would be able to sit in the garden and just look at the trees and notice the leaves
and do that all season round and did a lot of meditation too.
And it was, after years of wanting to meditate and being, I can't, it was like, I can't not.
but I'm pleased to have gone through.
It was all very hard.
And the book kind of was birthed out of that,
which is why, you know, science is stories.
It started off as stories.
You know, people living in villages,
sharing, don't eat that, plant, it might kill you
or use this as a medicine to cure you.
It was sharing stories that we've now built
into this, you know, peer review system
and evidence-based.
But there's something very human about stories.
I found myself numb to people,
telling me information.
We get so much information now,
but we've lost agency over our lives.
And I think I had to regain agency
and sort of switch off all the information for a while.
So I tried to weave some of my own personal stories
into the book as well alongside the science.
And stories about scientists
who've shaped a lot of the discoveries that I discuss.
Yeah, thank you for sharing that.
It definitely helps me understand
how and why the tone
this book, I would say, is quite different from your first two. And it's certainly, you know,
where I'm at in my life. So I very much resonate with this. As I said to you, when you walked into
my house this morning, there's less of the what, there is plenty of what in this book in terms of,
what can you do to help improve your immune system health. Yes. Yeah. But there's a lot of the why.
I mean, why should you care? Yeah. Why should you do these things? Why, in a limited time budget,
why should you spend your time actually doing these things?
Yeah.
And as you eloquently put on the introduction,
it's the conversation around longevity
is both science and philosophy.
Yes, yeah.
You can't just look at it through the lens of science.
Or, you know, this is how you should eat,
this is how you should move.
You know, this is how many hours sleep you should get.
Okay, great, helpful.
Yeah.
And if you don't have the bigger why,
if you're not living in alignment,
are figuring out why should you do those things?
purely on a behaviour change aspect,
I think this is one of the main reasons
why people can't make habits stick in the long term.
I think about behaviour change in two levels.
There's tricks for habits, right?
Make it easy.
Stick it on to an existing habit.
You know, design your environment
in a way that supports the behaviour you want.
Those things are very, very helpful.
And I think there's a much deeper level
to behaviour change
that we don't think about enough.
And I really strongly have found that people's behaviors
will always end up matching the person
who they believe themselves to be.
Yes, 100%.
So you can try every January to change things,
but if you don't fundamentally change
how you see yourself, how you value yourself,
as you say living in alignment,
you may find that that's the real thing.
and you can't make these habits stick
because there's a slight disconnect.
100%.
And actually in my second book,
I remember reading this study.
It was actually a weight loss study,
but I think it is useful to illustrate the point.
And they looked at people who went on a weight loss journey
and then successfully maintained that weight loss
versus people who didn't manage to.
And one of the things that they found was most consistent
was that they changed their entire perception of themselves.
They gave themselves a new identity.
So that whole story that we, I mean, everything is the story that we tell ourselves,
but they managed to completely change it.
I am not the person that does that.
I am the person that does this.
And then they changed their life around that.
And I think we can be told like this is what healthy diet looks like,
but we still don't manage to do that.
And that's because of those deeper layers of like, you know, we need to unpick and unpack.
Your behaviour matches your beliefs.
You know, how you view yourself, the identity which you hold has certain behaviours that are attached to it.
Yes, 100%.
The only way.
I, you know, and I think this doesn't get spoken about enough because it's much easier to talk about, you know, little tricks for habits.
And I do as well, and they're helpful.
Yes, yeah.
Up to a point.
Yeah, exactly.
That's kind of where I've got to, especially with the social media and the amount of information and health and wellness information.
Like, I'm not sure it's actually helping people.
I think people need to regain agency.
And I think that's by really having those conversations with yourself,
getting to know yourself and to be, for me, that could only happen in stillness
when I wasn't distracting myself with busyness or the phone or another project.
It was sitting with yourself.
And I, you know, many of us think about meditation as being like getting into this calm Zen place,
but it's not.
It's really observing how nuts your mind can be.
And then observing it again and again and again
until you start to be able to get control of that sort of monkey brain
and then, you know, not sort of sleepwalk through your life,
which is I think, you know, where I got to,
where you are unconscious to your behaviours.
Yeah.
And then you see them and you can't unsee them.
And slowly by just repetition, you get there.
Well, come back to your personal story maybe a bit later.
I do want to talk about practical things.
that people can do when it comes to improving the health
of their immune system,
because as we've already said,
immune system sits at the heart.
Yeah.
Probably everything you want from your health.
You can make a case that good immune system health
is necessary for that.
We just spoke there about identities.
So why don't we start by talking about self-compassion,
how we talk to ourselves,
because there's some really interesting research
is there showing how people who are more
compassionate to themselves, have better functioning of their immune system.
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This is a really lovely study that was done and it resonated with me and certainly was my
introduction to self-compassion, which is sort of having a sense.
of common humanity, how we speak to ourselves, sort of having the compassion for yourself as you
would for a good friend. And there's several different techniques that you can find to help
you develop this. But they're looking at blood markers, so a sort of empirical read out of your
immune system. And particularly they were interested in unwanted inflammation. So inflammation is
your immune system's a weapon of defense. So when it wants to remove something from your body,
or heal or repair or damage, it will pull out inflammation.
So it's very, very useful.
It keeps us alive.
It's the reason we haven't died out as a species.
But over time, that can get a bit leaky
and your immune system will react to things it shouldn't with inflammation.
And as much as it's helpful, it has a bit of collateral damage.
You know, that's flowing through your blood vessels.
That's going to be, like, causing a bit of oxidative stress.
Like, there's a sort of collateral damage to unwanted inflammation.
But by teaching self-compassion, and I think this intervention was done over six or eight weeks, they found that they could help people lower unwanted inflammation.
Because if your sort of thoughts are wrapped up in how your body is physically behaving, then your mental health and physical health are, to me, now, one and the same.
Like, and almost can't speak of them separately.
And if you think of the nervous system
is there to protect you and keep you safe,
your immune system is there to protect you and keep you safe.
These two systems are integrated and working together.
So if you're always in fear,
always like speaking in the negative voice to yourself,
your immune system's getting that message that there's something bad.
Like, I need to be prepared for danger or damage.
I need to keep this person safe.
The only weapon I've got is inflammation.
I'm going to whip that out.
Whereas when we're more compassionate,
we get a sense of safety and the immune system can calm down and come back into balance.
Yeah, it goes back to what we said earlier, doesn't it?
That the immune system is built and it is shaped through the inputs that we give it
via the way we live our lives.
And that also includes the voice inside our heads.
Yes.
And I think when we get that awareness and then it feels really kind of icky to
to change that because you're so used to this sort of negative self-talk and then to switch to
something more positive. But it's just iteration over time. Keep doing it. And then it becomes more
normal and you start to accept it and you don't have to go wild and sort of big yourself up. But it's just
like, oh, you've been a mistake that that's part of life. You know, chalk it up, take the learnings
and then move on. And I think when I went through some very difficult chapters in my life, it was like,
you could easily spiral into like oh I've just destroyed everything what's the point or you can be like
wow there's a lot to learn I've got another opportunity to take those learnings forward and keep going
and that was kind of like night and day for how I felt for my ability to get out bed in the morning
and function and show up for myself for my children and my health like it's the difference between
physical pain that I experienced my body because I was not feeling so
safe. So I was like bracing all the time. And someone who's really fit and active, I started
suffering with back pain and just from like not realizing that I was always bracing for something
dangerous to happen. It affected my posture. So I'm not feeling confident because I'm like slouch
like this. And even if we just roll our shoulders back, you feel more confident just by moving
your body. So it's this, I can't even separate mind and body anymore. To me, it's like they're the same.
Yeah, I don't even like the terms physical health and mental health anymore.
I've almost stopped using them.
They slip in because, you know, you're conditioned a certain way.
People understand them.
People understand them.
So there's always the challenge between what's easy to communicate versus what is totally accurate.
You know, you could make the same case with boosting an immune system.
You know, this idea that boosting your immune system, which I think you're not a huge fan off as a terminology,
I understand why.
At the same time, I think the flip side to that is,
is that I think a lot of people understand it as being,
I want to improve my immune system function.
Yeah.
So if I sleep eight hours compared to five hours
and my natural killer cells go up by 40 or 50%.
Yeah.
I think I would say it's reasonable to say boost that
because I think you boosted the number of natural killer cells.
But I understand also that we want to talk more about balance,
Do you want to just speak to that for a moment?
Yeah, I'm always really compassionate when people ask me.
It's usually like a friend or maybe someone on my Instagram or a journalist.
And I'm like, I know what you mean.
But if you quote me as saying boosted, everyone's going to come after me and be like,
you can't be a brilliant system.
But I'm like, I know what you mean.
You want to, you know, we're going into winter.
You want to avoid colds.
You want to, you know, be resilient to whatever is going around.
But, you know, when you turn the immune system on,
It means you're usually turning on one of the different flavors of inflammation to remove something.
So that's good in the short term.
You might have a virus.
Get through the virus.
You might have an injury and you want to heal and repair that tissue.
But then you need to turn it off again when that process is finished.
And if you don't turn it off in a timely fashion, then it's going to linger and you get problems.
Because inflammation, as I said, is inherently damaging.
It's just meant to be a short term.
It's like the stress response.
You know, I want to run to safety and my heartbeat is racing and like blood sugar is filling.
My veins is motivating me to safety.
But then, oh, now I'm at the other side of the road or wherever.
Everything needs to be able to calm back down to baseline in a really nice, timely fashion.
And if it doesn't, then you end up, you know, in some sort of anxiety spirals.
It's a similar thing with inflammation.
Like, you don't need to have the immune system in one state all the time.
It needs to be responsive and then it needs to come back.
It's like the nervous system needs to respond and come back.
We have to be able to, you know, we don't know what danger is around the corner.
We don't know what healing and repair we will need.
But we need to be able to be ready and then also back to baseline.
It says of practical things and that we can think about doing to support our immune system health.
We've just mentioned self-compassion being one of those.
you just mentioned stress and the stress response
and also how over the past years
it sounds as though you've introduced meditation into your life
perhaps let's move on to stress
and think about what is the impact of chronic unmanaged stress
on our immune systems
and then what are some of the practical things we can do
like for example you do meditation
I'd be interested to know if you think meditation has a positive impact on your immune system.
Yeah, I think stress is just this pervasive thing that is everywhere.
Whenever I speak to friends, it's like we're all stressed all of the time,
but nobody quite knows how to stop it.
And a lot of the tips inherently are usually useful and have some evidence,
but they're often kind of in a self-care bucket,
and it makes you as this self-isolated human that's meant to do it by yourself.
and we're actually living in this kind of wider ecosystem of stressors.
As I mentioned, the nervous system and the immune system are completely integrated.
You know, if your eyes are seeing danger, then it's telling your brain there's a danger,
your nervous system's preparing for whatever that might need,
and then your immune system is also being told, right, that you might get injured.
You might have an infection.
Something might happen.
There might be tissue damage.
You've got to be ready.
So it's primed for inflammation.
If we're stressed every day because of our, you know, home situation,
because of a work situation or family events or things out of our control,
then your immune system doesn't know any different.
It's just like, right, I've got primed for something dangerous to happen.
That priming is this inflammation, this unwanted inflammation,
which is then causing more wear and tear on our bodies.
And that ultimately is feeding into chronic disease.
Something we haven't mentioned is that these chronic diseases,
which now replace infectious diseases
as the biggest causes of poor health
all have unwanted inflammation
as one of their core features.
So if we can have a handle on that,
it's going to hopefully interrupt
the tide of those developing across the life course.
Yeah, and I guess just a point to highlight for people
is that they will have heard on this podcast
on many occasions,
me or my guest talking about chronic and resorts,
old inflammation and why it is one of the root causes of most of the chronic diseases that
we struggle with these days, but they might not have drawn the link to the immune system.
Where does that inflammation come from?
Well, it comes from the immune system, right? So actually, if you're going root, root,
root cause, yeah, go to chronic inflammation, but then you actually have to go one step deeper
and go, yeah, that's because the immune system, for whatever reason, feels that it needs to
propagate an inflammatory response
because of what it is sensing.
Yeah. And the sensing part is the nervous system, which is
talking to the immune system. And I just think when you start
to piece that together, to me, I can't think of it
differently anymore. Like, that's why I can't think of mental health
different from physical health. Because if I imagine a scenario,
oh my God, this is going to happen at work and this is terrible,
then I'm basically telling my whole body there's a danger
and telling my immune system to be on red alert,
but it's all just my thoughts about what might happen
before I go to work, for example.
So I think it's, sadly,
we're in this kind of modern world
where we're stuck in all of these situations
where there's lots of imagined concerns and fears
that compromise our sense of safety.
I think we always assume the word safety
is like an inherent danger,
like I'm about to be hit by a car.
But I think our sense of safety can be compromised by
by our thoughts, by a stressful email, by all sorts of things.
Yeah, but by what we consume.
Of course, as we're recording this conversation, middle of March,
you know, the news has become quite alarming over the past week, okay?
And flights been cancelled, like people wondering about the end of the world,
all kinds of things.
And we have to be aware that the content we're consuming is sending that
signal to our immune systems.
Yes.
Right?
And I was really good for a while.
I sort of had deleted X and Instagram from my phone.
So I would only look at them on my laptop.
And then I think, because I was traveling in February, I'd put X back on for some reason.
Yeah.
And after this all sort of started to go down, right, in the news, I was finding myself on X for,
God knows how long just trying to stay up to date with stuff.
And I thought, okay, wrong in.
you know, you do not need X on your phone.
Yeah.
You know, again, not trying to tell anyone how to live their life.
For me, I was realizing that I don't need 60 to 90 minutes of negative inputs into my life
about stuff that is largely out of my control.
Yeah.
I just delete the app.
And even though that hasn't changed anything that is going on in the world,
my experience of day-to-day life is completely different.
Yeah.
And I think it goes back to our earlier discussion on time.
because if I get to the end of the day
and I realize how much time I've spent mindlessly scrolling
when I could be just living more deeply in the moment,
more present with myself, with the world around me,
then that means by the end of the day
I've had very different inputs into my body
in terms of our kind of information diet.
You know, we talk a lot about what we eat,
but what we're exposing ourselves to
in the content that we're exposed to
is also having a physical effect on our health.
For many years, Jenna, I would specialize in seeing people with autoimmune disease.
This is out with where I was in general practice at the time.
I'd also see people for an hour, an hour and a half who had complex issues that they couldn't get resolution for.
And I used to really enjoy that.
And one thing I found, I mean, I don't have the exact statistics.
So it was almost 100% of the time.
was when I did a timeline on people who suffered from any autoimmune disease,
whether that be lupus, Crohn's, ulcerth colitis,
rheumatoid arthritis, whatever it might be,
I can tell you it was amazing how many times
in the six months prior to them getting a diagnosis,
there was a significant stressor in their life,
whether it be a divorce, bereavement, job loss.
I'm not saying it was the only cause,
but it seemed to be the trigger that tipped them over the edge.
You've been studying immunology for many years.
Does that make sense to you through the lens of the science of the immune system?
Yes, completely.
And it sounds like what you've experienced with your patients
is starting to be reported now in the literature.
and it's an anecdote that we hear time and time again
for people who have autoimmune conditions.
They'll also often say that stress will flare up their symptoms
as well as perhaps being some antecedent to the diagnosis.
And again, that's because we have this really integrated response
between the stress response and the immune system.
And also if you think about it, you know,
when your stress response is activated,
everything's going to be amplified in the immune system.
So if you already have some immune responses that are happening,
so for example, in rheumatoid arthritis, there's an attack on the cartilage in the knee,
then you're just amplifying the conditions for this.
Immune cells are metabolically active, so the stress is affecting our metabolism.
It's affecting things like blood sugar levels.
And that doesn't cause inflammation, but it will amplify what's already there
because of the metabolic profile of those immune cells.
And also things like cortisol, when we have a heightened cortisol,
which is one of the main stress chemicals,
it downregulates the cortisol receptor.
So we can't resolve the stress response as well.
So we kind of get stuck in a loop.
And then you have layers on top of that,
things like vitamin D deficiency, which is really common in winter,
which will again lessen your ability to close the stress loop.
And suddenly you get into this messy network
of all these different things happening under the surface
and all of the symptoms are flaring for that person.
I think if you can manage as much of the unwanted inflammation as possible,
stress will come and go.
Then that's the best case scenario.
And actually, there's some really interesting literature
that the people who have chronic diseases,
but fear the best in terms of their sense of their own well-being.
so how they feel in themselves
are the ones who've kind of made peace
with this lifelong condition
this awful diagnosis that they've had
and I think that they're no longer kind of resisting
because for so long it can be like
but why me and what's going wrong and what have I done
but when you have a sense of acceptance
of how things are instead of wishing they were different
that seems to allow people to feel a better sense
of well-being.
This is where
science and spirituality, for one of her better terms, start to really combine and become one, right?
Because these concepts of acceptance are things that spiritual teachers and philosophy would have
talked about for years. So it's really fascinating to hear how that actually can actually
transform or certainly have an impact on people's physical symptoms because these things are not
separate there. They're one and the same. And now, I spend a lot of
of time thinking about stress and what stress actually is. And you can look at it through multiple
lenses. You know, my second book back in 2018 was all about stress. And whilst I still stand by
everything that was in that, I would probably write it differently today. Yeah. You know,
because it was, well, eight years ago. And I think about stress. My thinking has evolved somewhat
since then, and I think one way of looking at stress is thinking about it as resistance.
Stress in many ways only exists when we resist. That resistance is the stress.
Whereas acceptance is the opposite of resistance.
If you can accept everything in your life, I know it's easier said than done.
Yeah.
That working on how you go about cultivating the skill of acceptance,
literally will transform your stress response
because the stress,
the stress comes from the fact that you're resisting what is.
And when you stop resisting what is,
the stress just isn't there, at least not to the same degree.
I think for me, there is a moment of being like,
it doesn't mean I have to like it.
Like, I can resist this and be like,
why is this happening to me?
And then I can be like, well,
it couldn't be any other way because it's not.
This is literally how reality is.
And I can't change it.
And it's like you put the hot cold,
down and you're no longer burning your hand.
But this doesn't mean I have to be like, yay, I'm really happy for this.
And I think when I kind of put those two things together, and I notice it now with the kids,
like when my kids get frustrated because of something, and it's usually because they're resisting
whatever it is.
And then they kind of eventually get to the point of acceptance.
Yeah.
And then it's like, oh, yeah.
And sometimes the solution to stress or chronic stress that may be impacts in our health,
I think it's not, sometimes it's not as hard as we think.
I think sometimes it can be challenging for sure.
I always remember a case of a lady, a middle-aged lady with Crohn's disease.
I'm pretty sure I use this as a case study in my first, but the fore-per the plan years ago.
And I always remember how she had really bad Crohn's.
She didn't like the immunosuppressants.
They gave her bad side effects.
And I was seeing her for a more holistic approach, let's say.
And one of the time she came to see me,
the recommendation for me was to have 15 minutes to herself every day.
And she went away for four to sit suites.
And in that time, she would have 15 minutes to herself every day,
which from recollection was after she dropped her kids off at school,
before she got into work, she'd go for a 15-minute walk in the park.
That was it.
The other thing she brought into her life was a passion that she'd always wanted to do,
which was salsa dancing.
And she had never done it.
She never thought she had time.
She was always doing things for her husband and her children, never for her.
Yeah.
And 15 minutes of meantime every day and going to a salsa dancing class once a week,
brought her Crohn's disease symptoms down by over 50%.
And it was sustainable.
That's incredible.
I always remember that because I'm like, wow, no one's teaching us at a medical school,
but it totally makes sense through the lens of the immune system and stress.
If her having time to herself is lowering her stress,
if her doing something that she's passionate about,
we also know that has a positive impact on your stress response
and your immune system,
it stands to reason that her symptoms may reduce someone.
It didn't go away, she still had the condition,
but it was way more manageable.
Yeah.
And I think to be able to do those things,
go and enjoy a Celsius class class or something you enjoy,
but you just put it off or it.
whatever reason, you need to give yourself like a sense of safety and love and compassion.
I'm allowed to do that. I can find, I can carve that out in my busy week where sometimes we
jump from task to task, that 15 minute walk in the park. Like you're giving yourself something
that you didn't have before that you deserve, which is just peacefulness, a nice bit of fresh air.
And I think that's really, yeah, incredible, but so simple. And yeah, I hope we, we'll be
can start to sprinkle this in alongside all of the amazing medical treatments and things that we
have available, which has given us this really long lifespan that we now potentially have.
But I think to really have a depth of life and not just be chasing some horizon,
optimizing for the sake of it. And actually, one of the things that blew my mind was,
you know, we're always looking at all these longevity hacks, you know, there's protocols everywhere,
there's morning routines. Like, you can really indulge in that content online.
if you want to, the latest hacks, the equipment, the technology.
But one of the best ways of sensing how long you might live is actually how much you can sense
your own body.
So by that I mean like being able to be aware of your heartbeat, being able to respond to signals.
So simple examples include things like your interception.
So when you're hungry, when you need to go to the bathroom, like those, we can override them easily.
but the more you're able to sense what your body's telling you,
the better able you are to sort of live well, feel well, stay well.
And I find that quite fascinating.
And I think we can only do that if we're still and calm and with ourselves.
Because I certainly can override all of my basic needs
if I'm having a really busy day and running around as a working mum.
And I think that it was, you know, when you sit in meditation,
you're suddenly like, oh, my hip's niggling.
and like I'm fidgety
and I want to, dopamine
wants me to pick up my phone and like
you suddenly become aware.
My heart's racing, my breathing
is all in my upper chest.
Like, and then you're aware.
You're like, oh, right now I can sort of
start to fix those things.
Yeah.
I've noticed from your Instagram page
that you've taken up Jiu-Jitsu
over the past few years.
And I think in one of your posts,
I think he says something to the effect
of,
this idea that Jiu-Jitsu has healed your nervous system.
We're talking about stress, we're talking about the impact it has on our nervous systems
and therefore our overall health.
Meditation is something you brought into your life and so is Jiu-Jitsu.
Can you speak a little bit to what those two things have done for you?
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They're both really significant.
I wanted to do a martial art for quite some time.
I've always been very active and I was just kind of curious about it.
I don't know anyone who did it.
I had a car accident a few years ago
and I just had to recover from those injuries
before I could take up a sport,
which is historically quite littered with injuries
because you're effectively wrestling other people.
And I found a local studio and started going down there.
And this was kind of in the midst of like, you know,
coming out of the marriage and all of my personal stuff.
And I kind of realized that I didn't,
I, talking about the,
nervous system as like fight or flight is what most people would be familiar with.
Like you're faced with danger, you're going to fight, or you're going to run away.
And your nervous system is helping you be motivated to do one of those.
But there's other parts to that conversation that are less spoken about.
And I think they more apply to women, generally speaking, and that's freeze and fawn.
So if you can't fight, because maybe you're smaller and you wouldn't win,
and you can't flight, you can't run away for whatever reason, you might freeze and you might
try and appease the thing that is causing you danger. And it's still a stress response. You're just,
you're still bracing, you know, all of that stress chemistry is still happening, but it's, it's
physically in your body. I mentioned earlier, you know, dealing with back pain because I spent
a lot of time in this freeze fawn response. Like everything breaks.
And I didn't even realize. This was just how I went about my day. My whole diaphragm not working properly, like breathing in my upper chest, like my heart rate elevated. So I went to Jiu-Jitsu and I was like, this is great. You're learning technique. It's all very like a calm, brilliant training partners. You're learning how to do the technique in a very safe way. Your partner is very passive so that you can understand the movements. And then you have rounds of sparring at the end. And I just completely.
froze. Like my body had forgotten that I could have this fight response because I think there's a
certain amount of adrenaline when you're very new to a martial art that you need to go and spar
with someone because you're like literally six minutes trying to fight to choke, you know,
submit the person. And it was kind of after that I realized that this is what I'd been experiencing.
I'd been in this freeze phone but stuck. And my nervous disson,
know how to fight and it was like just in that safe environment with this amazing community of people
that I reconnected with a bit of my body that I function I had that I didn't know how to use.
And I think this is really important because when we speak about the nervous system, it's always like you have to regulate, you have to be calm, do the calm breathing and the calm self-care routine.
And it's like, no, no, I have to be able to fight when I want to fight, come back to baseline, be calm when I need to be calm.
I need to be able to respond to what life throws at me
because I don't know what's coming.
I need to be able to run away if I need to, fight if I need to, freeze or fawn.
If I need to, I need to do all of these things and have access to them.
And I realized that I didn't.
So it was kind of like a re-learning of how to use my fight response.
Because we have these for a reason.
And I think it's important that we get activated for those six minutes of intensity
and come back to baseline.
And I think that a lot of the messaging around telling people to be calm all the time, it's like, you just need to maybe not be calm. Because if someone's stressed, telling them to be calm is quite hard.
It's so interesting, Jenna, the way you've articulated the benefits you got from Jiu-Jitsu, it wasn't there, you know, it could easily be, and I'm sure this is part of it, you know, this is something I do for me. I've always wanted to do it. And that is true. And also this idea.
that your nervous system was almost a bit stuck.
Yeah, I mean, I thought I was going to be sick.
I was like, and I'm in the middle of like, you know, having a round of sparring.
I could feel myself not wanting to practice the technique.
I could feel myself wanting to freeze and just let them do whatever they wanted to me.
And it was intense and emotional.
And it was, I didn't have to go back.
Like, I could have stopped at any time, but almost like exposure therapy.
Like, I needed that.
I needed to expose myself to things that I didn't know how to do or was avoiding.
And I think so much of the time we avoid things.
Yeah.
Because we want to keep safe and it feels safe to avoid.
But we're almost kind of giving ourselves a front row seat to future pain in that way.
How long have you been doing it for now?
It's been about two years now.
About two years.
And from that, I've also got a community.
I don't know if it's normal in the martial arts community,
but the gym where I go, like,
everyone's supportive and friendly
and it's so welcoming.
And so I get more and more out of it
as I keep doing it. And also,
I'm not very good. Like, it's really, really
like a tough learning situation.
Like, I can go to the gym and I know what
I'm capable of and I can go for a run
and I've done like various half marathons
and things, but then to be completely like
a newbie and just like,
I can't remember my left from right.
You know, it's humbling, but it's just
it's been such a tonic.
It's unreal.
Tommy Wood has been on the show several times, including just a couple of weeks ago.
And Tommy's this incredible medical doctor who's, you know, works in pediatric neurology,
and he's got a PhD.
And he's just so knowledgeable and so grounded in the advice that he gives.
And Tommy has been saying for years that he thinks one of the main things that drives a decline
in brain function as we get older.
is that we're not stimulating the brain with new things.
So he's a big fan of us becoming a beginner again at something, right?
Rather than, yeah, there's nothing wrong with wanting mastery and something
and trying to get even better.
But I think for our brains, it's very, very good every few years
to try something brand new where we aren't very good.
And then we learn because the brain then has to grow stronger
to learn those new things.
Yeah.
That was one thing I thought about.
The other thing I thought about was,
so much of the advice that's given these days
online in books
is about solo pursuits
it's about you know what
you're overly stressed
which is true for many if not most people
these things can help you
right but the onus then becomes on us
to find time to meditate
to find time for our workout, to find time to cook or whatever it might be.
And that's all great.
And I think we do need to find some of that individual time in our lives.
But there is also something really beautiful about doing things in a group, isn't there?
Yes.
Which I think we lost in COVID.
I think society has forgotten this.
Yeah.
And I think there's a hangover from COVID that hasn't fully been returned yet.
Yeah.
Because we learn that we can do our yoga on YouTube.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, we can do the Pilates workout on this online course.
Okay, great.
And it ain't the same thing as doing it in a community
because nourishing relationships in and of themselves lower your stress.
A hundred percent.
Irrespective what you do.
And actually, I want to talk to you about meditation and its impact on the immune system,
but I've actually, two weeks ago, was on a four-day meditation retreat.
I've never meditating in a group before.
I didn't know I could meditate for that long.
I was a bit nervous before I went.
Can I meditate kind of most of the day?
It's one of the best things I've done.
And I really thought, I really experienced,
oh, there's a benefit in meditating in the same room
as 10 other people who are also doing it.
So how much do you think, I guess you've already answered it,
but what do you think community and doing things with other people?
What's the impact that that can have
on our immune system, would you say?
Yeah. Well, there was a really interesting study, actually,
when I started getting into jih Tzu,
started looking at the research, obviously, like a true nerd.
And there's a really interesting study showing, like, the oxytocin response.
So this is a neurochemical that is to do with love and bonding,
but not just the romantic love, but, you know, it could be people, friends,
the favorite barista at your coffee shop,
and that you get this boost of oxytocin when you're,
grappling with someone in Jiu-Jitsu and that this has a bigger health benefits because it's very
anti-inflammatory, it's calming, it's giving you a sense of safety, because ultimately humans
evolved in communities, you know, we need each other. I don't go and grow all my own food
myself. I might do something in the garden, but ultimately I have to rely on many, many other people
in the food chain to be able to eat. There's always been this aspect of our survival that relies on
other people. And so we need community. And there is, again, like neurochemical imprints of being
around people and that, again, your immune cells have receptors for those chemicals on their surface
too. So you're feeling it. You're feeling the warmth of chatting to the, you know, your neighbor as you
leave for work. You feel like, oh, there's someone there in my community. But then your body's also
experiencing this sense of safety, which again is really good for your nervous system and by proxy,
the immune system.
Wow.
I also think there's something in the heart rate, you know, because we have that kind of
electromagnetic field that our heart is emitting and it's much stronger than any other part
of our body.
You can also detect the brain, but you imagine the ECG on like a medical TV show people might have
seen.
you can detect that outside of the body.
I can't remember exactly how far it emanates.
But I always think about it in terms of my kids.
Like if one of them is out playing and they fall over,
they start crying, you know, that real kind of hyperventilating crying,
really upset.
And you bring them into your chest and you're calm
because you know everything's fine.
And your heart has this more powerful electromagnetic field
than their little heart does.
And you get this like phase lock response.
So imagine two pendulum clocks.
on the wall, eventually they phase lock onto each other, which means they kind of swing at the
same time. And the little heart is using the bigger calm heart to help calm and bring themselves
back to baseline. And then, you know, the kid's fine and they run off and play again. And so I think
when we're around people, we're sensing as we sit here today, like your heart is giving off
an electromagnetic field, so is mine. And if we're both calm, they're sort of going to phase lock
into each other. If I was incredibly stressed, it might be very calming to talk to you as a friend
if you were feeling very calm. So that's why it can be good to go. Go meet a friend when you're
stressed who's maybe able to be that kind of strong calm beat that you can sort of benefit from
being close to. Yeah. It makes you think now back to the case study I shared with you about the
lady with Crohn's, how much of that improvement also came from her doing a salsa dance
in class in a group.
For sure. Yeah. And you're up close with someone. Yeah. You're getting all their body language.
This one component I probably hadn't thought about as much. But I did think about when you mentioned
Jiu-Jitsu because I did think there's a lot of close content. Yeah. Right? And there's a chat
called Professor Francis McGlone from the University of Liverpool. I've known Francis for years.
He's brilliant. In fact, I think it's time to get him back on the show. He came on maybe episode 30,
maybe like in the first year,
but he was basically talking about how we have a touch deficiency
in the modern world.
And just to be clear, we're talking about safe consensual touch.
Yeah.
Okay?
But he has done a lot of research showing how important
that safe consensual touch is the human beings.
Yes, mother child, for sure.
But also beyond that, we need it.
And there are certain receptors
that actually only get triggered when you give it that touch.
Yeah. I mean, you go to hug a friend, don't you?
It's like the natural reaction when you see people that you care about
is to touch them or put your arm around someone you know who's really upset.
It's kind of an instinct almost.
Yeah. And looking at that through the lens of the immune system,
we know that those things are anti-inflammatory.
So, of course, that anti-inflammatory component is mediated through the immune system.
Yes, exactly.
And you trained, I think, to become a performance breathwork instructor.
Yes.
Relatively recently.
Under this kind of umbrella of stress and how it can negatively impact our immune system and therefore our health,
you mention what jiu-jitsu has done for you, which sounds profound.
Can you briefly mention what you feel meditation has done for you?
Is there any research on meditation to your not?
and what it does for our immune system.
And also then let's talk about breathwork
and how that can also essentially help.
Well, meditation that kind of touched on in my life many times.
And I don't know if I just didn't have the quite right teacher
or, you know, hadn't grasped what meditation really meant.
I do think there's a kind of perception that it's going to make everyone really calm
and zen.
And I don't think it's that anymore.
I think it's being able to observe your mind and have a bit more agents.
see over your mind.
But then I had this real kind of rock bottom moment in my life where I was just like,
I can't do anything.
I'm just going to sit.
And it was just after the kids had gone to bed and the house was quiet and I was just
on my own.
And I was like, I'm just going to sit and see how long I can sit because I've literally
I'm out of options, about ideas.
I don't know what to do with my next step, my next day.
and from that came a daily habit that I just couldn't not do
and it's just never stopped
and I look forward to it and sometimes I do it for longer
and sometimes it's in the garden
sometimes it's you know
I have a little area in my house
where it's always comfortable with a little rug and stuff
so that when it's cold I want to do it
and it's been really profound
just get to know myself a bit better
and to give myself space, like mental space,
and be able to see the thoughts kind of flowing through
and be like, ah, it's fine, they're just thoughts.
Rather than like clinging onto everything
and thinking this is, you know, the end of the world,
it was like, I couldn't not.
And so after years of being on and off meditation,
it just suddenly clicked into place.
And yeah, that's...
That's it. But then I was very interested in breathwork, having gone to various different, you know, courses, classes, events and touched on different styles and forms. And I just kind of wanted to know how I could use it in daily life. Like I think it's fine to go and do a really intensive workshop. But I was like, I've found the little things I can do every day are much more profound. And then maybe you build up to like a retreat or something.
something. And so I came across the biomechanics of breathing. And again, this is kind of all wrapped
up in like having this chronic pain that I'd been dealing with and realizing that inherently when
you take an inhale, this is kind of the sympathetic part of the nervous system because your breath
is kind of connected to your nervous system. And you have lots of mechanoreceptors on your lungs.
So when you're inhaling, you're changing the anatomy and then you're exhaling. And then you're exhaling.
it's changing again
and the exhale is
activating the parasympathetic
so they're more rest and digest
so you have this constantly going on
with every breath
and then you kind of get the overall
bigger picture across the days and weeks
and then just the simple thing
of I can change my exhale
and change how I feel
was just amazing to me
because I was like right
that's a real time tool
you know you've got the meditation
was kind of the future proofing tool
Like if I'm really stressed, I'm probably not going to sit down and meditate.
I'm doing that when I feel kind of normal and it's a future proofing so that when the stressful moment hits, I've got that space between how my brain responds.
But the breath was like the real time tool.
Like I'm in the supermarket and I get a stressful phone call.
I can quickly anchor into my breathing.
When I was trying to recover in the gym, I could use my breath to completely manage.
my pain and that to me just blew my mind and then realizing that the diaphragm is this amazing muscle
that we don't think about as a muscle we don't train it like a muscle and thinking that just by
having an awareness of my my diaphragm my rib cage expansion whether I'm using all the accessory
muscles in my neck and breathing up here or whether I'm taking a full deep breath it can affect
my performance in the gym or how you know my
ability to do jiu-jitsu and stay calm in those rounds and or just before a big stressful meeting
or after a long day before I go to bed I can do different breathing techniques and so I did the
practitioner training to deepen my own understanding and then from that now I've started to bring it
into other areas and do I love doing workshops or even if I have a meeting at work sometimes I start
with a little breath work or something because I think it's just nice to sprinkle that in to
daily life. Have you seen any research on breathwork and or meditation and the immune system? Or
is it more, we know that chronic stress negatively impacts the immune system and we know
that meditation and breathwork can help lower the chronic stress. Yeah. Or have you seen anything
sort of direct? Yeah, I think there's definitely the stress link. Meditation is probably more studied
and there we do have like really amazing, tangible differences in, you know, you know, you know,
know, actual empirical data, measuring blood markers, looking at symptoms, scores and things
on people when they're taught and implement different meditation techniques. I do think it can be
hard if you have a serious trauma, like to sit with yourself. I think that maybe sometimes you have to
get a sense of safety in your body before you can sit with yourself, which I think then comes
from things like little moments of breath work, helping extend your exhale, helping your ribcage
placement, grounding your feet into the earth, like those little things that make the body feel safe
before you can just sit there with yourself. So I think it sort of depends where you're starting.
If you're finding meditation hard, it's like, it's a process and a journey, I think.
One thing I've always loved about you, Jenna, is I feel you've always taken a very holistic approach
to health and well-being, which you don't always see with scientists. And it really, it feels
I also say you've really taken that on more and more over the last years,
how you just described, you know, the breath and the diaphragm.
And I've realized over the past few years that your posture plays a huge role in this.
Because if you've got a forward flex posture, you can have stuck ribs.
You can have a stuck diaphragm.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of us don't realize that actually, if you think about upstream causes,
if you have got postural inefficiencies that you're not aware of,
that is naturally putting you in a more stressed state.
Your diaphragm isn't as free to move,
so you're not going to get as many of those benefits.
So it's these little micro things that we're not thinking about enough, are we?
Yeah, and it just takes a little bit of awareness,
and I think it also takes repetition.
Repetition.
You know, just like if I'm spending lots of days on my computer
and realizing that I'm all like this and I'm just breathing in my upper,
chest and by the end of the day I've taken way more breaths than I should have or needed to
and everything has an energetic cost. So even breathing has an energetic cost. So if you're breathing
at a higher rate because you're not breathing efficiently, you're going to feel tired at the end of the
day. So there's like an easy win is just, you know, little things like setting an alarm so that every
like hour I kind of reset everything and do that repeatedly until it becomes programmed in. It's like,
you know, brushing your teeth. You just, it's automatic. But you know, you know, you're just, it's automatic. But
you have, like with my kids,
I had to remind them to brush the teeth when they were very little until it became automatic.
It's the same with anything like that.
Like, I know all the stuff intellectually about how I should sit at my desk and my breathing,
but I'll still find myself like slants.
Exactly.
You know, and it's just like, okay, I need those nudges and just accepting that.
I think it's really useful.
We mentioned self-compassion.
We've taken a bit of a dive into stress.
What about diet and our immune system?
you know, where are you at these days?
How do you think about it?
And how is that evolved since the last time you were on the show?
Yeah, actually, it was funny.
I had a doctor's appointment the other day.
And they were like, so what are you?
And I was like, what do you mean?
What are you?
Like, are you low carb?
Are you high protein?
Are you keto?
I was like, that's a strange question.
But yeah, I was like, none of those things.
Where's your badge?
Yeah, like normal.
Yeah, I just kind of tried to drive.
out the noise around food, which I think is easier said than done.
And kind of anchor on.
And I think I wrote about this a little bit in the book.
Like, you know, my sort of take my grandmother, for example, when she was a kid and what
her diet might have looked like versus mine in the 80s as a child versus my own children
now, the food landscape has changed dramatically across that time.
And that means that my children's generation are on a very different trajectory in terms of their microbiome, you know, things like obesity rates and metabolic health of children.
And so I think that we need to take some principles from, like I think about principles of my grandparents.
I grew up on a farm when my grandparents lived there.
And so, you know, there was no takeaway.
There's no delivery.
Even my parents have never used any of these services.
And I'm like, it's probably a good thing, you know.
And just that kind of like three meals that are really nourishing that I know
keep me going.
I try and be kind of on it with food prepping and stuff and sharing meals with my kids
and eating at home.
And then, you know, you slot in around that.
The busy days, the days where you just grab something and there's not really a great deal
of choices.
And I think my philosophy is, they don't worry about one or two bad days,
the overall pattern is good.
And I think that's what we've started to see coming out in the literature,
is that dietary patterns over time are more important
than worrying about one or two superfoods.
And the Mediterranean diet is a great example of that.
It's really well spoken about probably because it's well studied.
It's not the only diet pattern.
but a pattern is just kind of the types of foods that are eaten frequently over time.
The Mediterranean diet has elements in it where we know, okay, olive oil really, really important for health.
It's kind of stood the test of time, but we have a lot of research to back it up.
And it's full of anti-inflammatory compounds.
So things like olikantol is a polyphenol in olive oil that has a similar shape to ibuprofen.
So when we're taking it a little bit every day, using it at a little bit every day,
using it as a food, it's kind of nurturing that anti-inflammatory response, but not in the way
that the pharmaceutical drug does. And so they think that that's one of the key reasons the Mediterranean
diet is so closely linked to longevity. And olive oil is actually the one thing that links
all of the different cuisines of the Mediterranean, because actually they're quite different.
If you go from country to country, and olive oil's kind of the sort of linch pin that pulls them all
together. So I'm a massive olive oil fan and it is safe to cook and there's lots of studies debunking
stuff about smoke point and that kind of thing. And there's a big trend to shotting it and I actually
did an Instagram video on that because I was like it actually works better if we take it with food,
if we use it as it was intended because of the way it helps us digest and absorb like fat soluble
nutrients, the way that it sort of is assimilated with a meal versus taking it on an empty stuff.
So it might look cool to be shot in your olive oil instead of tequila, but actually to get the
full benefits, have it, you know, as your Italian grandmother might use it to prepare her food.
A lot of people, as you just pointed out, are concerned about doing high heat cooking with olive oil,
but you're saying from the research that you've seen, that's not really something that we
should be worried about.
Yes, I think for all kinds of normal home cooking, that it's so high in polyphenols, it stabilizes
the oil and it actually helps absorb some of the nutrients in our food.
Like olive oil on tomatoes is a great combination for summer.
I love the seasonality of food.
And we know that the olive oil will help with the absorption of things like like peen in the tomatoes.
And we know that that's really important for your skin defense against UV in summer.
So like a great reason to enjoy these foods in season and take them with olive oil.
Apart from olive oil.
for people who want some more specifics,
you have mentioned that the Mediterranean pattern is one pattern,
of course, it's not the only pattern.
What are the principles you look to follow
or you advise people if they're saying,
hey, Jenna, how can I eat in a way
that supports my immune system health?
Yes, olive oil,
but are there some more broad principles
that you advise people try and follow?
Yeah, I think just you don't want to be deficient.
in anything. I mean, we hear about certain nutrients being really important for the immune
systems of vitamin C, zinc, vitamin D. But really, you could argue that all the essential vitamins
and minerals are important in having a healthy immune response. There was a really interesting
study, I think, just came out this week of part of the Cosmos trials where the headlines in the
news was multivitamin pill increases lifespan or something. And when you actually look at the
study, it found that when they did this multivitamin and mineral intervention, it was one of the
biggest nutrition studies ever, over two years. They got an improvement in biological age, but it was
because these people were falling behind. They had shortfalls in key nutrients. So you're actually just
recovering the shortfall by giving them a vitamin mineral capsule. It's not that the vitamin mineral capsule
is suddenly giving them a longevity advantage. So I think making sure you're covering all those nutrient bases
across the life course.
And obviously that can be hard in modern world.
Well, I think that's the key point, isn't it?
So I saw that study as well.
And I think it's really interesting
because then the question becomes
how much of the population
are being replete in vitamins and nutrients.
And certainly from my clinical experience,
I would say quite a lot of people
are not getting in the right amount of nutrients
for a variety of.
reasons. Yes, it can be cost. It can also be that they're super busy and time pressure so they don't
have time to make these home-cut meals. So they are relying on takeaways and deliveroos.
Chronic stress that we've spent a lot of time talking about, a lot of people don't appreciate
that chronic stress affects the way your digestive system functions. Right? So even if you are
eating the right food, if you're constantly stressed, you ain't absorbing the nutrients as well. And
And then, of course, you've got soil quality.
Yeah.
And how we know compared to 50 years ago, soil quality is different.
So maybe in broccoli, for example, we don't have the same level of nutrients as we had 50 years ago.
Yeah.
So I think there's science of research which helps inform us.
And then there's the actual practical applications of it.
You know, who are you?
Are you someone who is low stress, who eats really good food three times a day and is nutrient replete?
Yeah.
Or you're someone who perhaps is trying your best in very challenging situations,
but is a bit deficient and therefore maybe might benefit from a volatile mineral.
Do you know what I mean?
Exactly.
And I think that nuance, I think, often gets lost online where people say it's either good or it's bad.
It's like, well, it kind of depends in what context.
I think that it depends is my most common answer to things when people ask me.
Because I hate being dogmatic yes or no.
Like there's definitely a place where we could say in the modern diet and when you look at population studies, okay, you're like, okay, vitamin D quite likely to be low, magnesium, and omega-3s always something that comes back, particularly in the UK. I think the mean is like pretty much close to zero for having enough omega-3s in her diet. And so you're like, well, there's a case for supplementing with these because there's a large population of people who are probably insufficient in them.
And so I guess those sort of personal optimal health versus that's a broad public health message
that it makes it really confusing for people and there's so many different supplements out there
that people often get confused and don't know where to start.
But I think thinking about those real foundational nutrients, the ones where there is a high
chance of being deficient, I think those are a really good place to start.
Are you a fan of increasing plant diversity as a way of nourishing.
a healthy gut microbiome?
Yeah, definitely.
And I think when we speak about plants,
we need to make sure we're not just limited to fruit and vegetables,
but like nuts and seeds and whole grains and beans, pulses, legumes.
But I don't, you know, I often have these conversations
and I wrote about it in the book where I get people saying,
oh, I've just, I've changed my diet.
I eat so healthy now.
But I still have all this like digestive feedback and issues and stuff.
And I kind of think, well, you've got this whole ecosystem in your gut
that you've been living with since you're a child
and it's been changing across your life course
based on what you're doing
if you had certain medications
or periods of, you know,
gastrointestinal infection
or different hits to that ecosystem.
And then suddenly you shove all this plant fiber on it
and it's like, whoa, I don't know what to do with this
and your IBS is worse than ever,
but you're like, but I'm eating healthier than ever.
And so I think we do need to encourage people
to eat more plant diversity,
but people need to find where their starting point is
and build up slowly.
Because if you go from eating very little fiber
and then suddenly eating a lot of fiber,
your body's going to tell you.
And you're probably going to be like,
why am I getting these symptoms?
That doesn't feel good when I'm doing the right thing.
So I think it's about thinking of it as a garden,
as an ecosystem, you don't just dump a load of seeds
and expect it all to grow.
You've got to sort of coax it delicately.
And if your body is rejecting a certain plant food
and the fibre is really irritating
instead of deciding that food is bad
it's like, well, why is your body not able to tolerate it?
Why have you lost tolerance and how can you slowly get that back?
And I think stress is a huge part of it.
Even the clues in the name, we talk about rest and digest
when we talk about the parasympathetic, don't we?
And it's like, well, if I'm sort of rushing stuffing food in my mouth
because I'm between meetings and doing stuff with the kids
and trying to juggle 50 things, which happens to me regularly,
there is no way I'm properly in a way to receive that food
and digest it properly, barely chewing it, you know. So how is it going to land in my stomach
and it hasn't had the benefit of me breaking it up with my chewing and all of the digestive enzymes
in my saliva, you know, and then not to mention all that nervous tissue and the gut that forms
the gut brain access, just being like, wait a minute, I don't know we're eating. One thing I find
quite useful is to eat at the same time every day, if possible, because we have this like migrating
motor complex which sort of clears out the gut in between meals and then you get like Pavlov's
dogs. It's like, oh, I always eat lunch at one. You can almost feel the digestive juices turning on
because your body's always preserving energy. It's not going to be ready to digest just food
24-7 because that wouldn't be efficient. So if I eat at the same time, I'm like, all right,
yeah, I'm ready to digest this now. But, you know, then you layer that onto people's busy lives,
working shifts in the hospital or, you know, all the different things that people juggle. And then
you realize that the way our lives are created makes even these simple interventions like eating at the same time can be incredibly hard for people.
Yeah. One of my favorite sections in the book was the section on midlife gut health.
And what was really interesting about it and very thought-provoking was this idea that midlife gut health serves as both a mirror for our past and a compass for our future.
I've never heard it put like that before.
Can you talk a little bit about midlife gut health,
why it's so important,
why you wrote those beautiful words,
and also how it interacts with our immune system?
Yeah, I mean, I think midlife in general is a kind of watershed moment
and perhaps we can linger on that for a bit.
But the gut is hugely important to the immune system.
We mentioned in the beginning of our conversation
about the early life and how the gut starts to have.
this ecosystem that then trains and educates the immune system across the life course.
So that relationship's still going on, but I feel by midlife, most of us have had several hits
to our gut health, whether that be, you know, multiple rounds of antibiotics.
We might be on PPI's because that's one of the most prescribed drugs.
And we now know they're significant in how the impact the gut microbiome.
We probably had periods of bad diet.
You know, I know when I was a student, I was not eating the best or drinking too much,
which we know is not a great, favorable environment for the gut microbes.
So there's all these kind of hits.
And it's often when people start to think,
well, I will start to take care of myself now
and start eating better.
And their guts kind of rejects it.
And then they're pulling in all the fermented foods
because they've heard that those are good too.
And kind of just overwhelming the guts.
And the gut is not just about the microbes that are in it.
They're obviously important.
They are breaking down.
a lot of our foods
that as humans we cannot digest
they have the enzymes to break them down
we get the benefit of that
and absorbing all those breakdown
metabolites that are
then absorbed into our bloodstream and have
wonderful effects many of them are anti-inflammatory
things like short-chain fatty acids
which are immune cells love
they help the immune system regulate
but then again
it also is about the gut barrier
health so the gut is this tube
that goes from our mouth all the way to
the other end. So it's very fragile. It's one cell thick and that's deliberate because its main
function is to absorb nutrients. But the barrier therefore has to be somewhat permeable, but also
resilient enough to keep stuff out that we don't want to go into the body. And with all these hits
and knocks to the microbiome, then the microbiome's not able to keep the barrier as healthy as
we'd like because the microbiome digesting our food produces these metabolites that help
keep that barrier intact. And that is going to raise the unwanted inflammation because as soon as
you have stuff in the gut going through the gut wall that shouldn't, your immune systems are on
the other side going right, red alert, we've got foreign material here we don't want, let's turn
on inflammation because that's our weapon. And that is systemic, it's going through your whole
bloodstream. So it can really be the source of inflammation. And I think at four,
you know, it's this kind of watershed moment if we take it as being the halfway point in our life.
And really, evolution sort of designed us to not live much longer.
Like evolution just wants us to pass on our genes and keep the human race going.
And that's whether you as an individual want to have children or not.
It's kind of like that's what you were optimized for.
And we have this thing called antagonistic pleatropy, which means that the genes that optimize the first,
half of your life and allow you to pass on your DNA can actually work against you in the second
half of your life. So in the first half of your life, there's a lot of these antagonistic
pleotropy genes are in the immune system. And a child to survive, you know, most children
would die in early life before we have all the medical care that we have today. So to keep them
alive, they need a really fierce immune response to all the different infections as they're developing
their immunity through the early years.
But then the genes that allow them to do that,
actually in your 40s, 50s, 60s
mean that you get much more easily triggered
and have much more unwanted inflammation
than the second half of life,
which can accelerate your ageing.
So that's why, for me, 40 is that time.
And I always think in terms of science,
but also in how we feel, people start to feel like,
oh, I don't have the energy I used to have.
I have more aches and pains than I used to have.
I don't recover like I used to.
Can't quite drink alcohol like it used to.
To me, it's a wake-up call to be like, listen to all that information
and realize your biology is now working against you from this point forward.
So you probably have to work harder with the anti-inflammatory inputs
to enjoy that second half of your life
and not just kind of surrender to This Is Aging.
Yeah, I think there's going to be many people listening, Jenna,
who totally resonate with that.
And I think the people,
point you're trying to make, I think, is that you might have got away with certain things
in your 20s and maybe your 30s, but you're probably not going to be getting away with them
in your 40s. So you're almost making the case that actually this stuff may not be actually
starting in your 40s. Your lifestyle, it may have been driving this possibility in your
symptoms for years, but you got away with it because of youth.
Yes. I know in the book you split up the human life into four seasons,
but you could also, I guess, look at it in two seasons, couldn't you?
You could either go pre-40 and post-40.
Pre-40, you might get away with stuff.
Yeah.
Post-40, you're probably not.
Yeah.
We even know from a lot of doctors who see women with menopausal symptoms,
they will say that actually, if use in the right way,
this can be the best wake-up call you ever get.
Because if you can now start to live a bit more in harmony with your rhythms
and the rest of your life and, as you would say, in alignment,
you might, I'm not saying you won't need hormones, you might still do,
but a lot of the time, women don't.
Yeah.
I've seen that over and over again.
A lot of the time, if you can balance what I call the four,
pillars, food, movement, sleep and in particularly stress, I have seen women's menopausal symptoms
almost disappear because the whole system is a lot more balanced. Yeah. And this is why I think of time
as as circular because, you know, my kids need to develop really good habits now. They have to have
a good idea in their mind of what a healthy meal is and isn't, what foods should be consumed regularly
and what ones should be less regular
because if they don't,
like when they get to my age
there's a lot harder to change.
And my thinking when I was writing the book
is that my kids are in a different trajectory
to what I was on
just by virtue of how the world has changed.
The worst trajectory.
Potentially, yes.
And I think we're starting to get hints
of that and the data
and even things like the health span
where current health span
and the UK's around 60
and lifespans around 80.
That 20-year delta
is actually starting to get bigger.
So while we're able to keep people alive,
we have amazing medical technology.
We're not necessarily giving them a good quality of life
and the health span isn't improving.
And so almost that has to happen first
before we get to the let's live to being 120.
And so I think that all starts in childhood
with kids and things like them putting down bone density.
That's where your immune cells are made in the bone marrow.
And we know that happens.
in early life through play, jumping around,
you know, impact on the bones.
Whereas if kids are more sedentary now,
that's affecting it.
Even things like muscle mass,
we hear so much about midlife women.
And as you said about menopause,
like muscle mass is really, really important,
protection from osteoporosis.
But potentially, that starts in childhood.
And so I don't want to have a negative message
that people are like, oh, it's too late for me.
But I think we have to realize that we're all connected.
We need to take the way.
we've learned now and feed it into the younger generations
and not just sort of like leave them to figure it out.
We're like, no, no, look, this has to be a circular thing.
Yeah, it was so profound what you just said.
This idea that actually by telling the truth,
we're going to make people feel bad and disempowered,
is one I just don't buy.
We should be telling the truth to people, right?
It may be that someone is listening to this in their thoughts,
and actually for whatever reason, through no force of their own,
they didn't get the right inputs when they were a teenager.
Maybe their parents didn't know.
Maybe they had trauma.
Maybe they didn't do enough stuff that was going to maximize their ceiling of bone density.
And of course, it would have been better had that not happened.
But I think by saying that, it does two things.
Number one, it empowers you to go, okay, well, maybe I didn't have the best start in life.
But let me max what I can do now to make the most of what I have.
have. The second point is that person now could be a parent themselves. Yes. I think,
I hope most parents are certainly, this is how I feel, I want my kids to have a better life than I do.
Yeah, 100%. I want to see them thrive and do things that I wasn't able to do or have opportunities
that I didn't have. Yeah. And so if I, for example, didn't have the right inputs to me as a child,
I sure as I want to make sure I'm giving my children that. Yes. So I think,
these conversations are important.
I don't mean at you.
I think sometimes these days, maybe because of council culture,
like, we're sometimes too scared to say truth.
Yeah.
It's okay to say it.
It's like, you know, yeah, you may not have had the best up.
Okay.
Yeah.
But can you learn and give your kids something that you didn't have?
Exactly.
And I think that was a balance I kept trying to find in the book between like,
oh God, sometimes when you look at the data,
like it's quite depressing, but also like it's never too late to start.
And as, you know, examples where I've spoken about it in the book and we've well heard of
them of like, you know, people in their 60s and 70s suddenly taking up an activity and then,
or, you know, doing amazing physical feats.
Whereas, you know, they were sort of frail and aging a few years before.
And I think that when we just start to have that narrative of it's too late for me,
it's almost defeatist.
that we're not even trying.
Yeah, and it goes to the flip side, doesn't it?
You might have had the best teenage and adolescent life
where your parents made sure you had all the right inputs.
Yeah.
So you've had great bone density building.
But you may be living a sedentary lifestyle and be doing nothing.
And so it's still going to start declining.
Yeah.
Right?
So I think the message is empowering whatever you are,
whatever your start was,
it's never too late to start paying attention
to your health and well.
You made that case throughout the book.
Just come out to gut health for a minutes
because I do think that's a really provocative line.
Gut health in midlife is both a mirror for our past
and a compass for our future.
I think in that chapter, you're sort of making the case
that all the choices you've made,
some you were aware of, some you were not aware of,
have influenced your gut health.
And it might be in your 40s that it's coming home to roost, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And you have covered this, but I just want to make sure we've clarified it for people.
They hear the latest podcast on gut health.
And as you say, they go all in.
Femented foods and kimchi and kaffir and stuff.
And they're bloated.
And they've got wind and they don't like the way they feel, right?
I think your message is really, be patient.
Yes, 100%.
Can you just elaborate on that a little bit?
Because I know there'll be many people who've fallen into that trap before.
Yeah.
And I completely advocate for all of them.
these fermented foods and different plant diversity and we have all the research coming out now
to support that. But it is like go low and slow because you have to meet your body where it's at.
You have to take the symptoms as the feedback and not be like, well, I just made this amazing
bean casserole with like three different types of beans. And now I'm like, you know, bursting out
of my genes, I feel really uncomfortable.
Maybe the dose is really the important starting point
in just bringing these things in really, really small
and allowing, you know, if we think about the microbes
as digesting these rather than our body
and our own ability to break down these plant foods,
it's really the microbes.
We might have lost some important communities.
We know that we have the successive loss
of really important keystone communities happening
with each generation.
And then we have layered on top of that periods of bad diet,
different medications, infections.
We might have lost some.
And the communities that are in there need to adjust
and you have to sort of coax them out with some fertilizer,
but low and slow.
But I do think it's a really, really worthwhile investment to do.
I just feel like the message can be quite simplistic online.
And I see many people just diving in
and then not understanding why the healthy food makes them feel unhealthy.
Why is oral health so important for our immune systems?
Oh, I feel like this along with olive oil are like my two big like longevity things.
This actually started when I was at Sussex University and I had this lady who joined and she was
coming to do a research project with me and she was previously a dentist in South America.
and so she was really interested in rheumatoid arthritis
and autoimmune diseases generally
and she was retraining in biomedical science
but she had this dentistry background
and we started looking at all the literature
and there was this whole body of dental literature
that I'd never come across
because I'm not really living in the dental world
and reading that
and then there's obviously the rheumatology literature
which is looking at the immune response
in rheumatoid arthritis.
And what we found was that people who go
and have their teeth cleaned regularly,
have really good oral health,
frequently visit their dentist,
they had improvements to symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis.
Because this oral environment, again,
was sort of seeding that whole body unwanted inflammation
because of the presence of less favorable bacteria, you could say.
and when you're having that regular cleaning
and you're taking care of your oral health
you're lessening the whole body inflammation
so you're lessening any symptoms
and then you can see that link now playing out
and all sorts of things so
cognitive decline is another one
where people who look after their oral health
regular hygienist dental visits
they can see improvements
and cognitive decline that's happening
so it's just amazing
and it's upstream of the gut.
So whatever we're breathing, swallowing,
whatever's happening in the mouth,
it's, again, it's going to both our gut,
but then through the gums into the bloodstream
and affecting what's going on everywhere else.
And wherever there's a bacteria,
which we have, our whole oral microbiome,
that, you know, the immune system has evolved
to detect bacteria.
So if they're a friendly bacteria,
they have a good working relationship,
but the minute they're in the wrong place,
and they slip through into the bloodstream,
the immune system's on it going,
we need to get rid of this bacteria,
but it does that with inflammation.
Yeah.
Just goes to show how interconnected the entire body is, right?
It's better oral health for reduction in rheumatoid arthritis symptoms.
Again, we said that right at the start, didn't we?
These are not separate organs.
These are connected systems,
and the immune system sits at the heart of them all.
We almost need the rheumatologists to be referring their patients,
to the dentist more regularly and vice versa,
if the dentist spot something in the gums
and then maybe say go get checked out by your doctor.
Yes, it's almost as if, you know,
if we were starting medicine today from scratch,
which of course is impossible,
we may not set it up in the way in which it's currently set up.
We may actually go, and actually I think it's reasonable to say this,
if you look at both the research,
and the historical application of medicine from clinicians.
Yeah.
I think you could almost say the way we've got it set up in many ways is misguided.
Yeah.
Instead of organs, it should perhaps be systems.
Be systems.
And we definitely should have an immunology as a kind of standalone that's touching base
with all the other specialists.
Yeah, I guess the only problem with that, what I agree with you,
is that if you then became a...
an immunology medical specialist,
you're basically doing everything.
Yeah, I know.
Because the inflammation comes from the immune system
and the inflammation is at the heart of Alzheimer's
and heart attacks and strokes and tight to diabetes.
So you're becoming the expert generalist.
Yeah, I sort of see it like a tree,
like all of these things on the branches,
but there's just one big root.
Yeah. Or at the very least,
even if you work in an organ specialist,
speciality, you should have some training or, you know, professional development in immunology.
Yes.
Because frankly, a lot of doctors just don't have that.
Yeah, and the understanding of chronic inflammation, I think.
Exactly.
We've talked to a lot about the practical things that we can do for our immune system.
But I want to go back to one of the kind of main ideas in your latest book that I really enjoyed.
you know, what is the point of all of this?
You know, why should you make time to do these things?
What is the point of life and how we're living our lives?
And you kind of start off the book in quite a provocative way, don't you?
You know, in fact, do you mind if I read the first few lines to you?
This is literally the opening to the book.
Let's start with an easy question.
Are you scared of dying?
Why did you start the book with that?
question. I think I felt like I wasn't really living, but I wasn't obviously dead at the time when I was
coming up with the book idea. And I think then there was this rise in longevity trends all around me.
And I was kind of like, what's the point? And I think we're all inherently scared of dying. I think
everything that we've talked about today,
all of the stuff about our nervous system
and our immune system is to stop us from dying,
is to keep us safe.
So we don't injure ourselves
so that we can heal when we are injured.
I think we're all inherently scared of dying.
But that should be the immunity
to not have a life unlived.
Like it's almost to inoculate us
to enjoy the moment
because you really don't,
none of us have the control over when we die.
People with their optimising.
protocols and wanting to live in to be 120 something could happen to all of us tomorrow and
I just I really had this point where I can't have a wasted life I can't look back in a decade and
be like I continued being so unhappy with so many things in my life I have to make changes
and I guess I hoped for people reading it that you know I have had people since come to me and
say I did what you did I threw those a grenade
and blew it my life.
And I was like,
I didn't really mean you to do that.
But they're like,
no, it's great.
I'm a lot happier now.
And I do think that
definitely happens
around the midlife point.
But yeah,
I think we're all scared of dying.
And that's the point.
And I think,
you know,
we give ourselves meaning
if we need it.
But we can also just
enjoy the ride
and sort of be more present.
Deep in our soul span
notice the little things in the day and the beauty, you know, spring is unfolding.
I could quite easily just, you know, get to summer and not even have stopped to sort of notice
the daffodils. We rush through everything. Yeah. It's so beautiful the way you put that, Jenna.
And it's kind of interesting, you know, time and the passage of time is this underlying feature
throughout your book
and I'm just thinking back now
if someone had told me in my 20s
to notice the daffodils
hear the birds
you know what? I fact my mum probably did
and it probably went in through one ear
and out the other
I think there's certain messages
that are right at certain times
do you know what I mean
and I think that's something as a parent
I've had to accept with my kids
it's like yeah they're probably
not ready for that message.
I mean, I'll share it, I'll try and impart it,
but maybe they'll get there
when it's right for them.
Yeah, you've planted the seed.
Yeah, because I think one of the reasons
I really enjoy the way in which you've written this book
is because it does articulate
the things that I'm thinking about.
I feel that you can cultivate gratitude,
you can cultivate calm, you can cultivate presence.
I like you, have meditation as a regular feature in my life.
And the reason I couldn't do earlier is because I misunderstood what meditation was.
And these days I love it.
Yeah.
And, you know, we spoke about the worrying news stories early on this conversation
and the impact that has on our immune system and our stress levels.
But I always think back to the Dalai Lama quotes
when he said if every eight-year-old on the planet was taught how to meditate,
we'd eliminate violence within a generation.
Yeah, it's beautiful.
Which is beautiful, and I believe it to be true.
And, you know, as we speak, Jenna, I've done something that haven't done before,
which is, you know, on all my channels,
we're doing a March meditation challenge in partnership with an app called The Way by Henry Shookman.
Oh, I love Henry Shoeuvre.
Yeah, Henry's, Henry did the moment.
meditation retreat I was on and Henry's been on the show twice and that app I think is for me
the best meditation app I've come across. So we partner with them. And at the moment, as of last
night, there's 20,000 people we've got meditating on the way during March. That's amazing.
And I hope that, you know, this has, you know, got 30 free meditations there for people. And
my hope is that that's enough time to, because I think two or three days is not really enough.
Even a week. You need to do it enough to go, oh, this.
This is what it brings to my life.
So I'm hoping some of them continue with the practice afterwards.
And I think those solitude, stillness practices,
they really help us with the meaning of life.
You won't know this, but the first thing I underlied in your book
and one of the first things was a quote from my mum's favorite poet of all time.
So my mum still now on her wall has a picture of Rabindranath Tagore.
Oh, wow.
He is my mum's idol.
Oh, he's brilliant.
And, you know, on page three of the book, you quote from him, you say,
the one who plants trees, knowing that he will never sit in their shade,
has at least started to understand the meaning of life.
Oh, it goes big goosebumps.
Yeah.
What does that quote mean to you?
I think it's, you know, we have a responsibility to the future generations.
We kind of, there's a lot of talk about the self and look after ourselves and self care and self.
But we're all this big network.
And like you mentioned to your kids, you'll plant the seed of these ideas on their head,
knowing that, you know, the next two decades they'll go off and do their own thing.
But you planted the seed and that's important.
and the work you do, it's like making sure that it's benefiting the next generations
because one day we won't be here
and we have a responsibility to leave something behind for the next generation.
What do you think the meaning of life is?
I think it's to probably grapple with the human condition
and understand that we only ever have the present moment.
And that is so difficult.
But yet somehow that's what makes it so beautiful.
Yeah.
It's really interesting, Jenna.
Since I last saw you, which was in this studio,
maybe five or six years ago,
I know you've been through significant life changes.
And what's really interesting is that most people would probably say that
if they had to make those kind of life changes,
You said you left your job, you left your marriage.
You're now, I guess, a single mother.
Single mother, right?
They would probably think, well, yeah,
but doing those things is going to make it harder for me
to look after myself because life is going to be busier and more stressful.
The impression I'm getting from you is that it's been quite the opposite.
Yeah.
And I would say it's hard, but a different hard.
And I think that comes back to when we talked about alignment,
there's the heart of day to day of doing all the stuff on your own
but then I feel so aligned that have way more energy
so everything has a different texture
and maybe people can think of a time that they've experienced that
like when you're so in flow and aligned
your capacity starts to expand
whereas when you're kind of in this like fear
safety mode then everything is sort of
shrunk. So it's like in biology you have anabolic and catabolic. There's always a buildup and a
breakdown or the seasons of life like winter, everything dies and spring it comes back. It's always
sort of flowing. And if we can sort of find a way to lean into the sort of opening up of our life,
then we just have more capacity. And like it's not just a simple case of sort of energy and
energy. It's like when everything's sort of coherence and synchronized,
and you're living in alignment, suddenly you can do so much more.
Yeah.
Jenna, it's been such a joy talking to you.
I honestly think the book is such a beautiful book, so gaudously written.
Immune to Age, the Game Changing Science of Lifetime Health.
I didn't know it's also coming out of paperback very, very shortly, so that's super
exciting as well.
You've also got your substack company as well as your Instagram.
Yeah.
And I know you really enjoy that.
Can you tell people about the substack and what they can expect from it?
I mean, I do have a love of long form writing I've discovered.
So while Instagram's kind of my little sandbox of ideas
and I share lots of personal stuff and lots of immune system stuff,
but substack I've leaned into is like, right, okay,
now I can take people into the nuance with me.
And it's been really fun.
It's such a nice platform for people like me who like writing,
but I can't constantly be writing books and a little bit more detail.
So they just look up your name, Jenna Machoki, on Substack?
Yeah, it's The Science of Staying Well, which is the title of my first book.
So, or if you type in my name, it's all linked to my Instagram as well.
But yeah, I'd love to see more people come over there and read my content and join in the conversation.
Yeah, amazing.
Jen, final question, for someone who has been listening to this conversation, who has realized throughout it that they have neglected their immune system,
health for the bulk of their lives,
but they feel as though it's too late to do anything about it.
What would you say to them?
It's never too late.
And I know that sounds really kind of contrived,
but start with a bit of self-compassion.
You know, if there's areas you've neglected,
there was reasons.
And you now have the opportunity
to start to build up your capacity
and start really, really small,
like so small.
and just little tiny increments
and know that that repetition starts to become innate over time.
So start with the self-compassion piece
and then start with kind of looking at one area of your life
and see it like a little experiment.
You know, I really encourage people to be their own kind of citizen science,
their own end of one experiment.
You know, write stuff down, see what you notice.
Start to experiment but very, very slowly
and cut out the noise.
You know, we have so much to compare ourselves to.
And everyone has a different story.
Compare yourself to who you were yesterday,
not, you know, all of the shiny things we might be seeing on social media.
Yeah, Jenna, I love that.
It's been super fun talking to you.
Like that.
Thank you for making the journey out to the studio.
No worries. It's been amazing. Thank you.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation.
Do think about one thing that you can take away.
and apply into your own life.
And also have a think about one thing from this conversation
that you can teach to somebody else.
Remember when you teach someone, it not only helps them.
It also helps you learn and retain the information.
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