Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 2615: Identifying Food Sensitivities With Dr. Stephen Cabral
Episode Date: June 9, 2025Healing the Gut-Lymphatic Connection: The Missing Link in Health with Dr. Stephen Cabral Why take a food sensitivity test? (1:41) Addressing the skepticism surrounding these types of tests. (6:5...0) Explaining the gut-lymphatic connection. (9:10) How can you improve or assist with the lymphatic detoxification process? (12:31) The connection between the gut, lymphatic system, and your skin. (16:47) How do coffee enemas aid in detoxification? (20:41) The importance of the lymphatic system on your immune system. (24:09) Movement matters. (26:34) Revealing the guy’s Food Sensitivity test results. (28:56) Sal. (29:26) Justin. (36:14) Adam. (42:52) Doug. (47:48) Be the practitioner you never had. (53:48) Related Links/Products Mentioned For a limited time, Mind Pump listeners can save $120 on our comprehensive Food Sensitivity Test, which looks at 190 of the most common foods that may be causing inflammation in your body. ** Includes a FREE 30-minute health coaching call with an EquiLife Certified Health Coach to answer all of your questions. ** Visit Eight Sleep for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump Listeners! ** Use the code MINDPUMP to get $350 off your very own Pod 5 Ultra. The best part is that you still get 30 days to try it at home and return it if you don’t like it – – Shipping to many countries worldwide. ** Mind Pump #2165: How To Address Your Food Sensitivities With Dr. Stephen Cabral Mind Pump #2415: The Dangers of Inflammation & What to Do About It With Dr. Stephen Cabral The Protocol - Stephen Cabral Integrative Health Practitioner Institute Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Dr. Stephen Cabral (@stephencabral) Instagram Website Podcast Ben Greenfield (@bengreenfieldfitness) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go
Mind pump with your hosts Sal DeStefano, Adam Schaefer and Justin Andrews
You just found the most downloaded fitness health and entertainment podcast. This is mind pump
We have dr. Steven Cabral back on the show. He's one of our favorite functional health
Practitioners today's episode talk a lot about gut health back on the show. He's one of our favorite functional health practitioners.
Today's episode talks a lot about gut health and in fact we do a food sensitivity test.
He comes in and goes over the results of mine, Doug's, Justin's and Adam's.
Some of the results you'll expect and some of them are quite shocking. By the way if you go to stevencabral.com forward slash food test so that's s-t-e-p-h-e-n-c-a-b-r-a-l.com
forward slash food test you can get this food test for yourself it's very easy do
it at home and then find out what intolerances your body is showing. Now
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Here comes the show.
Dr. Gabral, welcome back to the show.
Always a good time.
Great to be here.
And we have more tests to review.
We're gonna talk about food sensitivities.
This is the most popular test that you have,
if I'm not mistaken.
In functional medicine in general,
food sensitivity testing is one of the most popular,
if not the most popular.
Why would you say that is?
Is it because it's inexpensive, easy,
and it's kind of a nice first place to start insightful
Or it's where Western medicine really doesn't go whatsoever wouldn't you say that?
I mean, I would think that's like you could get a lot of the other stuff when he gets into hormones
I think that you can get some insight when you go to your regular practitioner
They're not doing anything like this that that and people do this for ages three and up
So they're doing it with their kids the whole family is doing it
It's really approachable and everyone has to eat like That's the thing. So your nutrition absolutely matters more than anything, really. And the other
big part of this is that people are feeling symptoms, like random symptoms, could be skin
rashes, maybe brain fog, lower energy, and they don't know what's causing it. And it could be a
food that you literally ate two to three days ago, because these are latent reactions that you're reacting to.
So there's no other way to really figure this out.
Right, right.
And again, what you're looking at with these tests
are not anaphylactic shock type of reactions,
but rather, you mentioned it, latent reactions.
So it's an autoimmune reaction that's more subtle,
takes longer to kick in,
but it can look and feel like a lot of different things
including lethargy, inflammation,
of course digestive issues and stuff like that, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
And so you can have a early reaction when you eat a food,
that's the anaphylaxis that you were talking about,
most typically known with peanuts or strawberries
or things like that.
And so what is that?
That's gonna be an immediate IgE based reaction, so an immediate reaction, it's the easiest way to look at that. Hive, what is that? That's going to be an immediate IgBase reaction,
so an immediate reaction. It's the easiest way to look at that. Hive, swelling of the throat.
That is a real food allergy, different than what we're talking about, which is sensitivities. So,
sensitivity just means non-life-threatening allergy. That's really what we're looking at.
Now, there's still immune reaction, so there could be an IgM, which is like intermediate,
one we call it. That's 24 hours later or so after you eat the food.
And then the easiest way to think about it is IgG.
That's the late one, two to three days after you eat a food,
you end up with skin rash, headaches, low mood,
low energy, inflammation, joint pain.
So what is it?
It's just creating an inflammation.
So the IgG is just an immunoglobulin,
which is just a white blood cell,
that's going after a food that it has marked
as foreign to your body.
And when it goes after it, it creates inflammation
when it actually begins to engulf it
and remove it from your body.
So the more you have that food,
the more inflammation you can get from that.
Now, again, it goes back to the rain barrel effect.
Let's say you're also not eating well in general,
not getting sleep.
If you already have a lot of inflammation,
this is just one more thing you're adding in the rain barrel
and it's making a big difference.
So these are the ones that we like to test.
Most people, you always use this example,
if you're sensitive to shellfish or lobster
and you eat it and you get hives,
you don't need to run a lab test for that.
You know you're sensitive, right?
So we wanna do the ones that,
this is a big one with kids,
like should they eat dairy or not eat dairy?
Well, I don't know.
Let's take a look at the lab test.
And I will share with you, it's come a long way over the last 12 months with the lab testing
too.
So since it is so popular, and we were talking about this previous on the Hormones Bay show,
we are one of the largest utilizers of these lab tests around the world. So typically the top company shipped them all over the world,
UK, Canada, US, et cetera.
And what they did was we actually looked at,
again you can anonymize this data,
a population study of 79,000 people.
And so we looked at 25% from 25 to 50%,
from 50 to 75, and then 75 to 90, 95,
and then 95 and above. And so we were able to categorize people based on reactivity.
And so what we're actually, which I love, because I love the research behind this, we're
helping to increase even to a greater degree, not necessarily the number, the number is
always the number, it's your reactivity, the potential for you to react to this food.
So the likelihood you're going to have a symptomatic reaction, which is pretty amazing. So we're going to talk about the latest test, which shows you
the truest reactivity you're most likely having.
Okay, so that implies that someone can have elevated IgG antibodies and not necessarily
noticing symptoms.
Exactly right. Yes, exactly right. So we look at it from 0 to 25, because remember you're
eating foods which are non-human.
So there's some reactivity, but not great.
That doesn't mean that, is there some inflammation?
Normal inflammatory reaction.
What we're finding is the 25 to 50%,
which would ordinarily be low before,
before, call it like a year ago with our labs,
you would see that as low,
and our typical recommendation was remove for six weeks,
not a big deal. See what happens. Yeah. And then, exactly, see if you feel better when you remove it
and worse when you add it back in. And then most people have a tolerance for that food of like once
or twice a week. It's not going to be an everyday food. Right. So that's the biggest difference we
found is that the 25 to 50% may not need the full six week removal.
You might have no symptoms if you're doing everything else well, but you also might just
keep it at once or twice a week in your diet.
Okay, so this alludes to how I wanted to start this conversation because I find that of all
the tests and all the things that we talk about, there seems to be the most skepticism
around this type of testing.
So is that kind of why?
Because there's this wide range of, well, yeah, you
maybe you don't have a full blown intolerance to it, but it's not ideal for you. And so
people are finding that they get a test and it says like, oh, I shouldn't be eating this.
Well, I seem fine when I eat it. Well, yeah, you're fine as long as you only eat it once
a week or every other week. It's just, it shouldn't be a food every single day. So where
can you address like all the skepticism that is around this type of testing and why that
is? Yeah, 100%. So everybody believes that there is a legitimate reaction taking place in the body
Everybody believes in the IG E I GA I GM IGG
That's fact yeah, and we know that when you eat foods you have various reactions to these different immunoglobulins because it's seen the protein
So we're actually so people that's the problem is that it's mistaken even with dietitians and medical doctors.
They're like, well, this person clearly can't or can't
eat dairy because they don't get bloating,
they don't get gas.
I'm like, first of all, it's typically a digestive issue
to dealing with lactose, which is the carbohydrate
or sugar in that, and it has nothing to do with the protein.
So first it's just education around,
we're looking at the proteins inside of these foods which would be the reactivity. If you
have dairy and you get gas or an issue like that, that is a digestive issue
where your body's not producing enough lactase in order to break down the
lactose which is the sugar in dairy. That's a totally separate subject. So you
could come out on this lab test and actually Show you're not sensitive for certain foods
But when you eat them you feel sensitive to them and see people like well it should have showed up in the test
No, that's a digestive based issue with bloating gas distension not a
These antibodies are you're tagging them by the proteins. That's right
Okay, so you know you said it could be autoimmune
It can actually so you get enough of these and you get enough gut permeability, which I want to talk about
for sure the gut lymphatic connection here, because this is really important.
It can lead to autoimmune issues.
You have a permeable enough gut where enough is seeping out proteins, bacteria, mycotoxins,
mold from food, which is in a lot of milk and dairy as well, and that will eventually lead to autoimmune issues. In every person, no. But in
genetically susceptible people, absolutely. Talk about that. So what is the
lymphatic system people don't know and what is the connection between those two?
So the the lymphatic system flows through the entire body, but the biggest
difference between that and blood is that it really moves on a manual-based
pump, which I'm sure you've probably chatted about before in the show, but that means that you need to
literally move your body or move it. So rebounding, you know, trampoline, that
type of thing is phenomenal for moving it, but also just heat. Sauna is a great
thing to be able to move the lymphatic system or dry brushing or massage,
always moving towards the heart. Now here's the interesting thing though,
because outside of your intestines,
so you've got about, call it 19, 20 feet of small intestine,
about six feet or so of colon, your large intestine,
all around that, and we've heard this term before,
70% or so of your immune system, right?
Well what that is is actually
it's the gut-associated lymphoid tissue.
So the gut and then associated just means part of lymph. So it's all
this lymph that lives around the intestines and it's part of a greater
system which is called a mucosa associated lymphoid tissue. Now what
that looks like is it's basically a netting or gel, not exactly a gel,
but it goes inside of the intestinal lumen which is just the cell wall of
your intestines and the laminate properiaumen, which is just the cell wall of your intestines, and the
laminate properia flow, they take all the toxins and fats, and they move them through
the lymph nodes.
And what happens though, is if you have a more permeable gut, it's taking more toxins
and it's getting backed up.
So these lymph nodes and the lymph itself is getting congested.
Think of like, you haven't changed your oil in a while, it's like sludge,
rather than that nice viscosity, that smooth and flowing.
Over time, that sludge moving through your entire body,
well, what's it going to feel like?
It feels like the lethargy that we talked about,
the brain fog, the puffiness, the water retention, the low mood,
and the skin rashes.
That's a big part of being imbalanced.
And so much of our health really does depend
on this gut associated lymphoid tissue.
And when you have more than two thirds of it,
70 to 80% around your gut and digestion,
that's why when people say, oh no,
you don't need to worry as much about your diet,
no, food and digestion, not just food,
but the digestive system has to be one of the number
of things you look at in terms of health.
Backing up again, you talked about dairy.
I can take a lactase tablet with dairy
and I won't get the immediate digestive distress,
but I'll still get the inflammation.
And it's because, and I've tested this years ago,
I haven't done one in a long time,
so we'll see what it says now,
but I have strong antibodies to the dairy protein.
So I can do lactate, I can do lactose free,
which is better than with lactose,
but still not great, I still don't feel good from it.
And it's good that you recognize that
because people will think I can have dairy
as long as I take my lactase tablets or an enzyme
or whatever it might be.
Now, those will be helpful in order to break down
the carbohydrate, but they don't stop the reactivity
of the protein, and you're exactly right.
It will lead to whatever your susceptibility is.
Could be joint pain, could be puffiness,
could be water retention.
Some people, they'll weigh six pounds, seven pounds less
from when they wake up in the morning to
when they get on the scale at night.
Now some of that's normal just rehydration,
but a lot of that can be inflammation.
How do you improve or help with that
lymphatic detoxification process?
So the first part we wanna look at
with the digestive system,
I would say there's about five main things it could be.
We've chatted about it before
so I won't go too much more in depth.
Maybe we can link up previous shows.
But Candida overgrowth, which happens all the time
with the antibiotic use.
So, or SIBO.
So like SIBO is another imbalance.
But when you have SIBO, again, you'll go to a medical doctor,
what will they do?
They'll give you an antibiotic.
Okay, so it kills the bacteria.
Now you typically relapse,
because eventually it grows back,
because it doesn't grow back properly,
but it does nothing for the yeast overgrowth.
So candida overgrowth begins to grow
whenever you take antibiotics.
Also because there's no bacteria to check it, right?
So candida now can just explode.
Exactly right.
And now the candida has a lot of the same symptoms
as the SIBO, which is the bloating,
or gas, intestinal distension.
All of those things.
Don't tell me, go back to the doctor, give him more antibiotics.
You just think it works.
That's basically, oh, the SIBO must have come back.
And so, you know, that's, that's, that's the, you know, the cycle that people repeat.
So we've got SIBO, swan test, the bacterial overgrowth.
We've got Candida, we have parasites.
We have H.
pylori, but 25% of people walking around with H. pylori.
Don't even know.
25%.
Yeah, it's a huge number.
And that's because it's so easily passed.
You can get a salad bar, you can get it undercooked foods,
you can get it person to person,
like it's pretty easy to pass.
It's true, if you have H. pylori,
your partner probably has it too.
A high likelihood, unless some people's immune systems
are unbelievable at killing the bacteria,
because it's an infection, the bacteria beforehand.
Okay. So, and some people are just far more prone to it as well.
And it's tough for them to kick it.
They knock it down, they knocked it down,
it doesn't really show up, and then it comes back.
But there's great things you can do for it.
Number one thing is mastic gum, believe it or not.
That little Greek resin, it's called mastic gum,
you take two to three grams a day.
It's been working for hundreds to thousands of years.
For H. pylori?
For H. pylori.
Really? Yeah, it's not the only thing I would do, but certainly it works great for that. Because eventually it causes
peptic ulcers. Yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. In fact, they think ulcers were due to so many other things,
and then somebody realized it's a infection. So with the, when you go back to Candida,
SIBO, is this why functional medicine practitioners like you tend to favor
natural antimicrobials because they don't just kill bacteria but they're
also anti fungal and okay so it's the same thing that works for bacteria are
gonna work for the fungus as well okay now there's there's some that don't have
the exact crossover but most do and also I'm at least for me as a practitioner
I'm not a single nutrient
type of provider. Meaning like some people just say, we're just going to use oregano oil, or we're
just going to use uva-irsi. Because when I started to run all these labs many, many years ago, on the
lab test, it actually, the lab will show you on some of these labs, if you do a bacteria and
parasites stool test too, which nutritional supplements and which pharmaceuticals will actually work to kill your bacteria.
And what I realized was like two thirds of these are going to work and one third isn't
and you're not going to know who the individual is going to work for unless you're running
a stool test.
Nobody likes to run a stool test.
So we created formulas, the CBO protocol, which just uses all of them and it does it
by month and it works for least strong
to most strong and the reason is then you don't have
all the die off reactions.
Because these, I mean, when you think about 100 trillion
bacteria in your gut, now you're not killing them
all off of course.
But when these things die off, it doesn't always feel good.
And so we do it at a much slower pace and it allows
people to heal.
That's called the Herxheimer effect?
That's right.
Yeah, the die off that you get from that.
It originally founded due to antibiotics.
So you take antibiotics and it does what it's supposed to do. It kills the
bacteria. And if it kills too much bacteria too quickly you have an awful
Herxheimer reaction. Happens with parasite treatments as well. It can for sure. Yeah if I'm not
mistaken. Yeah so those four plus food sensitivities which are the fifth one
are all the reasons why people get gas bloating and that's why when you have gas
bloating you go to your doctor and they tell you
you have irritable bowel syndrome, you know, you're like.
That just means we don't know what you have.
It just covers the bases.
That's really what it means.
They're basically saying that.
Thanks, Doc.
We don't know what's causing it,
but we're gonna give it a name.
You got tummy rumblings.
And then, yeah, you've got an upset tummy.
And they'll give you some anti-spasmodic drugs
and other things like that and send you on your way.
But there's really only five underlying root causes. That's the nice thing.
What's the connection between gut health, the lymphatic system, and skin? I'm
always here, it comes out in your skin, bad skin, you got skin rashes, skin. And I've
noticed this with clients, that when they would work with people,
functional medicine practitioners who help them with their gut health, their
skin oftentimes would clear.
Things like rashes and discoloration and stuff like that.
What's the connection?
Is it really coming out?
Are you really detoxifying your skin?
That's the terminology out here.
You really are.
I mean, I know people don't love the word detoxification.
It's like it's being used now more liberally
and sometimes the right way, sometimes not.
But that is what your skin is literally meant to do.
That's the nice thing.
We are meant to sweat through our skin.
And when you do sweat tests,
you can actually look at mycotoxins, believe it or not,
like mold coming out.
Wow, they're coming out.
Mercury.
And all sorts of different bacteria.
And you use a sauna.
So that's why I love all saunas.
So don't get me wrong, the finished dry sauna,
I've got a barrel sauna in Maine that I love using. But I don't get me wrong. The finished dry sauna, I've got a barrel sauna in Maine
that I love using, but I also have an infrared sauna.
And an infrared sauna allows it to penetrate deeper
into the cells and tissue itself to further detoxify.
So yes, it is literally being pushed out through your skin.
One of the number one reasons for acne
besides hormonal acne is from bacteria.
And so that's why they'll give antibiotics for,
one of the reasons I got so sick when I was 17.
Isn't Accutane like a really strong antibiotic?
Well, it is at least what I believe,
or no understand why, is a derivative of vitamin A.
Oh yeah.
I believe it is.
But they give antibiotics, so that was the issue
with my gut, so from 14 years old to 17 years old.
That's right, you were on Antibiotics the whole time.
The whole time.
I took over 3,000 capsules of Amoxicillin.
Oh my God. Twice a day. I had the big containers000 capsules of amoxicillin. Oh my God.
Twice a day.
I had the big containers.
I would go to the pharmacy, and this was totally normal.
Like this was just like growing up in the 80s.
You get your Z packs, you get your amoxicillin,
any case of a sniffle, you just take your Z pack,
and then for this, and you know what?
It cleared up my acne.
Oh my God.
What it did was destroy my gut associated lymphoid tissue,
and then I ended up with
10 years of Addison's disease, type 2 diabetes, acid reflux, all sorts of issues.
So sure, got rid of the acne, clear skin, had to trade that for a decade of my life,
so yeah, pretty brutal.
Wasn't fair trade.
I think I'd rather have the pimples for a couple of years.
Exactly.
Rather go through that, but also I was eating a couple years. Exactly. But I had to go through that. But also, I was eating a terrible diet. I mean, I was sweating and not the best hygiene or cleansing of the skin when you're 14 years
old and eating cereal and drinking Kool-Aid in the morning and little Debbie snacks in
the afternoon.
So, not the best diet.
But having said that, a big part of acne is bacteria in the blood cell. Could because or due to the fact that the skin does help
with the detoxification process, when you go on treatment,
when you go to support your liver and your lymphatic system
that you can actually get worse skin first.
100%.
So for two to three weeks, when using even like an
N-L-C-D-L cysteine, a glutathione, a CBO protocol, whatever it might be,
you may get worse, your skin might look worse
for two to three weeks.
It really might.
And this is important to know for people listening
because you might be like this was for my skin
and it's worse.
Yes.
But you oftentimes get worse before you get better
with these types of things.
And I know people don't want the worst,
which is why I always say start lower.
If the dose is four capsules a day, start at one capsule for the first week.
It's going to take a little bit longer, but that's okay.
Second week do two, third week three, next week four, now you're at the highest dosage
so that your body slowly got into it.
And that is the best way, kind of the best of all worlds if you're really worried about
that.
Now we will say it only happens in maybe one or two out of 10 cases, so it's not the majority.
Because remember, the main detoxification organs
are your liver first, then your kidneys,
and then your skin.
And if you aren't seeing the improvement,
or you want the improvement to happen faster in your skin,
you can do sauna to sweat it out faster,
and you can also do coffee enemas.
And coffee enemas are wildly important.
Okay, so explain that for me real quick.
So why does coffee enemas help you detox?
I never understood that.
Is it the-
Antioxidant properties?
I just don't get, is it the, yeah,
why not drink your coffee?
Why is that?
Why in the ass?
Yeah, yeah.
So you can drink the coffee, which is good too.
There's nothing wrong with it.
The polyphenols in coffee are great
and they actually can help with detoxification.
Too much caffeine actually is not great for detoxification.
Can slow down the, it's called the Cetichrome P450 pathway. But with
a coffee enema, so it sounds kind of strange, but to demystify it, literally you're just
using three tablespoons of a clean coffee, organic mold-free coffee. You put it in a
French press, keep it there for about 10 minutes, put it into a bin. I don't like people putting
them in plastic bags
because then you get the phthalates and other things
coming in your body, you let it cool down to about room temp.
Yeah, you don't want hot coffee.
Hot coffee, enema.
Do you need to say that?
I think you may have to.
You may have to, yeah.
Because it'll immediately come out.
Cold brew, guys.
Cold brew, enema.
Hi!
And then you're inserting the sterile tube
and basically you're rolling from your left
side onto your back.
You're trying to hold it for 12 to 15 minutes.
And so this started, well this has been around for hundreds of years, forever.
And then they started to get popularized with anti-cancer based treatments.
And the reason is, is they're just trying to work on detoxification happening at a greater
degree.
So how it really happens though, is that it's cycling
through your liver, meaning the caffeine itself,
and the polyphenols from the coffee.
So you have a-
They bypass the digestive system,
I'm assuming that's why you're doing it this way.
That's right, so your colon is attached to the liver.
And so typically the bile would be able to drop down
to the small intestine of the liver itself
through the hepatic portal vein,
and the hepatic portal arteries which the small intestine of the liver itself through the hepatic portal vein and the hepatic portal arteries
which bring blood flow to the liver itself.
So what we have is the coffee is being uptaken to the liver.
The liver then, there's an enzyme,
glutathione S-transferase is being increased.
More glutathione is being produced by the liver.
That's the master antioxidant of phase two detoxification,
which is the most important to change
fat soluble toxins to water soluble toxins. Then after 12 to 15 minutes of holding the detoxification, which is the most important to change fat soluble toxins to water soluble toxins.
Then, after 12 to 15 minutes of holding the enema,
a lot of the bile and a lot of the toxins held in the liver
will immediately move to the colon
and it'll be removed in a bowel movement.
So it's just a faster way to remove these toxins.
Do you absorb the caffeine that way then?
Are you getting like a big old caffeine spike?
Many people are sensitive, so we say try to do it
before the noon hour.
But it's gotta be regular coffee, not Folgers.
Has to, yeah.
Well, Folgers may work, but probably not the best,
yeah, the Chuck Fullenuts coffee.
We'll commit to the audience that we'll have Doug do this
and then we'll get ready.
Now, the best way to do it, I talk about this in my book,
as well, if you're willing to go all in,
you do some rebounding or dry brushing first.
You get in the sauna, and then you can do some dry brushing in the sauna if you want and
then you do the coffee enema.
So basically you're mobilizing a lot of these toxins with an infrared sauna and the dry
brushing or rebounding and then you do the coffee enema.
So they've been using this Gerson Institute many places for many years.
I like how you do it at the end because you get them committed first.
You don't start with the enema.
You start with the sauna.
Okay, this is going good.
Going good. Ready for the last bit. That escalated fast. the end because you get them committed first you don't start with the enema start with the sauna okay this is going good
that escalated fast. I'm not saying you need to do a coffee enema but if you're
looking to get rid of a lot of these symptoms faster it does not. No that's great
our buddy Ben Greenfield has done it many times and I think that we've
joked about it. We've always been curious to like okay what is
really going on here for you? Don't drink that coffee.
I've actually talked with Ben on a show about coffee.
So I've never heard of the gut-lymph connection before.
Is this something that is being explored recently in functional medicine?
Or is it like, I've never heard it before.
Almost no one talks about the lymphatic system in general.
And just really how important it is for the immune system.
So we talk about boosting our immune system.
We talk about how 80% of the immune system
is inside of your gut.
But really it's just that the payers patches,
the mesenchym, all around the intestines
are filled with what's going to be able
to produce antibodies.
And so the secretory IgA and these immunoglobulins,
we're gonna be talking a little bit today
with the food test of the IgG,
all of those sit right there.
And they wait for pathogens, toxins, et cetera, to come in.
And when they do, their job is to basically corral them
through this fluid that looks like veins
that move through the body, and it moves through nodes.
And the lymph nodes are, they're all over the body,
but big patches behind the knees, in the groin,
the armpits, around the neck, your tonsils, adenoids,
those are examples of those.
That's why they get swollen and they get sick, right?
Because they're a bunch of antibodies.
If there's a lot of cleaning process that goes on.
Yeah, absolutely.
So if you get swollen lymph nodes,
that's a real serious infection or virus.
A lot of people, they'll get a cut on their foot,
they get a swollen lymph node in their groin.
That's important to look at that.
Okay, do I have an infected cut
anywhere on that leg below that?
Because that's a serious sign
that you need to have that taken more seriously.
Yeah, I had a client once who had a swollen lymph node,
but there was a spot of acne that was slightly infected
that was causing the inflammation.
Yeah, because it's the closest. Did you know that or did you find that out later causing the inflammation. Because it's the closest.
Did you know that or did you find that out later?
I did not know it at the moment.
I used to train a lot of doctors and so I had a client with that.
My next client was coming, it was a doctor.
I'm like, hey, do you mind if I ask you a question?
You know, free, whatever.
And they explained, oh, it might be because you have this right here.
And sure enough, that's what it was.
Yeah, in the back of the neck, I've seen that too with jewelry.
People wearing nickel plated or different types of jewelry
and actually having a reaction, because that
can be absorbed through the dermal layer of the skin.
Interesting.
Very interesting.
So the lymphatic system itself, if you get this right,
it's going to improve not just your overall immune system,
but the quality and clarity of your skin and your energy.
Because as I said before, if that lymphatic system is slow and sludge-like
and you're not getting it to move, you're gonna feel tired, you're gonna feel
swollen and puffy and retaining a lot of water retention. For people working at a
desk job, I would assume then it's very important for many reasons, but for this
one as well, for them to get up and flex their legs a little bit and their upper
body just to allow,
because this is not connected to your heart, right?
So your heart doesn't pump this fluid through,
it's movement and muscle contractions and whatnot.
Yeah, 100%.
And if you can't get up from your desk,
ideally you're getting up from your desk
once an hour at least to stand.
You know, that's the biggest thing.
Just try to stand, walk around, use the bathroom,
get water, whatever you need to do.
But if you can't, as you were talking about before,
plant your dorsiflexion with your ankle.
So literally just pump your calves.
And that's gonna move the blood flow back up.
Not just for your lymphatic system,
but for your blood pressure.
I mean, if you start to let blood just pool in your legs,
it's one of the worst things that you can do
for overall the peripheral artery, which is down there,
for stenosis of that.
It's really important because it's not just the artery
in our neck or the arteries around our heart,
it's the one down in the calf as well.
So that's a much overlooked one.
And then, you probably can't do this in your office,
but putting your legs up a wall.
So you put your hips against the wall,
legs up the wall, kind of stretches your hamstrings
a little bit, lets the blood flow down.
It's really relaxing, nice for a lot of people.
What are those tables Cole where you hang upside down? There you bit, lets the blood flow down. It's really relaxing, nice for a lot of people. What are those tables Cole, where you hang upside down?
Those too.
There you go.
You must like those then.
I do for a lot of people, not if you have high blood pressure.
Of course.
If you're pregnant, yes, but I do for the most part.
It takes a lot of the pressure off your spine as well.
So it's interesting, but about a year and a half ago,
I started to get some neck pain, like some cracking in my neck.
And I'm like, all right, alright well let's go figure out what
this is and so I did all the exercises to help you know I had I always do a
yearly full-body MRI take a look at it okay yeah there's a little something
going on there and it's from city I can't get rid of it with all the
postural base work the rhomboid work like everything like opening up muscles
the levator scapula you you name it, does not matter.
It is the compression for me being seated.
And so that is when I always had a standing desk,
I've had a standing desk for like five or six years.
I just said the first half of the day, I don't sit down.
And I have a anti-fatigue mat under the feet,
which helps a lot.
And then I'm just at my desk working.
And it makes a tremendous difference.
Yeah, like literally, then the neck pain,
the popping's all gone.
And then do my workout like four or five hours after that
and I can do all those prehab exercises to warm up.
So I don't know how we go on that topic
or how I go on that topic, but yeah,
I know it helps tremendously.
Awesome, all right, let's look at our tests.
I can't wait to see what's going on.
I'm the guy historically with all the gut health issues,
although it's been a lot better recently.
You've been really good though,
so it'll be interesting to see you.
I remember you saying that before.
You had previous gut-based issues,
you had done some work.
I still, I mean, compared to the typical person
with good gut health, it would still be,
I'd still be, for lack of a term, sensitive,
but a lot better.
I struggled with it for years,
I mean, for the first probably eight years of the podcast.
Yeah, mine really ramped up after hanging out with him,
so I'm pretty sure that's why.
You caught his?
Yeah.
So what foods do you feel, we'll go over yours first,
Sal, but what foods do you feel you're most sensitive to?
Historically, dairy first, gluten.
Egg whites can be on or off.
Right now, I seem to be okay with egg whites,
but in the past they were bad.
Peanuts were bad in the past,
but they seem to be okay again.
And I think that's pretty much it. Lagoons sometimes
can cause issues also, but maybe not so much these days. And what type of symptoms
do you get? Gluten is latent. So gluten, if I eat gluten I'll notice a little
bit of swelling inflammation, some gut issues that'll pop up about a day or two
later. Dairy is almost that night, like I'm just stiff.
I just feel stiff, and I avoid gluten, excuse me,
dairy almost 100%, 100%.
I just stay away from it for the most part.
The other ones I don't avoid.
There was a period of time when I had to stay away
from eggs, but I don't anymore,
and they don't seem to cause any issues.
Do you have eggs daily?
Previous, maybe a year ago.
You know, not as much, but I'll go through stints where I'll have them every single day.
And a lot.
Yeah.
And obviously they can be a great food.
B vitamins, actually increased dopamine, all those kinds of things.
And I mean, if I eat eggs, it's like eight.
I don't just eat two.
So you had about the same sensitivities as you had when we ran this about two years ago.
And when you look at it, there's a lot.
So, you're not able to give a diagnosis of this person
has leaky gut or increased intestinal permeability.
But when you see more than, call it eight to 12 foods,
it's a high likelihood.
Sure.
And so, what happens then is that when you have more
increased intestinal permeability, this is another reason
why people don't love the test test because they're like, well,
it just shows the foods that you're eating.
But as we're about to see here today,
we've got four people, two of them are high,
two of them are just normal low.
And you're all eating at least 30, 40 different foods a week.
So if that was true, all these foods would show up.
But what I will say is that historically,
you have shown up for all types of dairy and you still do.
Some people, their immune system, innate like it's gonna go after dairy. I will say is that historically, you have shown up for all types of dairy, and you still do.
Some people, their immune system,
innate, like it's gonna go after dairy.
They just don't do well with it.
Cow's milk is still the number one sensitivity.
But what's interesting on yours is you're really sensitive
to all types of dairy.
A lot of people-
Including goat milk, dairy, all of it.
But a lot of people can get away with goat or sheep.
Because the protein molecules are so much smaller.
It's much easier to absorb, they're less inflammatory. So the
categories, because you're higher on 37 foods, so the categories are some nuts,
some legumes, which I can go over, but mainly it is dairy, eggs, almonds, peanuts.
That are your biggest ones and it's egg whites, not the yolks.
Now, I will say that your high reactivity was cut in half. So, it's better now from what was
two years ago. So, previously you had about 18 high foods, which is quite high. Now, you have nine.
So, that is better over the last two years. What I would recommend is that
you do a true gut healing based protocol, which you don't have to eliminate a lot of the foods.
What I would say is if you're eating more than every three to four hours, if you can,
you'll still have the same macros, but you'll move those a little bit further apart. Just
give your digestion time. If you're not doing 12 to 14 hours of digestive rest,
call it from seven at night to seven in the morning,
six at night to six in the morning,
give yourself a little bit of rest.
And I would use, we have a product called Healthy Gut Support,
but people can find any product they want,
which is L-glutamine, N-acetylglucosamine,
aloe vera, zinc carnosine is a big one,
and then marshmallow root just for the inflammation.
Yeah, isn't that for the mucosa lining as well?
That's right. So I would use that for 12 weeks. So if you're decreasing sensitivities of those
foods, which sounds like you're already doing a lot of that, and then you're helping to rebuild
that mucosa, and if I didn't mention glutamine, glutamine and zinc carnosine are the two biggest
ones, you're going to use five to ten grams of that a day, so one or two servings. You pop it
in any shake, doesn't really matter, it mixes instantly, that's gonna be what your body
needs to heal that, but in terms of overall inflammation,
it'll go down dramatically.
And in between those two tests,
I got treated for a parasite, so I think that might
have been playing a big role.
I would say so, yes.
What parasite did you have, do you remember?
Tapeworm.
Wow, okay, yeah.
So even after you go through a parasite-based protocol,
you wanna do the same healing because of that,
because it is a strong, parasite protocols
should be done by most people, honestly,
but they are quite strong.
Yeah, how common would you say,
a lot more common than people think?
Like we were talking about H. pylori,
it's about the same.
It's about a third worldwide when you look at that,
but you're looking at other developing countries
without clean water, and so it's much more common
to get Giardia and other parasites like that.
But parasites are a chronic immune stimulant,
which is why they're so bad for you.
Sometimes, again, with a parasite,
people may have no symptoms at all.
Oh yeah.
Maybe they'll have teeth grinding,
maybe they'll have night sweats,
maybe they'll have loose stool, maybe.
But oftentimes it's nothing,
except the end of the end with an autoimmune issue because they're chronically immunosimulated.
I just pointed because you said teeth grinding and I was like that I'm on I just ordered
one to go through just because I people have just recently told me that that was an association
there. It can be. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Plus the itchy butt, right? Yeah. Well, if you have that. We'll talk about that in a little stool.
That's usually pinworms, but it could be any parasite.
It has been a little itchy.
It actually is a big sign of kids. Parents should know that.
Oh, pinworms are super common in kids.
Yeah, so if you see your kid kind of itching their butt, then you should say, okay, they
might have pinworms.
I'll convince your butt.
We should do a parasport protocol and get that done.
All right, so obviously you're gonna get all these results.
The nice thing is they're categorized high,
moderate, and low.
As we talked about before, the low might just be cut down
to once or twice a week.
The moderate should be a 12-week elimination.
The high is a six-month, and I'll tell you this.
So again, we work with the great third-party lab testing,
amazing scientists.
We had a huge call, there was 12 people on the call and again
I won't make this too long because I know it's like me and like three other people that might be interested
But we geek out over all this and it is they're finding that it's legitimately six months to really have those IGG
Amino-globulins stop having the memory of these foods, okay, and then some't. So this is an important one that if you
really want to get rid of a food sensitivity, earn the side of six months if you can. Yeah, well my
dairy one just stuck around and I never have it, but it's just there. Some people continually have
that. For me, the ones that stick around, two random ones, kidney beans and almonds. So I'll have
like three or four, everybody has like two, three food sensitivities normally, like this is normal.
I don't eat almonds and I've never eaten kidney beans,
because I don't even like kidney beans,
and they just always show up.
So it's a reactivity to, again, not to the kidney bean
itself, but the amino acid, yeah, the protein, exactly.
All right, Justin's up next, let's take a look at yours.
I knew it.
The two strong guys.
Now the nice thing is you went from 45 reactions
two years ago to 34.
So there is a big difference.
45. 45.
Holy shit.
You guys don't remember that?
I remember just him.
Oh no, I remember.
Yeah, I remember.
Going over it and pretty much just.
And you were eating quite a bit of dairy
and cheese before that.
I was a lot of that.
A wheel a day you were saying.
A wheel a day and a gallon washing down, yeah.
But so also your high reactivity went from,
let's do the math there 18
Yeah, 18 down to
15 so improvement there you still be improvement. Yeah. Yeah, so there's definitely now we're trying your guys tummy guy, bro
What's going on over there? So he doesn't say
Yeah, all dairy and gluten all very
Basically, I won't let it go. That's why bro. I'm sorry Yeah, all dairy and gluten all dairy all basically
You won't let it go. That's why bro. I'm sorry. You won't let it go
So like he said it's latent so for me like with dairy It's weird cuz I don't feel it till like two days or so, but you have it
I do get it
Play that game of like ah well, you know, just keep it going
Right now
I feel I feel immediately with gluten. What do you feel when you when you have gluten immediately?
It's usually just like heartburn like almost like
Instantaneously. Yeah. Okay, and then you had a random one. So I always call it a random one. That's high celery
So I don't even know if you eat celery, but celery did show up in this night show. Old-fashioned jokes.
He's over there eating celery.
He's a screed-ass rabbit.
Fucking man, I'm trying to eat him out.
So nothing too off.
That's fine.
There's no nutrients in this.
Can't fall a celery diet now.
There goes that.
There's that one out there.
That's an easy one.
That moderate was casein and glianin.
Glianin is the main protein in wheat.
So it's a big one to look at there, too.
And then besides that, it's just yogurt,
it's mozzarella, it's cheddar, cow's milk, sheep's whey.
Every cheese, bro. Every cheese, dog.
Every cheese, yes.
Every cheese, bro.
I'm just the messenger that's here. Not my lab. I don't have anything to do with it.
But if you can do a 21-day elimination, now you fill that obviously with the food that
you're not sensitive to, it is interesting to see.
Sometimes people will feel more brain clarity,
like just more energy in general.
They feel lighter, they just have more energy.
I would try it for 21 days.
I gotta tell you, I gotta tell you Dr. Cabral,
he went off dairy after the last one,
and he was intolerable, we could not handle him.
He was so angry all the time.
I was really angry.
Irritable.
So there's another connection there,
not just the immune system. I think he's just psychologically, psychologically he needs to have it.
The food addiction is there. There's some connection to it being like some kind of,
they said like a heroin molecule or something. There's some drug effect to like eating cheese
and I was like, no way. There is actually with casein and there's one with the gluten as well.
Yeah, in the brain themselves they can have addictive properties. That's probably what it is.
I'm like detoxing or something.
100% he's got that.
Yeah, and it may take two, three weeks.
Just like a real addict isn't denial too.
Wow, I didn't know you were being serious.
That's interesting.
So there was a real, yeah.
I wish it's not coming to me right off the top of my head.
That's why he went back.
He originally said, I'd rather be a messed up gut
than angry girl. And we agreed. Just snapping on everybody. Everybody was in my one half. That's why he went back. He originally said like I'd rather be messed up gut
We agreed just everybody was in my
So if it is a food that you can't really live without you maybe even look at though like every other day you might you might Look at that and then but the cheese substitutes though. I have to say they're pretty terrible. They're horrible. Yeah
Substitutes though. I have to say they're pretty terrible. They're horrible. Yeah
When you how long did you mess with the GLP one did you do that for a while? I did you that you that tamp that down at all?
I'm oh
Man, like I just I didn't have a good reaction
He went to hold those ones were and then that was it and then you didn't mess with it again after that
No, and then I did I did a micro and it just yeah honestly it didn't agree with me. Interesting. Yeah I didn't do well with it. Just a
hypothesis I bet GLP-1's increase gut permeability and food sensitivities.
Now you're eating less but it is causing a gastroparesis like it's causing a
slowing of the digestive system and if bacteria begins to build that can cause
an immune reaction that can be interesting
interesting so I don't know that I mean they haven't been really a lot around long like
that theory but only because I just I couldn't explain it I was like I didn't and I was hoping
for some kind of if it was an autoimmune thing like yeah you know if that was gonna help
but it didn't well just watch that this does for the both of you guys that it does not
turn in to start to feel like joint pain or other skin rash based issues which could be autoimmune in nature.
So it's just something to keep an eye on.
I know you guys are always on the cutting edge but have you tried BP 157?
Not injectable but oral for the gut?
Yeah, with KPV I take it.
And have you felt any improvement from that?
Yes, I was starting to take too high of a dose because that's what I do with peptides
but when I was thinking the normal dose
How many milligrams did you think well supposed to take 500? Yes. Yeah, so you're doubling that well both
I like so for me I like I learned from everyone that I work with I like to know like okay, well
I'll tell you all fair
It's a bit of a bit of a thing. I don't want no listeners to copy me is what I'm saying
Yeah, I can agree with that as well. So yeah, 500 really should be your max dosage if you're
taking it orally. And they make some, but I haven't had, no, I haven't even had enough
anecdotal data. It hasn't been around long enough that there's great science-based data
on it. Now again, I am saying that it's most likely a very safe one to try. And that anecdotally
people do say that they can feel better. The injectable can be great for muscle tissue repair along with what is it?
Is it TB 500? So it's basically a partner with it once more for
muscle tendon ligament but that one has to be injectable and that we're BP 157
for the gut should be oral for that. So anyway, that was interesting.
All right, so yeah, both of you guys definitely recommend
the gut healing protocol.
I don't know that a probiotic would be best for you right now.
If you already have a lot of bacteria in the gut,
you might feel more bloated or you might feel better.
We use one called clean gut probiotic,
which helps to push out some of the yeast.
It's transient, which means it's unique
that it only hangs around for two weeks
and then it moves on itself.
If you started, I would start at a lower dose,
one capsule instead of two, but I would definitely work
on the gut repair and then as much elimination as you can.
Okay, all right.
And since we did look at those hormone tests before
and your cortisol levels were lower,
that's a good sign too because high levels of cortisol
will increase gut permeability.
Yeah, that's right.
And so that's not great, not only for, it lowers certain white blood cells, but if will increase gut permeability. Yeah. And so that's not great. Not only for it lowers certain white blood cells,
but if it increases gut permeability, it's going to throw off the immune system there
around the gut and lymphatic system. All right. Adam is up next.
Good for you, Doug.
Adam went from too high to zero. So cow's milk and yogurt were high.
Casein, which is the main protein, about 80% of the protein in dairy was moderate.
You now have no high, no moderate, which is great to see. And the casein and cow's milk are now low
reactivity. And previously you had egg white and whey, they're still low. And you have yogurt on
there too. So you get five total. Oh, interesting. I wouldn't have thought that. So, and yogurt's a
little bit of a strange one.
We've got the fermentability of that,
which really more affects the carbohydrates
than anything else.
Yeah.
But we still look at it on a reactivity scale.
Okay.
Yeah.
So all low, you know, you could do a six week elimination.
And then it's just, it's cow's milk dairy only.
Goat and whey would be okay.
Yeah.
And have you ever tried a goat whey protein?
I haven't. I do notice, and I've told these guys before, I always milk dairy only, goat and whey would be okay. And have you ever tried a goat whey protein?
I haven't.
I do notice, and I've told these guys before,
I even feel okay with minimal dairy.
But if I had two servings of dairy in a day,
I notice stuff.
So it seems like if I, or if I even have it
Kate every other couple days, seems to be fine.
It's if I start to compound days back to back
or two times in a day, then I start to compound days back to back or two times a day,
then I start to notice things like that. But I've switched a lot of like I use more of the
bone broth protein powder nowadays. Rarely ever do I use whey anymore. You know, occasionally,
very, very rare though, which is probably why you why you notice that.
So I think this is a good case that if you eliminate it long enough, these sensitivities
can go away.
Okay.
And it, yogurt's all yogurt's?
So that'd be like Greek yogurt, everything like that would fall in that category?
When they look at yogurt, they look at cows based yogurt.
You could look at a goat milk yogurt, a sheep yogurt, which would be totally fine.
They're typically lower in protein, but goat milk itself is higher in minerals,
many minerals, especially potassium, than cow's milk. But cow's milk is more anabolic,
so it is better at building muscle.
I don't need any more.
You know, it's just different.
Do you see a difference between the,
because I know that the dairy particles of protein
is smaller in goat, but what about the A2 proteins
in dairy, because I see these advertised all the time,
it's easier to digest.
Yeah, there seems to be less reactivity
in terms of an inflammatory component,
but I haven't seen it change the results of a,
if you're sensitive to this amino acid profile,
you're sensitive to it.
But it is, I think it's like looking at
organic strawberries versus regular strawberries.
So people will react to conventional strawberries
because they are the number one sprayed food
basically out there.
And so are you reacting to the strawberry
or are you reacting to the hybridization
and the spray that's all over it?
And then with A2, like different types of Jersey cows
or cows in general, are you reacting
to the inflammatory nature of this cow
and all that they're fed?
Because these A2 cows, they're not feeding them
like the same way.
So I look at it in a little bit different way.
I think you're looking at a much cleaner and healthier
original variety than you are a hybridized
or heavily sprayed one.
Okay, and so Adam, we went over that, which is great.
There's no, again, no real changes there.
These are, when they're low, that just means. There's no, again, no real changes there. These are, and when they're low,
that just means every once in a while,
foods or maybe once a week.
How many were moderate that you would say
maybe try get rid of for six weeks?
How many?
You had no moderate and no high.
Oh, no moderate and no high.
So just, yeah, before you had three high and moderate.
Now you have none.
So really, I mean, this is,
it's as good as it gets because everybody
always has like one or two.
Yeah. So it's just a cat, you're in a category, right? So you're, if you look at it,
casein, yogurt, cow's milk whey, that's just dairy. Yeah. Like so it's only one category. Yeah. And
then egg whites is the second. Yeah. And so it's not all foods. It's, you could have sheep or goats
bake based cheese every once in a while. Now what would you attribute it getting so much better in
that time? Now I did during that time, the two tests
is when I went through that GLP-1 thing
and I reduced calories, like big time
and very, very minimal food.
I was eating, I was probably not having
a lot of dairy at all part of it.
Is that just why I probably gave my gut a break
for that period of time?
And what would cause it?
It's not like I went in and did a protocol
to solve that during that time.
What's most likely would happen?
So you didn't have high numbers to begin with.
You were at eight total,
which is kind of like our baseline is like
after 10 to 12, eight is like that very top.
So we wouldn't say there might be massive
gut permeability in the first place.
But the IgG cells, the immunoglobulins,
needed time not to see those foods.
So if you did a six month elimination, their previous memory and reactivity to that as
an antigen would have gone down or gone away.
It doesn't happen to everybody.
But we do see it a lot with eggs.
So meaning some people are high in eggs, after a six month elimination they come way down
and they can start having those a couple times a week.
So overall, yeah, like very, very good.
And then Doug.
Good for you.
Doug was our champion.
Wow, finally.
We're looking at no high before,
and you had one moderate, which was rye,
a form of essentially wheat based bread.
And then low before was, uh, abalone and miso.
So a fish and then miso, which, which is strange.
Rarely eat those.
But remember like this is just looking at like, I've had kidney beans before.
I don't eat kidney beans.
So it's that reactivity, that protein beta lactoglobulin, which is, you know,
it's high, but we see that sometimes this is more a reactivity to like the immunity of dairy itself, which is an interesting one. So I wouldn't get
overly concerned about that in any way, shape or form, just like we don't get overly concerned
when someone comes high for bromelain. Bromelain is an enzyme that your body may or may not react
to. It's literally something that breaks down. It's like a proteolytic enzyme that starts to break down.
Fiber and other things in your body that's very, very helpful.
So you had no moderate this time.
So Raya's gone.
It's off the list.
No more abalone, if that's even how you pronounce it, or miso.
Whey and octopus are on the low side now.
OK.
Big octopus guy.
Yeah, lots of octopus.
Swirp in that octopus.
Sometimes people eat octopus as a little appetizer
Gold octopus, but those are low
So again, if you had them once a week or so, it wouldn't be a big deal
If you're having way right now
It might be worth it for six weeks or maybe ten weeks twelve weeks maximum to eliminate that go with a different type of way
When they say way in this they're talking about cow's milk, so you can try a goat's whey, there's
not a lot of sheep's whey out there right now, or just a different protein putter.
Yeah, interestingly I started to eat a protein bar almost every day I'm here
that has whey in it, so that's probably what's... It could be, but again like so if
we want to go back to that because I think it's important, let's say that all
you guys have broccoli every day or green beans every day or you have salmon
every day.
Those aren't coming up on the test.
So it's not always what you're eating.
However, if your body is sensitive to that thing and you start to eat it, it will then
show up.
So it does make sense.
But if your body's not sensitive to it, those immunoglobulins haven't been primed to that
amino acid sequence from the protein, it will never show. Question, what's the least reactive
food typically that you see? In other words, what's the food that most people have
no issues with most commonly? Red meat? I do not see a lot of red meats or
lamb would probably be one of the biggest ones. I do see some fish. Fish can actually be an allergy.
Yes, fish are commonly an allergy.
But if you are not allergic to it, I almost never see it show up as a sensitivity.
Rice and then most vegetables, most fruit are not going to show up. Now you could say, well,
they're lower in protein, but sure, but like lambs, high in protein.
Everything has protein in it. It's not that it doesn't. Those are just less
reactive. I'll tell you across the board, I believe every single person should run this food sensitivity
test, they should do it once a year. But if you're not able to, you got to eliminate the dairy,
the gluten, and the eggs just for 21 days. Do you feel better or not feel better? And if you feel
better, one of those three is the culprit, add one back in.
See what happens.
See what happens.
Wow, that's awesome. I was first introduced to these tests probably 16 or 17 years ago,
and I wasn't the one administering them. I was just a trainer. I just did fitness. But I had
someone in my studio that would administer them, then we would share clients So yeah, they would train with me and then she would do these food sensitivity tests
And at the time I had no experience with them whatsoever. So I was just like, let's see what happens and for people listening
Many of them felt better. Obviously some people
Thought they were asymptomatic when they got the test, but they because they trusted us they cut them out
They got better results with me.
So I saw better strength gains, better gains in endurance, better mobility when they were
following this protocol, which to me, and it happened, I remember the first few times
it happened, I said this is a fluke, but it kept happening and it was remarkable.
And again, that wasn't what I did.
So.
That's a great point, 100%, great point.
And when I first learned about these,
I was on my healing-based protocol myself.
But when personal trainers, massage therapists,
estheticians, chiropractors add this into their practice,
what they're helping their clients do
are find the foods that are creating inflammation.
That's right.
And when you decrease the inflammation,
your clients sleep better, they feel better, they
have clearer skin, they lose more body fat, which is really not body fat, it's just inflammatory
water weight that they're holding, and you get better results too.
So the nice thing is just like you said, you partner with an integrative health practitioner
that run these labs, your client gets the results, but they're still your client.
That's the great thing, right?
So you just, I always look at the personal trainer or aesthetician, like still your client. That's the great thing, right? So you just, I always look at the personal trainer
or a statistician, like if your client comes in
every week and they have skin issues,
doing more topically is not the answer.
You've gotta work internally.
But if you become the hub, right,
and then all the spokes come off of you,
your client looks to you as the practitioner, the guru.
That's what it should be.
That's exactly what I did.
That's exactly what I did.
It made me very, very valuable to have those.
I even worked with a therapist who,
obviously, talk therapy, and she would refer for exercise,
and she would refer for food sensitivity tests,
and would help, and she noticed that it helped
with their depression, anxiety, and all those others.
With kids, it's unbelievable.
So when you eliminate these foods from kids' diets,
they can focus better, pay attention better at school,
less runny noses.
Remember, kids' sinuses are so much smaller, right?
And so it's like a little congestion for them
blocks their whole nose up, right?
And so they feel terrible, they have trouble focusing,
they get ear aches all the time.
You do a food sensitivity test,
you find out what they're sensitive to, those go down,
it makes a world of difference.
And you see results in three weeks.
That's a great thing.
How is somebody able to give these tests?
You guys offer courses, right, where someone can follow your course and then they're able
to administer these tests and read the results and do it themselves, correct?
Integrativehealthpractitioner.org is what I set up about six years ago now.
Half of our people there are personal trainers,
chiros, massage therapist, dieticians, you name it.
And half of the people have no previous
health fitness based background.
But we teach everybody to take control of their health.
Our motto's again like heal yourself, heal others.
But don't guest test.
So we teach people how to run these labs
so they can use them with their own family,
they can create a practice as well,
or personal trainer or something,
they can add it on to their practice.
So that's integrativehealthpractition.org.
And if you don't wanna learn how to run these yourself,
we offer them over at Equal Life,
or just for this site or this lab test,
it's stevencobral.com slash food test.
And your audience, audience obviously we always
give a big discount. I was gonna say are we hooking them up? Yeah at least a
hundred dollars off this lab. Wow nice. I always think about every time you come
in here I was thinking about God if I had you when I was a personal trainer. I'm
telling you guys I was so blessed because I had somebody in my studio that
did these tests that was so far I mean this is back when nobody knew what they
were and I was lucky to have her because I learned about these
and saw them firsthand, it was someone I could refer to.
But I mean if I was able to do this,
if you're a trainer now and you're not doing this,
you're like, if you do do this,
I'll tell you this, you are gonna separate yourself.
You separate yourself from the reappears.
And you need to now, you really do.
Because you're also able to do this virtually
and add other components to your practice
So you're not locked into just the gym setting but but truthfully like we always say to our IHPs
Be the practitioner you never had and like I try to live that because I mean had I known about all of this
You know earlier, I mean we all we can all say that but you know
We're all on our own healing journey
And I believe I was sick for 10 years for a reason because if I figured it out within six months
I would have just gone a different path.
So I wouldn't have gone down the rabbit hole of reading you know thousands of books and studying all over the world and all that
Good stuff, so I'm not upset that it happened to me, but other people
It's not their path like let's get them well
And you know a couple weeks your team and your course is the most recommended that we do for our coaches and our trainers
So it's a big deal 50% offer or no $100 off at least $100 off. It's at steamcoball.com
Food test I don't handle the business side. Okay, I handle the teaching side and the practitioner side
But always a pleasure and I really appreciate you guys have me on. Thank you
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