On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Gary Brecka: 5 Ways Sitting is Shortening Your Lifespan & 2 Changes to Transform Your Daily Routine
Episode Date: April 1, 2024Do you want to know why sitting for a long time shortens your lifespan? Do you want to know how to transform your daily routine? Today, Jay is joined by Gary Brecka, the Co-Founder and Chief Biologist... of 10X Health and the founder of The Ultimate Human. With more than 20 years of Bio-Hacking and functional medicine experience, Gary has worked with and everyone from CEOs to professional athletes from the UFC, NFL, Professional Boxing, and entertainment industries. What will you do when there is a possibility to predict how many more years you have left? Jay and Gary ponder on how our daily habits and emotional states impact our overall health and longevity, the dangers of a sedentary lifestyle and emphasizing on the need for regular movement, the benefits of deep, intentional breathing to enhance physical and mental well-being, and the complexities of mental health disorders, shedding light on common misunderstandings and the reasons why some supplements may not deliver their promised benefits. In this interview, you'll learn: How to boost your emotional health with simple daily practices How to reduce health risks by moving more throughout the day How to deepen and lengthen your breaths for better health How to clear your mind by understanding and addressing brain fog This conversation is focused on empowering listeners with knowledge to make healthier lifestyle choices. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:13 Predicting Your Lifespan 09:17 What Is An Emotional State? 12:54 Sedentary Lifestyle Is a Health Hazard 15:37 Why You Need to Breath Deeper and Longer 22:44 Why Mental Health Disorders are Often Misunderstood 32:20 The Some Supplements Don’t Work 36:54 The Science Behind Brain Fog 44:30 Pre and Postpartum Care 48:55 Folic Acid Mutation 50:36 Deficiencies Are Passed Down, Not Diseases 56:01 What’s Wrong with Tap Water? 01:03:02 How Much Chlorine is in Your Water? 01:06:41 Gary on Final Five Episode Resources: Gary Brecka | TikTok Gary Brecka | Instagram Gary Brecka | LinkedIn Gary Brecka | YouTube Gary Brecka | Website The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jay Shetty and on my podcast On Purpose, I've had the honor to sit down with some of the most incredible hearts and minds on the planet.
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In the industry that I was previously associated with, which was large life insurance,
if the database that I had access to
could see the light of day,
it would upend modern medicine
in a way that would be catastrophic.
We could tell the insurance company
how long you had to live to the moment.
Keep human biologists scary ruckus.
He's gonna make you superhuman.
We know that sedentary lifestyle
is the leading cause of all cause mortality.
You're breathing in that repetitively expired air,
dropping that oxidative state.
You're making the blood more hospitable to disease.
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The number one health and wellness podcast.
Jay Shetty.
Jay Shetty.
The one, the only Jay Shetty.
Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose, the place you come to to become happier, healthier
and more healed.
You know that we're dedicated to making sure that you get the insights, the habits, the
hacks, the advice that's going to help you uplift your life from wherever you currently
are.
So if you're someone who wants to live longer, this episode is for you.
If you're someone who wants to get healthier, even if you're starting from zero, this episode
is for you.
And if you're someone who's been hearing about biohacking and longevity and you're kind of confused and you're thinking
I have no idea where to start this episode is for you today's guest is Gary Brecker the co-founder and chief
biologist of 10x health and the founder of the ultimate human with more than 20 years of biohacking and functional medicine
experience he is obsessed with the function and performance
of the human body and finding innovative ways
to help people achieve absolute peak function
in their bodies.
Please welcome to the show, Gary Brecker.
Gary, thank you for being here.
I am so excited to be here at the top of the mountain.
On the way up here though, I was kind of like not it
on some of these places that are sticking out
from the edge of the cliff.
I've been looking forward to this.
I'm a huge fan.
I've been loving what you've been doing.
Really, thank you.
I've been loving watching your interviews.
I'm so glad to finally have you here.
I remember when I first came across you, I told my team,
I was like, we've got to get Gary on.
Really? Thank you so much, man.
I'm super pumped to be here too, man.
Me too. And I'm always trying to learn.
I feel like I'm always trying to grow.
I'm new in this space in the sense that I got into in the last couple of years and I'm
learning from great experts like yourself.
And I want to start off by talking about this because you talk about the ability to predict
how long someone will live.
And that sounds fascinating and crazy at the same time.
It does.
How is that possible?
Well, first of all, it's based on large data.
And it wasn't me just looking at blood work and gene tests
and saying, I can tell you how many more months
you have left on earth.
But if we got in the industry that I was previously
associated with, which was large life insurance,
if we got 10 years of medical records on you
and 10 years of demographic data,
we could tell the insurance company how long you had
to live to the month. And there are enormous companies that do this. The biggest one is
probably a Fasano and Associates. But this is based on very, very large pools of data.
And remember that life insurance companies have data that no other financial services
enterprise has no other, you know, bank has has CDC doesn't have it collegiate universities that are doing longevity studies don't have it
and that is that they know the day the date the time the location and the cause
of death for hundreds of millions of lives and they have blood work on these
people they have you know very in-depth analytics on their demographic data if
you've ever applied for a large life insurance company,
or large life insurance policy,
let's say five million, 10 million, $25 million policy,
there was at some point somebody determining
not where you were on an actuarial curve,
but your specific mortality.
And the way that it's done is
you start with an actuarial curve, right?
So if you're a 35-year-old male,
you have a life expectancy of X. If you're a 28-year-old male, you have a life expectancy of X.
If you're a 28-year-old female,
you have a life expectancy of Y.
The question is not where are you on that curve,
but what is your specific mortality?
And it's incredible how big data trends
can actually predict, and not only the onset of
and the severity of, but how quickly you will
succumb to certain disease conditions.
And what became glaringly apparent to me was that, you know, if the database that I had
access to during that 20 plus year career could see the light of day, it would permanently
change the face of humanity.
It would upend modern medicine in a way that would be catastrophic because they have real
data.
You know, so if you went to your cardiologist, for example, and he put some heart stints
in your heart and you left his office, you may or may not ever see him again.
He doesn't know if something happened to you three days later or 30 years later.
If you pass because of complications related to the heart stint or just died of happy ripe
old age, But the insurance company
know exactly day date, time, location and cause of death. And you can triangulate that back into
the record. And you can see where the mistakes were made either in diagnostics, as we know,
medical errors, the third leading cause of death. And that doesn't mean that doctors are out to kill
people, or that the healthcare system is out to kill people. We know that it's completely overburdened and sometimes medical error occurs.
It just happens to occur at a rate that in the United States at least is the third leading cause of death.
And if you ever want to question whether or not insurance companies are good at predicting mortality,
just look at what happened during the 2008 and 2009 financial services crisis.
We had 364 banks fail. mortality. Just look at what happened during the 2008 and 2009 financial services crisis.
We had 364 banks fail. You didn't have a single life insurance company fail. In the United
States, a valid death claim in America has never failed to have been paid. Now, that's
an impressive statistic, but you also have to realize that only 2% of life insurance
policies ever pay a death claim. 98% of all life insurance policies lapse.
So I guess I really belabor that point,
but the science of mortality
is some of the most accurate science in the world.
And if you really boil it down to the sum of its components,
you find that it's predicting where processes in the body
that are running on parallel tracks will finally
converge, right?
What we call comorbidities.
When that happens, there is a parabolic rise in the ability to predict the terminal end
of somebody's life.
We know that, for example, all human beings leave this earth the same way.
We actually all die of the same thing.
It's called hypoxia, lack of oxygen to the brain.
So when you can no longer sustain enough oxygen
to the brain that you don't have brain function,
that's essentially the definition of death.
And we think of it as an event like a gunshot wound,
heart attack, a bust, a stroke,
you know, some other kind of event.
But the truth is that this is a predictable curve.
We used to use an underlying,
what we call the hypoxic curve.
How well is this person managing oxygen
or how poorly are they managing oxygen?
And once we were able to predict that,
looking at red blood cell counts, hemoglobin levels,
hormone levels, nutrient deficiencies,
you can very accurately discern whether or
not somebody has a fighting chance of getting out of their condition or that condition,
you know, resulting in their demise. And, you know, two things were very trying for me in that
industry. One was that, you know, I really began to realize that it wasn't just data. There were
human beings on the other side of these spreadsheets.
But the second immensely obvious point that came out of 20 years in that career was that
the majority of the reason why people are not living healthier, happier, longer, more
fulfilling lives is we're because of things that we call modifiable risk factors.
Just simple changes that they could have made
to their daily routine that would have materially changed
the trajectory of their life.
In most cases, they had to do with simple basic nutrients
that were missing from their body
that were causing the expression of disease.
And, you know, anemias, D3 deficiencies, hormone imbalance,
not because of their endocrine system
had a particular disease or pathology,
but because it was nutrient deficient.
And it became so obvious to me that if I had just been able to pick up the phone
and call any number of these people, you know, I could have, could have
dramatically changed the trajectory of their life.
Wow.
I mean, when I'm hearing you talk about oxygen to the brain, which sounds so
obvious, but it's something that is rarely articulated.
Oxygen to the brain is not just gas entering the brain.
You know, if you, if you look at the molecular structure of a lot of the
states in the brain that we talk about, like if you were to say to me, what is a mood?
What is an emotional state?
Well, it's a collection of neurotransmitters,
in most cases bound to oxygen.
If you look at the molecular structure
of some of these activated, deactivated neurotransmitters
or some of these, the differences between different moods,
elevated emotional states, passion, elation, joy, arousal, or suppressed emotional states, anger, you know,
vengeance, despair. You'd find that a large reason, a large difference between these two emotional
states is the presence of oxygen. You know, one of the reasons why no human being has ever woken up
laughing is because you don't have the oxidative state to experience laughter.
But can you wake up angry?
Very easily.
Lower to your emotional states
do not require the presence of oxygen.
And so when, you know, if you wanna do a fun experiment
tonight, just pinch your wife while she's in a deep sleep.
She will instantly wake up angry, right?
I actually don't suggest that.
And then I may laugh.
But if you wanted her to laugh, right? I actually don't suggest that. And then I may laugh. But if you wanted her to laugh, right? If you wanted her to be joyous, if you wanted her to
be elated, aroused, you would have to, you know, wake her up, improve the oxidative state, and then
allow those emotions to come in to play. And so, you know, I have a saying that the presence
of oxygen is the absence of disease.
And so we know, and you know very well,
because you're in this space, that we feel emotion
in an area of the brain called the amygdala, right?
Two little almonds.
And the fascinating thing about this area of the brain
where we experience every emotional state
that we can experience.
If you're angry, you're angry in the amygdala.
If you're related, you're related in the amygdala,
area of the brain.
Is that it is, according to MIT,
the sole gateway to the hippocampus,
which is where our memory is stored.
And so when you start thinking about that
from a physiological standpoint,
you're like, well, the sole gateway to the hippocampus is through the amygdala. But when you start thinking about that from a physiological standpoint, like, well, the soul gateway to the hippocampus is through the amygdala.
But when you start thinking about it from a practical standpoint, then the soul gateway
to our memory is through our current emotional state.
And if that's how we access memory, and memory is what we draw upon our prefrontal cortex
and our consciousness, our future draws from our memories, then if the amygdala is what accesses the hippocampus
part of the brain and taps into our memory and then our conscience pulls from our memory,
then this essentially means that your current emotional state determines your future. And
I just feel like if we could improve the capacity for people to experience
elevated emotional states for prolonged periods of time,
not like a heart monitor, right?
Because you find so many people
that are not in good physiological condition
that are trying to become in better emotional condition,
right, better mood.
And they are only able to reach these emotional states
for short periods of time, like a heart monitor. So and they do
all the right things, they wake up, they journal, they read
self-help motivational books, they go to the right seminars,
they try to express gratitude, even even fake their way through
it. But as soon as they're done, that intentional focus drops
back down into the state where they most comfortably exist.
And I believe a lot of this has to do with the oxidative state in the brain,
and it also has to do with nutrient deficiencies, right?
I mean, every emotion that we can feel,
every mood that we can experience is a collection of neurotransmitters.
As we have imbalances and deficiencies in these,
then we cannot manufacture the moods and the
emotional states that we really want to experience.
And then we're told we have a mood disorder or a mental illness.
And I think very often we just have a lack of mental fitness.
And so when you realize that the happiest people are the people that are moving the most,
that have the greatest sense of purpose,
and that they're not necessarily the world's greatest biohackers,
but they're eating whole foods, they're moving their body a lot.
They have a sense of purpose.
You look at the blue zones and some of the things that actually extend life.
We would see this in the medical record.
Yeah, were those people actually having some alcohol?
Yeah.
Were those people actually having a little bit of elevated LDL cholesterol?
Sure.
Did those people eat sweets once in a while?
Yeah, they sure did.
But they moved on a consistent basis and they had relationships and they had a sense of
purpose and for the most part, they ate whole foods
and not any particular type of whole food,
not any particular type of diet.
It wasn't the carnivore diet that extended their life.
It wasn't the keto diet that extended their life.
It wasn't the raw food vegan diet that extended their life.
It was the whole food diet, you know,
just eating real whole foods.
So I kind of diverted there for a second.
No, no, no, no, I get where you're going.
Yeah, how do I?
Sometimes my wife is like, you just eat people's face.
And like, you know, so.
I love it.
Government, you sit next to me
on like a commercial flight or something.
Oh yeah, I love it, I love it.
Just eat your face.
So how do we do that though?
Like how do we get more oxygen to our brain?
Like what does that mean?
What does that look like?
Well, I mean, we know that sedentary lifestyle
is the leading cause of all cause mortality, right?
And why is sedentary lifestyle the leading cause of all cause mortality? We know that
sitting is the new smoking. Well, we know why smoking was bad for you, right? It destroyed the
lungs. But, and you know, the nicotine caused permanent lung damage. And, but it wasn't the,
really the nicotine, it was the reduction in the oxidative state. And when the body doesn't have oxygen and can't really defend itself.
I mean, if you actually were to go in through the wall of a cell, go through
the cytoplasm and, and, and find the little organelles floating around in
there called the mitochondria, which there's probably a thousand or so per
cell and 32 trillion cells.
So it's estimated we have 110 trillion mitochondria, about 10% of your
body weight are these little mitochondria. This is the true energy source for human beings.
And when cells become metabolically sick, it usually begins in the mitochondria, including
the genesis of cancer and forms of all kinds of different pathologies. So when the mitochondria does not have the right oxidative state, you have a 16-fold
step down in its production of energy.
And what happens when you take a 16-fold step down in the energetic state of a cell is now
that cell can no longer eliminate waste, repair, detoxify, regenerate.
And so you're becoming metabolically sick,
mainly because of the deficiency in oxygen.
It's not that linear, but that is the main component.
And sedentary lifestyle means that we have prolonged periods
of where our respiratory rate is very shallow.
When our respiratory rate's very shallow,
the majority of the air that we breathe in and out
is high in carbon dioxide, it's expelled air.
I mean, right now, every time you let out a breath
from the tip of your nose and the front of your lips,
all the way down your esophagus,
through the back of your pharynx,
and all the way down and out to the bronchioles
and in your lungs, this is all expired air.
So when you breathe in and out, if it's very shallow,
you're breathing in that repetitively expired air
and you're dropping that oxidative state in the blood. You're making the blood more
acidic. You're making it more hospitable to disease. Not alkaline and less
hospitable and not full of oxygen which is energetic. And so what are ways to get
more oxygen? Obviously things like breath work. Just simply moving your body.
Give us one that... So I love what you're saying here
because it's so fascinating to understand that
the reason a shallow breath is reducing our lifespan
is because of this idea of just how much can get stuck
and lost in there.
Changing in the gases.
Yeah, and so what are some breath work practices?
Because I think what we don't realize today
is with everyone dealing with anxiety,
dealing with stress, dealing with pressure, we're
all subconsciously breathing far more shallower and we're breathing quicker
and you got these shorter quicker breaths and I think sometimes we're doing it
without knowing at all. What are some great breathwork practices that you
stand by that? So you know I don't have a breathwork practice that I that I take
credit for. I use a Wim Hof style of breathwork. I mean, you could spend a lifetime going,
and I encourage people to do so.
I mean, the lifetime going down just the breathwork avenue.
There's breathwork to wake up,
there's breathwork to go to sleep.
But I think it's important,
as a part of a really daily health practice,
longevity practice,
see you're just taking a deep breath now.
Now I'm like, yeah.
The counter suggestion, he's like,
that's what I'm saying, yeah, I'm like,
yeah, let's get really clear on this.
He's like, I'm not dying any time soon.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm not going down.
I hope everyone listening and watching
is taking a breath right now too.
Everyone's like, everyone's doing the same thing I'm doing.
Yeah, they're doing it right now.
Everyone's like counting how long their breath is right now.
The truth is, you know, it's better to breathe
deeper and longer and less frequently
than it is to breathe more shallow and less
frequently.
In fact, Wim Hof in some of his teachings will do a very simple exercise where he'll
say, I just want you to look down at your watch and I want you to count the number of
times that you breathe in and out in the next minute.
And people will just, they don't know that they're actually being tripped.
And what he's showing is that the majority of people are breathing 15, 18, sometimes 20 breaths in 60 seconds.
And what this is showing you
is if you're breathing that frequently,
you're breathing that frequently
because of the very little amount of oxygen
that you're getting.
And so you're breathing shallow
and your buddy is trying to get more oxygen. Then he says, okay,
count the number of breaths in the next minute.
I want you to only take four breaths for the entire minute,
one every 15 seconds. And you're going to breathe in
and you're going to pause and you're going to breathe out.
And so essentially what he's trying to demonstrate
is that in that same minute,
four breaths actually was equivalent to 15 or 18
or 20 breaths in the same period of time,
but they were four deep breaths.
As we age, I read a statistic,
I don't know if there's any valid science behind this or not.
I actually got hassled online for repeating this,
but I read a statistic that after age 30,
less than 95% of people will ever sprint again.
I don't know how much truth there is to that,
but as I kind of just meander my way through the world,
I have a tendency to think that it's fairly close.
And if it's not 95% of people, maybe it's 70% of people.
But after age 30, and this means that we're not using
our auxiliary muscles of respiration,
we're not using our intercostals,
we're not using our diaphragm to massage our intestines,
we're not correcting our posture and getting air down
into the lobes of our lungs and out of the apex of our lungs.
And so what Wim Hof talks about is,
I do three rounds of 30 breaths every morning.
Takes about eight minutes.
That is the one thing that I do
that I never, ever, ever, ever miss.
Three rounds of 30 breaths that every minute
you're only taking four breaths?
No, so it's three rounds of 30 breaths.
So the one minute of four breaths
was just a way of showing you how you're actually hyperventilating
yourself.
You're actually, if you're taking 20 breaths in a minute
or 15 breaths in a minute, those are really short breaths.
And which means that you're not drawing in a lot of oxygen.
And you made it through the next minute breathing
less than a quarter of the amount of time.
And it just shows you that it's because during those
15 or 18 breaths, you use the apex of your lungs.
During those four breaths, you use the lobes of your lungs
where two thirds of the storage capacity is.
And so it's just demonstrating the fact that getting oxygen
deep into the lobes of our lungs and into our bloodstream
is a very, very healthy thing.
And it not only elevates your mood and your emotional state,
but it is the antithesis of disease.
It can actually even alkalize the blood.
So I do three rounds of 30 breaths,
obnoxiously deep breaths,
and then exhale.
And then on your 30th breath,
and you exhale and you hold as long as you can.
When you start, you might be holding your breath
for 15 seconds, 20 seconds.
After several months of doing it,
because the oxygen tension will change,
the storage capacity changes,
you'll be up to, I'm up to almost four minutes now.
So I can hold my breath for four minutes between rounds.
And you want, on that exhale,
you want to build carbon dioxide.
That's the main vasodilator in the human body.
It's not nitric oxide, it's carbon dioxide.
The reason why we get vascular during exercise
is because of the carbon dioxide traveling back to the lungs,
not necessarily because of the pressure.
So we want the carbon dioxide to build up.
We want that vasodilation, and then post vasodilation,
we take a nice obnoxiously deep breath in,
we let that air out, and we start again.
It's like my coffee, my caffeine,
my double espresso in the morning.
I call it my drug of choice
because my body craves it like a rat to cheese.
So within 30 minutes of waking every day,
I'm finding a spot to do 30 minutes of breath work.
And the great thing about it is number one, it's free.
Number two, it's portable.
You do it in a hotel.
You just sound a little weird doing it in the hotel room
or in airplane bathroom.
You know when I'm on long flights,
I go in the restroom and do it.
God only knows what they think I'm doing in there.
Cause about every-
Why weren't you doing your seat?
Well, cause there's like everybody out there
and I'm like-
You're stressing out, yeah.
The ring the flight attendant call button.
But I was actually on a long flight from Dubai
back to New York.
And actually a few times ago when I was actually on a long flight from Dubai, back to New York and actually a few times ago
when I was in LA, I went LA to Dubai on Emirates
and they got a big bathroom in the front of the plane there
and I just went in there and had at it, you know,
I would do like 25 air squats
and then I would do 25 deep breaths,
25 air squats, 25 deep breaths
and I could see the looks on people's face
when I came out of the bathroom.
I'm like, I feel great.
And then every hour on the hour is going back in
and doing the same thing.
I know they were thinking, God, just give it a break.
Give it a break, guy.
They need a gym on planes.
Yeah, we need to normalize gyms on planes.
Gyms on planes.
Somebody was actually talking to me about that.
My friend, Mikey Wang, was talking to me about that
the other day, how he wants to put gyms on planes.
Take out the bar, even if you just put like some TRX bands
or something, you know, I can't imagine a squat rack
with some freeways, but what a cool thing it would be
if the business class section in the back,
like in Emirates, it's a bar back there
with a cool TV and little lounge seats,
but I'd love for him to put some islets around
and just throw up some TRX bands.
I would be back there doing it.
In fact, I had a whole group of people in the back of the planes, about 12 or 13 of
us last time on my way to Dubai, and it convinced everybody to do breath work.
And we all sat in a big circle on the back of that Airbus and did breath work for like
20 minutes.
It was amazing.
Yes, yes, the Street Stoic podcast is back.
One of the quotes that came to mind here is from Drake.
The lyrics that came up for me was from Beyonce.
I pulled a quote from just one of my favorite artists
in general, Kid Cudi.
We are combining hip hop lyrics and quotes
from some of the greatest who ever grace a microphone.
In it he says, "'Cause it's just waves. lyrics and quotes from some of the greatest to ever grace a microphone.
Along with ancient wisdom from some of the greatest philosophers of all time. Seneca, right? And he says,
your mind will take shape
of what you frequently hold in thought.
For the human spirit is colored by such impression.
A story quote from Epictetus where he says,
don't seek for everything to happen as you wish it would,
but rather wish that everything happens as it actually will.
Then your life will flow well.
And listen, I know we all could use a daily shot
of inspiration, so this is the podcast for you.
Listen to season two of the Street Stalk podcast
as part of the My Kutura podcast network
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
When you find that bright spot
to help you get through your day, it's powerful.
That's where The Bright Side comes in.
A new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine
that's bringing you a daily dose of joy.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And I'm Simone Boyce.
Listen, both Danielle and I are reporters.
We've covered the news and we know the world can feel heavy,
but the Bright Side podcast is a space to have a little fun,
to learn something new and get into some friendly debates.
That's right, join us five days a week
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Hi, I'm Laura Vander Kim.
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Gary, I want to go back to something you said earlier. What's the relationship between
mental health and vitamin deficiencies? Well, if you look at...
I don't think this is talked about enough.
I don't think it's talked about enough either. When we talk about mental health,
a lack of mental fitness, so many mental health disorders are, in my opinion, poorly understood.
They are defined one way and treated a different way.
I just had Dr. Palmer from Harvard on my podcast.
It was fascinating how he was treating, and he's a board certified psychiatrist, an MD,
and a Harvard professor, and he's treating some of the most drug resistant psychiatric
illnesses.
And I'm talking about the most awful of psychiatric illnesses, you know,
paranoid schizophrenia, the conditions where people are literally tortured inside their own
head, voices, what have you, and they're drug resistant. And he treated them with
supplements and ketogenic diets. And again, I'm not trying to oversimplify mental health
by any means and saying, if you're suffering
from severe depression, just get on the ketogenic diet.
That's not at all what I'm saying.
But if you look at the, if you keep digging in
and you say, okay, what is a mood?
What is an emotional state?
These are collections of neurotransmitters.
They're recipes, right?
What is anxiety?
It's an excess, it's an elevation of a category of neurotransmitters. They're recipes, right? What is anxiety? It's an elevation of a category of neurotransmitters
called catecholamines.
So if catecholamines rise in your brain,
you will feel fearful.
You will actually feel the presence of a fear
without the presence of a fear.
And when we understand that the brain can play tricks on us
because it truly doesn't know the difference
between perception and reality.
You know, I use the example that if you drove home tonight and you got out of your car
and somebody was standing in front of you with a knife, very real fear, right?
You would begin to have a fight or flight response.
Pupils would dilate, heart rate would increase, your extremities would flood with blood.
But you could also be in your place here, and we're very high on the mountain in LA,
and you could be laying in your bed tonight and you could start thinking about getting eaten by a shark.
You know that the chances of a shark
getting out of the Pacific Ocean and making it up there,
right, that, you're real, even if you had an Uber.
We are virtually zero,
but you could have the exact same reaction.
How is it that I could have the same reaction
to the presence of a real fear
as an entirely imagined fear?
Because at their core, at the hub, where all these spokes meet, it's the same thing.
It's a rise in catecholamines.
So if we know fear can be born from a rise in catecholamines, then we know anxiety and
anxiousness can be from a rise in catecholamines.
This is why so many people that have anxiety or experience anxiousness
Very often will say I've had it on and off throughout my entire lifetime And I cannot point to the specific trigger that causes it they can be sitting on a podcast like we are right now
Very calm their staff around nothing to be afraid of and all of a sudden become overwhelmed with anxiety
so
And then we take it a step further and we say well well, where are these neurotransmitters come from?
How do we make neurotransmitters?
Well, the majority of these are made in the gut.
Serotonin, for example, is methylated in the gut.
We take a simple amino acid called tryptophan.
We methylate it into the neurotransmitter serotonin.
It travels up the vagus nerve and it creates a mood.
We take phenylalanine and tyrosine,
and we turn those into dopamine, the main driver of behavior.
So if we know that mood and behavior
driven by neurotransmitters
that are derived from amino acids,
then why isn't it possible that deficiencies in amino acids
could give rise to deficiencies in neurotransmitters
which could then be interpreted as a mental illness?
And again, I'm not trying to oversimplify mental illness
by any means. I believe in therapy, I also
believe that, you know, meds do work in many cases. But why
wouldn't we start first, if we define, for example, depression
as an inadequate supply of serotonin, then why are we not
trying to raise the level of serotonin? If we define some addictive tendencies
as an inadequate supply of dopamine,
the absence of dopamine is the presence of addiction.
One of the reasons why addiction has a tendency to shift
is because we never treat the dopamine deficiency.
We only treat the physical addiction, right?
So these are what, drug addicts become alcoholics,
alcoholics become work-alto-holics,
work-alto-holics become work-a-holics.
You know, you shift one addiction for another because that deficiency in dopamine drives
you to feel want to feel normal.
And this is where I believe most addiction starts is the search for normalcy, not the
search for a high, right?
I don't believe that most, most addicts woke up one day and said, I want to get really
banged up.
They woke up one day and said, I want get really banged up. They woke up one day and said, I wanna feel normal.
Yeah, or numb.
Or numb.
Numb, yeah.
Yeah, and in this search for that numbness
or the search for that normalcy,
whether it was alcohol or nicotine or permisciuity
or what have you, they felt that either that numbness
or that sense of normalcy.
And then the addiction grew from that.
And so they were then running from a low,
not running towards a high.
And this is one of the reasons why I have so much empathy
for people that are trapped in the cycle of addiction.
And I think that more addictive therapy needs to address
these dopamine deficiencies.
But now we're getting down to the possibility
that nutrient deficiencies could give rise to neurotransmitter deficiencies
that could give rise to states of mental instability.
And then we label this mental illness.
You have ADD, ADHD, you have OCD, you have manic depression, you have bipolar, you have
schizophrenia, you have generalized anxiety, you have generalized depression, which I personally
think are nonsense.
But again, I'm not talking to the mental health profession.
When you deprive the human body of certain raw materials, you get the expression of disease.
And we accept this in so many different areas of medicine, but we don't really accept it
in mental illness, right?
I mean, how is a leading PhD from Harvard having success treating drug resistant mental illness with diet?
Because it's not the diets,
the nutrients that they were deficient in.
And how is it that people that experience
high rates of anxiety and anxiousness
and attention deficit disorder
or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
can sometimes do something as simple
as take a methylated multivitamin and experience a dramatic reduction in their symptoms. Because
nutrients matter. The human being, the human body is such a fascinating machine. You know,
the more you study human physiology, the more you believe in God, because there's no way that this was just
assembled by accident or by chance over time, right?
I don't care how much time you give to bacteria in a mud puddle, you're never going to get
a human being out of it.
And the intelligence with which it's designed, how one raw material enters a cycle, it gets
used, it creates waste, and then that waste is accepted
and taken into another cycle, and it's utilized.
And it's like one man's trash is another man's treasure.
And cellular metabolism is so fascinating
because one amino acid enters a cycle
and it gets converted into something completely different.
Homocysteine gets metabolized into methionine.
Homocysteine then can be one of the most inflammatory
compounds in the human body.
This gets metabolized into methionine, which then goes up into the mind and quiets the
mind by dismantling, by essentially down regulating catecholamines, these fight or flight neurotransmitters.
So it puts people into a calm state of being calm.
So then you start to understand, well, the majority of people that have sleep disturbance
have one or two types of sleep patterns.
They are either lay down to go to sleep, body tired, and they are mind awake.
So when their environment quiets, their mind wakes up.
Why does the mind wake up when the environment quiets?
Because you have excess catecholamines in the brain.
There's a gene mutation called COMT, C-O-M-T, catecholomethyltransferase.
It's a fancy way of saying the gene that codes
for the enzyme that breaks down this class
of neurotransmitters, that down regulates them.
Well, let's say that this gene mutation, you have this
and you have an impaired ability
to down regulate catecholamines.
That doesn't sound like a big deal until you realize that catecholamines
create a waken state in the brain.
And so this waken state usually happens at night
and somebody will lay there and they will just think
about the most innocuous little thoughts
while they are exhausted.
They're just like,
did I get everything on my grocery list?
Did my belt match my shoes?
We changed the Juni label to Fuchsia from dark blue.
You know, and you're like,
why am I thinking about this at 2.30 in the morning?
Right, or you get up to use the restroom
and you go back to bed and you lay there
and your mind's awake.
And so you don't have a sleep disorder,
you don't have a mental disorder,
you don't have generalized anxiety,
you don't have a mood disorder,
you have excess catecholamines in the brain.
And very often these can be downregulated very simply
with complexes of B vitamins, methylated B12,
methylfolate, the raw material that the body needs
to downregulate these.
And by not giving the body the raw material,
we get this expression of disease,
and then we say this person has this condition.
You know, I tell the same story all the time a lot about when I was in grad school and
I took these plant botany courses, which I didn't like to take because I wanted to get
a human biology degree and I had to study algae.
It wasn't super interesting to me.
That's what was so interesting about biology growing up.
I remember there's so many subjects now where I'm like,
if I knew that neuroscience was a part of, you know,
looking at biology and so many other things,
I would have been fascinated by it.
Right, right, exactly.
But you were learning about plant biology, I didn't care.
Yeah, me too.
I really could have cared less about plant biology.
But, and then you have to start with rock stratas
and, you know, fossil lineages
and all this other kind of stuff.
And I'm like, who makes a career out of this?
You know?
But you can actually get a degree
in traffic management too.
So I guess that I'd rather study rocks than traffic.
No offense to the traffic experts out there.
You guys are killing it.
But, you know, when You're gonna be like, no, just crack him out.
Just lost half your audience right there.
Like don't offend the traffic guys, dude.
Somebody's gotta figure out when these lights go on and off.
Go on, sorry I can't.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm just having a good time. I'm just having a good time. I'm just having a good time. I'm just having a good time. I'm just having a good time. Like don't offend the traffic guys, too. Somebody's gotta figure out when these lights go on and off.
God, sorry I can't.
I'm just having a good time.
I'm having a good time too,
but I don't know how we got down that road,
but in any case, you know, when you're studying plants.
All right, go ahead, Gary, go.
I don't know why that's so funny.
Hopefully your listeners think it's so funny.
But when you're studying plants,
and you will cut it, maybe we should leave it in actually.
Kind of like it.
You don't think you have a lot of traffic experts
that listen to the podcast.
No, probably a very low,
you probably lose two followers on that one.
It's worth it.
You know, if you have a leaf that's rotting
in the top of your palm tree,
and you call a true arborist,
a true botanist out to your house,
and they'll look at that leaf
and they won't touch the leaf.
They won't even touch the tree.
They'll court test the soil.
And they'll say, you know what, Jay,
there's no nitrogen in this soil.
And they'll add nitrogen to the soil
and the leaf will heal.
We stopped thinking about human beings this way.
We go very quickly to chemicals and synthetics,
pharmaceuticals as a way to solve potential
nutrient deficiencies in the human body.
And we're fascinating machines like plants.
And when, if you didn't add nitrogen to that soil,
all of the things that were good for that plant
would have done nothing, right?
You're like, well, maybe we should water it.
Water's great for plants.
When you put water on there, nothing happens.
Maybe we should add sulfur.
Sulfur's great for plants.
And you put sulfur, you put peat moss on there
and you're like, peat moss is great for plants.
And this happens in human beings too.
We don't get data.
So we actually never find the nitrogen.
We never find the raw material that's actually missing
that's causing the expression of disease.
And this is how most people wander their way
through their supplement routine.
They get lost in the myriad of great supplements
and they start supplementing for the sake of supplement.
Well, is NMN good?
Yeah, it's great.
It raises NAD levels.
Is resveratrol good?
Yeah, it can lengthen telomeres.
Is St. John's wort good?
Is ashwagandha good? Isrol good? Yeah, it can lengthen telomeres. Is St. John's wort good?
Is ashwagandha good?
Is salt-plemental good?
Should I take CoQ10?
I mean, you can make an argument
for all of these different things
that we could supplement with.
But like the missing raw material,
like the missing nitrogen in the soil,
if you don't find the deficiency, none of that matters.
And that's why I tell people
that they should get data on their body.
You know, there's 74 biomarkers that I look at in the blood.
They're right up on my Instagram.
If anybody wants to take those biomarkers off my Instagram,
take them to your doctor, your healthcare practitioner,
and say, hey, will you look at these in my blood
and have your doctor interpret those?
That's a great place to start.
I put the genes that I think are the most impactful
for mental health and for gut health and for mood
and for anxiety and for quieting the mind
and for the research that I've been able to uncover
on ADD and ADHD and poor sleep,
poor focus and concentration.
And you could take those five genes
and you can find a genetic methylation counselor
or find a place to get a genetic methylation test
and get data.
So that you go, you know, like you were telling me, but when we sat down before the podcast,
you were telling me where you go to get your blood work done. That's great because you're getting data.
You're not just aimlessly wandering around going, I don't know if I feel good. I don't know if I feel normal.
I don't know if I could feel better. I don't know if maybe some of the little nagging things that are going on in my life,
and I don't know if you have any, but.
Of course, it was.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not sleeping as good as I could,
and I work it out, and I don't have a response
to exercise like I wanted.
I feel like my focus is off, you know,
my waking energy's a little bit.
I was gonna ask you actually about that,
because I think a lot of people feel,
and I wanna talk about some of the symptoms
that I hear from our community, our audience,
what people feel, and to get your take on how to combat that.
So one of the biggest things I hear from people is,
J, I'm just feeling brain fog.
I'm just feeling like I have no clarity, like I struggle to make decisions,
I'm feeling a sense of low energy, and so like I'm lethargic.
Like these are very common things.
So with brain fog, what's going on there?
Well, I mean, everything that you feel about energy,
like when you say I'm low on energy,
physiologically what you're saying is I'm low on oxygen
in my blood, because everything that you perceive
about energy is nothing more than oxygen in your blood.
So if oxygen equals energy, which it does,
then if I want to raise your energy level,
I need to improve the oxidative state.
And how do I do that?
Well, one of the ways, and I'm not saying this is the only way,
but one of the physiologic pathways
is if we know energy equals oxygen,
then we take it a step further and we say,
well, what carries oxygen around the human body?
Well, red blood cell carries oxygen inside of a fluid.
And I'm simplifying for you, UltraWork biohackers, but the red blood cell carries oxygen inside of a fluid, and I'm simplifying for you ultra-worked
biohackers, but the red blood cell carries oxygen inside of a fluid called hemoglobin.
So if I'm low on red blood cells, right, I'm low on vehicles to carry oxygen.
If those red blood cells are further deficient in hemoglobin, then the few cells that I have
that are able to carry oxygen have less fluid to carry oxygen,
therefore I'm hypoxic and it hides in plain sight.
So then the question becomes where red blood cells and hemoglobin made? Well, they're made in the bone marrow.
So how do I get the bone marrow to make more red blood cells and hemoglobin? I go to the bone marrow's boss,
which is the hormone testosterone.
In men and women,
one of the roles of testosterone
is urethropoiesis to put pressure on the bone marrow
to make new red blood cells.
And in nearly every case where we see clinically
deficient levels of this hormone,
testosterone free testosterone,
we see red blood cells and hemoglobin
towards the low end of the range.
And then you look at, well, what is testosterone made from?
Well, I mean, it's made from several things,
but largely from DHEA.
So if I'm a deficient DHEA, I should get that fixed.
And what is the next macronutrient below DHEA, vitamin D3?
So you go oxygen, red blood cells, bone marrow,
hormone testosterone, DHEA, D3.
So if you start in the root and you raise your D3 level
to the optimal functional range,
which I think most practitioners would agree
is between 60 and 80,
and then you raise your DHEA into the optimal range
and you wait to see if your hormones respond.
And if your testosterone rises,
especially your free testosterone rises,
your red blood cell count and hemoglobin will go up.
As your red blood cell count and hemoglobin level rise,
the amount of oxygen that you transport in your blood
will rise and you will perceive that as more energy.
You will perceive that as improved focus and concentration
and your sleep will deepen.
Why?
Because in low respiratory states,
when our respiratory rate gets very shallow,
we want our blood to be very good at carrying oxygen.
Because if you're already poorly transporting oxygen,
and then you try to get into a deep sleep,
and your respiratory rate drops,
and you get to where you are hypoxic,
your brain will wake you up.
It will wake you up by pulsing cortisol.
And so people that have, that are
exhausted sleep the worst. And ask a physician sometime, why is it that people that are the
most exhausted sleep the worst? They very rarely connect the fact that they're low on oxygen,
which is why they're tired and have brain fog. And they're low on oxygen, which is why they're
not sleeping because their brain is waking them up.
And then they do the worst thing.
They go to their doctor and they go, I can't sleep.
And so then the doctor suggests something
like a zolapidom nitrate, diazepam, you know,
dinesta, Ambien, and essentially they tranquilize you.
And what's happening when you take
a lot of these sleep medications, not all of them,
but when you take a lot of these sleep medications
is you're in a low oxidative
state. So your brain's trying to save your life and wake you up. Um,
and then you take a sleep medication and you block the brain's view of blood
oxygen.
So now the brain can't isn't able to try to save your life and wake you up.
And so now you get into a deep sleep and you wake up the next morning. You go,
man, I hate taking Tylenol PM
because it is, I am so groggy.
It's still in my system the next morning.
That's actually not true.
That drug's been out of your system for hours.
You are feeling the effects of having suffocated
for six hours.
And so suffocating yourself to sleep.
And then now you've slept,
but you get up from the sleep medication
and you are still exhausted and you still have brain fog.
So there are other potential causes,
but that is the one nice thing about the clinics
that we have is we see 20,000 new gene test patients a month.
We see thousands of new blood test patients a month. So we thousands of new blood test patients a month.
So we do have voluminous pools of data.
And some might say, well, it's never been put through
a randomized clinical trial, but it's anecdotal.
But it's actually not anecdotal.
When you see pools of data as large as we see them,
you can say, listen, if you are clinically deficient and free testosterone,
you are very likely to have low red blood cell count.
The reason why people feel so good when they get on hormones
or when they supplement in their hormones
return to the normal range is because the effect
of those hormones returning to the normal range
reoxidizes the blood, for lack of better words.
Brain fog is, has to do with access.
It's like in the disease Alzheimer's,
it's not so much that people are losing their memory,
it's that they're losing access to their memory.
In the early stages, access can be restored.
There's a significant difference
between the memory actually fading,
which it does in the later stages, and access to the memory fading. So the oxidative state of the
body is very important, which is why I think people really need to get data. If your hormones
are in the optimal range, you're not nutrient deficient, you're not insulin resistant. I'm
not saying that your blood labs need to be perfect, but by dialing in a few markers in your hormone levels and your nutrient levels, you can live a dramatically
different life. And in the majority of cases, probably 70% of the cases, people that qualify
to be on hormone therapy don't even need hormones. They need the nutrients to make hormones.
And that to me is really exciting. You mean I could just be deficient
in something like DHEA, like D3.
I could have an elevated protein like SHBG
and I could take something simple like Boron
and lower that and raise my hormones
and feel a lot better.
Yes, I'm not saying that you have to go
and get on hormone injections by any means.
But I am saying that you need to get data on the deficiency
so that you can drive a state of being optimal
because so many people that I work with
will call me like weeks into our journey
and say, oh my God, Gary, I feel amazing,
including like Dana White.
And I'm like, you know, you really don't feel amazing.
They're like, what?
I say, you feel normal, right?
That's how normal supposed to feel.
Yeah.
You're really supposed to feel that good.
Right.
This was not used to that though.
We're not used to that.
Yeah.
I was going to ask you, what does it feel like?
Have you worked in your clinics with women preparing to give birth
and then post giving birth?
Yes, quite a bit.
In fact, our clinic director is a board certified OBGYN. She's a gynecological
surgeon. She's got a double master's.
Because I feel like that journey, we still don't talk enough about how challenging it
is on the human biology.
Oh, yeah. It's very challenging. I mean, if you look at a woman's, you know, what happens
during a woman's menstrual cycle and you look at what happens when she becomes pregnant,
it's perfectly normal during regular cyclical periods of her cycle for her
estrogen to be as high as, you know, in the 400s, perfectly normal for it to be in the teens. So it
has a very large frequency, you know, rise and fall depending on where she is in the cycle.
Soon she becomes pregnant, you know, estrogen goes into the four thousands, mainly because, you know, one of estrogen's
primary role is to retain water, to pad the uterus and protect the fetus, has other roles,
but it retains water.
But postpartum, you don't want to be estrogen dominant.
And you know, it's not necessarily for women, especially the level of hormone. It is the ratio of hormones in their body.
And Dr. Sartis, who's our OBGYN is phenomenal about pre and postpartum care.
She's an enormous believer that certain gene mutations like MTHFR, which increase the frequency
of miscarriage, she delivered 9,000 babies, so she's very qualified to speak on that.
The gene mutation that is one of the most common gene mutations in the world, the MTHFR,
it stands for methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase.
It is the gene that codes for the conversion of folic acid and its derivatives like folate
into the usable form called methylfolate.
And this is what I mean. We have a process in the body called methylation, which is where we take
one raw material, which is useless, folic acid, for example, entirely useless in human body. Folic
acid does not prevent neural tube defects. It doesn't prevent anything until it is converted
into methylfolate.
So what if your body can't make this conversion?
Well, it might not sound like a big deal
until you realize that number one,
it's the most common gene mutation in the world.
And number two, folic acid is the most prevalent nutrient
in the human diet in the United States.
So if you have an issue converting the most prevalent
nutrient in the human diet into
the form that your body can use, you have a significant deficiency.
And the expression of this deficiency is increase in the number of miscarriages, infertility,
a difficulty in getting pregnant, I'm just talking about in the female cycle, postpartum
depression, which can actually begin before the pregnancy ends.
We call it postpartum depression,
but very often it begins during the pregnancy.
And women that have this MTHFR gene mutation,
the first thing they're told when they get pregnant
by their OBGYN is to take high doses of folic acid.
Well, if you put 1400 or 1800% of the daily allowance
of folic acid into somebody, a woman like that,
who has that gene mutation and cannot process it, 1800% of the daily allowance of folic acid into somebody, a woman like that,
who has that gene mutation and cannot process it.
That is a disaster.
And she develops postpartum depression
before the pregnancy ends.
And eventually when the pregnancy ends,
she stops taking the prenatal vitamin
and the symptoms go away.
And so she blames it on the pregnancy, not on the vitamin. And this
is another pandemic that we see is that pregnant women, all of them could use methylfolate.
Less than 60% of them can use folic acid. So why don't we just give women methylfolate?
Why don't we actually just give them the form that would, that their body can use?
By the way, folic acid also is a manmade chemical.
You can't find folic acid anywhere on the surface of the earth.
It does not occur naturally in nature.
So someone convinced me how, you know,
a synthetic chemical that we make in a laboratory
is somehow necessary for optimal health.
Yeah, it's bizarre, isn't it?
It can't be.
Yeah.
You know, wasn't even around, I don't think,
until 1993 or so.
What did we do before that?
Just suffer?
So I'm a huge believer that,
getting back to the basics
is really the gateway to optimal health.
How do you know if you have that mutation
and what do you do about it?
You do a genetic cheek swab.
So there's a cheek swab test.
You swab your cheek, you usually put it in a test tube,
you send it to the lab and they'll send you back the results.
Even 23andMe, I do genetic tests at 10X Health.
You do not have to do the test through me,
but we do 20,000 of these a month.
I'm sure 23andMe does something similar to that.
But you also get a lot,
depending on the type of genetic test you do, you'll get a lot of
the non-actionable data, right?
I mean, like, if I pulled your entire genetic code, I could see that you have dark olive
skin, you have green eyes, you have brown hair, you have detached earlobes.
But there's nothing you can do with that genetic information.
You want to look at the genes responsible for converting raw material,
vitamins, minerals, amino acids, into the usable form.
I always use the analogy that we pull crude oil out of the ground, right?
But you cannot put crude oil into your gas tank.
The car doesn't understand that fuel source.
Crude oil has to be refined into gasoline.
Now the car can run. Human
beings are no different. We put vitamins, minerals, amino acids, nutrients, proteins
into the body, which are useless in that state until they are converted into the gasoline,
into the form that the body can use. And this is governed by several of our genes. And they're
very easy to look at. And you only do that test once in your lifetime.
When you find that bright spot
to help you get through your day, it's powerful.
That's where The Bright Side comes in.
A new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine
that's bringing you a daily dose of joy.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And I'm Simone Boyce.
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That's fantastic. Thank you for that. I think that's going to help a lot of people listening
or watching because I feel like when we're thinking about people are planning for kids or
have had kids and they're struggling. And again, I think we all do this and that's why I'm so glad
we're talking about this because I think the first thing we blame is our mind. That's the first thing we all do is we judge ourselves and we go,
I'm not strong enough. I'm too weak. I'm mentally not there. I'm not figuring it out. There's
something wrong with me, but we're not looking at the fact that let me actually take a look
at what is wrong and which part of it and where has it gone wrong?
Yeah. You know, you know what I think we try to do, just naturally,
instinctively is when we don't feel good or something seems to be going wrong in our bodies,
we're anxious, we're worried, we're depressed, or there's something more physical, we're
bloated, we're constipated, we're irritable, we've got cramps, we're fatigued, we begin
to look at our outside environment, right? We look at what's called a cluster of symptoms
and a cluster of symptoms is very often nonsense.
We diagnosed Abraham Lincoln with a depression
150 years ago with a cluster of symptoms.
We did the same kind of diagnostic.
We use a similar diagnostic tools today.
What if you considered that it's not something
happening to you, it's something happening within you, right?
Like that leaf that was rotting in the palm tree, nothing happened to it. Something happened within the soil that then caused
something to happen within the tree, which translated to that leaf. And I always use
that example because it starts people thinking that, you know what, maybe I'm not as sick
or pathological or diseased or mentally ill as I think. You know, people very often that suffer from gut issues,
I mean, we see this thousands and thousands of times.
So they're like, they get gas or bloating or diarrhea
or constipation or irritability or cramping.
And they are always trying to relate it
to what they last ate.
Because that makes sense, right?
I ate something and now I blew up like a tick.
It must have been what I ate.
But you may not be considering that if you're deficient in methyl folate, for example, very simple nutrient
That the peristaltic activity of the gut is off. So the pace of the gut is off
You know you can think of the human intestinal tract as a 30 foot long conveyor belt
You put contents on it at one end and as it traverses to the other end from the stomach to the rectum, there's a very specific sequence of events that needs to
occur. There's acidic bacteria in the proximal end of the small intestine. There's alkaline
bacteria in the distal end near the rectum. What if you just changed the pace of that
conveyor belt? What if you went into any factory in America that works on a conveyor belt system
and doubled the speed of the conveyor belt, the whole line would break down.
What if you went into any factory in America and reversed the speed of the conveyor belt,
the whole line would break down.
But there's nothing wrong with a conveyor belt.
And so, you know, it sends people down the wrong road because they're like, well, should
I get my gut bacteria checked?
Should I get my gut biome looked at?
Should I start taking probiotics? Should I maybe take antibiotics and maybe maybe I have a CBO?
Should I change up my diet?
And nothing really seems to work because they think
it's something happening to them
rather than something happening within them.
And this happens very often with anxiety,
with people that suffer from anxiety
generally have the same three characteristics.
Generally, if you'll ask them,
have you had it on and off throughout your entire lifetime,
they'll say yes.
Can you point to the specific trigger that causes it?
No.
Have anti-anxiety medications helped you?
No, they just make me feel like a zombie.
Those are very commonly the same sequence of answers.
So that is not something happening to you.
That's something happening within you.
If I ask you if you have anxiety and you go,
yes, I'm afraid of heights,
and every time I walk to the edge of a 30-foot balcony,
I freak out.
Yes, I'm claustrophobic.
When I step on a crowded elevator, I really get anxious.
But if you say, yes, okay, well, what causes
it? I don't know. What makes it come and go? Pretty much anything. You know, have you had
it on and off throughout your lifetime? Yes. Then this is a sign that this is a genetic
mutation that's led to a deficiency that's causing the expression of that condition.
We very rarely pass disease from generation to generation.
We do pass deficiency.
We pass these genes that are either broken or operating.
And when they're broken, for lack of better words, these gene SNPs, the body has an inability
to convert a certain raw material into the usable form, which means that this deficiency
is passed
from generation to generation, right?
So a deficiency in the ability to down-regulate homocysteine means that you get the expression
of hypertension.
So you see that hypertension runs in these families, even though there's not a hypertension
gene.
You see that the inability to convert thyroid hormone T4
into thyroid hormone T3,
which is a de-identization process in the liver,
in the gut, in the periphery,
that this process is impaired.
So people have hypothyroid,
but the hypothyroid runs in families.
So, but there's no specific hypothyroid gene.
And you could go through dozens and dozens and dozens of cases like this. in families, so, but there's no specific hypothyroid gene.
And you could go through dozens and dozens and dozens of cases like this.
We accept that things are inherited or familial because they run in our family.
Not because we consider that the deficiency may run in our family and the deficiency can be fixed.
Two more things I want to ask you Gary.
I want to get your thoughts on this tap water.
What is wrong with tap water and what is wrong with plastic bottles?
We'll start with tap water.
I mean, there are two or three things that I think that everybody should get out
of their life permanently out of their life. Tap water is definitely one of them.
And the reason for this is that it contains high amounts of fluoride,
contains high amounts of chlorine.
It also contains microplastics.
Very often now it contains high levels of glyphosates and even pharmaceuticals,
which are very hard to filter out of the water.
And we have to decide if we want to filter things before they get to the temple.
Or the temple's doing the filter.
Let the temple be the filter.
And what's astounding to me is if you ask just about anyone, what's the most important thing to you, your business or your health?
They'll always say their health.
What's more important to you, money or your health?
It's always their health.
But when you just take one step further, and I do this with entrepreneurs all the time, I was actually at an event this week with Damon John, and it was
high level. Was it Tuesday night? Yeah. I was going to be there. Oh, you were? I was traveling.
Yeah. Oh, okay. And this isn't a pick on Damon. He's a very good friend of mine. I love Damon.
He's done a lot for me, and he's just an incredible entrepreneur. And he's been a very, very good friend to me.
But we were in a room with entrepreneurs.
And if you went around that room, and we asked several of them,
what's more important to you, your business or your health?
And they'd say, my health.
But then you bring them up, and you say you know, how much money did your business make
last month? $628,000. What was your net income? $142,400. How many employees do you have? 17.
What's your hemoglobin A1C? Blank. Right. What is your your, where your testosterone levels?
Like, right, so,
our intention is to put our health first,
but our activity is very different, right?
And I could have asked them 15 more questions
about their income statement, their balance sheet,
their P&L, the best marketing strategy,
where they're getting the ROI,
what their best return is
on Facebook ads or any number of other things
and they would have hit every one of those metrics,
don't know if they have a clinical deficiency
in vitamin D3 or not.
They don't even have the most basic of information.
And so this goes back to,
we need to put up an imaginary fence around ourselves
and start filtering things before they make it
to the temple, just consciously being intentional about what we're letting into the temple.
It's very easy for me to look at food and say, are you going to serve me or are you
going to steal from me? If you're going to steal from me, I'm not going to let you into
the temple. You wouldn't knowingly let a thief into your house, right? And so tap water is one of these things.
You know, there are fluoride, which we know is neurotoxic.
And if you don't believe fluoride is neurotoxic, just find a, you know, just find a, you know,
a fluoride toothpaste label in your house of years in crest or Colgate or any toothpaste
with fluoride and flip it over and look at the back because there's a required FDA warning on
there. and it says
If more than an amount used for brushing is swallowed contact poison control immediately. It also says keep out of reach of children
under six years of age
And it also says do not use more than a pea sized amount
So if you swallow more than a pea sized amount of fluoride toothpaste you are supposed to contact poison control immediately
You will get four times that amount of fluoride in
six, eight ounce glasses of water. So why wouldn't I call poison control at the
end of every day when I'm drinking six, eight ounce glasses of water? I mean,
according to the previous disclosure, I should call poison control at the end of
every day and let them know I've been micro poisoned. There is an interesting
study that was published by the Naxional Toxicology
Program in March of 2023. And they were able to pull this data from the CDC through a freedom
of information act lawsuit. And what it found was in 52 of the 54 studies that they reviewed,
and in nearly every municipality in America that had fluoridated water
they found an inverse relationship between IQ and fluoride. So in other words as fluoride went up IQ
went down. So the more fluoride in the water the lower the prepubescent IQ and if that's not enough
data ask we have to ask ourselves well where does fluoride come from? Well fluoride is fluorosilicic acid.
Fluorosilicic acid is a byproduct of phosphate fertilizer production.
It's also a byproduct of aluminum production.
But the majority of the fluoride that we use in municipal water supplies comes from phosphate
fertilizer production.
It is the waste from phosphate fertilizer production because if we leave it in phosphate
fertilizer, it burns the root
of the plant.
And actually, so we can't keep it in because it kills the plant.
So we take it out and we have a big stockpile of fluorosilicic acid.
So what are we going to do with it?
Well, let's dump it into the municipal water supply because there is marginal, and I would
call it weak, evidence that we can remineralize the enamel with fluoride and stop tooth decay, which
you can also do with hydroxyapatite and other things that are safe.
And so we dumped this into the water supply, but now the evidence is clear that this neurotoxin
in small doses over time, it's not the dosage determining the poison.
It is the cumulative dosage determining the poison, it is the cumulative dosage determining the poison.
And one of the challenges that I find with a lot of governmental regulatory guidelines
is that there are safe levels of mercury, right?
There are safe levels of fluoride, there are safe levels of cyanide.
But our bodies clear these at different levels.
Nobody got mercury poisoning from one piece of tuna fish, right?
They got mercury poisoning because they ate, you know,
small doses of mercury over a prolonged period of time.
So fluoride is one of those things.
Tap water is definitely one of those things
to permanently get out of your life.
I use something called an Echo water filter,
and it's a four-stage RO filter,
and then it actually adds hydrogen
to the water on the way out.
And because the water is demineralized, I just remineralize it with a salt called Baja Gold Salt.
But you could also use Celtic Sea Salt.
I like this Baja Gold because it has all 91 trace minerals and they test it for microplastics and whatnot.
But just about every grocery store chain in the world has Celtic Salt.
So you get 4-stage RO filter your water, add Celtic or Baja Gold sea salt to your water
to remineralize it.
And you're covering the basis of not missing
one of the 91 nutrients, 16 of which are essential
for human function.
Amazing.
What a great answer.
I'm hoping no one, please stop drinking tap water.
Yeah, please.
It is the worst thing that will work for it.
Daily call to the, you know. Yeah, daily call to poison water. Yeah, yeah, please. It is the worst thing in the world for it. Daily call to the, you know.
Yeah, daily call to poison control.
Yeah, poison control.
I mean, that is like, you know, you just think about
just these things that we're so conditioned to do
on a daily basis and we're like,
oh, this doesn't matter.
I don't feel any different.
And then it just adds up and accumulates.
Why would I want to put something into my mouth consciously
that if I swallow it,
I have to call it poison control center for it.
Yeah, totally.
And then you think, it's huge. Well, how much is being absorbed in my gums? How much, you know, the
thinnest skin in the body and your body is on the floor of your mouth and it is fraught
with blood vessels. One of the best delivery mechanisms besides the, you know, oral, the
first pass metabolism is sublingual. So, so now I'm drinking tap water all day and then
I'm sublingually. And then, you know then the second thing that's in there is chlorine. And I did a really interesting video on my Instagram
the other day and people, it really made an impact,
a ripple effect.
I went to the faucet and I filled up two glasses
with tap water, clear glasses of tap water
and just set them on my counter.
And I had my, one of my heads of production
just take four fingers and hold them down
in one of the glasses and he held them there
for about a minute and he took his fingers out.
And by the way, you can do this.
The kit to do this, you can order on Amazon for six bucks.
And then I took a chlorine testing kit
and I put drops of chlorine in one glass
and I put drops of the chlorine tester in the other glass.
One of them tested very high for chlorine. One of them tested very high for chlorine.
One of them tested as having no chlorine.
So the question is, where did the chlorine go?
Well, it was absorbed into a skin
in just that 60 second period.
And so that's how good that transdermal,
it will absorb that chlorine.
And you can get a chlorine testing kit
for about six bucks on Amazon. Just try it.
Take your tap water, you'll never drink it again.
Take two glasses of tap water, fill it up,
put it on your counter, put your fingers down
in one glass of tap water for 60 seconds,
take them out and test both for chlorine.
You'll find whatever glass you put your fingers
and test for no chlorine.
Now imagine that's fluoride, microplastics and other things.
And when we talk about plastic bottles, microplastics, and other things. And, you know, when we talk about plastic bottles
and microplastics, you know, BPAs, the bisphenols,
these BPAs were, until the 60s,
they were used as a synthetic estrogen.
So it was used in female hormone therapy,
labor induction, and other forms of female hormone therapy.
Now, how some scientists with way too much time
on his hands realize that if you actually mix
a petroleum based product with this synthetic estrogen,
this Bisphel, all this BPA,
that you'll make the surface of the plastic more viscous
and therefore, you know, like oils and waters
and fluids and things won't stick to it.
How they figured that out, I'm not sure.
I'm not sure how that combination occurred, but make no mistakes, the BPAs are synthetic estrogens. And there's
some indications that there is enough BPA inside of the lining of a non-BPA-free can
of like tomato paste, for example, which acidic foods leach it out, heat leaches it out,
to actually shift a woman's menstrual cycle.
So from ovulation to utile or follicular to ovulation.
So imagine that you could actually just be eating
of food with enough bisphenols in it
that not disclosed on the label
that you don't know are in there
because it's leaching from the plastic
to actually shift your menstrual cycle.
That is astounding to me.
And so, yeah, plastic bottles is one
that I would try to get out as much as you can too.
Gary, I love, we have covered so much great ground today
that we've never covered on the show before.
So I wanna say a big thank you to you.
Super welcome man.
Because there are so many things that I know
that everyone's gonna be listening to.
There's so many actionable things I know
that people can practice straight after this episode.
We end every episode of On Purpose with a final five.
And these questions have to be answered in one word
to one sentence maximum.
Wow.
So, Gary Brackett, these are your final five.
Why didn't you tell me about this
so I could have had like a really cool answer?
So question one, what is the best advice
you've ever heard or received?
The best advice I've ever heard or received is you,
if you want to shrink your problems, grow your purpose.
Beautiful, very aligned.
Second question, next time you come to the show,
we're gonna talk about that,
because you have to come back. This is amazing.
Yeah.
Second question.
What is the worst advice you've ever heard or received?
You're perfect the way you are.
Question number three.
What is something that you used to value, but you don't anymore?
Wealth.
Question number four,
how would you define your current purpose in life?
I would define it as God given.
And fifth and final, if you could create one law
that everyone in the world had to follow,
what would it be?
To pause before you speak.
That's great.
Kari Brecker everyone, if you don't already follow The Ultimate Human Podcast, subscribe
online, follow them on Instagram, make sure you share your greatest takeaways with us
both, tag us both, whether you're using X or Instagram or TikTok, whatever it may be,
I want to see what you're playing around with, what you're testing, what you're experimenting
and what you're applying to your life.
If you listen to this episode,
I want you to choose one thing that resonates with you,
just one habit, just one practice,
and I want you for the next seven days to commit to yourself,
promise to yourself that you're just going to do it,
just as it is for seven days, experiment with it,
and then tell me and Gary what it was like.
Gary, thank you so much.
Super welcome. I really enjoyed this.
Coming on purpose. You are fantastic at what you do
and I'm so grateful to spend time with you, man.
Thank you. Thank you, brother.
Appreciate you.
If this year you're trying to live longer,
live happier, live healthier,
go and check out my conversation
with the world's biggest longevity doctor, Peter Attia,
on how to slow down aging
and why your emotional health
is directly impacting your physical health.
Acknowledge that there is surprisingly little known
about the relationship between nutrition and health
and people are gonna be shocked to hear that
because I think most people think the exact opposite.
Hi, I'm Laura Vanderkam.
I'm a mother of five, an author, journalist and speaker.
And I'm Sarah Hart Unger, a mother of three, practicing physician, writer, and course creator.
We are two working parents who love our careers and our families.
On the Best of Both Worlds podcast each week, we share stories of how real women manage
work, family, and time for fun.
From figuring out childcare to mapping out long-term career goals, we want you to get
the most out of life. Listen to Best of Both Worlds every Tuesday
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi friends, I'm Danielle Robay.
And I'm Simone Boyce.
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