On Purpose with Jay Shetty - Peter Attia ON: Scientific Ways to Slow Down Aging & How Your Emotional Health is Impacting your Physical Health

Episode Date: August 7, 2023

Have you ever found yourself thinking you're fine, only to discover that something is not right within your own body?  When is the right time to consciously invest in your health, and just how crucia...l is it to understand your family's health history? There are so many questions and so many answers are needed for us to get a better understanding of our own health. Today, I am excited to share the conversation I had with Peter Attia. Peter is the founder of Early Medical, a medical practice that applies the principles of Medicine 3.0 to patients with the goal of lengthening their lifespan and simultaneously improving their healthspan. He is the host of The Drive, one of the most popular podcasts covering the topics of health and medicine. We explore the the detrimental effects of over-nourishment and three transformative approaches to address this imbalance and unlock the path to optimal well-being, the concept of glucose control and its profound impact on our overall health, and the consequences of consuming nutrient-deficient plants and unravel the complex interplay between regenerative agriculture and the quality of our soil. In our pursuit of healing, we delve into the profound connection between childhood wounds and maladaptive behaviors in adulthood and identify the self-destructive behaviors that may be hindering your progress. In this interview, you'll learn: - How to reverse aging  - When is the best time to invest in your health - How to predict and prevent possible health risks - The benefits of changing your diet to address deficiencies in your body - The link between physical and mental health - How unaddressed big T traumas negatively affect our adult life - How to undo your self-destructive behaviors Join us on this transformative journey as we uncover the wisdom and insights needed to cultivate a life of vitality, resilience, and healing. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 00:14 When you think you’re doing okay but you found out that something is wrong with your body 03:42 When is the right time to consciously start investing in your health?   08:50 How important is it to know your family’s health history?  11:26 What is the best methodology to get a complete family history? 14:16 How do people know how healthy they are? How can you predict health risks early? 19:02 Did you know that over-nourishment is bad for our body? There are three ways to address this 25:31 Do you need to take supplements? If so, what types of supplements are good for your body? 28:39 Are you familiar with glucose control? What is it and how can it help you? 35:50 What happens when you’re eating plants that are less nutrient-dense? 39:11 What is regenerative agriculture and complexity of agricultural soil? 45:09 Should people grow their own vegetable garden, and how can they maintain a good quality soil? 49:04 What is the link between your physical and mental health? 53:10 How do wounded children become adoptive children and become mal-adoptive in their adult life? 55:23 Why is it difficult for us to turn around and acknowledge the root of our pain and suffering? 01:04:54 What are your regrets in life? At the moment, what’s your greatest source of joy? 01:10:39 There are certain things in our life that are non-negotiable 01:17:36 Are there any proven ways to prevent and confront cancer? 01:23:53 Have you identified your self destructive behaviors?   01:28:09 Peter on Final Five Episode Resources: Peter Attia | Website Peter Attia | YouTube Peter Attia | Instagram Peter Attia | Facebook Outlive: The Science and Art of Longevity The Drive Podcast  Early Want to be a Jay Shetty Certified Life Coach? Get the Digital Guide and Workbook from Jay Shetty https://jayshettypurpose.com/fb-getting-started-as-a-life-coach-podcast/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, this is Leverand Cox. I'm an actress, producer and host of the Leverand Cox show. Do you like your tea with lemon or honey? History making Broadway performer Alex Newell. When I sing the Holy Ghost shows up, that's my ministry and I know that well about me. That's the tea honey. Whoever it is, you can bet we get into it. My guest and I, we go there every single time. I can't help it. Listen to the LeVehrn COG show on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. Does your brain keep you up at bedtime? I'm Catherine Nicolai and my podcast Nothing Much Happens, Bedtime Stories to Help You Sleep has helped millions of people to get consistent deep sleep. My stories are family-friendly.
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Starting point is 00:01:05 They would give anything and everything for more chance at life. The best-selling author and host. The number one health and wellness podcast. One purpose with Jay Shetty. Hey everyone, welcome back to On Purpose. We're you're choosing to listen to become happier, healthier, and more healed.
Starting point is 00:01:23 That's our mission here to leave you feeling happier, healthier and more healed after listening to these conversations, these workshops every single day and I'm so grateful to you for your commitment and dedication to yourself, your investment in yourself and lending your ears and your eyes to me. I know some of you are listening every single day. So thank you and keep those reviews coming, keep all of that positive energy coming. It means the world to me. I know some of you are listening every single day. So thank you and keep those reviews coming. Keep all of that positive energy coming. It means the world to me. And today's guest is honestly the person that I've been waiting to talk to all year because of scheduling, we kept missing each other. I was on a world tour. He's busy traveling. He's launched an incredible
Starting point is 00:01:57 new book this year helping people. And I'm just so happy that we finally have in here at our L.A. studio. I'm talking about Peter Attea, the founder of Early Medical, a medical practice that applies the principles of medicine 3.0 to patients with the goal of lengthening their lifespan and simultaneously improving their health span. Peter is the host of the drive. If you don't already subscribe, make sure you do
Starting point is 00:02:23 a podcast covering the topics of health and medicine. Peter is also the author of the number one New York Times bestseller outlive, The Science and Art of Longevity. This is the book that I recommend. If you're going to read about your health right now, this is the book I want you to go and get. Peter, it's here. Welcome to on purpose. And thank you for being here. Thank you so much, Jay. Amen. Everything I said, I was, you know, really, really. Welcome to on purpose. And thank you for being here. Thank you so much, Jay. Amen, everything I said. I was, you know, really, really looking forward to this conversation. And I want to dive into many aspects of the book, many topics.
Starting point is 00:02:52 I've also sourced questions from my team, community, people, real, real-life questions that I think people are really struggling with. But I actually want to start with your journey and your story because I've gone through similar moments in my life where at a young age, I've had different health challenges. When I started to get the right help and support, I started to realize how detrimental those health challenges could be long-term if I wasn't to shift things. And the problem is I've always been a fairly healthy guy and had healthy habits. And so when you get that kind of musics,
Starting point is 00:03:27 kind of alarming and scary and can set fear into you, now I know that in your journey, you were a generally healthy person doing pretty healthy things only to find out that actually you were prone or open to a terrible disease down the road. So could you walk us through what it feels like to think you're healthy, to maybe even feel you're doing okay,
Starting point is 00:03:51 but in reality, there's something going on behind the scenes. Yeah, I mean, I think there were two sort of things that were a wake-up call for me, and neither of these things happen immediately. I think it's just sometimes the realization that happens immediately. So the first one is, I'd always been an athlete,
Starting point is 00:04:04 my whole life, insanely active, potentially even, active to an unhealthy level. And the focus of that obsession had always shifted, but at the point in the story that we're talking about, at this point I was sort of a ultra-distance swimmer. So I was probably in the water swimming 24 to 28 hours a week plus other types of training. you know, probably in the water, swimming 24 to 28 hours a week, plus, you know, other types of training. Yet, you know, I found out, this is probably around 15 years ago,
Starting point is 00:04:32 that well, actually, on top of that, I was sort of insulin resistant, I was overweight, and again, not that I didn't know, I was overweight, you sort of can realize that, but that I was sort of insulin resistant. And, you know, that's sort of the first step on the way towards type 2 diabetes. It was really at that time that I also, I think, confronted my own family history. So just within my genes, the acknowledgement that basically every man and my family died prematurely of heart disease. And in some cases, very prematurely in their 40s.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Those two realizations in my mid 30s, which also happened to coincide with the birth of my daughter, which was my first child, was a real wake-up call. And the realization that, you know, I needed to figure something out so that I didn't just, you know, march down the footsteps of what seemed to be my destiny. And even then, you were in the medical profession, right? Or no? Yeah, although I had actually left medicine at this point. So So after 10 years of medical training, including medical school, I became sort of disillusioned with medicine and left. So at the time that I'm having this realization, I'm actually in the world of finance,
Starting point is 00:05:33 and quite far from medicine. What was your biggest fear at the time, like if you could take yourself back to that moment, like what was the fear that you had? Yeah, that I wouldn't be around to, you know, be with my grandkids and things of that nature. Because I think, prior to my daughter being born,
Starting point is 00:05:48 I didn't really think I would be the kind of person that would find any joy in having kids. And that changed in an instant. The second she was born, I'm sure there are lots of people who can relate to that. Probably more so men than women, I think, because the switch is a little more binary when we have kids. And then the thought of, you know, I'm not going to relive this in 30 years with grandkids.
Starting point is 00:06:10 I think that was probably the thing that was the most motivating factor. Well, yeah, it needs that kind of incentive to get activated. And the reason I asked that question is everyone who's listening or watching, I want you to think about what that fear, what that challenge is for you, because often fear is in a great motivator to keep going, but it's a great place to start. And our health almost starts there sometimes. Like, I remember that. I remember feeling like Superman when I was in my early 20s, and then all of a sudden
Starting point is 00:06:38 having certain health challenges, I got into chronic fatigue, I had polyps in my throat, I had to be lasered out, I lost my voice for a few months. And that was in life threatening, but it was life altering in the sense that I couldn't communicate in the same way. It was different getting my voice back and not feeling like it was as strong or powerful and then having gut issues and inflammation issues and acid issues and all of these things again, like they weren't, it's not that my life was going to end that year, but it's like you start thinking long term and you start thinking about living a unhealthy or harder life. When is the right time for people to consciously start actually investing in their health?
Starting point is 00:07:17 And I'm going to caveat that with what is generally happening in the different decades of our life? So what's happening between 0 to 10, 10 to 20, 20 to 30, 30 to 40, 40 to 50? And when is the time when you have a bit more control and ability to shift the trajectory of your health, bar any, of course, major complications or surprises? I've never actually been asked it that way,
Starting point is 00:07:41 but the way you asked it kind of makes me think about different things. The aging process, in some ways, there are some aspects of it that are moving in the wrong direction, the moment you were born. In other words, the moment of fetus comes into this world, there are certain aspects of aging that are only getting worse. There are others that are not, so you have to imagine now they were talking about different things, so I'll give you an example of each. Something that's getting worse, the second you're born, is the damage to your arteries. So we call this process atherosclerosis, this is what leads to heart attacks and strokes. Heart attack and stroke is the leading cause of death in the United States for both men and women and globally for both men and
Starting point is 00:08:23 women, but it takes an awfully long time. That's why you've never heard of a baby having a heart attack. That's why teenagers don't have heart attacks and people in their 20s, it's almost unheard of they would have a heart attack. But the disease is starting right away. And we know this because when we've looked at people who have died prematurely from other causes, car accidents, homicide, suicide, and you look at their coronary arteries, you already see evidence of disease. So we know that this is happening right away, and it's simply a matter of time
Starting point is 00:08:55 until it reaches a critical level that results in disease. And of course, everybody's accelerating at a different rate based on many factors, genetics, smoking, high blood pressure, metabolic health, all these other things. But point being, that's something for which you could technically argue it's never too soon to start prevention. Then there are other things in which we're actually getting better and better and better
Starting point is 00:09:16 until we reach a certain point and then we start to demise. An example there might be sort of cognitive capacity. So we might have our greatest neuroplasticity in the first few years of life, but we're also building on that. And if we're in the right environment, we're exposed to the right things, we're actually getting better and better and better
Starting point is 00:09:35 at our fluid intelligence. And that probably reaches our peak sometime in our third decade. So that's something where you're actually getting better and better and better, and then it slowly starts to decline. And then there are all sorts of things that are mixtures of these things. So for example, your physical capacity, your muscle mass, strength, power, type 2 muscle
Starting point is 00:09:55 fibers, cardio respiratory fitness, all of those things are also increasing in capacity. Again, depending on which of those things we're talking about, if it's power and explosiveness, that probably peaks early in the third decade. If it's strength, that peaks a little bit later. Peak cardio-respiratory fitness, again, in your 20s, and then those things will start to decline. What's undoubtedly clear is for you and I, we're pretty much into decline. So most people listening to this are in a state of decline.
Starting point is 00:10:23 And part of the objective, I think, ought to be to slow the rate of decline as much as possible. But there's another aspect to your question, I think, is very important, right? Which is, like, at what point should you start putting effort into this? And that's a very difficult question, because it encompasses a couple of things. When you talk to a person, let's do this as a thought experiment, you talk to a person the day before they're going to die. I mean, they would give anything and everything they have for more chance at life. Despite how high their motivation is, there's no runway left.
Starting point is 00:10:57 Conversely, if you went into a high school and talked to a bunch of freshmen and said, I've got the program for you that is gonna add 15 years to your life. I mean, they couldn't be less interested, right? So there's a sweet spot somewhere where I almost think people need to go through a little bit of decline, kind of like what you described.
Starting point is 00:11:18 It wasn't life threatening, but you just need to realize that you're fallible to sort of say, hmm, I can project this movie forward a couple of decades. I've now mature enough to maybe see my parents, see my grandparents and uncles, friends, people's health deteriorate and realize that's a bit of a reality check that it's coming for me. But yet I still have long enough to bend the arc of my life.
Starting point is 00:11:43 And so I think those are the two curves that we're trying to intersect. Yeah, that's a great answer. And I appreciate that. I feel the same way. Unfortunately, it always comes through some sort of pain or some sort of reality check or wake up call that gets us going. And it's interesting what you were saying about cognitive function and ability as well. There were studies that I read that said that the
Starting point is 00:12:05 average age of most successful entrepreneurs is 37. And it's fascinating because we live in a world right now where everyone wants to be a successful entrepreneur by the time they're 21 or 25. And we put these artificial pressures on ourself when actually there's so much more to it. In the genetics versus environment debate, what have you, what's the latest in that space of like, because I think when you said you dove into your family's history, I think most of us are not fully aware of our family's history,
Starting point is 00:12:34 even though every time I saw Dr. Growing up, they'd always ask, is there this in your family's history? Is there that? First of all, how aware do we need to be of our family's history? How important is that for people to figure out? And second of all, how aware do we need to be of our family's history? How important is that for people to figure out? And second of all, what is that breakdown between genetics and personal environment and career and work?
Starting point is 00:12:52 You know, I think actually family history is such an important thing. It's one of these things that we stress to the end degree with our patients. So much so that, you know, it takes them weeks sometimes to gather the information that we want to know because we want to know. And we give them 10 questions for each member of the family. So your parents, your grandparents, your aunts and uncles, your siblings, we want to know everything. Did they have high blood pressure?
Starting point is 00:13:16 Did they have high cholesterol? Did they take this medication? Did they take that medication? What was their cognitive function like in the last decade of their life? What type of cancer is did they have, did they have low bone density? Did they have osteoporosis? I mean, we really want to understand every detail about it. And I think a big part of the reason why is contrary to what maybe people believe,
Starting point is 00:13:38 a genetic test does not give you that information. So if you and I went out and got a genetic test, and I don't just mean an op, you know, over the counter genetic test, like 23 and me, but I'm saying, if we went out and got the best whole genome sequence money could buy, we spent thousands and thousands of dollars and literally looked at every one of our, you know, 20 to 30,000 genes. We still wouldn't be able to impute from a risk standpoint what you can gather from a very well collected family history. And the reason for that is most genes by themselves are not to impute from a risk standpoint what you can gather from a very well-collected family history. And the reason for that is most genes by themselves are not deterministic, which really gets your second question. So if most genes are not deterministic, they need something
Starting point is 00:14:14 in the environment to sort of trigger them. Furthermore, most conditions that we care about are polygenic. It's easy to think of the sort of Mendelian monogene type conditions. They get a lot of attention, and they're important to be sure, but the vast majority of things that people care about, cancer, heart disease, dementia, they are not really just related to a single gene. And in many cases, we don't even know
Starting point is 00:14:43 what the collection of genes look like. So genes matter, but I think we're gonna get the majority of our information by understanding our family history in terms of susceptibility, and the environment matters greatly. And the extension of that is, of course, you have great agency over that. Yeah, and what is the best methodology for getting the family history in a complete,
Starting point is 00:15:00 comprehensive way that's actually going to be? It can be hard if members of the family are deceased. So for people your age and my age, our grandparents, I mean, at least for me, my grandparents are long gone. Yes, and so it's, you know, do your parents really remember? And part of it just comes down to
Starting point is 00:15:14 are they being prompted by the right questions? Now again, to be honest, in my family history, I have very limited understanding of grandparents because, you know, they just died long enough ago. And frankly, I don't think my parents were necessarily great historians of this. understanding of grandparents, because they just died long enough ago. Frankly, I don't think my parents were necessarily great historians of this. In my case, where the bulk of my understanding came from was that my dad came from a very large family.
Starting point is 00:15:34 There were 10 kids, two that died young, so eight that survived to adulthood. And there, I was able to elucidate really good information and really understand that there's something very bad going on with respect to heart disease. On my mom's side, I could also see some issues with her two siblings as well that also gave me a sense of, you know, what some predispositions might be. Where can people find those questions or how can they connect with that approach? Not a good question. I don't... We have a program that we've developed called Early, which is like a digital product that is our practice.
Starting point is 00:16:09 I know that it is within there. Got it. So if people like look for Early, I don't know if you, I should know how to do this. If you go to like earlymedical.com, there's a way to find it. Got it, got it, got it. Okay, perfect. Yeah, no, I think that kind of practical step is so needed because one of the biggest things when I was talking to my team and talking to the community about health, one of the biggest things that came out is, J were just stuck on where to start. Like, I don't know
Starting point is 00:16:34 where to start. I don't there's just too much information out there. It's oversaturated. Everyone's telling me to do this and that. And it's almost like, well, let's figure out your genetic history. Like, that's a great place to start because that's where we came from. Yeah, this program early is divided into 12 modules. We think each module would take you about a month to get through. And that's the first or second module. I think the first module is setting your goals and going through kind of this type of exercise. And then the second module is, okay, how do you get your family history?
Starting point is 00:17:02 How do you take that information and extract what the implications are for you and then go from there? What's your take on like full body scans and that kind of testing and how often should it be done? Because I think again, what's happening, I was talking to some younger people in our audiences, Gen Z, and it was just like going to see a doctor has become like not even a thought. And I could see that in my generation, but I remember my parents' generation, like my mum will still call me up and be like, have you seen the dentist every six months? Like have you been to the doctor every 12 months? Like, you know, my mum will still do that with me, but I find that that kind of culture is
Starting point is 00:17:37 diminishing day by day because of a lack of trust, because of a lack of transparency, so many different things could just be laziness and complacency. What is your take on getting checks, which checks, how often? And I guess the question is, how do people know how healthy they are and early is a great plan, but from the other point of view? It depends on the type of scan. So for example, there are certain scans that are going to be very helpful at predicting risk from heart disease.
Starting point is 00:18:03 So for example, like coronary calcium scan for the heart or a CT angiogram for the heart. Those are tests that I don't think are absolutely essential, but they can be very helpful if you're trying to further stratify risk. You refer to a whole body scan, so the best example of a whole body scan that I think provides value is an MRI. The reason being is an MRI doesn't have radiation, whereas a whole body CT scan or a PET scan would have staggering amounts of radiation. We would never want to do that just from a screening perspective. But of course not all MRIs are created equal. And anytime you're doing a screening test,
Starting point is 00:18:36 you have to be aware of something called sensitivity and specificity. And these are really important parameters. We've put out a lot of content on this because I think it's very confusing for people. So sensitivity is the capacity of a test to detect something if the something is present. So if you're looking at a sensitivity of an MRI scanner for cancer, the sensitivity is how likely is this to detect cancer if cancer is present. So on the topic of whole body scanners, MRIs are very sensitive. And again, not all MRIs are critical, but I'm assuming we're talking about the best of the best.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Yeah. That's good news. Means if you go into an MRI scanner and you have a cancer, the MRI is quite likely to pick it up. Now it does have some blind spots, and every screening test has a blind spot. So a blind spot that's worth acknowledging for an MRI is a small calcified breast cancer. That's easily going to get missed
Starting point is 00:19:31 by an MRI and that's why it's not a substitute for mammography. A woman would need to do both. The next parameter of a screening test is the specificity. This says how likely is this test to give you a negative result if indeed the condition is not present? So it's the mirror opposite of sensitivity. Here is where those whole body scanners are abysmal. They have very low specificity. What that translates to in English is they have a lot of false positives. I always tell patients, look, if you're going to go and get these scans and we advocate that our patients do, but we do it in a much more robust way where it's part of a multiple
Starting point is 00:20:10 system of screening tests so that we're covering the basis of everything and trying to attach to the strength and weakness of each study. But when it comes to that MRI, we say, look, there's a really good chance you're going to come out of this test and there's going to be some false positives. We're going to need to chase down. So I always feel bad when people sign up to do these scans and they aren't aware of that because it generates sometimes more stress on the back end. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:35 I went through that. We had an MRI done and they found like almost like a group or a cluster of things in an area and they were like, well, that could be cancer than I had to go and do a endoscopy as well. And luckily they found it was nothing. But I remember that week before. I was like, that's it. It's all over here.
Starting point is 00:20:56 It is like, you know, I need to. Whereas I think sometimes if you're told up front, hey, Jay, there's like a 15% chance. Yeah, I didn't, I was not told about that. Yeah, we're gonna, we gonna make sure our patients understand it. And by the way, a subset of our patients, probably 10% decide I don't wanna have the scan because I don't wanna cope with that.
Starting point is 00:21:12 That stress, yeah. Yeah, and it was real. I was like, all right, I'm gonna have to get focused on figuring this out because it sounds bad and I didn't have that layup, as you said. And it's really interesting. And that's what I find so fascinating today, right? Like, there's managing your health and then there's the stress and the pain that comes with
Starting point is 00:21:30 figuring your health out, whether it's the overexposure to too much information, whether it's bad information in the past. And then we're like, oh, well, just forget it. I don't want to do any of it. I mean, that's what I feel your book does and that's what your work does is trying to help people figure out, well, let me give you all the information. Here's how you can know what's good for you and test it for you and write for you. One of the things that I love that you talk about is you talk about the need to get rid of, you know, just focusing on a random diet or following a random diet and actually looking at like eating habits and patterns that work for you. And so just putting a little footnote for everyone
Starting point is 00:22:06 who's listening, the book will walk you through how to make sense of how to know what is right for you, what is wrong for you, whether you should do something which I think is like the biggest anxiety driver for so many people when it comes to their health. When it comes to food, I think fasting has become trendy, it's become a big thing that everyone's talking about. We hear so much about every single diet in the world.
Starting point is 00:22:29 There's always a new one that's coming on the surface. How have you helped people, one on one, actually discover what's right for them? Because I found that my eating patterns are very different to the trending habits of how to eat food and even fasting. Yeah, I mean, I think the first thing is, as you said, it's just letting people understand that the less you can pay attention to social media, fads, and your news, feed on Google or whatever, the better.
Starting point is 00:22:52 I acknowledge that there is surprisingly little known about the relationship between nutrition and health. And people are going to be shocked to hear that because I think most people think the exact opposite. Most people think that nutrition is the most important pillar of health. And the reality of it is outside of very extreme states, that's really not true. And the very little bit we know about nutrition just frankly speaks to the challenge of scientific inquiry into something as difficult as nutrition to study.
Starting point is 00:23:24 And the reason for that is you can't study us as humans very well. We're very messy subjects, so we're not like mice where you can put us in a cage and control what we're eating and follow us through the duration of our lives. It doesn't work that way. So when you're trying to make inferences about nutrition in humans, you have to rely on poorly controlled studies called epidemiologic studies, which are fraught with all sorts of limitations that I talk about in the book, or if you're going to control the study, you can only do it for a very short period of time. There's only a short period of time in which I can control exactly what you're eating. So as a result of that, we don't know a lot. So I always want to start with, what do we know?
Starting point is 00:24:03 Well, we know that protein is a very important macronutrient. There are four macronutrients. Carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and alcohol. People kind of forget alcohol, but some people don't understand it's very coloric. And so it constitutes a source of energy. It's the worst macronutrient.
Starting point is 00:24:18 But nevertheless, you know, you'd be amazed. Sometimes people are going to like 15 to 20% of their calories from alcohol if they drink enough. So protein is really important. And it's not a source of energy the way carbohydrates and fat is, but it's a structural macronutrient. And so I always start with that and say, look, rule number one is you have to make sure you're getting enough protein. And this is especially true if you're over 50. Because if you're over 50, you start to become resistant to the effects of protein, that's called anabolic resistance. And loss of muscle mass in people over 50 is a significant driver of mortality. And a significant driver of poor quality of life. If you really start to
Starting point is 00:24:57 think about it, even if a person is of sound mind and they're not, you know, suffering from some intractable disease later in life. A great source of misery is simply being physically unable to do things. After that, it really comes down to what do we understand about energy balance? Well, we understand that too much nutrition, I call this over-nutrition, is bad. And that the body historically developed lots of tools to store energy, because that's what allowed us to evolve the way we did. And up until, I don't know, 100 years ago or so, that was a great skill to have, it's now thwarting us in an environment of too much food.
Starting point is 00:25:41 So now this ability that we had, this superpower basically to store excess energy, has become a liability. In the United States, certainly, the vast majority of people, probably over 70% of people are overnourished. And that's the thing that's driving a lot of their poor health. If you're overnourished, you have to correct that problem. The way to correct that problem is to eat less. And there are three strategies to do that. One of them is to deliberately go about cutting calories. That's called calorie restriction or CR. The other one is called dietary restriction. That means limit certain things within the diet.
Starting point is 00:26:14 And if you are restrictive enough, that will indirectly also reduce total intake. And then the third is fasting, or time restricted eating, where you create a narrower and narrower window each day in which to eat. All of these things can work and all of those things have significant limitations that you as an individual practicing this need to know. I couldn't be more excited to share something truly special with all you T-lovers out there. And even if you don't love T, if you love refreshing, rejuvenating, refueling sodas that are good for you, listen to this. Radhianai poured our hearts into creating Juni sparkling tea with adaptogens for you, because
Starting point is 00:26:55 we believe in nurturing your body and with every sip, you'll experience calmness of mind, a refreshing vitality and a burst of brightness to your day. Juni is infused with adaptogens that are amazing natural substances that act like super heroes for your body to help you adapt to stress and find balance in your busy life. Our super five blend of these powerful ingredients include green tea, ashwagandha, assyrola cherry and lion's main mushroom and these may help boost your metabolism, give you a natural kick of caffeine, combat stress, pack your body with antioxidants, and stimulate brain function.
Starting point is 00:27:33 Even better, Juni has zero sugar and only five calories per can. We believe in nurturing and energizing your body while enjoying a truly delicious and refreshing drink. So visit drinkjuny.com today to elevate your wellness journey and use code on purpose to receive 15% off your first order. That's drinkjuny.com and make sure you use the code on purpose. Yeah, it was incredible. I was looking at the just history of the design of plates and cups, randomly. I don't even know how I got there. How much bigger they're getting? Just how much bigger
Starting point is 00:28:12 they're getting. And it was insane for me to think that the way plates are designed, the way cups are designed, the way anything's designed transforms how we consume. And it's fascinating to think that just because of a larger plate size, we're now eating larger amounts and we think it's normal in our time, whereas someone else would have think we were feasting. I'm sure you still get back to Europe all the time, but like look at the difference in portion sizes when you're in Italy versus the United States. It's comical what a difference it is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:44 I remember as a kid coming to the States, and obviously when you're a kid, everything that's biggest better. And I remember like pulling over at the gas station, and I'd see like this massive, like, you know, jumbo thing, defil your drink cup in and like, you know, forever refill to whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:28:59 And just that got as a kid, I was like, this is the coolest thing in the world. And now you look at it and you're like, wow, there's no need for that. So it's fascinating also how these cultural shifts and cultural changes have made some of these things harder for us today. So you said CR, DR and TR, those are the three that
Starting point is 00:29:16 people need to experiment with each of those. Yeah, basically, if you are in that overnourished camp, you need to employ some combination of CRDR and or TR. And if you're adequately muscled, you can just focus on that. If you're inadequately muscled, you have the added challenge of needing to boost protein intake, to match strength training while engaging in CRDR-TR. But the raw of it is, that's it. The rest of it, the alphabet soup of diets is just, it's all noise.
Starting point is 00:29:50 I just encourage people to not fixate on the trend and just think about those different things, because, you know, look, each of the alphabet soup diets fits into some form of DR. I mean, and that's true whether you're talking carnivore, pervigan, or everything in between. Those are just forms of DR, and they can all be effective, but you have to be aware of the limitations of each and make sure you're circumventing them.
Starting point is 00:30:13 Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. I think that one of the things that there's a lot of question marks around as well from the community that they were asking was nutrition, which you've beautifully clarified there, but nutrition versus supplements. And the need for supplements. And I think I would love to hear your takes on supplements that are working, types of supplements,
Starting point is 00:30:32 types of ingredients, types of chemicals that are making a difference, natural supplements too. I'd love to hear your thoughts on new tropics because I'm just hearing about new tropics everywhere right now. Adaptogens, as you just tried as well, we've been focusing on adaptogens. I'd love to, let's talk about your take
Starting point is 00:30:48 on great supplements that everyone needs to take, not a brand, but I mean, like, just me. And then you're taking on new tropics and adaptogens, that would be fantastic. I mean, I definitely do take some supplements. I'm always careful to kind of make disclosures. So one thing I do supplement, I take something called AG.
Starting point is 00:31:04 And I'm an investor in AG, but I've been taking it long before I invested in it. And I know the founder very well. I'm very under the hood of exactly how their products are made and sourced. And for folks who aren't aware, AG is like a green that you, you know, just mix in with water. I drink it every morning. They sponsor the podcast. Yeah, okay. Cool. And my approach to that is, if you buy the thesis that we need to be having X amount of vegetables a day, and let's be clear and be transparent, I can't guarantee that that is true, because we don't know. That's another example of something that the epidemiology tells us is true, but there
Starting point is 00:31:43 are many confounders there. But my view is that it's better to err on the side of that's probably true than the counter. So if you buy the thesis that you need X amount of vegetable a day, I actually find it very difficult to do that without exception. There are lots of days I can, but there are enough days that I can't. So my view of a supplement like AG is, it's my belt and suspenders approach. It's basically my way of guaranteeing that by seven o'clock in the morning, I've met my needs. And then, if I have a salad for lunch and dinner as well, perfect. I went a little overboard. But that's better than the reverse to me. So that's one.
Starting point is 00:32:22 And AG, specifically talking about that kind of a supplement, that's a vegetable focus supplement. That's right. Not all supplements, uh, that's right. Specifically focused on that. That's that specific age. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:32 There's another supplement I take, which is a probiotic. Now, no one has been a more vocal critic of the probiotic space than me. I have generally viewed it as a space that has demonstrated no efficacy despite all the intentions in the world. In the past year, I have sort of changed my take. So there was this study that came out
Starting point is 00:32:55 that looked at a certain type of probiotic and noted that a certain type of bacteria in it would help with the production of something called butarate and this was actually helping with glucose disposal. The results of the study actually were pretty impressive. It was a relatively short study, a three-month study, but it demonstrated in the group that was actually taking this probiotic, and this was in a blinded randomized trial that these
Starting point is 00:33:17 patients with type 2 diabetes had a significant reduction in blood glucose. Even though I don't have type 2 diabetes, I sort of subscribe to the idea that everybody benefits from lower blood glucose, including those without diabetes. So that's a probiotic that I take. I don't have any involvement with the company, the company's called Pendulum, but I take their glucose control probiotic. Can you walk us through a bit on glucose control?
Starting point is 00:33:37 Because I think that's still an area that, for people who are not as well informed, that that's an area that I learned about probably in the last year and a half, that has changed what I eat first thing in the morning. It's what I'm eating at different times. Like to me, I was just like, oh, if I need a boost of something as long as it's a healthy sugar, it's fine, not only to realize that, you know, causing spikes in my blood glucose level.
Starting point is 00:34:02 So could you walk us through that a little bit? You know, glucose is this essential, very simple carbohydrate. It's kind of the final common pathway of most carbohydrates. There are other simple carbohydrates as well, fructose being one of them. So sugar, for example, table sugar
Starting point is 00:34:16 is a molecule of fructose and a molecule of glucose. But glucose is the most abundant carbohydrate, final breakdown product. and it's very highly regulated. At any point in time, you're walking around with, you know, if you have an eat in that day, somewhere between four and five grams of glucose in your blood. Maybe say four to six grams of glucose in your blood, which is just over a tablespoon or a teaspoon rather. So tiny, tiny amount. But you're using it constantly, and therefore your liver is constantly putting more out
Starting point is 00:34:49 into your circulation ever so delicately. And the balance of that is so fine that if that level were to be just twice as much, if you were to go from one teaspoon to two teaspoons, that would be consistent with having type two diabetes. So type two diabetes is a condition where an individual can't control the amount of glucose in their blood. This is very problematic because glucose when it becomes too high starts sticking to proteins and it starts causing damage all over the place, but primarily to small blood vessels.
Starting point is 00:35:23 So blood vessels in the heart, blood vessels in the kidney, in the brain, if you're in the extremities of the toes, that's why people with type 2 diabetes are more susceptible to amputations, kidney disease, heart disease, strokes, Alzheimer's disease, all of these things. Anything that compromises blood flow and oxygen. So it turns out that even if you don't have type 2 diabetes and that today is just defined by a threshold of average blood glucose above 140 milligrams per deciliter even if you are not in that category it still appears that your mortality goes down the lower your average blood glucose So meaning within the normal range of glucose lower is still better people sometimes say
Starting point is 00:36:07 Well, does that just mean, you know, you should never eat a food that raises blood glucose. No, that doesn't necessarily mean that at all. What it means is you need to be mindful of matching your glucose consumption to your capacity to dispose of glucose. And those are factors that are, of course, highly impacted by how much you sleep. So, sleep interruptions in sleep dramatically reduce your capacity to put glucose into your muscles,
Starting point is 00:36:31 which means glucose levels get higher. It also has to do significantly with how much you exercise and how much muscle mass you have. So, people can have completely different tolerances for glucose. And I think I write quite a bit about this, which is, you know, basically trying to understand your glucose tolerance level comes down to matching it with your insulin sensitivity, muscle mass, activity level, sleep stress, etc. Absolutely. Thank you so much. Sorry, and I caught you off of moving forward. That's okay. So just to go back to this other point quickly. So there are lots of other supplements that I think can be really valuable. I think B vitamins are very important, especially methylated B vitamins. Vitamin D is very important. Many people I think don't have valuable. I think B vitamins are very important, especially methylated B vitamins. Vitamin D is very important.
Starting point is 00:37:06 Many people I think don't have sufficient levels of vitamin D. I think the data on vitamin D week do an entire podcast on that. The clinical trials looking at vitamin D levels are really poorly done clinical trials. And so I think if a person looks out at the literature and the literature says there's no evidence that vitamin D really helps,
Starting point is 00:37:21 I would argue pretty strongly that those trials haven't asked the right question and weren't designed correctly. So my view is it's better to probably err on the side of caution and make sure your Vitamin D is probably somewhere between about 40 and 60. And if you're not achieving that through natural exposure to sunlight, which many people are not,
Starting point is 00:37:39 then you're probably better off supplementing. There are a couple of other supplements I really believe in, and I think magnesium is a very important one and I think you have to be thoughtful about the form in which you take magnesium. So you can take magnesium in a slow absorbing form or a fast absorbing form that's poorly absorbed technically. And I think we need both, right? So I think that I'm like a poorly absorbed magnesium would be like a citrate, glycinate, or oxide, and magnesium would be like a citrate, glycinate, or oxide. And those actually really help with bowel regularity. So for anybody who's a little bit constipated or just, you know, kind of needs to
Starting point is 00:38:11 be a little bit more regular, we always want to have in anywhere from two to 500 milligrams of one of those forms. Conversely, I think virtually everybody also benefits from a slow absorbing form of magnesium. The brand that I like is called slow mag. Again, I don't have any affiliation with any of these companies, unless I'm disclosing it as I did with AG. That actually, so most people, if they notice, oh, I have a little bit of cramping sometimes, or I'm getting little palpitations called PVCs sometimes,
Starting point is 00:38:41 those get a lot better with magnesium supplementation. So I think most people benefit from that. There's another type of magnesium that I'm a fan of called magnesium L3 and 8, which is magnesium paired to a transporter that gets the magnesium into the brain. I think there's reasonable evidence. I wouldn't say it's incredible,
Starting point is 00:38:59 but I think it's quite good that magnesium L3 and 8 is beneficial to the brain and might even have some capacity to reduce the risk of dementia. Before bed, I tend to rely on ashwaganda, which I believe you said is in there. So I take a big dose of ashwaganda and glycine, and again, I take that magnesium L3 and 8,
Starting point is 00:39:21 and those are kind of things that I think help with reducing cortisol and making it a little easier to sleep those are kind of things that I think help with reducing cortisol and making it a little easier to sleep. Then the final supplement that I do think most people benefit from, and there are probably many others, but I'm just sort of going through a few that I can think of would be fish oil. So most people probably don't consume enough marine fat to get what I think are ideal amounts of EPA and DHA, which are two very special types of fats called omega-3 fatty acids. And EPA and DHA, I think the balance of evidence is quite strong that they're both beneficial to the heart and the brain. that they're both beneficial to the heart and the brain. EPA, probably a little bit more for the heart,
Starting point is 00:40:05 DHA, probably a little bit more for the brain. I take a brand that I've had tested because you always want to be careful about contaminants here. I mean, it's made by a company called Carlson's. Again, I have no affiliation with them, but I take their EPA and DHA daily as well. That's a fantastic summary for anyone who's looking. I take all those things. Yeah. You know, I think that's a fantastic summary for anyone who's looking. I take all those things.
Starting point is 00:40:25 I think that's a brilliant summary and I really hope everyone is listening and watching, get those checks and tests done and grab those supplements. Because again, I like what you're saying that it's all about airing on the side of caution. It's almost like protecting yourself being safe rather than assuming that, A, you get this, or B, it doesn't really matter. You know, is it that we used to find these supplements in other forms before or as humans, if we always ignored this and now we've suddenly figured it out or has our lifestyle just got so stressful and intense that we're needing more of all of this to support the pace at which we're moving?
Starting point is 00:41:04 That's a great question. I do think that the supplement world is such a slippery, dirty world that I always want to throw out a disclaimer, which is when I talk about these things, I'm also very diligent about the brands that I buy. So again, I have no affiliation with any of these entities, but having looked at third-party testing, I find the brand Jero, J-A-R-R-O-W, the
Starting point is 00:41:27 brand Pure and Capsulations, to be two of the most reputable companies out there. So I'm basically always going to try to buy from them if I can, even if I'm paying a little bit of a premium. Your question is a very good one, and I don't know how much you've paid attention to kind of the field of regenerative agriculture, but it's a topic that interests me quite a bit. And the more I've read about it, the more I've come to realize that I actually think part of the problem is our food today is far less nutrient dense than it once was.
Starting point is 00:42:00 And so I do think that many of us don't get the same quantity and density of nutrients today that we did for the same caloric intake, say, 50 years ago. And the proponents of regenerative agriculture would argue that a big part of that has to do with soil health. So as the health of the soil has deteriorated with more tillage, more fertilizers, less crop rotation, all of these things, the net result of that is the plants themselves are less healthy. So when you're eating a plant, you're getting less nutrient density.
Starting point is 00:42:34 And of course, when you're eating meat, if you're an omnivore, the meat is also less healthy and less nutrient dense because it's eating a less nutrient dense plant, which is growing in a less nutrient dense soil. And so the old adage that, you know, it's hard to be healthier than the animal you eat, which can't be much healthier than the plant it eats, which can't be much healthier than the soil it grows in, brings this whole thing full circle.
Starting point is 00:42:59 And so I suspect that that plays a pretty significant role in it, coupled with the changes in our lifestyle, right? So many of us would have got sufficient vitamin D, for example, in the past, because we would have been outside more, and we would have been active more, and today we aren't as one example. Are you seeing the rise of more regenerative farming and places to buy regenerative vegetables or is that...
Starting point is 00:43:23 Yeah, I mean, you've got even a thing, yeah. No, it absolutely is. And there are some great places. You know, certainly one of my sincere hopes is that, you know, we see a greater and greater movement to scale this because I do think regenerative agriculture is not only what I think of as one of the most important ways in which we can improve human health through nutrition.
Starting point is 00:43:53 But for folks who are also concerned with climate change and the effects of anthropogenic CO2, regenerative agriculture probably has more potential to attenuate that than anything else, inclusive of electrifying the entire transportation grid. And that's a pretty bold statement. It is, it's very bold, and that's why I'm gonna dive into it too. Like, what gives you confidence to make that bold statement? Like, what have you seen that has given you that conviction? It really comes down to understanding the capacity for plants to fixate carbon. I'm sure everybody understands, you know,
Starting point is 00:44:20 the basics of how CO2 works, right? So why is there a concern with the combustion of fossil fuels? Because when you're combusting a fossil fuel, whether it be coal or natural gas, you're taking carbon that was sequestered billions of years ago in the form of fossilized, you know, organic matter, and you're now liberating that carbon dioxide out.
Starting point is 00:44:41 So how do we get carbon dioxide back in the system? Well, plants do that. So plants have a capacity to do something that no animal does, which is they fixate carbon. So they fix in carbon, literally, is just the chemical process of taking a carbon out of CO2 and attaching it to another hydrocarbon. The way that regenerative agriculture works
Starting point is 00:45:01 is by storing more and more CO2 and carbon specifically in the soil. So right now, the way conventional agriculture works, when you're constantly telling the soil, you're leaching carbon out of the soil. And so, you know, when you look at the mathematical models that look at how much carbon could be brought back into the ground and sequestered i.e. brought out of the atmosphere, it's more significant than the carbon that's being put out through the combustion of fossil fuels. The reason I'm particularly excited about that is you're basically getting two wins for
Starting point is 00:45:37 the price of one, right? So you're reducing atmospheric CO2, but doing so in a manner that's also very positive for our health, because in doing that, you're increasing the soil health and by extension, then the nutrient density of plants and ultimately animals and ourselves. I'm Danny Shapiro, host of Family Secrets. It's hard to believe we're entering our eighth season, and yet, we're constantly discovering new secrets. The depths of them, the variety of them continues to be astonishing. I can't wait to share 10 incredible stories with you, stories of tenacity, resilience, and the profoundly necessary excavation of long-held family
Starting point is 00:46:20 secrets. When I realized this is not just happening to me, this is who and what I am. I needed her to help me. Something was annoying at me that I couldn't put my finger on, that I just felt somehow that there was a piece missing. Why not restart? Look at all the things that were going wrong. I hope you'll join me and my extraordinary guests for this new season of Family Secrets. Listen to season 8 of Family Secrets on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. 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. Oprah, everything that has happened to you
Starting point is 00:47:05 can also be a strength builder for you if you allow it. Kobe Bryant. The results don't really matter. It's the figuring out that matters. Kevin Haw. It's not about us as a generation at this point. It's about us trying our best to create change. Louren's Hamilton.
Starting point is 00:47:23 That's for me being taken that moment for yourself each day, being kind to yourself because I think for a long time I wasn't kind to myself. And many, many more. If you're attached to knowing, you don't have a capacity to learn. On this podcast, you get to hear the raw real-life stories behind their journeys and the tools they used, the books they read, and the people that made a difference in their lives so that they can make a difference in hours. Listen to on purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever
Starting point is 00:47:50 you get your podcasts. Join the journey soon. Our 20s are seen as this golden decade. Our time to be carefree, full in love, make mistakes and decide what we want from our life. But what can psychology really teach us about this decade? I'm Gemma Spagg, the host of the Psychology of your 20s. Each week we take a deep dive into a unique aspect of our 20s. From career anxiety, mental health, heartbreak, money, friendships, and much more to explore the science and the psychology behind our
Starting point is 00:48:27 experiences, incredible guests, fascinating topics, important science, and a bit of my own personal experience. Audrey, I honestly have no idea what's going on with my life. Join me as we explore what our 20s are really all about. from the good, the bad, and the ugly, and listen along as we uncover how everything is psychology, including our twenties. The psychology of your twenties hosted by me, Gemma Speg, now streaming on the iHotRadio app, Apple podcasts or whatever you get your podcasts. What you take on regenerative agriculture versus lab produced vegetables? I have yet to see any evidence that laboratory produced meats and vegetables can be done really well at scale or that they
Starting point is 00:49:15 are particularly certainly any more viable in terms of the nutrient density. I think in part it comes down to the complexity of soil. There's a great book I would recommend for people who want to go really deep on this. I believe the book is called What Your Food Eight. And it's a wonderful book. It's a bit of a deep dive, it's a nerdy book. It's not light reading. And they go into incredible detail about...
Starting point is 00:49:41 David Montgomery, is that? Yes, and there's another author as well, a female- Ann- And Beakley? Yep. Once you get under the hood of how complex soil is, so for example, many people talk about the human gut biome. And, you know, we talked a minute ago about probiotics, right?
Starting point is 00:49:58 Well, the human gut biome is really complicated. And we haven't figured out a way to perfectly model it. I mean, maybe we're just getting to the point where we can figure out if we add a little bit more of one bacteria can make a difference in the direction that this thing goes. Well, it turns out that soil is probably even more biodiverse and complicated than the bacteria in our gut. And so again, I just think it's very difficult for us to sort of play super farmer and think that we can kind of replicate what nature has figured out for, you know, literally a billion
Starting point is 00:50:31 years. Well, so yeah, so your understanding is actually that we don't know enough about the complexity of the soil, which is actually what is impacting the quality of the vegetable or hence the heat and all the way up the chain. Hence, even if we can produce a vegetable or me in a lab, it won't have that same. That's my take on it, which says nothing about, which says nothing by the way about the scale factor. I think at the end of the day, scale matters.
Starting point is 00:51:02 Like, I mean, food, I think it's safe to say agriculture is the second largest industry in the world. Just in terms of the magnitude of what it takes, you have to have solutions that work broadly. And by the way, I think that's still, there are certainly proponents of regenerative ag who say it can be scaled, but I think that's an open question still. Regenerative agriculture means it can be scaled, but I think that's an open question still. Regenerative agriculture being scaled. It can be scaled to meet the needs of the entire world. Yeah. What are the challenges with scaling that? It's a totally different infrastructure truthfully, right? It's not going to rely on as much automation.
Starting point is 00:51:37 So, for example, like you're not going to be able to rely, you know, so one of the hallmarks of regenerative ag is you're not using fertilizer. So you're not using the nitrogen of a fertilizer, you're actually using the nitrogen of the animals. Another one is you're not using pesticides, so you're crop rotating instead of using pesticides and allowing, you know, the crops themselves to generate resistance by cycling them and not letting the pests get used to the same crop, not to, you not to belabor the point, but all of a sudden the industry that is now dominated by the pioneers, the cargels, the monsanto's of the world, it's going to have to look very different. So I think that's a big challenge,
Starting point is 00:52:15 is going from big to little and then scaling little, if that makes sense. Where are the places, like, if people have fascinated to... Have you been out to any regenerative agriculture farms or anything like that? Yeah, there's one outside of Austin. There's actually one here in California. So there's not many, there's like, there's. I mean, there's, so the one out in California is called,
Starting point is 00:52:36 there's a documentary made about it called, I think the documentary was called Biggest Little Farm. It's not too far from here by the way. Okay. And my kids were obsessed with this. So we like watch this documentary like, I don't know, 15 times. But you'll get a sense of what it looks like. But yes, no, I mean, you, I think everybody can find regenerative farms near them. So really,
Starting point is 00:52:55 it's just a question of helping farmers understand why ultimately it is in their best interest to do this. So economically, it makes more sense. But look, it's going to require the government completely changing incentive structures and changing the way they subsidize certain crops today. It's a big shift. Yeah. What should you take on people trying to create little farms in their home?
Starting point is 00:53:15 Like, they're like mini-growing. Yeah, I mean, look, I think it's wonderful. I think if you can grow your own vegetables, I mean, we have a vegetable garden, and there's no question that The vegetables we grow taste infinitely better than anything we're gonna buy at the grocery store And how do you take care of the soil in in your area? You're saying because it's untouched it naturally has yeah, I mean, we we compost our own stuff
Starting point is 00:53:39 So but it's you know, look it it's not even big enough to completely feed us Right, you know, it's it's there's work that goes completely feed us. So, you know, it's, there's work that goes into this. And I have friends that do have the time and effort to at least, you know, support themselves fully. That's beautiful. Yeah, yeah, yeah. My wife's really big on that. She wants to build a little vegetable garden
Starting point is 00:53:58 on the back right now in the same way because that's one of her core beliefs as well. So, just this past weekend, I had to put all this chicken wire around the fence where our garden is because these squirrels are figuring out a way to get under the fence and they're like eating all the tomatoes and the peppers and stuff and it's like my son who's eight. This is his project and it just drives him nuts
Starting point is 00:54:21 when the squirrels are getting them. What a great age to get connected to it. So it's so great. Yeah, it's the land and when the squirrels are getting them. So what a great age to like get connected. So it's so great. Yeah, it's the land and to the soil and to growing. That's so beautiful. I love that. Yeah, we've had a go for problem for years here. And it's like, it's always ruining the lawn.
Starting point is 00:54:36 And I'm like, well, if I plant vegetables here, those vegetables are going to be gone. Yeah, you have to be smart about it. Yeah, yeah, incredible. I want to make sure that everyone knows. The book dives into cancer Alzheimer's. We're going to dive into exercise in a second. We talked about diet, eating less, eating patterns. I want to make sure, because I don't want to either
Starting point is 00:54:59 repeat things that are already in the book or repeat things you've talked about in other interviews. And so I just want everyone who's listening to know that, that, you know, it dives into multiple key diseases that we're all struggling with today and the biggest challenges. One thing I wanted to talk to you about, which I think you really wonderfully highlighted was this challenge between physical health and emotional health. And you talk about the need for prioritizing emotional health as well. And I found that so much of my subtle emotional health was so based on physical health.
Starting point is 00:55:34 So what I mean by that is I found at one point in doing all of my checks and tests that, and by the way, I was doing, I was functioning at like a really optimal level. I was just feeling tired. And when we did my tests, we found that my, I was doing, I was functioning at like a really optimal level. I was just feeling tired. And when we did my test, we found that my vitamin D was at a 10. It was around two, three years ago. And I realized the majority of the challenges I was having was because I was sleeping. We rented a home during COVID. We moved from our apartment.
Starting point is 00:56:01 And when we rented this space, I never slept well in that space because it was just the most noisy, loud area because there were, it was in the middle of too many animals, too many things at night, like going through the floorboards, like it was an old, old space. And so there was like, I was waking up multiple times, which I don't usually go through. And so I started to find that a lot of my emotional challenges, whether it's fatigue, irritability, stress, because of that environment, was causing emotional challenges, but it was actually all coming from a physical space.
Starting point is 00:56:39 That makes sense. For sure. And I think so often these days, I find a lot of us are just trying to solve everything in our mind, rather than recognizing that often, it's a chemical, it's biological, it's physical. So I wanna just point that out to people because I think a lot of us are like, I could have done anything to change.
Starting point is 00:56:55 I was working out, I was trying to sleep prior, I was doing everything I possibly could, but because my vitamin D was at a level 10, there's not much you can do instead of taking vitamin D supplements. How, where are you saying this relationship, where are you seeing this relationship between emotional health and physical health? Well, they're absolutely linked.
Starting point is 00:57:15 And, you know, I think that one of the things that I've observed, you know, my therapists will always ask me at the beginning of a session is, how are you doing physically? So are you in pain? Is your shoulder bugging you? Is your back bugging you? Do you have like an ulcer in your mouth? Or something like, like literally, something like that? How are you rested? And how much stress are you under? And the reason I think is those things exacerbate vulnerabilities that we have on the emotional side, on the mental side. So if you take an individual, same individual and two parallel universes, but in one situation,
Starting point is 00:57:55 they have lots of issues going on physically, right? So they're not well-rested. Their vitamin D is low. They're in pain, and you have another individual for which everything is physically firing on all cylinders, and you present them with the same emotional distress, you're going to see a completely different response. That's a big part of why I think it does matter to keep your physical health in order to optimize your emotional health. But I would also argue that you could still have your physical health in perfect order and not becoming close to addressing your emotional health. When you use the term emotional health, what does that constitute for you?
Starting point is 00:58:36 I tried to distinguish it from mental health. I think mental health is a subset of emotional health, but it's the perhaps the more medicalized piece of it. So in medicine, we use something called the DSM, the diagnostic and statistical manual, I think we're on version five. And that's the one that codifies psychiatric illnesses, right? Everything from depression, anxiety, different personality disorders, and all sorts of things like that. And those things clearly matter. But I'm talking about something that is applicable to everyone, whereas those things might only be applicable to people who would meet diagnostic criteria. So emotional health in the sense, the way I think about it, kind of in compasses, your relationships with other people, your sense of purpose, fulfillment, happiness, joy, spontaneity, all of these
Starting point is 00:59:22 things that every human should be thinking about, because every human is a part of those things. In my case, so the book is written basically at 17 chapters. Sixteen of the chapters are me writing about it as the doctor, the scientist. The last chapter, which is about emotional health, is me actually just writing about my personal experience and my own, well, transformation, I think, would be an understatement. You know, I think that the most important lesson for me in the past decade has been that all the health stuff that's that makes up most of that book, how do you reduce your odds of getting cancer? How do you reduce your odds of getting heart disease, Alzheimer's disease?
Starting point is 01:00:06 How do you make sure your muscles work better in the last decade of, you know, they're like all those things, they're very important. But if you're miserable, none of it matters, right? If your relationships suck, none of it matters. And I can't state that enough, but I couldn't have understood that a decade ago. You know, I had to personally experience things going really wrong. I had to nearly lose everything to
Starting point is 01:00:34 realize I've really missed the plot here. And if I don't get this stuff addressed, then the rest of this outliving doesn't mean anything. What was the wake up call for you or what was the... I mean, I think it was essentially almost losing my family, right? It was just being so selfish and so such an awful person that, you know, I finally woke up and realized how much I was hurting everybody around me. And I was confronted with that and confronted with the reality that I had no choice but to go away and get help to sort of address my own reasons for why my coping mechanisms were so negative. What made you so selfish and awful, Lee? Where did that come from? Well, I mean, again, at the time I had no clue, but I also at the time, I don't think I was even privy to understanding what I was doing.
Starting point is 01:01:27 But obviously, as I talk about in the chapter, what I basically learned is, I think a lot of my adaptations had to do with certain things in my childhood, some of which were, I describe as big tea trauma, some of which are frankly just little tea trauma, but collectively they just produced a response and adaptation. I talk about this model of trauma where wounded children become adaptive children, an adaptive children are there to protect the wounded children. And I think that's a remarkable trait of us as humans. We are very resilient. The problem is that a lot of those adaptations become maladaptive in adult life.
Starting point is 01:02:07 And I think that's really what I was dealing with was so many of my adaptations, you know, for example, control, drive, perfection, anger, all of those things served me quite well as a child, but as a husband and as a father, they were not serving me well anymore. And all of the good that came from those adaptations, for example, a strong work ethic, a desire to do good, was more being done for the wrong reasons. It was, I'll show them, I will, you know, I will matter. My self-esteem will be based on performance, et cetera. And I think all of that had to be turned on its head. For me, that was sort of my journey
Starting point is 01:02:52 was learning how to undo all of the maladaptive behaviors to try to keep the good parts of the adaptation and then shed the harmful ones. Why do you think it takes us? Thank you for sharing, by the way, and I know you're going to a more depth in the book. And I find this fascinating, and I think people, I'm so happy that you address it,
Starting point is 01:03:12 because I think people find it especially fascinating from coming from you, because often they're just seen as separate things and separate pursuits, but for you to unify them is really, really interesting. Why do you think it takes so many of us so long to address the very root cause of so much of our problems? And you partly covered it there that some of these things become superpowers in the material world, like they're phenomenal, manipulating the outside world through control and perfectionism, et cetera,
Starting point is 01:03:46 but then in the inner world and the family tends to suffer from that. Why does it take us so long to look backwards almost to look forwards in both our genetic background and are also genetic trauma in that sense? I don't think we want to uncover painful things unless the pain that we're confronting is greater than the pain we're going to encounter
Starting point is 01:04:14 by doing so. That's probably my simplest thought as to why. I just think that like how many people without ever having experienced dental pain would go to the dentist, right? You do as a kid because you're sort of told, but when I think about now, why do I put so much effort into taking care of my teeth? It's because I've learned how miserable it is when I don't.
Starting point is 01:04:39 I think until you experience enough discomfort in the present. And in my case, that came through the circumstances I write about, the pain of turning around and going back and exploring what happened and why, and then embarking on the corrective steps and learning a whole new language and a whole new set of skills. I mean, in chemistry, we call that the activation energy of a chemical reaction, right? So every chemical reaction has to overcome some sort of activation energy, and the higher that activation energy, the less likely that reaction is to take place.
Starting point is 01:05:20 So enzymes, which people have heard, what's an enzyme do? An enzyme or a catalyst will make that reaction more likely. It lowers that barrier to activation. So I think what we need in our life are catalysts. We need something, and unfortunately, I think sometimes it often has to be painful, a loss to force us to do that. I make a point when I showed up in the first rehab place I went to, there was a woman that I met there
Starting point is 01:05:49 who could sort of see from the look on my face that I wasn't happy to be there. She just said to me in a manner that was just so perfect. She said, hey, nobody shows up here on a winning streak. Yeah. This is just 100% true. How did you help the people around you that you cared about be patient as you
Starting point is 01:06:07 went through your own journey? Because I feel like it's really interesting when we're trying to solve our own wounds and pain. It's already so hard, but because we've taken on responsibilities or commitments, whether that be in a marriage or as a parent or even as a CEO or a boss or whatever it may be, it's like, all of a sudden you have so many other commitments that you had taken on even before you've realized you had to work on yourself. Did you find yourself helping them while you helped yourself to be around and be supportive as opposed to like tap out? And so, you know what, we don't want to be around. Because I think we often look at like how are people helping us in our time
Starting point is 01:06:47 of struggle, but sometimes it's like we already committed to them and then we realize that, does that make any sense? It makes a ton of sense and I will tell you, I think it just speaks to how fortunate I am and perhaps why I feel I have an obligation to talk about it, which is I just think I was really lucky and that the people around me stood by me and let me go through this and gave me the chance to do it and stood by me because I don't think many people would have.
Starting point is 01:07:15 I really, I've said this to my wife many times. I describe her as like sort of Hall of Fame wife who didn't really need to stick by me. I think she had enough reasons to leave and take my kids away and just say to hell with that guy and that she didn't, I will forever pay that forward. And I think the same is true of people that I worked with who knew I was struggling.
Starting point is 01:07:36 I think deep down believed that I was not a bad person. I was a good person who did very bad things and that I deserved another chance. I wish I could say I was supporting them on that journey but I don't think I was a good person who did very bad things and that I deserved another chance. I wish I could say I was supporting them on that journey, but I don't think I was. I think I was just reeling in pain and lucky that they stood by me. Well, thank you for sharing that. That really hit me.
Starting point is 01:07:56 There's, you know, don't expect people to catch you when you're falling, but if they stand by you, never let them leave you aside, because I think most of us could probably you when you're falling, but if they stand by you, never let them leave you aside, because I think most of us could probably, the fortunate ones attest to that. I would say that about my wife too. I'd say that about my parents, I'd say that about the people that I'm surrounded by,
Starting point is 01:08:16 that sometimes I haven't had the capacity to help them as I help myself, even though I intend to. But the problem sometimes is we do the other extreme where we demand them to help us. That's the balance. It's like the gratitude that you're displaying right now is actually like the right, I think a wonderful balance because we do either or we either go, I'm going to solve this myself and I don't need anyone or I want my family to solve my problems for me. Interesting.
Starting point is 01:08:43 Yeah. And like we live in one of those extremes and you're actually saying, well, I had to help myself. I didn't have the capacity to help them at the time, but now I'm just grateful and I'm humbled by the fact that they stayed here. Like there's some beauty to that, and that really resonates. It's probably four years after one of the events
Starting point is 01:09:03 that I write about in this book, which was when my son almost died. I was talking to Esther Perel and I was just saying, I don't think I could ever forgive myself for what I did. And she said, that's okay. I think it's okay that you remember this for the rest of your life. I think there's a degree of humility you need to carry with you forever. And I think that was really wise thing to say, right? Like I think it would have been easy to have said, no,
Starting point is 01:09:29 no, no, no, no, no, you should just forget about this and move on. But she's like, no, you should remember this forever. This is the humility you need to remember. And she described it in a very eloquent way, which was you need to understand that there's a monster in you, and he's never going to go away. I'm confident you will keep him in the corner for the rest of his life, but don't ever take an eye off him. And don't ever think that just because you're better now, you're better for life. This is a constant process. Yeah, and remembering that there's a monster in you,
Starting point is 01:10:03 but you are not that monster. That's right. Yeah, he's over in the corner and you are the one in charge of whether he stays in that corner. Yeah, it reminds me. I remember in my early experience of living as a monk, I said to one of my monk teachers,
Starting point is 01:10:16 I said, I just feel like I'll never overcome my ego. Like it just is too big. Like there's two mites to deal with. And it's not that it's coming out in an externally gross way that it's manifesting, but I can I know it's there. You know, we've trained in self awareness and and I can see it. And he said to me, yeah, it's always going to be there because it's it's not going anywhere. And he said it will always act as your anchor and ground you and humble you, even when you saw to new heights or whatever else your life brings to you. That you knowing that it's there is actually what will help you.
Starting point is 01:10:53 Right. You know, stay grounded, which is such a beautiful reminder as opposed to like ego death and we're gonna crush it in. It's interesting with the health too, right, with emotional health and physical health. That from what you said, the first thing you said today was, you know, there are certain things from the moment you're born that that's it. It's already going in the wrong direction. And we often think of like, how do I end this? So how do I start this? How do I finish this? And it's like, well, most things are just in motion. They're not beginning or ending. They're just already happening. And as you said earlier, we're trying to slow it down
Starting point is 01:11:26 or we're trying to be aware of it, or we're trying to monitor it. When you were speaking about your family there, and you were talking about that emotional well-being, there was something that came to mind. There were these two beautiful words you used, which one of them is used a lot, but one of them not so much.
Starting point is 01:11:42 We talked about joy and spontaneity. And I love the word spontaneity. I think it's not used enough when we talk about emotional health. Joy is used, but the challenge I find today, when I'm talking to people, is that we're so overexposed to whether it's, where they chemically, we're talking about dopamine or whether we're just talking about like fun pleasure, instant gratification, which we've talked about for such a long time, that everything
Starting point is 01:12:09 feels boring almost. It's hard for people to get to a state of joy or spontaneity. I find that a lot of people have a sense of like, what's there to look forward to? They're like, oh, nothing's that great. It's okay. Whereas before, and now it feels like you've got to up the results so hard, and the problem is even when you up it, you're thinking that happiness is in Europe on that yacht. Even if you've got there, it won't actually even live up to that experience that you put in your mind.
Starting point is 01:12:45 Because it was never about the physical manifestation of it, it was the idea that you've overexposed yourself to so much pleasure that now, even the highest pleasures don't satisfy or suffice. How do we work on that? Like, what is the health and emotional version of approaching that problem? I wish I knew. I mean, I think you're addressing one of the most important questions.
Starting point is 01:13:09 And this is something I really struggle with because, you know, for me, I, and I was just talking about this with someone earlier today, I think about the next decade of my life, this amazing time where I get to be with my kids the most. Because, you know, as you're probably aware, the data are pretty clear that once your kids leave for college, the amount of time you'll get to spend with them is quite small. I think it works out to basically, you have a total of 19 years with your kids. 18 of which occur until they leave for college.
Starting point is 01:13:43 And then one year is the sum total of time you will spend with your kids the rest of your life on average. So I look at that and I think I regret the time I've wasted so far, right? But so that's the stuff I talk about. And now I'm here in the future. I think, wow, the greatest source of joy I really experience
Starting point is 01:14:04 is with my family. That to me is what spontaneity is, right? Spontaneity, for me, is an important... The reason I brought it up is I'm a very rigid person by nature. Like part of control for me is rigidity. Deviating from my plan is a very hard thing to do, but I also realize it's a very important thing to do. So, like, I'm the kind of guy who makes lists on weekends.
Starting point is 01:14:25 Me too. Right. There's just, like, there's a list of 12 things that have to be done on Saturday and eight things that have to be done on Sunday. And you can imagine that that rigidity takes any spontaneity out of life. And one of the great things I've learned is how to screw the list sometimes. The other day when I went to get, you know, had to go to Home Depot to get all the chicken wired to do the thing like that, wasn't on the list that day, but I could see that my son was upset that the squirrels were eating his tomatoes. And I was like, you know what, I'm supposed to be doing X, Y and Z. Let's go to Home Depot.
Starting point is 01:15:01 Yeah. I think interestingly, anyone who does that, which I'm sure is everybody listening to this at some point can experience that, those are probably the things that bring more joy than the yacht in Ibiza. It doesn't mean that you should never go on the yacht in Ibiza.
Starting point is 01:15:15 Yeah, it just means, yeah. I think it just means that don't dismiss the stuff that's right in front of you. And again, for most people, I really do believe connection is that thing. Like, just having intimate connection with friends and family probably provides more of that than any of these other kind of material things. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:40 In the 1680s, a feisty opera singer burned down a nunnery and stole away with her secret lover. In 1810, a pirate queen negotiated her cruiseway to total freedom with all their loot. During World War II, a flirtatious gambling double agent helped keep D-Day a secret from the Germans. What are these stories having common? They're all about real women who were left out of your history books. If you're tired of missing out, check out the Womanica podcast, a daily women's history podcast highlighting women you may not have heard of but definitely should know about. I'm your host Jenny Kaplan, and for me, diving into these stories is the best part of my
Starting point is 01:16:22 day. I learned something new about women from around the world and leave feeling amazed, inspired, and sometimes shocked. Listen on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Being human is not easy. This is not just this unique thing that is happening to me. I'm Megan Devine, host of It's OK, that you're not OK. This season on the show, I'm joined by leading actors,
Starting point is 01:16:49 and musicians, and activists, and authors, all discussing their often invisible losses and what they've learned about being seen and supported in difficult times. I used to think that I had to make myself suffer in order to serve, right, to be breathless all the time. From the everyday grief that we don't call grief to losses that rearrange the world,
Starting point is 01:17:09 everybody's at least a little bit not okay these days. And all those things we don't usually talk about, well, maybe we should together. This has been an experience that is so beautiful. Thank you for inviting me into what feels like kind of a sacred space here. It's okay that you're not okay. New episodes each and every Monday available on the iHeart Radio app or wherever you listen to podcasts. And I think what you're saying is actually true.
Starting point is 01:17:36 And I want to clarify that point too that I actually think that when you are not missing the simple things that are right in front of you, then when the big material that are right in front of you. Then when the big material thing is right in front of you, you won't miss that either. That's the point, I believe. I think that if someone is grateful for where they're at and what they see and what they experience and are able to immerse themselves in it, then the same happens on vacation, the same happens on the yacht as our thought experiment. Like the idea is that the ability to experience a flower
Starting point is 01:18:10 as a thought experiment in the most immersive way allows you to experience a garden which allows you to experience a forest which allows, you know, it's, you can't really fully experience the forest if you didn't know how to experience a leaf. That idea of that much immersed. And I've personally experienced both the presence and absence of those experiences, where sometimes I'm walking up and down here or doing my morning hike and you completely missed the view because you're on your phone or even if your phone's not there, you're thinking about something. And then second, you look up and you're, oh, wait a minute. Like this
Starting point is 01:18:49 was right there. And so I think we all experienced presence and absence. And I've found that beautiful, we think beautiful things will make us more presence, but actually will be absent even in beautiful things if we're not present for the small things. And I've seen that again and again and again. And in your example, and I'm just, I'm only picking at this because I think there's so much lived experience in what you're saying. And the scientific background helps too.
Starting point is 01:19:15 It's like, how have you also not ended up, because it sounds like your kids and your family is just so important to you, which is beautiful. And I think that's true for so many people. But again, I find that a lot of the people that I'm talking to are living at the other extreme where they're like, Jay, I am so giving in to everything my kids want to do,
Starting point is 01:19:32 and my family wants to do that. I don't even have any of my own habits and disciplines, right? Like for you going to get chicken wire was a spontaneous moment of love for your son who's worried about this project that he loves. Whereas for some people, all they're living in is not spontaneity, but in urgency. And then they're not getting. I was speaking to her friend the other day and they were telling me, Jay, I wake up at 6 a.m.
Starting point is 01:19:57 But what happened? And then I was kind of walking through their schedule with them for the day and helping them map habits. And they were like, I don't know what. And I was like, well, when do you start cooking lunch, for example, that they as part of their day, they have to do, and they were like, 12. And I was like, what happens between 6 a.m. and 12? Noon.
Starting point is 01:20:13 They're like, I don't know. And I was like, what do you mean, like, you don't know? Like, that's six hours of time. Like, where does it go? And then they were like emails, phone calls, random people call, random things happen. And it's all like, I'm like, wow, you're waking up pretty early, which is amazing.
Starting point is 01:20:27 But now all of that six hours is just lost in kind of moving. How have you found that balance between like, I love my children, I want to be there, but I also need to do everything I say in this book, which takes time and energy. I don't want to necessarily use myself as an example because I also realize like, I have some really good things going for me,
Starting point is 01:20:44 which is I have like an amazing spouse and I have an amazing team and all of these things. But what everyone around me has figured out is, if you wanna get the best out of me as a husband, as a father, as a friend, as a boss, as a colleague, whatever it is, if you want the best version of Peter, he also has to be well-rested, he has to be eating well, he has to be exercising. He has to be doing the things that he has to do every day
Starting point is 01:21:10 for his mental health. I am actually quite structured when it comes to that stuff. So I'm very routine with how I do things. So I do not take a single call or meeting with very rare exceptions. Once a month, there's an exception to this rule before 11 a.m. I am scheduled without a break from 11 to 5 every single day. So I have six hours of pure scheduled that I consider that not my time. That's my patience time, that's my team's time, that's me giving 30 hours a week to everybody. I get up at about six, from six to 11 is really sacred time. So six to seven is just coffee with my wife and playing with the kids. So my daughter of course knows she's still sleeping, but the boys were playing board games, doing puzzles, having coffee, doing whatever. From seven to eight is work.
Starting point is 01:22:09 Just get the emails done, read whatever I need to read, etc. From eight to eleven is hobby plus exercise. So every day, I'm either in the simulator driving or shooting my bow and arrow, and then I'm exercising. From five to about seven is family time, so I'm usually cooking dinner, playing with the kids, going to, you know, Jiu-Jitsu, whatever it is.
Starting point is 01:22:32 And then seven till 10 is some combination of family time plus work, and that's where there has to be some flexibility. Like how much more work do I need to do? And the price I pay for that is I have to work on weekends too, right? Why? Because I'm forcing the time to be spread out.
Starting point is 01:22:51 And so that means like, yeah, there's just, there's other things I'm gonna have to make sacrifices around. But I guess my point of that is you have to kind of try to take hold of the schedule a little bit and sort of say, like there are certain things that are non-negotiable. So not exercising is a non-negotiable. Not having some time with my family is a non-negotiable.
Starting point is 01:23:12 I rarely travel anymore. I used to travel 20 days a month. I travel two to three days a month now. Just very deliberate and conscious decisions about how I want to spend my time. And the importance of taking care of my body in an effort to take care of everything else. Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:23:30 No, and I definitely agree. I don't think we want to use ourselves as examples or, you know, as the way to do it, because everyone's so personal. I think it's just useful understanding that that structure is needed for that spontaneity. What might be more helpful for people to understand how I communicate this with my wife. So my wife is that person who will put everybody ahead of herself.
Starting point is 01:23:53 So what I have to help my wife do is realize, hey, like you need to go for a run too because that matters a lot to you. And you need to go out with your friends and have drinks once every two weeks because that matters. Or you need to go and get a mani-pedi with your daughter and actually relax. I'll pitch in and do this other thing because I really feel strongly about you doing that. And that's not something I would have done before. Before, I would have just sort of said, hey, it's awesome. You're doing everything. So I think as a spouse, you want to sort of really understand that as true as that is for me, it's just as true for her. awesome, you're doing everything great. So I think as a spouse, you want to sort of really
Starting point is 01:24:25 understand that as true as that is for me, it's just as true for her. I think that's the key thing and I, we don't have kids, but I can definitely say on a relationship level, it's like just because your partner can do something and is doing something doesn't mean that you should just accept that as reality for the rest of the time. And I see that that's one of the biggest challenges and relationships is people feel like their role is assumed because of what they've done in the past, but no one checked with them as to whether they were okay continuing to do it or whether they felt good doing it. And we think, well, they should tell us if they don't like it, they would tell us like
Starting point is 01:25:03 I would tell them, but often you find that someone so ingrained in playing a role that they've even forgotten that they have needs or who they could be or can be, or they feel this overbearing burden or urgency in their role that they just can't disconnect from it. So yeah, I think that's a great point to highlight. Peter, I mean, there's so many, I really do want to talk to you. If you're still at the time, I really do want to talk to you about cancer and maybe also as well, because we went on a different direction, which I wanted to go into, and which I loved, but I want to talk to you about cancer just because I lost, I've lost three people in my life to cancer. I lost my uncle, who was my mother's brother when I was around...
Starting point is 01:25:48 Gosh, maybe I was around. Maybe just about to be 18 or something like that. He had throat cancer, and it was tough to see him go through that. It was the first time someone in my direct circle had kind of witnessed the journey of someone like struggling, going through pain and then, you know, dying at a young age, he was like 57 years old. And then I saw my, one of my, probably my closest friend, who I lived as a monk with, and he was still a monk when he passed away, and he had colon cancer. And he was like my age. He
Starting point is 01:26:26 died two years ago now. So like, it was a bit, a couple years older. So like 35, around thereabouts, I believe some of that was genetic, which we found out afterwards or like during the process. And he went through tons of cycles of chemo and like, he tried everything. Like that guy had spirit and resilience and everything and it you know it was tough and then I lost my spiritual mentor to brain cancer in the same time frame during the year of Covid so I also missed both of these people's funerals because I couldn't go back to London because you couldn't fly at the time. So anyway all of that to say I've just lost so many people to cancer.
Starting point is 01:27:06 And I think that's just not uncommon, which is even worse in one sense. Like I think everyone who's listening is like, yeah, Jamie too. And so I think it's so important to talk about because I don't know, was it one in three, one in two? Is it, I don't know what the stats are, but you cause it so common,
Starting point is 01:27:24 because it's so normal now, and just someone having cancer. But at the same time, it's the most painful news in the world, because you kind of feel like, you know, where it's going to go. What have we seen as proven ways of preventing and confronting cancer, both holistic and, you know, traditional medicine? You know, the way I sort of think about it is there are three things to be thinking about.
Starting point is 01:27:47 Three categories. So the first, as you said, is what steps can you take to prevent cancer? The second question is, if you get cancer, how can you catch it as early as possible? One thing we really do know is that if you treat a cancer earlier, your chances of beating it go up. And the longer you wait to treat it,
Starting point is 01:28:07 meaning the later you catch it, the worse your odds. And then the third question is, if you do find cancer, what are the ideal treatment strategies? Let's start with the first question. And this is the least satisfying because we don't know a whole lot about what's causing cancer.
Starting point is 01:28:23 So we know two things for sure. We know that smoking is a big driver of cancer, and we know that obesity is a big driver of cancer. Now, obesity is a bit of a misleading term, because it's just kind of an overly simplistic way to think about what's actually happening. The data say obesity, but really what it means is insulin resistance and inflammation. Those are two hallmarks of obesity that are present in 70, 80% of cases
Starting point is 01:28:55 of obesity. And if you look at the data more closely, that's what's actually driving cancer. So it's not actually how much fat you have on your body. It's more how much fat is in certain parts of your body that are metabolically problematic. But after those two things, smoking and instead of obesity, I just prefer to say poor metabolic health. We have some one-off examples. We know that there are certain types of exposures, pesticide, you know, certain types of pesticides,
Starting point is 01:29:22 for example, certain type of toxins, but those don't account for the significant majority of them. So for many people, cancer is still a mystery. In other words, whatever it caused, whatever caused the initiation of the genetic mutations that ultimately led to a cancer that the body was not able to on its own remedy is still a bit of a black box. And some very prominent cancer biologist
Starting point is 01:29:46 actually just argue that it's bad luck. In other words, it's a stochastic process. So our genes are constantly replicating, but when mistakes are made, mutations occur and some of these mutations drive cancer. And there's probably speaking two types of mutations. There are mutations in tumor suppressor genes. So these are mutations in genes that are there to stop cancers
Starting point is 01:30:07 when cancer is appear. And then there are mutations in what are called oncogenes. These are genes that propagate cancer. So mutations in any of these things can actually lead to cancer. So once you sort of accept that you're going to do everything in your power to not get cancer, which is to say you're not going to smoke, you're going to be as metabolically healthy as possible, you're going to do everything in your power to not get cancer, which is to say you're not going to smoke. You're going to be as metabolically healthy as possible. You're going to exercise. Do all those things right. The next most important thing is thinking about your strategy
Starting point is 01:30:31 for cancer screening. You know, this is where I probably differ significantly from the mainstream establishment view, which is actually kind of, you know, not that aggressive on cancer screening. I would argue that we have to be very aggressive on cancer screening provided. We can get our minds around the problem
Starting point is 01:30:48 we discussed a little while ago, which is we understand that there's gonna be, the harder you look for something, the more like you are to find something that isn't relevant. But if you understand that going in, and you're willing to accept that risk and evaluate each finding in a thoughtful way, I think that for most people psychologically and physically, the benefit is a net positive one.
Starting point is 01:31:13 And so that means looking at things that are, for example, with a colonoscopy doing it earlier and more frequently than is the standard recommendation. The standard recommendation is not to begin till you're 45. We would recommend that everybody, even without a family history, begin at least five years before that. It also means repeating colonoscopies more frequently, especially in the finding of certain types of polyps. Whole body screening you talked about with certain types of MRIs.
Starting point is 01:31:37 We also use something called the liquid biopsies, what's a blood test that looks for really, really small fragments of DNA in the blood, and can identify the presence of cancer and the tissue of origin. Now, again, none of these tests are perfect. So each of these tests have things that they're going to miss. But the idea is that the more you're layering these tests, the better your odds are finding something earlier. And then the final point is, okay, well, what are the strategies?
Starting point is 01:32:00 If should you have cancer? And this is where I think we just have a little bit more promise now than we did a decade ago. So a decade ago, because this is the first time I did this analysis, in the previous 50 years, so from 60 years ago until 10 years ago, the overall survival improvement in cancer was about 3%. It was abysmal. But in the past 10 years, it's been about another 8%. There's a bismal. But in the past 10 years, it's been about another 8%. And while that doesn't sound remarkable, and the implication of that is half the people who are diagnosed with cancer today will still die from cancer. It's the biologic insights and the trajectory that we're on right now that gives me much more hope. And that is primarily based on a couple of things. The first is the field of immunology has really taken off. The tools that we have to harness the immune system
Starting point is 01:32:50 to attack cancer have become so dramatic. Immunotherapy, right? That's right. That it really is, I think, within the next decade, which I know seems like an infinite amount of time for someone who's got cancer right now. We're really seeing changes that I think are going to allow immunotherapies to go from the niche place that they occupy in only working for certain types of cancers, like melanoma
Starting point is 01:33:19 and kidney cancer, to being able to go after the holy grail of cancers, which are what we call the solid organ epithelial tumors. Breast, pancreatic, colon, lung. These are the big cancers that do the majority of the killing. 50% of cancer deaths are just five cancers. Lung, colon, breast, prostate, pancreatic. That's more than 50% of all cancer deaths. Until you have a solution for those,
Starting point is 01:33:48 we don't have a solution for cancer. I do believe that we are really moving in that direction. We've touched on this point a few times of almost the stress about stress for health. And that's a really interesting way of thinking about it. It's like the stress of, oh, I need to work out today. The stress of, I need to have my supplements to the stress of, I need to have my supplements to the stress of, I can't sleep, why am I not sleeping? Right? Like, we stress about the things that
Starting point is 01:34:11 are good for us. How have you helped your patients, how have you coached them through that? How do you guide people through that? Because I think a lot of people go, well, then I'm just not going to do anything because at least then I'm not stressed. I don't think that's the wisdom in what you're saying. I don't think you're saying, well, yeah, it's better not to have any stress at all. How do you help people to engage and use that stress in a healthy way?
Starting point is 01:34:38 Or how do you guide patients through that stress? I mean, I think every patient's different and I think you have to sort of get to know the person a little bit and figure out what's the underlying issue. So I do think that there are a lot of people who frankly self-sabotage going back to kind of like where I was, I mean, my self-destructive behaviors weren't coming directly at the expense of my physical health.
Starting point is 01:34:59 They were coming at the expense of my emotional health. But I actually think there are a lot of people who have very similar stories to mine, but their manifestation is it's coming at the expense of my emotional health. But I actually think there are a lot of people who have very similar stories to mine, but their manifestation is it's coming the expense of their physical health. They are sabotaging their ability. They are coming up with a million excuses why they can't eat well, they can't exercise,
Starting point is 01:35:17 they can't do this, they can't do that. And so you have to be able to get to the root of the problem. And so there are many patients where we just think, look, you're not going to get better the root of the problem. And so there are many patients where we just think, look, you're not going to get better without trauma-based therapy. Like, until you come up with a way to care enough about yourself to stop punishing yourself in this way, because I think people punish themselves
Starting point is 01:35:37 in different ways, you could almost argue, I used to punish myself by overdoing all of those healthy things. Like, some of the exercise I was doing was actually a form of punishment. So on the surface, you'd say, boy, that guy's really healthy, but no, he wasn't. Another thing I always think about is
Starting point is 01:35:52 when we're in the spirit of trying to build new habits, sometimes perfect is the enemy of good. Typically, what I want is a win. And I think that what people just need is a win, and it doesn't have to be the biggest win, it just has to be a win So if you're looking at a person for whom Nothing is optimal. Don't try to fix all things at once
Starting point is 01:36:12 Pick the one thing that you think they have the greatest odds of being able to make a difference on and just work on that and Accept the fact that the other things will continue to be sub optimal But you develop their confidence in that one thing. How about for 20 minutes a day, you do something active, you go and walk for 20 minutes a day. If you're talking about a person who's never lifted a finger, that would be a huge win. And you might do that before you get into the details
Starting point is 01:36:36 of this type of training or that type of training or we're gonna tweak your nutrition and optimize your protein intake. I mean, that's just overwhelming and you're probably just more likely to fail at everything and create kind of a compensatory negative reaction. But again, I don't think there's a paint by numbers approach. I think you, in the way, we do it with patience.
Starting point is 01:36:54 I think you just have to treat everybody individually. And by the way, when something's not working, you have to accept it and pivot and try something that is. I think that's the keyword pivot. That's the keyword. Everyone, Peter, the book is called Outlive, The Science and Art of Longivity. If you don't already have it, please go and grab a copy. I highly recommend it, of course. Today's conversation has been fantastic. I've tried to touch on topics that Peter may not have been asked
Starting point is 01:37:18 about in a million different interviews. He's got fantastic interviews out there on so many awesome podcasts as well. So if you're more interested in the parts we didn't cover, please do go and watch those and get informed. Peter, it's been such a joy sitting down with you today. Honestly, there's been moments where I've been mind blown and moments where I've been taken it back and felt really, you know, in my body and really present where my feet are. And I'm just really grateful that we got to have this conversation.
Starting point is 01:37:43 We got to share so much incredible insights with our community today. And I want you to make sure that you tag me and Peter on Instagram, on TikTok, on Threads, with what you're learning, what you've taken away. What are the things you're gonna apply and practice with? What's something you're gonna experiment with this week? That would make me really happy is that
Starting point is 01:38:03 you just take one thing away from this and you're like, I'm gonna try that out. I'm gonna figure this out for myself. That would be an awesome place to start. Peter, we end every episode with a final five, a fast five. So these questions have to be answered in one word to one sentence, max. So Peter, these are your final five or your fast five. The first question is, what is the best health advice you've ever heard or received?
Starting point is 01:38:25 Exercise every day. Second question. What is the worst health advice you've ever heard or received? Do a cleanse. Oh, interesting. Why? That's interesting. Yeah. Okay. Oh, I just think that, you know, I've seen some of those things go really bad where people, you know, get really mucked up and dehydrated. And I've seen people actually take in some chemicals and compounds that dramatically alter liver function tests and things like that. Wow. Okay. All right. Question number three, what's something you're currently trying
Starting point is 01:38:54 to unlearn? Continuing to work on perfectionism, unlearning or detuning it. Question number four, what's something that you're a very big proponent of that a lot of people may disagree with you? And they're like, I'm not sure about it. Uh, question number four, what's something that you're a very big proponent of, but a lot of people may disagree with you and you're like, hmm, I'm not sure about it. Maybe the importance of very heavy strength training in postmenopausal women. Interesting. Let's, let's dive into that because that's, that's fascinating. I'm really trying how specific you are. That's great. Women postmenopause are so unbelievably susceptible to osteoporosis and osteopenia with the loss of estrogen. Unfortunately, many women in that situation are not getting hormone replacement therapy
Starting point is 01:39:34 and so they're doubly susceptible to it. I think there's just a cultural belief that women don't need to lift weights and if they do, it's very light. But the truth of it is you really need to lift heavy, and if they do, it's very light, but the truth of it is, you really need to lift heavy things to make your bones stronger. And that doesn't mean it has to be complicated stuff, like squats or dead lifts or things like that. But one of the most important things is carrying,
Starting point is 01:39:56 doing a farmer's carry. So holding very heavy dumbbells in your hands and walking. So important, and it doesn't matter how old you are. Got it, great. Fifth and final question. If you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow, what would it be? You must go into nature for at least an hour a day with no electronics. And just be.
Starting point is 01:40:17 Just be outside, be in nature, but be untethered to electronics or obvious distractions. Beautiful. Peter, that's fantastic. Thank you so much again for your time, your energy, your presence today. I hope this is the first and many times that you'll come back on on purpose. And again, if you don't already follow Peter, Peter, where's the best place you'd like people to find you? I know you're on Instagram and YouTube and everywhere.
Starting point is 01:40:43 Yeah, I think everything is Peter, itia, MD, is all the handles everywhere. So thank you very much. I really appreciate this. Thank you. If you love this episode, you'll enjoy my interview with Dr. Daniel Aiman on how to change your life by changing your brain. If we want a healthy mind, it actually starts with a healthy brain. You know, I've had the blessing or the curse to scan over a thousand convicted felons and over a hundred murders and their brains are very damaged. Hi, I'm Ellie Camper.
Starting point is 01:41:17 And I'm Scott Eckert. And we're here to talk to you about the things we love on our new podcast, Born to Love. I can tell you about something I love this week's got foam rollers. For my own mind, you're not talking pool noodle. Oh my gosh! No, thank you for clarifying. A new podcast from Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network.
Starting point is 01:41:41 On the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. money players network on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.

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