Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Dr. Drew Ramsey on Why You Are What You Eat—And Think

Episode Date: August 5, 2025

In this powerful conversation, psychiatrist and nutritional psychiatry pioneer Dr. Drew Ramsey joins John R. Miles to explore the critical intersection of food, thought, and mental health. Ba...sed on insights from his groundbreaking book Healing the Modern Brain, Dr. Ramsey challenges the outdated paradigm of reactive mental healthcare and instead introduces a proactive framework for cultivating mental fitness.Together, they dive into why our brains are wired for connection and how modern life—from poor nutrition to social isolation and digital overload—is eroding that fitness. Dr. Ramsey shares practical, science-backed tools that listeners can implement immediately to begin reclaiming their mental clarity and emotional balance.Visit this link for the full show notes.Go Deeper: The Ignited Life SubstackIf this episode stirred something in you, The Ignited Life is where the transformation continues. Each week, I share behind-the-scenes insights, science-backed tools, and personal reflections to help you turn intention into action.Subscribe🔗  and get the companion resources delivered straight to your inbox.Catch more of Dr. Drew Ramsey: https://drewramseymd.com/If you liked the show, please leave us a review—it only takes a moment and helps us reach more people! Don’t forget to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally.How to Connect with John:Connect with John on Twitter at @John_RMilesFollow him on Instagram at @John_R_MilesSubscribe to our main YouTube Channel and to our YouTube Clips ChannelFor more insights and resources, visit John’s websiteSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up next on Passion Struck. The algorithm is whatever social media feed or screen feed you might be on. It could be anything from your daily news to one of the social media, to cruising YouTube, even going on LinkedIn. Just there's a lot of time that gets usurped. And so I think that's really the number one problem because how we learn, how we entertain ourselves, our little private moments. When we go to the bathroom even, right, entertain ourselves, our little private moments.
Starting point is 00:00:25 When we go to the bathroom even, right? We always have our phone with us to access everything. That's certainly one of the problems everyone is noting. It's like, you can't put it down. Welcome to Passion Struck. Hi, I'm your host, John R. Miles. And on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips, and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
Starting point is 00:00:43 and turn their wisdom into practical advice for you and those around you. Our mission is to help you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the best version of yourself. If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays. We have long-form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders, visionaries, and athletes. Now let's go out there and become Passion Struck. Welcome to Passion Struck episode 646. Whether even with us on this journey for a while or you're just tuning in for the first time, I am so glad you're here. This is the show where we explore the mindsets, habits, and decisions of the world's most
Starting point is 00:01:31 extraordinary thinkers so you can unlock your full potential and live with intention. Before we dive into today's powerful conversation, I want to take a moment to reflect on last week's episodes that closed out our series on the power to do more. In episode 643, I sat down with Helen Lee Plenn, who shared how tuning in to your inner energy alignment can help you move past limiting beliefs and reconnect with your core self. And on Thursday, I was joined by my friend Brian Keane, who unpacked how rewriting the stories we tell ourselves, especially the silent, inherited ones, can spark massive change and lasting worth.
Starting point is 00:02:08 Then on Friday, we kicked off our brand new series, Reclaiming Wellness, Healing from the Inside Out. In that solo episode, I asked a hard but necessary question. Why are so many of us doing the right things and still feel anxious, exhausted, or misaligned? The truth is, our current model of wellness is incomplete, and to truly heal, we need a deeper approach. One that touches not just our biology, but our emotions, our purpose, and our spirit.
Starting point is 00:02:35 Which brings us to today's guest, Dr. Drew Ramsey. What if everything we thought we knew about mental health was only half the story? What if mental wellness isn't just something we fix, but something we build? Dr. Ramsey is one of the world's leading pioneers in nutritional psychiatry, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University,
Starting point is 00:02:54 and the author of Healing the Modern Brain, Navigating the Future of Mental Health. He's reshaping the conversation around mental health and focusing solely on medication to integrating food, movement, sleep, connection, and purpose as powerful tools for brain fitness. In this eye-opening conversation, we explore why mental fitness is not a goal, but a daily process of building
Starting point is 00:03:16 and reinforcing brain resilience. The critical role of nutrition, how what you eat is either healing or harming you. We go into the loneliness epidemic and why Dr. Ramsey calls isolation the new smoking. How modern life from processed food to digital overload is sabotaging our cognitive health and the practical changes anyone can make today to start rebuilding their brain from the inside out. Dr. Ramsey's work is a timely reminder that our mental health is not just about avoiding breakdowns. It's about creating the conditions for our minds to
Starting point is 00:03:46 thrive. If you've ever experienced brain fog, anxiety burnout, or even just felt off, this episode is for you. Before we get started, make sure you're subscribed to the show. And if you haven't already, check out our sub stack at the ignited life.net. It's where I share bonus insights, journaling prompts, and behind the scenes reflections from every episode. Now let's dive into this transformative conversation with Dr. Drew Ramsey.
Starting point is 00:04:10 Thank you for choosing Passion Struck and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey to creating an intentional life. Now let that journey begin. I am so honored and thrilled today to have Dr. Drew Ramsey on Passion Strike. Welcome, Drew. Hi there, John. It's great to be with you. Hey, everybody who's listening.
Starting point is 00:04:33 Nice to see you. I want to start off by congratulating you on your new book, Healing the Modern Brain. What was the thesis for you to bring this into the world and why is now the best time to do it? Well, everybody's thinking about mental health and thinking more than ever around awareness We all know and unless we take action unless we do things in our everyday life to take charge and change What's going on especially for? Trouble or struggling with some aspect of our mental health or what I call our mental fitness We've got to do something.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And so I think I was really inspired to write this book now. This is my fifth book. I've been in practice for a long time, over 20 years. I've been writing a lot about food and mental health just because that has been a big missing piece. But it just struck me like food changed. And then really we started eating stuff
Starting point is 00:05:22 that was bad for our brain and bad for our mental health. There are these other aspects of our lives that the modern world has also taken a hold of and we really think about like movement and exercise differently. We are very different creatures in terms of how much time we spend in nature, even how we relate. So I wanted to capture a framework, truly ask people to take a step back, look at some of the new science and some of the real actionable steps that that information causes us to, you know, like almost have to take it when you learn some of this stuff, because it helps
Starting point is 00:05:55 your brain grow, it helps your mental health. And people just care more about mental health than ever. It's a great time in the history of the world to be a psychiatrist, because we're finally really taking the bull by the horns as it were around mental health. I just want to go back to your previous book and I was listening to a podcast you're doing with Amy Marin, who's been on this show before. And it really brings me back to some of the work by Chris Palmer that he came out with. And Chris was, I guess, on the show of, he made this quote to me that every mental health, I guess the way he
Starting point is 00:06:33 framed it was, all the different inflictions that we have from mental health can be tied to gut health in one way or another. And I was just hoping if you could maybe talk about that, and whether you agree with them. And if so, maybe just touch on it, because that was a really important part of your book. I've been interested in gut health. And before Chris, nutritional psychiatry has been an interest, there've been a lot of researchers around the world, thinking about gut
Starting point is 00:07:02 health, and mental mental health and this idea of psychobiotics. I think that it's one of the frameworks. Does everything relate to gut health? Well, in this book, it's one of the lenses I use. And I'd say that neuroplasticity, inflammation, and those are definitely related to the microbiome. We want to think about mental health in new terms, what Chris Palmer, Uma Naidu, a number of people thinking about nutritional psychiatry and metabolic psychiatry as it's being called. Shabani Sethi is a wonderful example
Starting point is 00:07:35 of a researcher at Harvard. I think we want to be careful about all encompassing statements. Does everything relate to the gut? Trauma definitely affects gut diversity, but how I work through complex trauma doesn't just mean eating more fermented foods. And so I think we want to just be, I think, mindful
Starting point is 00:07:55 in this era. There are a lot of people who maybe aren't treating as many patients or aren't looking at the broad lens that we really need when we think about mental health. And then there are a lot of issues right now in mental health, like whether medications are effective or whether it is just all a gut health problem.
Starting point is 00:08:15 So I don't know, we wanna just be very mindful that there are a lot of patients, there are a lot of clinicians, there's a lot of mental health healing that has been going on for a long time. And a lot that's known about things like how gut health relates to our mental health. Well, I think it's important to go over what mental fitness is, because in the book you write, mental fitness is not a goal, but a process. So I was hoping you can explain why it's a better model than just treating mental health issues. I think that it's more efficient in the sense that we think about building mental health
Starting point is 00:08:49 before we have problems is the hope. Right now we have an avoidance model. Realistically, your life's going well if you never meet a psychiatrist. It means you don't have a mental health problem. And we really need to shift that. It's very impractical. Just look at the numbers. 20% of all of our teens are going to have depression this year. That's up from 8%. So again, I think
Starting point is 00:09:12 there's a lot of where I get concerned is there's a lot of talk and there should be like, where is that coming from? But that's millions and millions of teens with depression. What can we do? What can we help them learn and understand that helps them and navigate this illness or these illnesses? And what can we do to prevent them? And so I think it's the idea of mental fitness is not to undermine people need mental health treatment, people need medications, people need psychotherapy. This, if you're watching the video version, this couch behind me is an active psychotherapy
Starting point is 00:09:43 and psychiatry couch. I see a lot of patients. So I want to keep that model intact. What this book is all about, it plays a wake up call. That the reason that system looks so broken in part is that we aren't engaging in the preventative aspects of mental health and in the parts of around mental fitness that really it's a new science. Like people don't think about their food in relation to their mental health in terms of
Starting point is 00:10:10 Chris and a lot of people are talking about gut health and the microbiome. And when you think about like the lenses and healing the modern brain, I say there are really three things that you need to up level and upgrade in terms of your knowledge base. You need to be thinking about the brain and mental health in terms of neuroplasticity, that there are mechanisms of brain growth, brain waste removal, and brain repair. I think it gets really oversimplified when we just say it's all energetics. It's like there's a lot more going on than that. We want to look through a lens of inflammation, right? Inflammatory pathways are, we just know more about them. And so how the brain regulates inflammation is different than the body, but very influenced by the body.
Starting point is 00:10:50 And then we want to think about the microbiome, in part it's new science, right? We didn't use that word 25 years ago when we were talking about health or mental health, and it's complex. People have really tried to simplify, oh, take a probiotic and now you have a diverse microbiome and like the war is won. And when we get reductionistic is what this model is, right? That
Starting point is 00:11:09 all of your mental health is about this one gut bug or all of your mental health is about gluten or all of your mental health is about your mitochondrial dysfunction. It's just a horrible disservice to the complexity of what's going on with mental health. When people are struggling with things like trauma or phobias or character disorders. There's a lot about that doesn't relate to any of the things that I just said. It's often about sitting and understanding the self. And so that's where, again, we want to combine these new lenses that biology and neurobiology and new great science is giving us. And we want to combine that with say like the modern psychological approach that so many people are missing. Thank you for sharing that Drew and you write in the book, let's face it, the idea that
Starting point is 00:11:59 the health of our brains which run on a multitude of hormones, neurotransmitters, our brains, which run on a multitude of hormones, neurotransmitters, proteins, and other neuro thropic factors comes down to the level of a single molecule is far too simple an explanation. And I think for so long, we were looking at serotonin and things like that. Why does this outdated view persist? And what would you like people to understand instead? Well, it persists because it's a really great idea, right? The chemical imbalance theory is brilliant because it means that one, you're not evil. So we need to like burn you at the stake because you have a mental health problem. It means that some of the guilt, shame,doubt, like horrible things that mental health problems can do
Starting point is 00:12:45 to us. We understand and explain those using modern science. And as I tell everybody, it's all chemicals up there, right? Whether it's the fats or the thyroid hormone or serotonin or BDNF, like these are all molecules. And we all know when things are not balanced upstairs, right, we feel differently. When we take molecules, we drink a lot of coffee, right, we shift the balance of the chemicals in our brain. So the reason the chemical balance and imbalance theory is helpful to us is that it adds science to the complexity of our mental health. It's chemicals up there, everybody. If you have a problem with that idea, it's a little confusing to me
Starting point is 00:13:29 because when I give people medications that influence serotonin, norepinephrine or dopamine, you see an effect right in front of you, and so do patients. So where I'm asking people to grow up level, get updated with their science. And I don't mean to be mean, I just think there's a lot of immaturity
Starting point is 00:13:47 in the space right now. Everyone's really going after Prozac in a way that's like, just not helpful and not well-informed. Prozac's a great medicine, really helpful for some patients. It's not a cure-all. It's not just about serotonin, actually. If you look at Prozac, it's an anti-inflammatory in the brain, along with binding to the serotonin actually. If you look at Prozac, it's an anti-inflammatory in the brain along with
Starting point is 00:14:05 binding to the serotonin receptor and looking like it also has a lot of neuroplastic effects. You don't get to that through the noise, right, because there's such a bias against pharma. And so I think in this book what I really wanted people to do was to bypass what's happening right now. Let's argue about antidepressants and their efficacy, and instead ask people to think about the brain as we should. It's incredibly complex. You want your mental health to be cared for by experts, not charlatans, not people filled with information, and certainly not people who don't have clinical experience. And to get, I hope, excited. There's so much hope in all these ideas for all of us in terms of, again, what we can do, what we can have some control over
Starting point is 00:14:48 when it comes to our mental health. Drew, we started the whole conversation by talking about gut health and its link to mental health. And in the book, you describe that the brain is an enigmatic electric storm made up of proteins, fats, and vitamins you eat. And you also say that more and more scientists are understanding that healthy brains are made, not born. What does this mean for someone who feels like they're stuck with
Starting point is 00:15:16 a brain that isn't working the way that they want it to? My intention is that it should be a hopeful message. It should mean that there is a way that you should look at your refrigerator in your plate that's different than 15 or 20 years ago. If you're feeling your brain is broken, like you're feeling depressed, too cocked into fog, irritable, easily overwhelmed, some of that is the psychology of the modern world. There's a lot more going on that's very concerning. It's very understandable that people are having more existential crises of what's it all about, more insomnia, more anxiety. At one point during the pandemic, a substantial portion of American adults had suicidal thoughts in the month prior. There's a lot going on right now in terms of our mental health. I don't love the idea that your brain is permanently broken.
Starting point is 00:16:10 I know it certainly feels that way. Certainly mine has felt that way at times. And I think that's again, what neuroplasticity and this molecule of hope, BDNF give us it's this notion that our brains can grow and change. John, if you and I like move to a remote Japanese fishing village, a year from now our Japanese would be okay. And we would know a lot about fish and fishing. And that's a function of neuroplasticity. And so just like that analogy, my brain can grow, change, learn about my symptoms, learn about how to manage them. And if you're somebody with clinical depression, and for whatever reason, he's never played sports,
Starting point is 00:16:47 he never had a real athletic stance, and you pick up movement of any type, whether it's walking or going dancing, or going to the gym or playing a pickup basketball game or dodgeball game, doesn't really matter. You start moving your body, you begin to shift biology in terms of your brain and all of these factors, right? Neuroplasticity, inflammation in the microbiome.
Starting point is 00:17:10 Absolutely. And I think this is a good lead in to talk about epigenetics. And for a listener who's been listening to this podcast for a while, you may remember I did some interviews on this topic with Dr. Kara Fitzgerald, Mark Hyman, C. McDermott, Lucia Aronica, who's out of Stanford, if you want to go to any of those and do a bigger deep dive. But Drew, in the book, you talk a lot about epigenetics and how our lifestyle choices can modify gene expression. And you share the story of Brian in the book, who's a patient who believed he had a broken brain because of his family history.
Starting point is 00:17:49 How do our daily habits override our genetic predisposition? Now, this is a great example of a patient who'd gotten some genetic testing. And so there was a big movement in psychiatry, maybe 15, almost 20 years ago, where we had a genetic test, the MTHFR gene. And if you had bad versions of the MTHFR gene and you took L-methylfolate, you'd bypass that bad gene and your problems like depression would be solved. A real specific root cause idea. And the problem
Starting point is 00:18:21 was it's not true in the treatment data. It's not true in some of the deep science data. It's certainly interesting for patients who are struggling with an interesting piece of information. I write about that in that experience is that as a early doc who is doing some genetic testing back then, I had this very hard experience. And it's part of where I think psychiatry needs to have more of an influence in how we're thinking about health and mental health, is that it sounds great to give people genetic testing and learn information, and then you sit with the reality of that with patients. One, that the data is bad, right? When you've got a bad version
Starting point is 00:18:59 of a dopamine receptor, a bad version of a BDNF gene doesn't actually mean a lot in terms of predicting what's gonna happen to your mental health. The genes that people really tout and are great, they're used horribly in public space. I meet patients all the time who say, oh, I can't try that because it's toxic to me, which is not in any way what genetic tests tell us. I got really concerned to be honest with you, John,
Starting point is 00:19:24 because you'd sit and you'd see people who don't have a lot of, let's say, training around things like ethics and boundaries would be giving people genetic tests that don't have the data to support them, telling them a lot about their mental health. And because mental health is so mysterious, there is that temptation to do it. I remember the first time I gave these tests,
Starting point is 00:19:41 I felt like Doctor of the Future, talking about people's dispersion of the seratoma receptor and they'd be like, Oh, this explains it. And you'd be like, I'm so glad we have this new information. And over time, if you sit with this, it's just not true. And so there's like, somebody's a whole kind of population of people who've been sold this like totally false bill of goods about their health and mental health, based on either one crappy genetic tests that aren't commercial grade.
Starting point is 00:20:09 The error rate is huge. I probably have it. I think I have a bad version of the ApoE gene. I've got an ApoE4 gene. And then I realized it's not a commercial grade test. It helps me eat a little more of the Mediterranean diet. It's also when I can't remember a name, I get a little more spooked and worried. And if you think about, you know,
Starting point is 00:20:28 if that data is true or not really matters to my health and my health choices probably. And there's a problem with quality and genetic testing. There's a problem with interpretation. And then I'm gonna say there's a charlatan misuse of the tests, which leave people feeling really concerned about their health in ways that they probably maybe shouldn't be. Epigenetics is the hopeful message that you are dealt the hand of cards and we can learn
Starting point is 00:20:51 how to play poker. I tell the story, I used to play when I was in New York, I had a buddy who's like a math genius hedge funder guy and he'd bring people together to play poker. And it would take him like, I don't know, it took him like eight minutes to take everyone's money. It was just incredible. This guy knew how to play poker better than would take him like, I don't know, it took him like eight minutes to take everyone's money. It was just incredible. This guy knew how to play poker better than anyone I'd ever met. It was just like, we used to joke.
Starting point is 00:21:10 It's just like, I will go over and just make a pile of money in front of him. It was a shorter, more efficient thing. Anyway, we can be the same with our genes. And so I don't want to disparage, which I think it sounds like I am, that genetic testing can be helpful in some situations. I don't want to in any way diminish our enthusiasm for progress that we're going to learn more about gene genetics and epigenetics. It's going to really be incredible. But I want people to, for all of this noise, feel very clearly empowered that what you do today,
Starting point is 00:21:42 over time influences gene expression. you do today, overtime influences gene expression. And this isn't like a woo wellness, weird notion. It's like very clear science. And so engaging in these tenets, the reason I call them tenets, John, is that principles that we agree on for the most part. We might argue about serotonin in the community or SSRI efficacy or whether you should eat meat or not, or whether you should take supplements or not. I don't think anybody's arguing about the importance of sleep and sleep quality. I don't think anybody's arguing about our loneliness epidemic
Starting point is 00:22:11 and that you've got to do more than ever before to connect. And so that's where these tenets come from, in some ways that I've had a lot of patients and a lot of health influencers like myself are spending time kind of arguing about specialty items or like arguing about red dyes. Let's let you know the big piece of the pie. Like what's really in front of you is an individual in terms of optimizing more around your mental
Starting point is 00:22:37 health. There are things that the new science of mental health, the mental fitness really show as you should be doing. Absolutely. And I just wanted to touch on something you were talking about because I've done a lot science of mental health and mental fitness really show as you should be doing. Absolutely. And I just wanted to touch on something you were talking about because I've done in a lot of these epigenetic tests myself and not going to go into the name, but I was sponsored for a while by one of the bigger ones that's doing tests.
Starting point is 00:22:58 And I remember taking my test results and giving them to Kara Fitzgerald to look over and we were going over the biomarkers and she was just saying that even though these are good things to look at, you're really missing in this test, like six or seven of the key biomarkers that should be measured and it's creating a gap in what you're looking at. So to your point, I think if someone's listening to this, they just need to do their research on which are the best tests to do and a number of people have come out with better ones, but I'll leave that for the listeners to look for
Starting point is 00:23:36 unless you want to give some suggestions. No, I live in Wyoming now. I like to remind people it's the wild west and that marketers are genius. And probably my other piece is if you're going to venture into the world of genetic testing, I think you should do so with a real expert, somebody who has some training, not just by the testing company, but actual training in some genetic testing, a medical degree, nurse practitioner degree, someone who's spent time thinking about this and that you're incorporating into a treatment plan. Because otherwise you're just, you're
Starting point is 00:24:07 getting a lot of data on your own, which for some people is great, for some of my patients it just creates a lot of anxiety. Yes, absolutely. Well, today I released an episode by Professor Sandra Matz who teaches at Columbia and she really studies the world of big data, algorithms, AI. And it was a nice tie into a quote that you have in your book, which is, our daily lives are set up to all but guarantee we feel distracted and overwhelmed. But you write that the modern world is creating a crisis of mental health. And it's not only these algorithms, it's the ultra processed foods
Starting point is 00:24:50 that we were talking about earlier to social media, to the ever expanding environmental toxins that are all around us. And I wanted for the listener's sake to hear from you, what do you see are out of all these different things, the biggest external threats that they need to focus on today for their mental fitness? The one I'm feeling right now, John, is less time where the algorithm has the grip on my attention. The algorithm is whatever social media feed or screen feed you might be on. It could be anything from your daily news to one of the social media,
Starting point is 00:25:27 to cruising YouTube, even going on LinkedIn. Just, there's a lot of time that gets usurped. And so I think that's really the number one problem because how we learn, how we entertain ourselves, our little private moments, when we go to the bathroom, even right, we always have our phone with us to access everything. And that's certainly one of the problems everyone is noting. It's like, you can't put it down. I've noticed that as the stress of a book launch has gone off, how it just feels
Starting point is 00:25:56 such a nice little reward to have a little time to myself as I put it. So I think that's what I think the other is the bandwidth just the amount. Right. So if we have this kind of is Dunbar's number, this idea that we can keep our tribe of 150, 200 people. Wow. How many people you're actually connected to now, especially for anybody who's spending a little time on social and then having metrics around that. Who looked at this? Who didn't?
Starting point is 00:26:24 How many people liked things? What's trending? How you're not trending? Lots of people have talked about this. I think this book, Healing the Bottom Brain, it looks at some of the science on how this creates a lot of distraction for us. And then just really gets into the actionable.
Starting point is 00:26:37 It's like, what you're gonna do about it? Everybody knows they're not supposed to look at their phone before bed. People still take their phones into the bedroom. It's just not, it's not like a viable option. There are a lot of other aspects of the modern world. And I go through the nine different tenants. It kind of sinks through.
Starting point is 00:26:54 You're talking about some of the tenant of engagement and how in some ways engagement is really, there's more opportunities than ever. I live in reasonably rural Wyoming and I'm able to teach, I'm able to see patients around the world, I'm able to learn. Oh my gosh, there's so much learning and education. How cool, that's like a new opportunity for my brain. And so it's not all bad. Some of the stuff that I would say in the books that I share patient stories of how I saw patients in New York dealing with this. And I also, in this book, share more of my own story of being a Manhattan psychiatrist
Starting point is 00:27:31 right there on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and moving back to very rural Indiana with my wife and kids back to our farm and then eventually migrating here to Wyoming. And so I use some of that as context of looking at some of the data that's in the book right in front of us about what urban living does. So good for me and my training and for my friendships and development. Also a lot of artificial light, a lot of noise. Growing up as a country boy, I was really sensitive to the noises in the city. A lot of stimulation that just disrupts some natural cycles. And so in the book, I'm not suggesting we all move out to the noises in the city, a lot of stimulation that just disrupts some natural cycles. And so in the book, I'm not suggesting we all move out to the country, Wyoming or wherever,
Starting point is 00:28:10 but that we pay attention to what some of the data says and you look in your life for where there are actionable steps, where this is like particularly meaningful for you. With a silly example, you have a massive construction site on your walk to work and you live in the city. It takes maybe two, three extra minutes to avoid that block, but every morning not getting this big blast of noise and sound and it might do something for you. It might just give you a little more peace of mind
Starting point is 00:28:40 in the beginning of your day. So, you know, whether it's little things like that, or as you noted, different foods to eat. again, I hope the book helps people feel inspired, feel hopeful in this era, and then get to it. It's like, mental health needs care right now. Andrew, you've read up the the core tenets several times in the book, you lay out nine of them. And on this podcast, we don't have time to go through all of them. So I'm going to cherry pick from the list some of my favorites, but I'm going to start with the first one, which is self awareness. And the ironic thing to me is when you ask people,
Starting point is 00:29:19 are they self aware? Typically the answer you get back is yes. But what I found out even with myself that we like to think we're self-aware, but in reality we often lack more self-awareness than we would like to admit. And I thought maybe I would ask it in this way, why did you think it was important to make this the first of the court tenants?
Starting point is 00:29:47 And what in your mind does it actually mean in practice for someone to be self-aware? I made it the first step because I found it to be the most important one for me. And I think also the hardest part about therapy for patients, you sit with yourself. And if I'm really doing my job well as a therapist, I'm really creating a very neutral environment
Starting point is 00:30:09 free of judgment. I'm just here to try and understand what your version of the best life for you is gonna be and what's in the way of it. As a simple way, I think about my job. Self-awareness, we have to start there because it's like that famous business saying you can't manage what you don't measure.
Starting point is 00:30:26 And so if we're not aware that we're really irritable or grumpy and unaware more of just saying it offhand. I've met people who like to tout their challenges a little bit. Oh, they're aware of it. Okay. So we're in terms of understanding who we are and where the opportunities are for us, skills we have assets that we're bringing to the table, particular interests
Starting point is 00:30:50 or drives or kind of attitudes. And then to be aware of our challenges is probably, there's just a way that we often head into wellness. And I think it's part of where people feel this yo-yo rollercoaster effect of, Oh, it's another headline. It's another toxin that I need to avoid and another super food I need to eat. And self-awareness allows you and empowers you
Starting point is 00:31:12 to take a big step away from that. Like all those people, I was just saying, like I was just talking. What really matters is what's in front of you on your plate. What really matters is in terms of where you are in the life cycle right now, like you specifically right now. Because if you're in your 20s, you're just telling the things at different set of issues than you are if you're in your 30s or in your 40s or in your 50s. It's just the landscape and the
Starting point is 00:31:37 menu changes. And so self-awareness really asks you to stop being so general, so sloppy, so misinformed with your mental health and to really do that cold, hard reality check. Who are you? Where are you? What are you struggling with right now? What is the big obstacle in front of you? And that is the first step. That is the most empowering step for all of us.
Starting point is 00:32:02 They say psychotherapy at its root is putting words to feelings, right? Actually creating language around this complex chemical imbalance up here. And self-awareness is in some ways the process of doing that. This thing I can't figure out, now I've got words for it, they're not quite right. Now I've got the words for it that are just right. And now I'm empowered with those words, with my awareness to step into mental fitness and really create it for myself. So Drew, another one of the areas I wanted to touch on is sleep.
Starting point is 00:32:36 And this is something that for a lot of my adult life, I struggled with. And I realized that chronic stress was impacting it. I realized that not getting into a strong circadian rhythm was impacting it. And one of the things that I cut out about two years ago completely was alcohol because I realized that was really getting in the way of getting deep sleep. I want to explore this topic through your book and in this chapter you introduce a person named Peter Tripp Who was one of New York City's top radio? personalities in the 50s and 60s and he has this interesting idea to raise money for the March of Dimes and Maybe I'll use that as the intro and you can take it from there.
Starting point is 00:33:27 Well Peter does this, he keeps himself up for days and it just ruins his mental health. He ends up having, as I understood it through the history, like lifelong problems and we don't think about the lack of sleep as dangerous. In some ways, folks like yourself, John, and me, and I think a lot of people listening, sometimes we're at a little bit of a badge, right? That we're getting so much done, we're working. So the idea, again, if we take a modern science look at what sleep is doing, we've all got to up-level.
Starting point is 00:33:59 And I feel like earlier in the podcast, John, it sounded a little scolding. And I wanna be clear with everybody, that includes me. Why? Because there's whole new parts of the brain that we never discovered. We didn't know existed. There's a new part called the glymphatic system.
Starting point is 00:34:13 I think it was 2014 it was discovered. Like, wow. And it's the part of the brain, makes sense. The brain is your most metabolically active set of tissue, right? Your neurons burn more calories than any other cells in your body by far. What do you do with all that waste? And so the glymphatic system, it's like the lymphatic system for the body, but the glymphatic system drains and helps pull the
Starting point is 00:34:37 waste out of the brain. We do this during sleep, we do it during non-REM, as I understand it, mostly deep sleep. And so the idea again, if you're not getting some good quality deep sleep, your brain just doesn't have as much time to clear out waste. Is that going to do you in one night, two nights? Eh, probably not. But there is some way that we feel it, right? That kind of foggy, almost hungover feeling. It's actually shown in the studies that were feeling, it's actually shown in the studies that the quality, the amount of a hangover directly relates to the amount of inflammatory factors that you've triggered. And I think about sleep a little same way, like how bad your sleep deficit in Paris really has to do with, it's always how much inflammation is triggering.
Starting point is 00:35:18 So all to say one done, I love the move you make. I made that move. Everybody listening who's over the age of 45. It's not an uncommon move at our age, folks. But alcohol is horrible for you, horrible for your brain. Anytime right we're in wellness and there's just one study. Like everybody else quotes the Harvard egg study. And to me, that just means like we really don't really know much about how eggs impact health, do we just have that one study? And it's the same thing with alcohol as a doctor, like everybody's, the boys can have two and the little ladies, they can just have one and it both reeked of the
Starting point is 00:35:51 patriarchy, but where are these recommendations coming from other than the idea of this quaint notion of, Oh, we're in the Mediterranean region. We're going to have a little wine for lunch. And then after dancing, we're going to take a nap. That's not how people are drinking in America at all. And so I love that you stopped drinking for your sleep quality and for your overall mental fitness and mental health is I joke with everybody there. There are a lot of ways in the modern world in 2025 to have fun on a Friday night, lots of legal ways these days, alcohol should not be your substance of choice. And if it is,
Starting point is 00:36:29 you should swap it out. That's great for your sleep. I feel like I'm droning on about sleep here. And so I want to practice self-awareness and just in the book, I go over real specific ideas to up level, go beyond this. Oh, sleep hygiene. I try and get my eight hours like boo sha, boo sha you do get a sleep tracker, tell me. Right, because I'll tell you, I try to get eight hours, but I know that I only, I get six hours of sleep. I've been tracking my sleep for five years now. And I'm embarrassed about that. I'm aware of it. I was aware on a night, I think nine,
Starting point is 00:37:00 of sleeping through the night. I'm a middle-aged person. I have a lot of that mid insomnia and I've done two things about it everybody. During this book, it was really bad and in the middle of the night, my brain is not in a very good spot. I'm much more chemically imbalanced.
Starting point is 00:37:17 It's like, you don't believe in the chemical imbalance. Wake me up at 2 a.m. and talk to me about the state of the world. It won't be this nice guy here. It, so I had to really sit with that guy. It's actually, I started journaling a lot in the middle of the night for 45 minute session. Cause I just, I couldn't sit there worrying. I hate it when I doom scroll in the middle of the night. And so I got up, I treated it as it was a period of necessary wakefulness is what I decided. It wasn't just to get up and go pee and worry.
Starting point is 00:37:46 And I found a lot of solitude in the journaling. And then I finished my sauna. And so now I spend about 30, 45 minutes in a sauna before I go to bed and sleep right through the night. Because I missed the journaling a little bit. I was like, I wish I had a little insomnia so I could get some good angsty pages down. So all to say, I'm a psychiatrist who got access to, I know all the meds and the supplements and all that stuff, but what's really helped my sleep has been journaling, sauna, and of course being active during the day and getting a lot of early morning light. I walk to work usually like seven, 730 AM trying to get a lot of natural light. That's a great recommendation.
Starting point is 00:38:22 So again, all easy, free, available to your recommendations, move your body early morning light. And then when you're having insomnia, address it. And then the book, I go a lot into bedroom stuff and not like hanky panky, but I keep using this word like up level upgrade. I just, you're, I bet your bedroom could do some work in terms of making it like a real just haven for sleep. Those are all great suggestions. And if you're a listener, one of my favorite episodes that I did if you really want to go deep on sleep was with Sarah Mednick
Starting point is 00:38:53 who's one of the world's experts on it and she teaches at the University of California Irvine and I would recommend you go back and listen to that episode. So Drew an area that I really want to hunker down in is your tenant on connection. And in the book, you write about, I think, a scenario that's common and it plays out, whether this is gaming or people in a sports league,
Starting point is 00:39:19 but you write about Ronnie and he's watching a game, doesn't matter what game it is, let's just say it's football with others, but he's also engaging in an online fan group. And when he's asked, has he ever met any of these people in person, the answer is of course, no. And where I wanted to go with this in this example
Starting point is 00:39:44 is how is social media tricking our brains to thinking we're socially engaged when we're actually doing the opposite? I think anytime we're getting a regular exposure to someone's life and they're sharing with us, we begin to feel a connection and attachment to them. Big work in psychotherapy and in modern mental health is thinking through your attachment and attachment style.
Starting point is 00:40:08 As you get close to people, does it make you anxious? Does it make you calm down? Does it make you disorganized? What happens as you grow close, grow dependent to people? And Rodney's a good example, I think, of someone who just the kind of creep of the modern world, that it's easy through maybe like fantasy football and watching and all of the digital tools to watch and all the very entertaining sports shows to be a fan in isolation.
Starting point is 00:40:36 And I think there are a lot of different things like this now where there's so much we can do for ourselves. You want to learn to bake sourdough bread. You don't need to go to the bakery down the street or take a trip, right? You can just take like an amazing class with one of the best sourdough bread bakers in the world probably. And so how we end up then, you know, in real life connecting with people and what the value of that is, it's been a real topic of interest for me as a psychiatrist and a psychotherapist
Starting point is 00:41:06 because you see these connections and especially real connections with people. And those are real, they can't be digital, but real in terms of content. There is a depth and appropriate depth of content within these relationships. It's just something that a lot of people have struggled with
Starting point is 00:41:25 pre-pandemic and certainly the pandemic made it more challenging for people. So you have this kind of mashup of a new digital environment, a new set of tools to connect, new opportunities to connect. I see it really on my couch on how it's affected dating, just a different landscape as you're dating now than ever before. And then we want to think again about just the actionables. And also, of course, because it's healing the modern brain, it's, I'm always going to be telling you about neuroplasticity, inflammation of microbiome in the book. Weird things happen when you isolate, your microbiome gets less diverse. Huh.
Starting point is 00:41:58 Most of the sciences look at the end of the day, eat more fermented foods, eat more plants, your microbiome would be more diverse. And that's good. This idea of like specific strands leading to specific health outcomes that has not been so clear, but the idea that like a social isolation shifts our microbiome is like, huh, where the idea that inflammatory factors go up when you're more socially isolated and they go down when you spend more time with people, just like cool stuff.
Starting point is 00:42:26 And then I like it because it's also, I actually, I just posted about connection on my Instagram and I'm sharing a couple of moments where I'm really feeling it today. I posted this video where I'm in this new community. It's a wonderful community, like incredibly interested in mental health, but it's a very intense athletic community. And I was out on this ski track by myself. And I got overwhelmed with this feeling of connection.
Starting point is 00:42:50 That even though I'm not seeing them all the time, there are all these people in the community that they've been on the same path. I could see their ski tracks right in front of mine. And I was setting down the path for the folks who were gonna come after me. And I was thinking, we're all taking in these gorgeous views and just for me, a really
Starting point is 00:43:05 nice moment of connection or the pumpkin sale at our local elementary school where all the kids help unload the pumpkins. And you're sitting there with all the other parents. It's just a great feeling of connection for me. So maybe just a couple of examples of, from my life. And then certainly when working with people like Ryan and Ronnie, and there, there's all kinds of anonymous patient stories, stories from my couch that I've changed some details
Starting point is 00:43:29 to protect the confidentiality of my patients, but they're general themes that I've seen happen over and over again. And this theme with Ronnie of people having some sense of attachment, connecting maybe like a weekly call with family, but not really feeling an intensity or a depth to their connection. And then not working what I call the web of connection, which in the book,
Starting point is 00:43:49 I get really specific about this, that you got to map it out a bit for yourself, because it's a mix of friends, family, lovers, intimate relationships, institutions, mentors, a lot of different types of connection in our lives. And one of the things I've seen people struggle with, in my expert opinion, where people get like gummed up, is we confuse one type of relationship for another. And we're looking to connect to, let's say, an institution and wanting it to serve us in a way that like, ah, that's a little bit more of what a mentor does or what a parent or a partner does,
Starting point is 00:44:21 or it's not really what a institution's gonna do for you. or what a parent or a partner does, or it's not really what a institution's gonna do for you. And that social webbing exercise was one of my favorite portions of that chapter. So I'm glad that you brought that up. So- John, I know you wanna go to the tent, but I wanted to hear, you just intrigued me earlier.
Starting point is 00:44:40 We were talking about self-awareness. You mentioned for sleep, you'd stop drinking yourself. Was there something for your self-awareness, especially as a guy that like has helped you? There've been a number of things. So I realized that, so part of this was a journey, Drew. I had been suppressing a lot of traumatic things that had happened in my life. Everything from sexual trauma to personal assault trauma to combat trauma.
Starting point is 00:45:08 I had a lot of it. I'd been pushing this stuff away for decades and it all culminated in 2017 in two events that happened within a week of each other. I was confronted by an armed burglar in my house and I came face to face for the first time since I was in combat with a gun pointed at me. And then four or five days after that, one of my best friends committed suicide
Starting point is 00:45:32 and it not only unearthed the trauma from those two situations, but unearthed everything. And I just came to this realization that I had been taught, especially in the military, that to be a strong man, don't go and talk to specialists, keep this stuff hidden. You're going to learn, lose your security clearance, all this BS. And I decided that this time my way out of this was I needed to permanently deal with it. So I went into cognitive behavior therapy, specifically CPT, and then I did EMDR, and then I did prolonged exposure, tried some other modalities, but when I got really clear
Starting point is 00:46:15 on the stuck points that were holding me back, I was able to process it without having to use any medical intervention. And then once I started to get clear on it, I still wasn't sleeping the way I wanted to. So I started to really explore what's causing this. Is it my sleep hygiene? Is it other behaviors that I'm doing? Is it still too much stress?
Starting point is 00:46:38 And I think a couple of things that I figured out was, one, being in a very healthy relationship with my wife who I had met at the time allowed me to not feel like I had to rely on alcohol to hide aspects of myself, but I could just be me. And it made it easier to make that breakthrough. And so it was a number of changes that I put in place that over time allowed me to ground myself and to really lean in on my differences are my strengths. And I was hiding a lot of things that actually are my superpowers. And when I got really clear about that and who I was, it really showed me the importance that I was using alcohol as a blocking mechanism and that I could be a much stronger person if I didn't have it in my life.
Starting point is 00:47:32 And I saw then all the other benefits that it has brought into my life. And I was talking to a friend of mine recently who stopped drinking about a decade ago, and he was kind of laughing. He goes, life becomes normal without drinking, just like it became normal for you when you were drinking after a while, didn't it? And I said, yes. And it's actually nice, very welcoming how much more productive I am now when I'm not drinking compared to when I was.
Starting point is 00:48:01 Thank you for that. And I hope everybody listening, you hear this path and a mix of like frank mental health concerns and great evidence-based treatments. I think also demonstrate something where we're often hopeful mental health like we'll have a course of CBT or therapy or try this medicine like, and it's better.
Starting point is 00:48:18 And I love your story because I think it represents the real world with each of these experiences, you're gaining skills, perspective, different tools, right? And eventually it coheses where you get a kind of language to appreciate more about yourself and transcend. Here in my clinic in Wyoming, I've got about my little slogan is traverse, because I think about mental health crises and often where I meet people is needing to traverse through something often very treacherous
Starting point is 00:48:45 or you need someone, you need help being tied to the mountain and then to transform. Something inside of us has to shift. Maybe it's stopping drinking and it's a lot more than that as you hear in John's story. And then that allows us to transcend. I love the way that you put it, transcending over you're accessing these parts of yourself as a lightness when you talk about it. And if something really is living above or beyond the traumas that you shared, thanks for sharing all of that, John. It's a really nice way to hear about, yeah, it's a real world example of what we just think about as mental health. But if
Starting point is 00:49:20 we put it like a mental frame fitness framework where you're racking up points and building this kind of new machine as it were, new self. But if we put it like a mental frame fitness framework where you're racking up points and building this And a new machine as it were new self I think it's everything that I now try to talk about on the podcast It all came down to a whole bunch of intentional choices that I made from my diet to who I was allowing in and out of my inner circle to my mental health to The relationships I wanted to cultivate to the relationships I wanted to cultivate, to the career I wanted
Starting point is 00:49:47 to be in, where I was serving people instead of feeling like I didn't have a lot of meaning in my job. So it was a lot of changes that I made that once I really opened up that self-awareness, lightning bulb really allowed me to make a ton of choices for the better I feel in how I'm living. Drew, I know we are very short on time, so I wanted to end by you yourself have a podcast, you have other books for people to dive into. Where's the best place for people to go to take advantage of everything that you do? Well, I hope you just got the best of me everybody because it's been fun to be
Starting point is 00:50:23 with you and to talk with John. I'm easy to find everywhere. I'm drewramsiemd.com is my website. Drewramsiemd is my Instagram. I've got some free downloads on the website. There's an e-course, Healing the Modern Brain along with the book. And you can check all that stuff out. But most important to me,
Starting point is 00:50:39 this is a really great conversation about some of the tenets of mental fitness. And it's really important to me in all this work that if it hits you, do something with it. And so whether I made some jokes about lentils and pesto and you haven't had any pesto in a while, okay, we got your lunch order or whether some of what John shared about not drinking or unburdening himself from significant trauma, combat trauma, really stuff that a lot of us have a hard time even appreciating. I mean, just that took a while, but then was an essential step. If something hit you about this show and it matters to your
Starting point is 00:51:13 mental health and mental fitness, I just hope you'll start taking care of that in some way. That would be the most important thing for me. And then otherwise, I hope you'll check out the book. I hope it helps you in your mental fitness journey, helps create a framework around the actionable things that as a psychiatrist I really love to see when my patients are doing. I love to see it when I'm doing them and I hope it helps you do more of these really key core pieces to our mental health that again the reason it's the modern brain is we just we got to do more to take care of it and your brain deserves it. All of our brains deserve it.
Starting point is 00:51:45 So John, thank you so much for all you do to spread a great message of health. And I really appreciate you having me on as part of this launch. It means a lot to get to meet you and just to share with everybody in your community about mental health and mental fitness. So thank you so much. You're welcome, Drew. And it was an honor to have you and congratulations on the book. And I hope it
Starting point is 00:52:05 turns out to be as successful, if not more successful, than your other books. Thank you so much. I appreciate that. Fingers crossed. That's a wrap on this powerful, deeply insightful conversation with Dr. Drew Ramsey. From his radical reframe of mental health as mental fitness, to his case for connection as medicine, to the small actionable steps that can rewire your brain from the inside out. This episode reminds us that real healing isn't just about addressing illness, it's about creating the conditions for your mind and body to thrive.
Starting point is 00:52:34 Here are a few key takeaways I invite you to carry forward. First, mental fitness isn't a fixed state, it's a daily practice like training a muscle. Second, your diet isn't just fuel, it's information for your brain. Every bite sends a message. Third, loneliness is not just emotional, it's biochemical. Connection is one of the most potent natural antidepressants we have. And most importantly, your brain is changeable. With intention, nourishment, and aligned action, you can shape it towards clarity, resilience,
Starting point is 00:53:03 and joy. If today's episode sparked something in you, I'd be so grateful if you left a five-star review on Apple or Spotify. It helps us reach more people who are ready to take ownership of their mental wellbeing. You'll find full show notes, video highlights, and links to Dr. Ramsey's work at passionstruck.com.
Starting point is 00:53:20 Or you can watch the full episode on our YouTube channel at John R. Miles, or the clip at Passion Struck Clips. And if you haven't already joined, check out our free sub stack, the ignitedlife.net. There I'll share companion prompts, nutritional guides, and reflections inspired by today's conversation. Now here's what's coming next on Passion Struck. We're continuing our reclaiming illness series with a bold, no-holds-barred conversation with Dr. Erica Schwartz, a pioneer in integrative medicine and the author of Don't Let Your Doctor Kill You, How to Beat Physician Arrogance, Corporate Greed, and a Broken System. We also discuss the
Starting point is 00:53:56 hormonal health crisis, especially for women and why it's so often misdiagnosed or ignored, the broken incentives in traditional medicine, and what you can do to take back control of your care, and how to become your own best health advocate in a system that too often prioritizes profit over people. I think most healthcare is protocol driven. And one of the things that I talk about in the new Don't It Or Die To Kill You is how AI is going to change that.
Starting point is 00:54:23 I say that what's gonna happen is that AI can take over all the algorithms and all the protocols and will now force, by doing that, it'll force the conventional medical education to change. Because that's where all the problems come from, really. It's the conventional medical school. Because the same education I received 50 years ago in a medical school is being given to people today. Until then, remember, you're not broken, you're not behind, you are building day by day, choice by choice.
Starting point is 00:54:58 Live boldly, lead with intention, and above all, live life passion-struck.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.