Pursuit of Wellness - Dave Asprey Part 1: Biohacking, Mold Toxicity, Over-Exercising & Keto Diet Myths

Episode Date: May 20, 2024

Ep. #100 Welcome to the 100th episode of Pursuit of Wellness! First off, we want to express our heartfelt gratitude for your unwavering support throughout this incredible journey. We are beyond excite...d for 100 more. To mark this milestone, we're thrilled to host the legendary Dave Asprey, the Father of Biohacking. Dave is an entrepreneur, author, and advocate of the high-protein, low-carb diet who started off as a computer scientist and applied his skillset to health. Our conversation was so full of knowledge that we actually had to split it in two. In this first installment, Dave shares his pioneering journey, thoughts on mold toxicity and coffee, and nuances of veganism, keto, and protein-based diets. Make sure you tune in Thursday for part two of this information-packed conversation with Dave. Leave Me a Message - click here! For Mari’s Instagram click here! For Pursuit of Wellness Podcast’s Instagram click here! For Mari’s Newsletter click here! For Dave Asprey’s website click here! For Dave Asprey’s instagram click here! For POW Brand Promo Codes click here! Show Links: Moldy Movie Work Smarter, Not Harder by Dave Asprey The Bulletproof Diet by Dave Asprey The Human Upgrade Podcast Dangercoffee.com DaveAsprey.com Upgradelabs.com Sponsored by: Treat yourself to the best bras and shapewear on the market and save 20% Off at honeylove.com/POW. Use our exclusive link to get 20% off - honeylove.com/POW  Bite is offering our listeners 20% off your first order. Go to trybite.com/POW or use code POW at checkout to claim this deal.  Cozy Earth provided an exclusive offer for my listener’s today. Up to 40% off site wide when you use the code “PURSUIT” at cozyearth.com Topics Discussed: 04:11 - Dave Asprey’s beginning in biohacking 09:57 - Dave’s thoughts on veganism 16:26 - Impacts of mold toxicity  19:02 - Mold and coffee   22:29 - Laws about mold toxins in coffee 23:45 - How to tell if there is mold in your coffee 24:59 - Best ways to drink coffee 28:52 - More on what mold does 33:51 - Body and mind health 37:02 - Dave’s training methods 43:09 - The laziness principal 45:19 - Dave’s diet protocols 51:48 - Eating different types of red meat

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Starting point is 00:00:00 anyone who still believes in calories in, calories out, including some of my friends in the bodybuilding community who believe that a KitKat is the same thing as an orange because calories. You can manage your body weight that way until your biology completely breaks. This is the Pursuit of Wellness podcast, and I'm your host, Mari Llewellyn.
Starting point is 00:00:31 What is up, guys? Welcome back to the Pursuit of Wellness podcast. Today's episode is very, very special because this is our 100th episode. Unreal, you guys. We launched the podcast January of 2023. And the fact that we've grown this much in just 100 episodes is actually insane. 100 sounds like such a big number. The fact that I've had almost 100 conversations, whether it's with a guest or simply myself, is unbelievable. And I can't thank you guys enough for the support, for tuning in, for engaging, for giving suggestions. It has been an incredible journey. And I'm so excited to see where this takes us. I feel like there's so much left to do, so many more conversations to have. And it's been an unbelievable ride to get to 100 episodes. So with that said, I really want to give back to the community and do a giveaway. All you need to do is subscribe and follow. And if you already do that, then go ahead
Starting point is 00:01:34 and leave a review. Send a screenshot of either or to the Pursuit of Wellness podcast page on Instagram, and we will send you a Pursuit of Wellness tote bag and hat with a bunch of Bloom goodies. We can't wait to celebrate 100 episodes with you guys. With that said, today we have a very special guest for the 100th episode, Dave Asprey, who is a huge name in the health and wellness space. He is known as the father of biohacking. He was originally a computer scientist or a computer hacker who basically took his skill set and applied it to health and wellness. He's also the founder of Bulletproof Coffee, now the founder of his new coffee company, Danger Coffee. He is an entrepreneur, an author, an advocate of the low-carb, high-fat
Starting point is 00:02:23 diet known as the Bulletproof Diet. He's also evolved a lot since his Bulletproof days and has so much knowledge when it comes to health and wellness. We talked a lot about biohacking and what that means and things we can do to biohack easily at home. We talked about hormone testing. We talked about thyroid. We talked about heavy metals, mold, candida. We talked about veganism. We talked about mold we talked about heavy metals mold candida we talked about veganism we talked about mold and coffee big focus on mold because dave actually experienced mold toxicity himself and i've also had experience with that we talked about methods to fight mold and things you can do we also talked about red meat we talked about diet we discussed my acne journey and David's thoughts on that as well. We go so many places in this episode. We ended up talking for over 90 minutes. So we have decided to split
Starting point is 00:03:14 this episode into two. So make sure you tune back in Thursday, this coming Thursday for part two of my conversation with Dave Asprey. We're going to pick up where he started to discuss my acne and acne in general and things we can do for toxins. We talk about ozone therapy and so much more. Also fertility, of course. So stay tuned for that. Dave has actually written a book on fertility. So I was really excited to pick his brain. So today is part one of this part one and two episode. I really hope you enjoy it. Again, don't forget to participate in the giveaway. We are so excited for the 100th episode of the Pursuit of Wellness. Without further ado, let's hop right into our conversation with Dave. Dave,
Starting point is 00:03:56 welcome to the show. I'm so happy to be here. Thank you so much for coming in. Most people know of you as the father of biohacking. They also know you from Bulletproof and now your new coffee company, Danger Coffee, which I'm very excited to talk about. I'd love to start from the beginning of how you got into health and biohacking in the first place. How did you get this interested? Well, when I was 14, I went to the doctor because my knees hurt all the time. I played soccer for 13 years. And he said, oh, look, you have arthritis in your knees.
Starting point is 00:04:31 And I'm like, that's for old people. And I was kind of stunned. And I was also fat. There was that. And I kept getting fatter. By the time I was 23, I hit 300 pounds. And I'm about 198 pounds right now and 6% body fat. And I'm not cutting or anything like that's just how I am. And so that was still kind of okay,
Starting point is 00:04:55 but I just had constant body pain. My gut was wrecked. I'd been on antibiotics for 15 years because I grew up in a basement with toxic mold. So fast forward, I'm 26. My Silicon Valley career has just taken off. I'm a computer hacker and all kinds of stuff happened. I was just feeling so much brain fog. Like I could barely function. But I was doing okay, but I was faking it at work. Like I couldn't remember anything half the time. So I went to a doctor and did a hormone panel before this is something you would really do. And he calls me up and he says, well, you have lower testosterone than your mom. Cause he had done my mom's numbers too. He was one of the first anti-aging doctors and you have like no thyroid functions. Okay. So I went on thyroid and
Starting point is 00:05:42 got on testosterone to get my levels up to just healthy levels for a 26 year old. By the way, everyone who's 26 has that level of testosterone now because it's a society-wide problem because of a pollution. It's such an issue. Yeah. I'm seeing it everywhere. My husband's constantly like trying to prescribe people testosterone. Yeah. And some people get really mad because I've made testosterone therapy as acceptable as I know how to make it, especially for people under 40. Because we have this idea that you're supposed to struggle and that that makes you a good person. And no, it's okay to work really hard, but you should do everything you can to make every ounce of work count. And if you're working really hard because you have no testosterone and no thyroid or because you're eating the wrong thing, then you put huge amounts of willpower in and you got bad results. So for me, getting on those things helped, but I still couldn't lose
Starting point is 00:06:38 all the weight and I had autoimmune issues and just all kinds of stuff. So I decided I would try all the different diets. I've been a vegan, a devout raw vegan. I did the original keto diet called the Atkins diet. Lost 50 pounds when I was 21 and gained it back. And after a while, I said, this is dumb. I'm a computer hacker. I know how to fix systems that I don't own. I know how to break into them too. Why can't I do this on my own system? So I turned the hacking idea around and in computer hacking, we have this idea of a black box, which is it's a system, but I don't know what's in there and I want to make it do what I want. So instead of having to know everything, which is kind of a medical approach, or at least believing you know everything, I'm like, if I do this, what happens? If I do this, what happens? And that led to biohacking, which is, in a nutshell, when I created the term to use it on humans, it was the art and
Starting point is 00:07:37 science of changing the environment around you and inside of you to have full control of your own biology. And then you can be curious, is what I'm doing working? How can I measure it? If it's not working, maybe a big company tricked doctors into thinking it was good, or maybe I was just wrong, or maybe I believe something that wasn't true. And through that process, I have increased my IQ, my extrinsic age, the age from the environment around me on my lab tests is 19.6 years younger than my actual age. I wrote a major New York Times bestselling book on first one was fertility. Second one was cognitive function.
Starting point is 00:08:14 Third one was on longevity. My rate of aging is 72% the rate of normal. It's the same as Brian Johnson's. I've spent $2 million on reversing my age and upgrading myself over 20 years. So I'm only $100,000 a year, guys, so I'm small, but similar results. In your head, is biohacking and health the same? No. Health is something no one actually wants unless they're really sick. Now, I say this because I've been really sick with chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia and got a lot of other stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:51 So when you wake up and you're just, I just want to get out of bed, then you want to be healthy. But for most of us, we're healthy enough that it's number 12 on our list of priorities. But did you want to be full of power today? Did you want to focus effortlessly? Did you just want to feel the vibe? We want that way more than we want to be healthy. The only people who care about aging are old. The only people who care about health are sick. The rest of us, we are wired in our bones. And I talk about how this works in the world of biohacking. In our bones, to want energy, to want power, and to want sex. That's how humans
Starting point is 00:09:34 are. And this happens before we can think. And that's a big part of my last book was what's going on before you can think and how do you change that signal so you can put muscle on or you can lose weight or have more energy or get smarter without a lot of work? And it turns out picking up concentrated rocks is a way to get strong. But on a per minute basis, there are better ways. So someone like Brian Johnson, the thing that confuses me. So he's vegan, right? He's fully vegan. No, he's not fully vegan.
Starting point is 00:10:04 Oh, I thought he was. So there's this weird longevity guy who said you should eat collagen for longevity. That was me, by the way. I made it into a billion dollar industry category. I'm the first guy to market collagen as a performance supplement. And that was a big part of Bulletproof, right? Yeah. So Brian eats 20 grams of cow skin every day. So he's not vegan. I don't know why he says he's vegan. He's going to have to knock off the collagen otherwise. By the way, Brian will be at the biohacking conference on stage.
Starting point is 00:10:32 I'm really excited. I actually like Brian. You guys are friends? Yeah, he's cool. Okay. Like he's weird. So am I. It doesn't bother me.
Starting point is 00:10:39 So yeah, he'll be at the conference. And it's funny. I eat almost exclusively saturated fat. Sheep butter is my favorite. And ghee and things like that. I do two tablespoons of olive oil a day, max. And I do 200 grams of animal protein a day. Same rate of aging.
Starting point is 00:11:00 You do not have to be vegan or carnivore to reduce aging. It's something else. It's eliminating toxins. And that handles so much for so many people. And in the world of health, I see so many people making the same mistakes that I made on the way. And some of them take a long time to recover from. So I'm- Like raw veganism. Or even just veganism in general. How did you feel when you were a raw vegan? Well, I liked that I got down to 176 pounds. I could have just starved myself because that was what I was doing.
Starting point is 00:11:33 But the joint pain was just incredible. And my skin was always bad. I always had like thick tartar on my teeth, like buildup of minerals on the back of it. And then I shattered two of my teeth and realized, oh my gosh, that's what nutrient deficiencies do for you. All right. So I stopped being a raw vegan and then I became a raw omnivore and I ate raw beef and all the raw veggie stuff. And then I went to Tibet because part of my practice has been, let's get the hardware going, but then how do you work on the software? How do you understand the emotional, psychological,
Starting point is 00:12:09 spiritual stuff? So I've traveled to the Himalayas, the Andes, and learned from masters from different disciplines around the road on personal development. It's what led to my neuroscience mystery school clinic brain upgrade place. And as I was just doing all this work, like, how am I going to make myself feel better? I went to Tibet. You're not going to eat raw yak in Tibet. It's just not a good idea because they're hanging in the wind swinging. So I just went back to a diet that was maybe healthier. And it was that trip where I first had yak butter tea on the side of Mount Kailash, like the holiest mountain in the world. And this little Tibetan woman gave me yak butter tea on the side of Mount Kailash, like the holiest mountain in the world. And this little Tibetan woman gave me yak butter tea when I was feeling like garbage, you know,
Starting point is 00:12:50 18,000 feet elevation, things like that. And my brain turned on. That was my, oh, I'm learning this weird stuff from a culture I don't know anything about. And then I brought that back. And that led me to create this idea of clean coffee and putting butter in coffee. MCT oil came from another place. And then magically Bulletproof Coffee was born and now Danger Coffee is my new brand. In the process of switching out all my everyday products to cleaner alternatives, I decided to switch out my toothpaste. And you guys know I love my Bite toothpaste. Did you know we are swallowing about five to seven percent of our toothpaste every single time we brush? That is an entire blob of toothpaste every seven days, which, by the way, most commercial toothpastes are filled with harsh chemicals, artificial flavors, and preservatives,
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Starting point is 00:14:15 bring on the go, and feel fresh and ready for whatever is going to happen in your day. They come in refillable glass jars, which are so cute by the way, and they send refills in compostable pouches so it's better for our bodies and the earth bite is offering our listeners 20 off your first order go to trybite.com slash pow or use code pow at checkout to claim this deal that's t-r-y-b-i-t-e dot com slash pow support for today's episode comes from honey love honey love has really revolutionized the bra game i know all of us when we have a long day of work, on the go, the first thing we do when we get home is take our bras off. Let's be real, like it's the worst feeling to have your bra digging into you all day. It's time to say goodbye to the underwire without sacrificing lift. Honey Love's bra features supportive bonding
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Starting point is 00:15:45 married soon, highly recommend you guys check out their shapewear. It is perfect for under your dress or whatever it may be. Honey Love is not just supporting women, it's empowering women. Treat yourself to the best bras on the market and save 20% off at honeylove.com slash pow. Use our exclusive link to get 20% off honeylove.com slash pow to find your perfect fit after you purchase they ask you where you heard about them please support our show and tell them we sent you honeys you deserve this free the pain and discomfort keep the support with honey love I want to talk about mold toxicity because I've spoken about it a ton on this show I personally struggled with it for a while and for me it came out as acne which is something I still deal with but I managed to get rid of the molds I also also had candida, staph, heavy metals.
Starting point is 00:16:45 And as someone who's like been living a healthy lifestyle for a long time, I was shocked to find that out. So tell us- Were you living a healthy lifestyle? That's the thing that I reflect on, you know, because I was doing HIIT workouts every single day, no rest. Oh, an over-trained woman who would imagine that that might wreck your hormones.
Starting point is 00:17:04 It does it to guys too. It just takes us longer, right? Salmon every day, farm caught, or farm raised, sorry. Just, yeah, reflecting back, I think I thought I was living a healthy lifestyle. And now I've really sort of realized what that means. Tell us about your mold experience and how you cleansed from that. Well, I grew up in a basement in Albuquerque, New Mexico that had been flooded. And I had mold exposure from an early age. We didn't know it at the time. It was a nice house with a nice basement. Who would have known? So I had nosebleeds like 10 times a day. It's a frequently occurring symptom with toxic mold. I also had rashes. I had asthma and a lot of behavioral disorders. I was diagnosed with ADHD and ODD. You know what that one is?
Starting point is 00:17:57 No. Oppositional Defiant Disorder. Oh. So think of the Rage Against the Machine song that Fuck You, I Won't Do What You Told Me. Pretty much you have that running all the time in your brain. That may have served you though at some point. It probably did. But it does come with just a lot of anger.
Starting point is 00:18:13 And I also had Asperger's syndrome, which is on the spectrum of autism. And I say had, which makes people get triggered because they have a belief that you can't reverse that. And you absolutely can. It's a very arduous process that requires first fixing core issues and then reprogramming all the movements, eye patterns, hearing. It's a lot of work. But all those things came about from being really unhealthy as a kid. I don't think Asperger's, in my case, was caused just by mold, although it's a common trigger for autism and things like that.
Starting point is 00:18:50 It's also a genetic thing because my grandmother has an advanced degree in nuclear engineering and all of my aunts and uncles, except for one, are on the spectrum. So there's that. So when you discovered that you had mold from these symptoms, what was your first step? Because I know it can be a really stubborn toxin. Oh, wow. Well, let's talk about what mold does. I did a documentary called Moldy Movie and it's free. MoldyMovie.com.
Starting point is 00:19:19 Just go watch it. If anything I'm saying, like that can't be real. I've got a dozen top doctors and a dozen people like you and me who were just taken out by this. And what mold does is it grows in houses when there's water damage, including condensation. And 100 million homes, according to the experts in the documentary, homes or businesses or cars and things like that, they have toxic mold right now in the US alone. So it's a massive problem. And mold is the cause of Lyme disease. What? Yeah. I've been diagnosed with active Lyme. When I say I've been diagnosed, I mean,
Starting point is 00:19:58 I owned the lab company that did the diagnosis of my Lyme disease. So that doesn't have to come from a tick. You can get bitten by a tick and you can get Lyme disease, but the people of my Lyme disease. So that doesn't have to come from a tick. You can get bitten by a tick and you can get Lyme disease, but the people who get chronic Lyme, 90% of them have toxic mold that took their immune system offline and Lyme is a symptom of mold. You fix the mold and the body gets rid of the Lyme. Now this totally triggered some Lyme people who identify as only Lyme.
Starting point is 00:20:21 This information comes not just from what I've seen in 20 years of working in the mold and Lyme. This information comes not just from what I've seen in 20 years of working in the mold and Lyme and chronic illness space, but on my podcast, I interviewed an expert from UCLA who did a genetic analysis and showed just comprehensively that although the symptoms overlap 90%, 90% of the time it's mold, not Lyme. So 10% of the time it could be just Lyme, in which case you go down the lime path. By the way, I did take antibiotics for a year to try and cure the lime, but you can't get rid of lime if there's mold on board.
Starting point is 00:20:54 So what does mold make? Mold itself, when you're breathing it or getting it on your skin, it is an immune system irritant. It can cause allergies. Just basically dead mold will do that. Mold also makes mycotoxins. These are toxins separate from the mold itself. And when you're talking about something like coffee, the mold is long dead. It's been roasted and brewed, but the toxin is heat stable. And that's why Danger Coffee says mold right on the label.
Starting point is 00:21:23 Some other brands I might've been associated with in the past don't say mold on their label anymore. Mold free meaning? Yeah. In other words, the coffee's lab tested for mold. Wow. And I think it's really important because along this journey, as I was figuring things out, I gave up coffee for five years.
Starting point is 00:21:42 Wow. Because one thing that mold does is it causes your immune system to go into almost like a fight or flight response when you're re-exposed. People who have had mold, they walk into a moldy building and their nervous system gets dysregulated. It's a cell danger response. So I gave up coffee because I noticed after I drank coffee, I would get jittery and anxious and then tired and I'd want more coffee. And I thought I was allergic. Well, I came back from that trip to Tibet and I went to a place in Mountain View and I had a really high end cup of single estate coffee. And it was like the lights turned on, the angels are singing. I'm like, oh God, I love coffee. And by the way, that's a
Starting point is 00:22:22 caffeine tattoo on my arm. Oh, I love it. So on brand. That's crazy that you had to give it up for five years. Oh, I barely remember them. I mean, is it fair to say that a majority of the coffee you're getting at a regular coffee shop is moldy? Well, I love local coffee shops. And so I don't want to pick on anyone in particular. I will say that in the US,
Starting point is 00:22:44 there are no laws protecting us from mold toxins in particular. I will say that in the US, there are no laws protecting us from mold toxins in coffee. But in Japan, China, Europe, and most of South America, there are government limits on mold toxins in coffee. And on an old video, I have the former president of the Specialty Coffee Association talking about how when he was in Japan, they rejected a thousand shipping containers full of coffee beans because they had mold. And I said, what did you do with it? He said, we sent it to the U.S. because it's illegal.
Starting point is 00:23:14 I am not making this up. I did not cause governments around the world to make mold standards. But people say, well, it's roasted. It goes away. On my website, there's a post with 36 studies supporting what I'm saying. And most people who don't think there's mold in coffee heard me on one of the three times I was on the Joe Rogan show. He decided to say there wasn't mold in coffee after a company he owns started directly competing with Bulletproof. So there was a
Starting point is 00:23:42 financial motive for that. And the evidence is very abundant. And here's how you can tell if you're getting mold in your coffee. So some of the studies say 80%, some say 90% of coffee is moldy. It might be 70%. And the degree and type of mold are also something that matters. So when you drink a cup of coffee and you have to pee right away afterwards, is your bladder full or not full? It's not full. So what system in your body is making you pee? I guess your kidneys, right?
Starting point is 00:24:16 It's your kidneys and bladder, and they're doing it to protect you because the toxin that's most common in mold in coffee is called ocrotoxin A, which is a kidney and bladder toxin. That's what I had. There you go. I had it too in my house. What that means is if you have most coffee that has OTA in it and you drink it, your body says, oh my God, get it out of here. And then you pee right away and there's like a half a cup of pee. When you drink clean coffee, it actually hydrates you, especially when there's electrolytes and minerals like danger coffee, but it doesn't give you the pee response. So if you want to monitor how much OTA you're getting
Starting point is 00:24:49 or one other toxin from plants, the frequency that you need to pee is a really big variable. You should pee when your bladder's full, not have to pee before it's full, unless you're getting rid of toxins. Is there a difference between, I mean, this might be a dumb question, but like a cold brew, an Americano in terms of the amount of mold? No, it doesn't affect the amount of mold at all. Studies show that mold makes it through the brewing process just fine. So it doesn't get broken down. Actually, let me correct that. Studies show that mold toxins don't survive the brewing process.
Starting point is 00:25:25 The mold is long gone, but the poison that's left is there. Think of it like penicillin is there, even though you're not eating the mold where penicillin comes from. So when you do cold brew, this is funny too, because when I was a vegan, especially a raw vegan, I'm like, oh, I do cold brew coffee. I'm like, newsflash, it's still roasted. But anyway.
Starting point is 00:25:45 I need to tell my husband this oh, I do cold brew coffee. I'm like, newsflash, it's still roasted. But anyway. I need to tell my husband this because he's a cold brew fan. So what cold brew does is it limits your ability to get the, actually a lot of the dissolved good things in coffee. So a heat extraction of any herb is going to get more out of it. And the reason people do cold brew
Starting point is 00:26:02 is because it limits some of the bitter compounds, or you could roast the coffee properly and get higher quality coffee. So you get less polyphenols that way, but there's no studies, nothing I've ever seen that says you get less mold that way. You just get less coffee nutrients. If you do an Americano or a French press with a metal filter, then you get coffee oils. And there's two camps around coffee oils. One of them says they might raise cholesterol, therefore they're bad for you. I don't worry about cholesterol unless it's oxidized because, well, that's what the science supports. There are some other variables like APOB that matter that are not cholesterol, but coffee doesn't affect those.
Starting point is 00:26:47 So coffee oils in multiple studies reduce inflammation in the brain. So they're plant essential oils. I drink Americanos when I'm at home almost exclusively. So what do I have in here? I have a double shot Americano that I just pulled right as I was running out the door off my espresso machine. I can't wait to try it. I have it in my pantry. I'm ready to go.
Starting point is 00:27:09 So what should you drink? I would say to get the most benefits, look at French press or no paper filter methods or espresso. Okay. But if you're worried about cholesterol, it might be up. It might be down from that. Just paper filters reduce the soluble fiber you get from coffee. That's a prebiotic.
Starting point is 00:27:29 And they take away those oils that I think are good for you. Greg and I just moved into a new house in Texas. And the first thing we did was get brand new bedding from Cozy Earth. I am obsessed with Cozy Earth and their best-selling bamboo sheet set is temperature regulated and incredibly soft. It's truly so, so comfortable and I feel like being cool at night improves your overall sleep, your HRV and I absolutely love this bedding. From pillows to sheets and blankets indulge in the ultimate luxury cozy earth also has a linen collection which adds a breezy classic charm to your space reinvent your sanctuary with
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Starting point is 00:28:38 up to 40% off site-wide when you use the code PURSUIT, P-U-R-S-U-I-T. Back to mold cleansing. Oh, we didn't finish the other part of molds. No, we didn't. Let's go back to that. Okay. So I want to hear if you did.
Starting point is 00:29:01 Did you do supplements, diet? All of the above. I'll tell you the protocol in a minute. Give us the protocol. We still have to understand what mold does. Okay. Okay. So we have the mold itself is a strong immune system activator.
Starting point is 00:29:12 And then we have the toxins from mold. They're called mycotoxins. And the toxins from mold are very, very small, fat-soluble molecules. They look a lot like cholesterol. And the body can't see molecules that size. It's below the level of our immune system for most of them. So they directly poison mitochondria and they wreak havoc depending which of the about 200 toxins there are in mold that really affect humans. And you can be suffering from an allergic response to mold or from mycotoxin exposure directly. And what makes it even more complex is your immune system eventually
Starting point is 00:29:53 can recognize some mycotoxins and have an immune response to the compound, but not the mold. So if you want to get rid of mold, it's helpful to know what you have. In my case, I had exposure to, among many others, something called ziralinone. Have you heard of that one? No. This is my favorite mycotoxin because anyone who still believes in calories in, calories out, including some of my friends in the bodybuilding community who believe that a KitKat is the same thing as an orange because calories. You can manage your body weight that way
Starting point is 00:30:27 until your biology completely breaks. Well, Zoranone is 10,000 times more estrogenic than human estrogen. And it absorbs through the skin. So the dust in your house or that musty blanket or you can breathe it.
Starting point is 00:30:47 So this is one of the things I had. Why I was so obese, why my testosterone was so low, right? And in fact, why my- Because estrogen leads to weight gain or weight retention. Okay. Yeah. And it also leads to basically softness in your muscles. I used to have man boobs and the whole nine yard. Now, industry is not dumb. Like, what can we do with this? They concentrate that mold toxin into a little waxy pellet, and you put it in an industrial beef cow's ear.
Starting point is 00:31:15 It soaks in through the blood vessels there, and the cow gets fat on 30% less calories. Oh, my God. Wait, are we eating this moldy beef? I don't. I eat grass-fed. Wait, are we eating this moldy beef? I don't. I eat grass-fed. Yeah, right. But this is what's happening to the grain-fed. Yeah. It's not that the meat itself is moldy. It's that a very potent estrogen gets added to the cow.
Starting point is 00:31:37 Wow. And is it still present in the meat? Well, it's fat-soluble and there's extra fat in the meat. Wow. But the important thing for those of us in the fitness area, if anything on the planet exists that makes you fat on 30% less calories, your story about calories in, calories out is bullshit. It is provably wrong. Now, might they be a variable that's worth tracking? Yes.
Starting point is 00:32:05 Does it give you a license to say a Diet Coke and a Snickers bar cancel each other out because calories? No. There are other factors at play. I love that you're saying that because this has become a big community on TikTok. And there was a period of time where I would share what I was eating every day and people got very angry about it because I do believe in quality of food. I think it's the most important thing. Why do you think people get angry at that stuff? They get angry because it makes them feel bad about themselves. Well, shouldn't they? I mean, listen, like I- Did you just laugh at that?
Starting point is 00:32:33 That was so dark. I lost 90 pounds through eating. That makes me so happy. Thank you. But I felt bad about myself. I did. Because you lost 90 pounds or before you lost 90? No, before.
Starting point is 00:32:44 Yeah, I did too. I felt bad about myself. I did. Because you lost 90 pounds or before you lost 90? No, before. Yeah, I did too. I felt bad about myself. And that was my motivator. And I think people get angry when they hear me say that because they, you know, look at themselves and have this feeling of like, I'm victimizing them in a way, but. Do you ever get like those fat protesters
Starting point is 00:32:58 who are like, fat is normal. Of course. Fat is healthy. And they come to you. They stopped coming to my page because I made fun of their moms. This is inspiring me. No, when people are going to troll you, they're not your people.
Starting point is 00:33:10 I know. I barely read my comments anymore at this point. I just pay someone to ban and delete those people. Oh, I love that. Like, seriously, they have no right to come into your living room and take a shit on your couch. Why would you let them come onto your page and just like attack you without asking questions, without being curious, without any desire to help anyone else. 100%.
Starting point is 00:33:26 So people like that, they're just not your people. I have no issues. So what I usually do the first time a troll comes is if they say an immature comment, I literally respond with your mom. Cause like, we're going to go to seventh grade insults and bullying, like let's do it. Right.
Starting point is 00:33:38 And then they just lose their mind because, well, you're going to lose your mind if you're eating crappy food because you can't regulate your emotions. That was me. Yeah, me too, man. I used to be a jerk. I still kind eating crappy food because you can't regulate your emotions. That was me. Yeah, me too, man. I used to be a jerk. Well, I still kind of am, I guess,
Starting point is 00:33:48 if I make fun of people's moms. I had been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. Wow. And I no longer meet the characteristics for it. Isn't it amazing you can heal these incurable things? I think it's absolutely incredible. Like when I look at my weight loss journey, that has to be just my favorite part of the whole thing is the fact that I can function and keep improving,
Starting point is 00:34:09 you know, my mind, the way I treat people, the way I show up every day. I mean, it's... Let me ask you this. Yeah. If you had to choose between having your current body, but your old mind, or having this mind and your old body? Would you swap the way you feel mentally for the way you look? This mind, because I was so miserable. That's what it's all about. I would happily weigh 300 pounds if my brain worked because I never want to go back to just not being able to think and just being lethargic, no matter how much willpower I applied.
Starting point is 00:34:46 I like to say that fat people are willpower athletes, right? You have less energy in your cells because your metabolism is broken. So whatever you have, you put towards willpower, which is prefrontal cortex and the brain. Well, you're lower energy and you're constantly telling yourself not to eat, even though your body's telling you to eat. So you're grinding every day, like fighting the cookie. And some days you lose and the cookie wins, but you were fighting the whole time before that, unless you'd just given up and convinced
Starting point is 00:35:19 yourself that it's healthy, which it isn't. So I have a lot of compassion, both for myself when I was heavy, because I did everything. I went to the gym 90 minutes a day, half weights, half cardio, six days a week for 18 months straight when I was 300 pounds. How much do you think I weighed at the end of that? I know because I researched you and I know your story, but 300 pounds. That's sad. It's sad. And I was stronger, no doubt. But 46 inch waist didn't change. Why was that? Well, if you don't have enough testosterone and you have lots of estrogen from your environment or from your white fat cells converting testosterone to estrogen and your thyroid is low, oh, and then you're overtraining
Starting point is 00:36:02 like I was. So now your cortisol is high. It's no wonder. And you see a lot of people going to the gym between about, oh, 18 and 35. And like, yeah, this works so well. Like, look at me. You know, I took my shirt off on Instagram. Great. And then after that, like, well, I'm working out even more, but it's not there. I had a couple of guys over for dinner two weeks ago.
Starting point is 00:36:26 And they're both big shoulders. Guys have been lifting weights for 25 years, total gym rats. And they both have these pot bellies. And they're just looking at each other going, I've never worked out this hard to be this fat. I work out every day. Guys, do it every other day. The other day, go to a yoga class or just chill, like meditate and get your cortisol down. Because the cortisol around your stomach, like the pregnant belly sort of thing, is a cortisol issue.
Starting point is 00:36:52 It's different than, say, an estrogen issue, which gives you subcutaneous fat everywhere. I don't know how old you are, but you look, I think, a lot younger than you really are. And everyone comments on your physique. How often are you training? All right. So how old do you think I am? 48. I'm 51.
Starting point is 00:37:14 Okay. So not bad. Now, the lab tests, they're all over the place, depending on which aging metrics you use, but they're all a lot younger than that. And so part of it's, you know, how's your skin? Because I was obese, I have extra skin. Like I have these like marionette lines.
Starting point is 00:37:33 And some of my favorite trolls online are like, you look old. And of course, the answer for that is that's not what your mom said. Like, bam. Anyway, but like guys, I have like stretch marks and I have extra skin on my ass too, right? Because I lost 300 pounds, because I went through like health things that most people never, ever have to face. Yeah. And my brain works great and I'm 6% body fat. They also say I'm not 6% body fat.
Starting point is 00:37:57 $26,000 medical grade scale from Upgrade Labs. I test myself three times a week and I average the scores. Maybe I'm lying or maybe you just have an ego problem and you should step away from the muffin. Muffins were my problem, by the way. Dude, muffins are toxic. Although I like them. They're gorgeous. I mean, there's nothing better. Yeah. I look at like cold plunge as a way of experiencing pain. Yeah. And so is a muffin. Just the muffin feels good. Use the pain calculator. Whole plunges muffins. Super comparable.
Starting point is 00:38:28 But how often are you exercising? Right now, my regimen is 20 minutes a week. That's insane. Now, most people didn't hear that. They heard me say 20 minutes a day. 20 minutes per week. I heard you say that on an interview and I was like, I must have misheard him. I will also admit for the past two weeks, I've done an extra hour of just functional movements,
Starting point is 00:38:51 which is not my normal routine. I've been working on some neurological repatterning, which is mostly not heavy weights. It's like activating muscles that I don't activate well. So my chain from my foot up to my shoulder is in the right order. So I guess you could say that's working out, but it hasn't changed my physique. It's probably changed my posture a bit. So what? A guy who used to work out 90 minutes a week down to 20 minutes a week. Well, I don't just pick up rocks and I don't run away from tigers, which are the two forms of exercise we've always done.
Starting point is 00:39:25 And when you go to the gym, the biggest thing is we concentrate the rocks into plates and we lift those up. And instead of running away from a tiger, you can stand still until your body, you're running away from a tiger with chronic cardio. About 10 years ago, when I started, like when I wrote the first big biohacking book, I'm like, guys, high intensity interval training works better per minute than chronic cardio and it doesn't wear out your joints. By the way, I've had three knee surgeries. You want to keep those knees. They're useful.
Starting point is 00:39:53 What I started doing was looking at what can artificial intelligence and the very latest breakthroughs in biohacking do for us. And my most recent book is called Smarter, Not Harder. In order to write that book, I had to open the world's first biohacking clinic. I opened under Arnold Schwarzenegger's office in, I think, 2014. It's in Santa Monica, right? Yep. It wasn't Santa Monica. Next to Bulletproof. Yep. I've seen it. Yeah. We shut that down though, because Santa Monica looks like the set from The Walking Dead right now. That's why I live here now. Yeah, a lot of people have fled Southern California, which is really sad. So we opened that, and I brought in a million dollars worth of biohacking gear that I used on myself.
Starting point is 00:40:38 I'm like, this should be available for all of us to see how you can feel. But over that time, we've got a lot of data from people and we know what works and what doesn't work. And it's not like, oh, I just did some squeezy pants or some red light therapy over here. You can buy that stuff for like $99 on Amazon. It just doesn't work. So we're using medical grade gear in the right order based on your biology and your goals. And it's like, we tell you the recipe and we help you go through the right things in the right order and because of that there are five or six ways to put muscle on way faster than just lifting rocks there there's a way to get six times better vo2 max in 15 minutes a week than five hours a week. So you can literally stop doing most of your cardio
Starting point is 00:41:28 and your VO2 max will be higher when you do that as long as you're using the AI tools. That's why we're opening and upgrade labs here in Austin likely end of next month. We're waiting on one more piece of electrical panel equipment to open. So this whole world of, oh, you mean AI and technology can tell us what to do? And even better than that, at the biohacking conference that's at the end of May, beginning
Starting point is 00:41:57 of June in Dallas here. By the way, did we give you a pass? No, you didn't, but I'd love to. Okay, I'll get you a pass after this. I want to come to the lab and the conference. Okay, once the lab's open, you're in. And the conference, biohackingconference.com. And I'll get you a pass.
Starting point is 00:42:12 I would love that. It's just not that long of a drive to Dallas. So a lot of the tech that went into that is expensive. And knowing what supplements to take, knowing what to do is hard. So I'll be launching a new tool for people, an AI tool that's been in development for two and a half years with millions of dollars spent on it that tells you, let us help you figure out your top goal. Let us tell you exactly what supplements you need, what biohacks you need, and what lab tests you would use to track it.
Starting point is 00:42:46 So this is a tool, and it'll track your wearables and all that stuff too. So this is a tool that basically says, oh, do I want to be younger? Do I want more muscle mass? Do I want to be more lean? Do I want my energy back? Do I want to manage stress better? Do I want to be smarter? We just tell you, here's the shortest path to do it. Because I found this is terrible marketing, but I'll do it anyway. My last book, Smarter, Not Harder, I talked about the laziness principle. And people, you might as well just talk about death or taxes. People hate laziness because it's in all of us. Right? So I believe that laziness drives all human progress. And it's because there was a farmer. He didn't want to plow the fields himself.
Starting point is 00:43:29 So he, oh, I could harness an ox. And then, oh, I could buy a tractor. Now I have a computer-guided tractor. We just don't want to waste our time. And that's actually a sacred thing. But people judge themselves. It's a very weird self-torture thing. Yeah. It's an ego thing too, I feel like.
Starting point is 00:43:53 It is. And I will just freely say, I want every ounce of energy that I can apply today to go to the highest good for myself, for the people around me. And the highest good includes joy. But if I'm putting all of it into a workout I hate, how am I going to have any energy left to be happy afterwards? It doesn't work like that. So I said, I'm going to take all this data and I'm going to have an app that just makes it so you don't have to spend $2 million the way I did to reverse my age and fix myself and all that. If I knew then what I know now, I probably had maybe a $50,000 problem because I was really, really sick. And for most people who feel like, oh my gosh, I'm tired all the time. I have all these weird issues and I'm fat. It's probably going to cost you very, very little. You just have to know what to do. So
Starting point is 00:44:36 the AI tool that I'll be launching at the conference, it's got everything I've ever said, all eight books, 3,000 and counting blog posts, 1,200 podcast episodes, and all the research behind it. So that's going to be happening because biohacking, if you just were to go through all the stuff I just listed, that's the same amount of content as a two-year college degree. So if you're a big biohacking fan, thank you and welcome. But I want to be able to guide people who are just, I don't care. I have stuff to do. Like I'm a dad, I'm a mom.
Starting point is 00:45:09 I want to be with my kids. I don't want to study. Yeah, so that's why I'm launching this new tool for people. Incredible. I can't wait to see it. It's going to be cool. So 20 minutes of exercise per week. I have to know what your diet's like.
Starting point is 00:45:21 Do you follow a carnivore diet or do you kind of like tinker it based on what's going on? My first big book was called The Bulletproof Diet and people have lost a couple million pounds on it. I think it's sold about 600,000 copies now. And you see it echoed in a lot of newer nutrition books. They're on the same path. Chapter one of the book, avoid these plant toxins,
Starting point is 00:45:46 including lectins, phytic acid, oxalates, histamine, and omega-6 fats. So if you're going to do keto, this is all from the Bulletproof Diet, do keto for short periods of time, come out of it. And when you're doing keto, protein quality and fat quality matter, right? So the whole clean keto thing, first book on that. And that's still what I do. You're keto all the time? No. Use keto as a scalpel. And I'm 6% body fat. What the hell business do I have being keto, right? I don't want to get any leaner. So you can use keto for mental performance, and you can also just use MCT oil for that. Because I know a guy, I made MCT oil also into a billion dollar business.
Starting point is 00:46:29 It was like an unknown supplement that made you poop when I started Bulletproof. And so what's going on there is I'll go in ketosis if I want to deal with a certain issue or I want to lose a little bit of weight, which isn't an issue. On a typical day when I'm not fasting, I will eat 200 grams of animal protein. And I do that because funny enough, I weigh 200 pounds and that equation works. In my longevity book, I went through all the research saying you might want 0.6 grams of protein per pound of body weight. And they say, but as you get old, you should go up to 0.8 because you start losing muscle.
Starting point is 00:47:13 But when I go to 0.6, I start losing muscle and I don't feel good. So maybe some people do all right on that. But I think between 0.8 and one gram of protein per pound of body weight is good. Except even saying that is nonsense. Because have you ever heard of sarin nerve gas? No. So back in some of the very early terrorist attacks in populated cities in Japan, some terrorists made sarin nerve gas
Starting point is 00:47:46 and put it on the subway. Sarin comes from beans. It's a plant-based protein. Uh-oh. So when plant-based people tell you don't eat animal protein because this one animal protein is bad for you, we could say, but sarin nerve gas.
Starting point is 00:48:04 You could also say snake venom is a protein. You probably don't want to eat rattlesnake venom because it has this weird spike-like protein in it. So maybe the quality and type of protein is an important variable. And if you say 200 grams of protein per day, that would give you license to make me crickets. Okay. And to make me eat soybeans, which might be worse than crickets. I don't really know. I'm not eating either one of them. So that's why I always say animal protein because animal protein, whatever source it is, whether it's dairy, if you're not allergic, beef, which is the best, or lamb, or not as good, but still okay, chicken or eggs, right? Those are the things that actually have the amino acids that your body needs and a lot
Starting point is 00:48:51 of other cofactors. If you do 200 grams of those kinds of proteins, you get results. If you do 200 grams of industrial processed plant protein, you don't get the results. So the idea that calories matter lets you sell junk food. The idea that protein matter lets you sell junk food the idea that protein matters lets you sell junk protein the reality is that it's the quality and type of protein and the availability in the body that says what works if i was talking to a devout vegan i would say oh no for you you need let's see um one gram per. So you would need three grams of protein per pound of body weight because you insist on eating plant proteins. Good luck with that. Just to make up for the lack.
Starting point is 00:49:32 It's only one third as available as animal protein. You're going to have to eat three times as much. And if you're a whole food vegan, you have to eat all the carbs that come with that protein. So you're going to eat like six pounds of beans. And I don't want to be around you after that. You probably don't want to be around you either. You can't do it. So you're going to have to go to non-whole foods, plant-based, which is highly processed plant protein. You still need to have three times more than I do. That's why using the fewest words possible, but still being truthful is so important. Calories matter, but they are not the only variable.
Starting point is 00:50:08 Yeah. In fact, they barely matter. And the quality of your protein is so important. Oh, and the quality of your fat. Try and do everything I just said on canola oil versus any saturated fat. It doesn't work, especially over time, because canola oil and similar seed oils break your cell membranes and they do it over time. It takes two years to replace half the fat in your cell membranes. So start eating French fries all the time. Two years later,
Starting point is 00:50:38 you replaced half. Two years after that, you're 75%. It's so weird when people go and start putting butter in their danger coffee. What's going to happen? They start switching out these bad oils. For the first two years, you feel like you are going to die if you don't get more butter. Your body's like, oh my God, vitamin K, conjugated linoleic acid, like all this saturated fat, my hormones are turning on, I'm fixing my brain, it's so good. But after two years, you go to put like a half a stick of butter in your danger coffee and then you go, I just don't want it. And you go down to like a tablespoon.
Starting point is 00:51:17 And this happens reliably. And I've seen this with millions of people. Why? Because you fixed your cell biology just by having enough saturated fat. And now some people are triggered. If you are triggered, you are now going to war with all of India where Ayurvedic medicine has been teaching ghee for 5,000 years. And I'm just telling you, there's more people in India than there are you, and they are right. At least their grandmothers were. So you should watch out. You shouldn't piss them off. Ghee is the best thing ever. I love ghee. It's fantastic. I use it all day. So my one question for you, are you eating different
Starting point is 00:51:50 types of red meat all day or are you sticking with the same kind? Because I feel like I eat red meat all day. Like I have beef for breakfast, steak for lunch, steak for dinner. And sometimes I'm like, should I be- Are you a pure carnivore? I've dabbled. I did it for a while to heal my acne and it worked pretty well. And I've also done keto. Now I would say I'm maybe 85% carnivore. And I have a few vegetables here and there and potatoes.
Starting point is 00:52:17 If you're still having issues with acne, let's talk about what it is. Because I know what it is. What do you mean? Well, we'll get to it. Let's finish the questions here. Okay. If you look at type of meat, kind of that hierarchy, if you go to DaveAsprey.com and just search for roadmap,
Starting point is 00:52:37 it's probably DaveAsprey.com slash roadmap. I have a thing. It's like a one page you print out on your refrigerator and it tells you quality of animal protein in order, quality of fats in order. So you are right. Steak, actually bison is slightly better than steak. Then steak, then or any beef, it can be ground. Then lamb, right?
Starting point is 00:52:58 And I didn't mention pork earlier. If you can find from a local farmer, pasture raisedraised pork that didn't eat corn and soy, it's magical. I built a regenerative farm and raised at least 100 pigs over the years. Oh my God, like really good pork. The fat is very similar to ours and it's just like, it nourishes you in a different way. But industrial pork is not a good choice
Starting point is 00:53:20 unless you don't have any money. You're like, I could eat this like weird soy cricket patty or I could get the cheaper cuts of pork and learn how to cook them. The pork is way better protein, and it's quite affordable. So that's what I would do if I was on a really strong budget. But what I do now is I primarily eat steak and lamb. And then once a week, I'll have fish usually sushi because well I like sushi okay so sometimes you will go out and enjoy yourself you're not always
Starting point is 00:53:51 you can get grass fed in almost any city now like when I opened what became the Upgrade Cafe in Santa Monica it was the first all grass fed place with no seed oils in LA and now when I'm in LA, there's at least 250 restaurants that offer grass-fed steaks. You can go to Erewhon and get grass-fed steak at the
Starting point is 00:54:12 counter, right? Because now there's demand for it. And it makes me so happy. So yes, I go out. Here in town, there's a place called The Well. It's great. They have two different grass-fed steaks on the menu and they don't use any seed oils in the restaurant so i like to go there and you can do this but what i won't do is go to a restaurant and say oh look they have the crispy onion blossom thing cooked in shit oil right and these other weird foods that are all chemically like i just don't do that because I like my brain. I like how I feel. I like how I look. I like how I move. It's not worth it. So I'll fast. Or if I'm going out with friends to say a Chinese place, which they always cook with bad oils, I just eat a steak before I go. So I'm pretty much, my protein comes from beef and it comes from lamb and it comes from sheep yogurt, which is all A2 protein.
Starting point is 00:55:10 I need to try that, but I'm afraid of dairy. You know, I do not tolerate cow dairy even a little bit. Even the raw, like the raw A2 grass fed from a local farm stuff. I get acne. I get serious brain fog from casein morphine. Sheep protein is very different. It's much more compatible with humans. Where do you get your sheep yogurt from? You can buy it almost at any city I've been to in the US. Just go to any of the natural stores.
Starting point is 00:55:34 There's different brands. Okay. Do you go to local pastures here? The blue truck? Yeah. I've been to local pastures. Yeah. That's awesome. I like that spot. Yeah. Austin's full of good stuff. I'm so happy to be living here. And I want people who are listening to this and saying, but I can't afford that. And then if you're feeling angry, guys, I used to put truck parts in boxes for a living. I welded Toyota trucks in the early 90s. I'm sorry if you ever drove one of those. I suck at welding. But literally five years, auto parts warehouse. I used to work
Starting point is 00:56:08 at Baskin Robbins scooping ice cream to pay for my university. So I have not always had an unlimited food budget. You can eat the way I'm talking about, which is a low toxin, quality protein, quality fat. you can eat surprisingly affordably, especially if you tolerate eggs. White rice and eggs cooked in butter is cheaper than McMuffins. And it's so much better for you. And if you can't afford the grass-fed ground beef, then what you would do is you would get the non-grass-fed ground beef, which isn't as good, but it's still way better than anything else. And you can get that stuff for 99 cents a pound if you buy it in bulk and you look around for specials. You can also go to restaurant supply stores and they will sell you ridiculously
Starting point is 00:56:55 cheap things. Like my lamb chops, the good ones, not the shoulder chops, but the rib chops, they're $6.79 a pound. I love that you're pointing this out because it's a comment I see over and over again, you know, about the exclusivity of health. So I think it's important that we're transparent on that. Why do you think I have acne? I'm stuck on that now. If you want to hear the rest of this interview,
Starting point is 00:57:21 tune in Thursday for part two. Thanks for joining us on the pursuit of wellness podcast to support this show please rate and review and share with your loved ones if you want to be reminded of new episodes click the subscribe button on your preferred podcast or video player you can sign up for my newsletter to receive my favorites at mariawelland.com it will be linked in the show notes. This is a Wellness Out Loud production produced by Drake Peterson, Fiona Attucks, and Kelly Kyle. This show is edited by Mike Fry, and our video is recorded by Louise Vargas. You can also watch the full video of each episode
Starting point is 00:57:55 on our YouTube channel at Mari Fitness. Love you, Power Girls and Power Boys. See you next time. The content of this show is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for individual medical and mental health advice and does not constitute a provider patient relationship. As always, talk to your doctor or health team.

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