Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Muscle Regulates Your Emotions: The Science of Protein, Strength, and Aging Well | Dr. Gabrielle Lyon
Episode Date: June 24, 2026Why your body is the fastest way to change your mental state — and how friction, protein, and resistance training make it work. Dr. Gabrielle Lyon is a physician and the founder of what she calls Mu...scle-Centric Medicine. She's the New York Times bestselling author of Forever Strong, and her new book is The Forever Strong Playbook. In this episode we talk about: Why muscle is the organ of longevity The three stress responses and the courage response Why distraction is the biggest health crisis Protein and why most of us aren't eating enough of it How to think about intuitive eating Minimum effective dose for exercise Recovery as you age The case for adding more friction to your life Get the 10% with Dan Harris app here Sign up for Dan's free newsletter here Follow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTok Subscribe to our YouTube Channel To advertise on the show, contact sales@advertisecast.com or visit https://advertising.libsyn.com/10HappierwithDanHarris This episode is sponsored by: BiOptimizers: Magnesium Breakthrough delivers seven forms of magnesium to support your nervous system, stress response, and daily recovery. Try it risk-free with their 365-day guarantee — head to bioptimizers.com/happier and use code HAPPIER for 15% off plus free gifts at checkout. Eight Sleep: The Pod automatically heats and cools your bed, tracks your sleep without a wearable, and their testing shows users get up to 34% more deep sleep. Use code DanHarris at eightsleep.com/danharris for up to $350 off the Pod 5, with a 30-day trial if it's not for you.
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Hello, everybody. Welcome to the 10% Happier Podcast. I'm your host, Dan Harris. This week, we're doing a special series called Get Fit Sainly. We run this series every once in a while. The whole purpose of it is to talk about physical wellness, not just mental wellness, but we approach physical fitness through the lens of human psychology and mindfulness and self-compassion. Our little tagline is how to take care of your body without losing your mind. This series is sponsored by our
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breakthrough. Their argument is that magnesium breakthrough delivers better sleep, calmer days,
and more energy. So big thanks to the folks over at Buy Optimizers. You'll be hearing a little bit
more about magnesium breakthrough as the show Progressive. But let me get to my guests today.
We're talking about something really interesting. When you think about doing life better,
one of the levers that I think many of us overlook is our muscles.
My guest today argues that muscle, specifically skeletal muscle, is the organ of longevity.
It's a powerful lever, she argues, that we can pull not only to increase our physical fitness, but also our mental fitness.
She has mainstream science largely on her side where things get a little bit controversial is how far she pushes that argument,
specifically when it comes to protein in the diet.
So you'll hear me push her a little bit on that.
Anyway, the guest is Dr. Gabrielle Lyon,
who is a physician and the founder of what she calls
muscle-centric medicine.
She's a New York Times best-selling author of a book
called Forever Strong, and she's got a new book
called The Forever Strong Playbook.
We'll get started with Dr. Gabrielle Lyon right after this.
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Today I'm talking to Dr. Gabrielle Lyon about muscle. The part nobody tells you about muscle
is that the work you put in at the gym gets built into muscle while you sleep, which is the
perfect segue to our sponsor today, ate sleep. They make a product called The Pod, which
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Dr. Gabrielle Lyon, welcome to the show.
Great to me here.
Basic questions to start.
The first is, what is muscle-centric medicine?
muscle-centric medicine is the concept that muscle is the largest organ system in the body,
and it is our focal point for health and wellness.
All of the diseases of chronic aging, the majority of them, that are metabolic in nature,
there's only one organ system that we have full voluntary control over.
And that, my friend, is muscle, and it's skeletal muscle.
If you're talking about muscle as I believe you call it the organ of longevity,
How would I think then about the heart?
Is that a separate thing, part of the picture, more important, less important?
The founder of muscle-centric medicine, I would argue that the heart is less important.
There are three types of muscles.
There's skeletal muscle, which we have voluntary control over, things like biceps, our clods,
anything that you can think about doing, that you can control, this is skeletal muscle.
And then there's the cardiac muscle.
that's obviously the heart and then smooth muscle, the muscle within the vascular system,
or say for a woman, the uterus, all muscles that are muscles, but they're not under voluntary
control. And when you think about muscle-centric medicine, you have to frame up why muscle is important.
Dan, you might think about athletics, you know, and sport performance, but that's just one
small aspect of why skeletal muscle is so critical and arguably probably one of the least important.
Skeletal muscle is responsible for carbohydrate utilization and disposal. It burns fatty acids.
You've all heard about cholesterol. It burns fatty acids at rest. When you contract skeletal muscle,
it affects your brain. It affects your mood. There's this inter-organ cross-talk. And quite frankly,
the most important aspect about muscle as an organ system, especially for your audience,
is all about choice. It is a voluntary choice.
Meaning it's something you can choose to work on.
You can choose to work on it. You can choose to build it. You can choose to fuel it. It is a choice.
There's so many things that we have no control over in life, but certainly taking care of muscle health
is arguably not one of the things.
We absolutely have full agency over that.
And then the downstream effects are very clear
that the stronger you are,
the greater your survivability,
the stronger you are, the greater,
I would say your survivability
in nearly any kind of illness.
Any kind of illness,
but also I think you would argue
and I think you do argue
that muscle is important,
not just for survivability,
when we're sick, which is, you know, inevitable, but also for, you know, just basic resilience and happiness as we're moving through the world.
I would fully agree with you on that. And, you know, I think that we have a very interesting intersection, you and I, you talk a lot about happiness and mindfulness.
And skeletal muscle, I would say, is the lever that you can pull to have the ultimate.
mind control. And here's what do I mean by that? Well, today, I have two little kids. One is not feeling well.
There's lots of chaos. And I might perseverate on, oh my gosh, is she okay? Or oh my gosh,
I can't believe she, whatever, threw her crayons in the corner and then they somehow got all over
the wall and on the white sofa. The fastest way, because we've all been there done that,
the fastest way to change your mind for us less experienced individuals who meditate or are using
breathing techniques. The most effective way is to move your body into a position that creates discomfort.
And it could be something like sprinting or some kind of maximum output, but it could also be
something like a pull plunge. Your body is a tool that can be used to control your mind.
Very practically, though, when your kid's freaking out, it's hard to hurl yourself into a cold plunge or, you know, do some sprinting. So like, what do you do in acute moments with your body to regulate your mind?
Well, it depends on what kind of acute moment that you're talking about. Obviously, you handle the situation. And there's the immediate, what needs to happen in that immediate moment. But that's not typically where the problem stem from if we're perseverating or if we're caught in saying anxiety. That is what I would consider is some kind of chronic condition that happens over time. In the moment, you handle the moment, right? But right after, let's say you've had a difficult conversation or you've had
or just gotten some news that completely hijacks your central nervous system, that's when you move your body.
It could be anywhere, anytime, any place, whether that's pushups, whether that's air squats,
whether that's a plank hold.
I don't care how you do it.
There are a million different ways to do it.
It just has to be done.
Once you identify that you're in that moment and that there's no getting out of it, and I do this myself,
and frankly, it doesn't even matter where you are.
you could be on an airplane.
If you contract those muscles and it could be just an isolated contraction, where you are
fully engaging your body, you release and contract, you can release and contract in a very confined
situation.
Or if you're in an office and you close the door, then you can do push-ups or whatever it is.
And the only way to not do that correctly, it's not a perfect science, is to not do it at all.
this tensing of the muscles and then releasing them, I listeners and viewers will know that I've
struggled for a long time with claustrophobia on airplanes and elevators. And there was a period of
time when it was particularly bad. And I would take flights with my therapist who would teach me
exposure therapy. In other words, systematically exposing yourself to the shit that scares you.
And when we were on planes and I was freaking out, he would say, you know, like tense your thigh muscle.
make a fist and then let it relax and just do that over and over. And I did find it helpful.
And what you're talking about in essence is something called progressive muscle relaxation.
Your therapist, they were on top of it. It's great to hear, you know, I don't know if you
know this about me, but I trained in psychiatry for two years. I actually went to the University
of Louisville. I was very fascinated as to how the brain works and ultimately I ended up switching
to family medicine. But I will tell you that my work in psychiatry,
what I learned about the human mind, some of the things that I learned and got insight into
have been the most valuable in all of my medical training. And ultimately, that's where muscle comes in.
It is, right now there's these two separate entities. People think about the mind as one,
and the way in which you control the mind is through meditation and mindfulness. Yes. And then
there are moments in time, what you alluded to is this stress response. You know, there are three
stress responses, three predominant stress responses. People think that fight or flight is
is the only stress response. In fact, I don't know, Dan, if you're aware, but that's only one
stress response. I'm going somewhere with this. But that's just one stress response. It's the one
that I would argue that humans move to the most frequently, most frequently. But there is
tend and befriend, which is I'm stressed and I might call you. And that actually in doing so
lowers my stress response. And then as it relates to muscle-centric medicine, the third stress
response is the courage response. And that you see a lot of operators, military operators,
my husband is a former operator now, a surgeon, so I guess he went from operator to operator.
And watching him, his stress response is a courage response, meaning there is an insult or something
that happens, and they move right to courage. And one would argue that you can train your body
in mind to move towards courage. And the small little baby steps involve taking action. And I know
that that seems to be such a big leap from, say, a push-up to a squat, but it's not. It's mobilizing in
the face of a threat into a positive action. So are you saying that if we train our muscles to
whatever our body's ability, that we're more likely when faced with an insult or an injury
or some sort of threat to move into courage mode? I am. And it's practiced for
part of, as I was thinking about our podcast and I was thinking, Dan, what would serve your audience the best? Yes, there's the musculature and we am sure we're going to talk about the things to maintain longevity and how to build muscle. But I do think that people come to you because they want to hear how you personally process things and they want to be inspired and they want to learn tools. And one of the missing tools out there is the integration of the body and mind in a meaningful way and what muscle.
actually does and how we use it. Every time we take a step towards friction, friction is something like
a squat or a push-up or something that's uncomfortable. Frankly, it could be flipping a coin and
not being able to get the Starbucks that you plan because you make a promise to yourself that
has you get the Starbucks and tails that you don't, it's in those moments of friction and actually
inviting them in as opposed to we here in the landscape it's all about removing stress and mitigating
stress and taking a step back and ways to work within our environment versus thinking these things
aren't problems and stress isn't a bad thing it really is our interpretation of the environment
and then when we use our bodies as tools then we ultimately can be discerning to make the next
right step. And discernment, you know, people will say, what do you think the biggest health crisis is?
And, you know, I've been a doctor for 20 years. You know what I think it is? This might come as a shock.
And obesity is not what I think of as the biggest health crisis. I believe that the biggest health
crisis that we have that faces us right now is distraction. Here's how it plays out. When you think about
the chronic diseases that we're really up against, whether it's obesity, sarcopenia, heart disease,
Alzheimer's disease, nobody chooses these diseases. There are a whole host of lifestyle choices
that we either make or we don't make. When we are continuously distracted by the next shiny object,
we no longer take that next right step in front of us, from eating a protein forward diet,
from making sure that we execute our training plan, not be on our phone while we are in the gym
or doing any of these things.
So ultimately, what we see as obesity,
what we see as heart disease,
one has to ask is in part what we're seeing a lifetime of distraction.
And you're not talking about the genetic,
those that suffer genetically,
but those that have to make repeated choices,
which are most of us,
are we making choices that are distractible choices
or choices that are a result of distracting.
versus aligning our actions with our values, much like what you have done in your lifetime,
you create a handful of values, right? I know that you were in the news and you used to be on air,
and now you made a decision to do that on your own terms, but that was a value, and then there
was actions that followed that. You're the doctor and the expert, so I defer to you on almost
everything. I'm trying to think, like, whether I agree, just based on my own experience, that
distraction is the biggest health crisis, what's going through my mind is, I think if somebody
had asked me, what's the biggest health crisis? I would have said lack of social connection,
which is what we evolved to need. But I could imagine arguing that that is downstream from
distraction, that we're so insorcelled by our devices that we're, that it's creating problems
in terms of us pursuing a health program that keeps us healthy. And it's, it's keeping us from one another,
which has always been our source of strength. Fully agree. I fully agree with you. The ability to not,
again, what this comes back to is, is the alignment of our values. And I wrote the Forever Strong
playbook. So I wrote the first book of its kind, which was called Forever Strong. It was dedicated to my
mentor, New York Times bestseller. It really highlighted muscle. And then I thought to myself, okay,
well, I've outlined the science of my muscle is important. I outlined the nutritional plan.
I outlined the exercise plan. What's next? And that's where the Forever Strong playbook over my
shoulder comes from. And in that playbook, it was how do we design a life that allows for us to be
forever strong. And as you can imagine, close social connection is part of that. We were not designed
to exist in isolation. We are communal beings. And our best defense is to be fully present. Our best
defense is to understand what our values are and execute on those values. You know, most people that
go on a nutrition plan or a training plan, most people will fail at it.
There's, again, New Year's, everyone's in the gym. It's really annoying because they can't get my squat rock. And it's super predictable. And human beings are so predictable that they execute the same thing over and over and make the same mistakes. And then they are surprised by their own humanness. The way that we avoid this, because ultimately what I believe, and this is, again, just a belief, there's no science to support this. But what I believe is that everybody wants to live in the best
version of themselves. Physically, mentally, connection-wise, but in order to make that a reality,
there are very practical steps that one needs to take. As you suggest, spending times with friends
in close connection, we know that isolation is certainly a cause of depression. We saw that,
you know, early 2020, you know, we've seen that for always. And there's also a handful of other
decisions that people make that ultimately take them on a trajectory of aging that is somewhat predictable.
I have a million questions for you and you've dropped a lot of bread crumbs and I want to promise
our listeners and viewers that I will follow up on all of them. But let me just go back to the
beginning assertion here that skeletal muscle is the, you know, the key unlock for longevity,
which is something I'm pretty sure we all want. What would a cardiologist
or a pulmonologist or any other ist who has their own area of the body that they focus on,
what would a smart person say to push back on you on your claim?
What is so fascinating about muscle-centric medicine is that I would argue that they wouldn't.
Because if the idea is root cause medicine, say for example,
if someone wants to address elevated triglycerides.
Let's just pull fats in the bloodstream, triglycerides.
We've all heard of metabolic syndrome,
and if your listeners have not or your viewers,
I would outline it as the following.
Elevated levels of triglycerides,
elevated blood pressure, elevated blood glucose,
elevated insulin.
people will say metabolic syndrome is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
Okay, so we're going to think through this as an is.
All of which can be true.
And when we hone in on elevated levels of triglystores, if we want to have a life that is healthy,
we have to recognize that our metabolism matters.
And the way in which our metabolism matters,
comes in the form of outcomes. Outcomes being the hard endpoints like blood sugar, insulin,
triglycerides, blood pressure. Now, when you go to your doctor and these are elevated, elevated triglycerides,
elevated glucose, potentially elevated blood pressure, the doctor should be asking you a question.
Why are these numbers like that? Typically, again, taking genetics out of it, one would say that your
diet, your dietary consumption is mismatched for your muscle activity and health.
What we know is that when we reduce carbohydrates, the average, in carbohydrates,
when we say carbohydrates, I'm talking about breads and pastas and all the whites and the sugars,
the average consumption is 300 grams a day.
To put that into context, it's three oral glucose tolerance tests.
That's a lot of carbs.
It's carbicide.
We're killing ourselves with carbs.
We are.
But people would ask, okay, well, you reduce the carbohydrates, yes.
And one has to understand that when you use and move your body, your body uses glucose for fuel, and it also needs to dispose of it.
And that disposal place is skeletal muscle.
It is the primary site for the food that you need.
It gets disposed of somewhere.
And I saw this very early on in practice.
I would have mid-50-year-old women.
You know, we still have a medical practice, come to strong medical.
And what I would hear and also take their blood is I would see on their blood panel,
this mid-50-year-old woman who is thin is having elevated levels of triglyceride,
elevated levels of blood sugar, blood glucose.
It's not particularly just a diet problem.
It's a muscle problem.
when you are sitting here like me and you are primary fuel sources fatty acids it's fat when we have
healthy skeletal muscle at rest we are burning primarily fat now when we overconsume carbohydrates
and this is getting to the isst the cardiologists when it comes to carbohydrates when we are non-active
or our muscle looks like a wago steak with fat infiltrated into it or
a rib eye, then clearly that muscle is a departure from the fillet that you hope that it is.
When fat infiltrates into this tissue, it affects your ability to store and use it.
You will also see that reflected in the bloodstream.
And so if a cardiologist would say, well, I think that heart is the most important,
I would say the heart is a very important organ and the cardiovascular system is a very important
organ system, my next question would be, how do you get it healthier? What activity can you take to get it
healthier? And that answer is movement. And that movement, whether it be resistance training or
cardiovascular activity, affects the health of that skeletal muscle, kind of like a suitcase. It empties out
that fuel system so that you can put more fuel back into it. And this is what people have to recognize,
is that if someone is faced with, you know, in the landscape of longevity, we know that there are
particular outcomes that we must control for, that we want. We want good blood sugar control. We want
lower triglycerides. We want lower blood pressure. And in part, if we look at the data, the average
American is either overweight or obese, close to 74%. This isn't a fat problem. It's a muscle problem.
These problems originate in skeletal muscle, whether it's inactivity, sedentary behavior in itself is a disease state.
And so your question is very astute.
I would say that every specialist would say that their organ system is the most important.
But from an action-oriented perspective, there is only one organ system that we control, and that is skeletal muscle.
And skeletal muscle is the largest organism.
makes up 40% of our body weight. That has to be healthy. If it's unhealthy, you will see derangements
in your lipid profile, derangements in your carbohydrate, glucose profile, insulin profile,
all of which lead to and contribute to diseases of aging and also these, quote, chronic diseases.
Muscle is the focal point. It's not a body fat problem. Body fat is symptom.
is e-scentral of unhealthy skeletal muscle.
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Can we go back to carbs and carbicide for a second?
because that's a hilarious term.
Are you saying that if we are consistently exercising and honing our skeletal muscle that we can eat more carbs?
Yes, sir, you can.
And this becomes very offensive to people because they don't like the idea that one would have to earn it.
And it's a tricky subject because food is so readily available.
it's not like it's always been readily available like this. And we have a lot of agency. We have a lot of
choice as to what we can adjust. And we have to do that responsibly. The most important macronutrient
is dietary protein. As we get older, we need more of it. The body rebuilds and repairs itself
four times a year. That number, I recommend no less than 100 grams of protein a day. No less
than that, regardless of your weight. And then you can choose carbs,
versus fat. It is personal preference. Obviously, you want to hit your fiber intake, but how we are
consuming right now, and in the playbook I make it a very pretty visual, because it's been
complicated for people, and it's been very difficult for people to follow over years. One third of your
plate should be protein. One third of your plate should be fibrous carbs for some vegetables,
and one third of your plate can be more starchy carbs. You can increase that amount,
if you are training. Carbs must be earned because at higher levels, it's toxic. And we have evidence
for that. It's called diabetes. Let's talk about your recommendations for eating because they're
really, really interesting, but also pretty hardcore and specific. As you just said, you know,
you have a big focus on protein. I believe you say every meal should have 30 grams of protein.
I have been very influenced personally by something called intuitive eating.
And basically intuitive eating is the argument that we get really tangled up in what's been called diet culture, you know, just trying to eat by other people's rules in order to achieve arbitrary aesthetic standards.
And so in intuitive eating, the thing is, you know, listen to your own body about when you should eat and what you should eat with, and this is crucial, a background.
of like gentle nutrition basics.
So having said all that,
when I encounter very strict guidelines,
I sometimes my back gets up just a little bit
because I have been so steeped
in this intuitive eating thing.
So where am I wrong?
You've never had a weight problem, have you?
As I sometimes joke,
it would take an archaeological dig
to get the abs that I had in my 30s.
And so I,
I can get into a whole self-critical thing about the way I look in the mirror, et cetera, et cetera.
But that's a long answer.
The short answer is, no, I have not had a weight problem where I'm overweight medically.
Which in my mind would mean that you've done pretty well with your nutrition and that your signals aren't super crossed.
That's one thing that I would say.
The next thing that I would say is do you track an account for your money and your taxes?
Would you also say that it's fair that the more particular one can be, the better that they can control an outcome, whatever that is?
Yes, yes, but, and I know you don't recommend calorie counting, which I really love you for.
But when I was overly fussy and obsessed with things like calorie counting, I think it was actually boomeranging back and making me less healthy because it was causing distraction at meal time, which was interrupting my ability to connect with people, connect with the food, et cetera, et cetera.
So I worry a lot about what is sometimes called orthorexia, the unhealthy obsession with getting healthy.
That is a real problem, and I wish it was more of a problem.
because again, let's look at the data.
The data is that the majority of our contemporaries are either overweight or obese.
The majority of people, maybe outside of our circle or in the wellness space, really struggle.
And they don't just struggle for a few years.
They struggle for an entire lifetime.
They struggle for decades.
I would also say that intuitive eating, if we define intuitive in my life,
my mind, it's eating what you feel your body needs. Would we agree on that definition if we were
to kind of come together? It's close enough. Okay. What I would say is if you understand foundational
principles, then intuitive eating would make perfect sense, meaning your body needs a certain amount of
protein. Your body does really well. Again, there is, there are so many different ways.
for people to eat, and that's evidenced by think about people in all different cultures.
They eat a variety of things and are healthy. But if you have a understanding, if there's an
understanding that your body requires these amino acids protein, then it might just be that you
are connected to what it is that your body is driving for. The body's very smart. It's actually
something called the protein leverage hypothesis. And the protein leverage hypothesis is the following,
is that we have an essential need for amino acids, which we do. And the body will feed until it gets
that dosing right. Meaning, and this is one of the reasons why people believe obesity happened,
is that there's been such a dilution of the quality of the calories. So in essence, they're
intuitively eating and feeding to get those amino acids and those proteins. And ideally, we get people
to a place where they can intuitively eat, that they understand that this is roughly the amount of
protein that I need. This is roughly the amount of fruits and vegetables that I need. And if we can
get people there, then it doesn't have to be strict and rigid.
because it shouldn't be. And we also have to recognize that there's a huge departure from the way in which
we used to get food. And so we have to have a baseline understanding. Otherwise, bodies, when they hit 40,
if you do whatever you want, see a drastic change in weight gain, middle weight gain, and none of that has to
happen. And I agree with you, eating shouldn't be super restrictive. And this is part of the problem of diet culture.
because we've really been so misled.
There's been the Lucky Diet, which is smoking diet, there's been Fen, Fenn,
there's been the grapefruit diet and the soup diet, all of these various diets to control hunger
and satiety and weight.
But if we frame our eating as to what we can eat and, frankly, what we have to gain,
like muscle, then the choices become much more liberating.
Diet culture is what we have to lose and the focus on fat versus a muscle-centric culture is what do we have to gain, what can we eat?
And again, it's just much more liberating.
Let me see if I can sum up your argument.
I think what you're saying is, yeah, Dan, you're not wrong for those of us who are interested in wellness.
Something like intuitive eating can be a nice corrective against orthorexia.
But I, Dr. Lyon, who is looking out at the sort of broad swath of humanity, specifically in America, but globally as well, where people aren't focused enough on wellness.
So they need pretty specific guidelines until they can achieve escape velocity and rely on their intuition.
That's absolutely correct.
because ultimately we want to build stronger, healthier, more resilient humans.
This is what we want.
This is what we're going for.
But we have to agree that there are some fundamental changes that have to be made.
And the reality is most people are not even hitting the bare minimum of activity,
which is 150 minutes.
The ECSM guidelines just changed, but it's 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity.
And it's two days a week of some kind of resistance.
training. My friend, most people are not meeting that. And we know this. And how do we transform
the culture, which is, have ever seen the movie Wally? Oh, yeah. I love it. Yeah. But it's terrifying.
And that's where we're going. That's where we're going if we don't make some serious course
corrections. And we have to acknowledge that we live in a domesticated environment. We don't know how to
we are so far removed from having to go out and hunt our food and go out and pick our berries
and do all of these things that really we just go on Amazon or DoorDash and it's there.
We have to adapt to our environment.
And if that adaptation means we have to double down on the amount of protein that we need
and understand what that looks like and then we choose, I'm totally good with that.
But I believe it's our responsibility to really understand what we need and why
we need it and then let people, let people choose. But if we don't acknowledge that protein is the most
important macronutrient, that we need more of it as we age, there is no other way. You can't just
build your body from thinking about it. You have to consume food and you have to consume
particular classes of food, meaning the particular macronutrients, because they're essential.
our bodies can't make it. And then aging, which is the reality as, you know, there's biological age
and there's chronological age, it's happening. When we are young, we are driven by hormones and growth.
We can get away with a lot. But as our hormones change and as our activity levels change and as our
body becomes less efficient, we have to account for those inefficiencies. It's just, it's a must.
otherwise we're going to find ourselves weaker than we care to be. And unfortunately, if we don't set
ourselves up from muscular health, again, this has nothing to do with aesthetics. Then it becomes
very challenging to manage the health outcomes that become meaningful, like blood pressure, like triglyceride levels,
like cognitive impairment or cardiovascular disease.
And I would just hate for people to overcorrect in a way that they are so fed up with this diet and that diet.
Because at the end of the day, they still need to make fundamental choices and not be distracted by the next shiny object or be so off put by the diet culture that unfortunately we have all grown up in.
And so that's what I would say to that, you know, as someone who trained in geriatrics.
Okay, so we've covered diet and people who want to go deeper can and should check out your book, The Forever Strong Playbook.
Quick word from eight sleep before we keep going here.
One thing Dr. Lyon mentions as being super important for muscles is recovery.
You can train hard.
You can eat all the protein you need.
You can do everything right in the gym.
but if you're not recovering, you're not going to truly get stronger.
And the place recovery really happens is in deep sleep.
Your core body temperature really needs to drop in order to enter deep sleep.
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Okay, let's talk training.
You said something before about 150 minutes a week.
I'm not good at math, but I think that's like 30 minutes, five days a week.
I have no problem with that I exercise six to seven days a week for an hour,
which I know to many people listening is going to make.
me incredibly annoying. However, to those people who are annoyed by what I just said and have trouble
getting themselves to the gym, what's the minimum effective dose and what should we be doing?
I don't think you're going to like my answer. I don't think you're going to like it,
but I don't want to be your most unpopular guest. What is the number one reason why you would say
people are not getting in 30 minutes a day? What's the number one reason?
lack of time slash it's hard to form habits.
The lack of time is the thing that I hear.
I want to just frame this up.
Again, I'm not trying to be your most unpopular guest ever.
But if you don't have time for 30 minutes a day,
how on earth are you going to have time for sickness?
If you don't have time for 30 minutes a day of exercise,
you think that you're going to save time when you're,
sick. And that is an absolute understanding that people have to recognize that there is no,
there's no shortcut here. If you think you don't have time for Xeroids, how the heck you can have
time for being sick? So they have to understand that. The minimum effective dose is typically
set as those ECSM guidelines. That's the minimum to make you not worse than yesterday.
Okay. What I cover in the playbook and what I think is really valuable is a three,
day a week resistance training program. And again, people will argue, no, you want to cardiovascular activity.
I think that walking is an exercise. Walking is part of your life. I want you to walk.
Human beings, if an individual is sedentary, that is a disease state in and of itself.
Being sedentary is a disease state. So, three days a week of resistance training,
and the less you train, the more full body it needs to be.
Again, I have put a very straightforward plan in my playbook to just address this.
Also, there's a million plans out there.
There's no one right plan.
It's how do we think about the foundations?
We know that you need 30 to 50 grams of protein in the morning or at that first meal.
Secondarily, you have to move your body.
You have to challenge it.
I don't care how you get there, but you have to do it.
Could it be a dumbbell program?
could you go to the local gym and use machines? Yes and yes. As long as you are doing and creating
a movement lexicon for your life, if you're running, you should be able to do overhead,
overhead extension. You should be able to squat and move and sit on the floor and get up off the
floor. These are all basic things. To do that, I would say three times a week of some type of
resistance training. Again, there's a whole continuum, a million different programs,
but you've got to, you have to add resistance.
And you can start with bands.
If you just want to do bands at home, I'm okay with it.
You do have to figure out ways to create progressive stimulus, not progressive overload.
It doesn't just have to be heavier.
It has to increase in the challenge.
Could be more reps, could be slower tempo, could be extra exercise.
Progressive stimulus.
How do we operationalize that concept?
Yeah.
make it harder.
Pick your poison, pick your challenge, don't care how you do it, it's got to be harder.
If you are someone who goes into the gym and does the exact same thing every day or three days a week,
you know, Dan, I'm sure that you've, where are you located, by the way?
Is it top secret?
No, it's not top secret.
I'm about an hour north of New York City.
Okay.
Hour north of New York City, I've been there.
Is that, either you've lots of gyms or are you kind of in, you know, I've been upstate New York.
They have like one gym every 10 miles.
or 20 miles.
I'm privileged enough to have a gym in my house.
Okay, fine.
So then you have no excuse.
And no, you don't go down there
and see the same person on the treadmill every day
unless it's you.
But imagine when you would go to the gym
and let's see you're in New York City
for the same people, oh, hey, a high five,
what's up?
And their bodies, they look exactly the same.
A year goes by, they still look exactly the same.
Well, that's not enough stimulus.
You must add a stimulus.
that is varying in degrees of difficulty or challenge. And by the way, first of all,
remember we open up this conversation and I was very graphic about the difference between a
wago and a filet. And that's what your muscle looks like. The simple act of doing resistance training
improves muscle quality, decreases that fat that infiltrates into that tissue,
regardless of your body composition changes or not. So I want to be very clear. I don't want to,
I don't want people to feel like, okay, well, what I'm doing is not enough. Well, I'm glad that you're doing something. And I think that we have to hold ourselves to higher standards that if we become complacent and we just accept that going to the gym and walking on the treadmill three days a week or four days a week is enough, frankly, it's not. During your 20s, it's okay. But it doesn't have to be heavier weights. There are a handful of ways to make things more challenging, whether that is slow to
down the tempo, speed up the tempo, change the exercise, change the volume.
It's not just lifting heavier. And that's what progressive stimulus is, changing the input
to change the output.
Three days a week of resistance training, where does cardio fit into this?
The pain of my existence? No, just kidding.
Cardo's great. Really, the question is, how do you want to do it? And the recommendation
is some kind of, is 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity a week or 150 minutes of
moderate to vigorous activity 30 minutes a day.
Cardiovascular activity, and I actually covered this on my podcast, and I had one of
the world-leading experts on high-intensity interval training.
And his name is Martin Gabala.
He's at McMaster University.
He's like the OGM space.
And here's what he would say.
The number one thing that I hear, and that we all hear, is time.
You can get a robust cardiovascular activity, cardiovascular training when you do high-intensity
interval training.
In fact, one could argue four minutes, four minutes a day, or four minutes depending on your
all-out effort, or ten minutes a day.
The more intense it is, again, it's, you want to think about it in a week span, but the more
intensity is, the less you need. You could easily do walk, you know, walk around and talk, walk kind of
quickly, keep your breath under control, do that 30 minutes a day, great. Or you could really push
yourself and do a high intensity interval training. I like adding that in two days a week.
And that will also improve your VOTOMax. Again, we're talking about the action, but what we really
want is the outcome. We talk about protein, but I don't care about protein. I care about the muscle.
We talk about resistance training, but it doesn't really matter how you get to the end point of healthy muscle.
It just matters that you do it.
And then when we think about cardiovascular activity, could you be someone who does zone two cardio every day, totally?
You can. Will you improve your VO2 max? Yes, will you improve your cardiovascular base? Yes, but it's the overall time and what your end.
goal is. For me, I don't do a ton of zone two cardio. I might do one day a week I do a high
intensity interval day. Two days a week, I might do some kind of lower intensity, maybe three days
a week or two a week. You know, zone two is different for everybody. But that's enough to maintain my
baseline level of fitness. People should be moving every day. Start with resistance training. Again,
this is controversial. Many of my fellow fitness people will say start with a cardiovascular base.
but for me, I want you to have healthy musculature.
And then hopefully it'll be inspired enough to do some kind of cardiovascular activity.
But getting people over the threshold of actually doing resistance training, I think, is the most challenging.
Let's talk about recovery.
You're saying we should be moving our bodies every day.
I'm totally down with that.
I will tell you at age 54, I tend to get hurt more easily.
So what's the role of recovery in all of this?
Did you train when you were younger?
Have you been like a lifelong athlete?
I mean, athlete would be a little grand to describe me.
But I have, yeah, I'd say maybe fell off a little bit in my 20s,
but starting in my 30s all the way for the last 25 years, very, very avid.
And then, you know, in your 20s, you wake up and you can just go run.
You're not having to roll your wrist and like your hip.
It's a whole thing.
And then all of a sudden, right, it happened to me.
You just wake up and you're like, I'm 40 and now I got to do this whole mobility program.
When you're young, it just seems as if we have this flow, right?
That recovery doesn't seem as important.
Arguably depends on the level of the athlete, but maybe it's less important.
But as we age, we have to recognize that our joints and our joints and our muscles,
tendons have to keep up with our muscle health and strength. And oftentimes our muscles outpace our
ability of our joints and our tendons and this other fibrous tissue to keep up. So when I think about
recovery, I don't think of a warm bubble bath. I think of moving. I think of active recovery. I think
of walking. As we talked about walking, recovery is simply allowing your body to downshift.
sleep is important, dietary protein. Again, active recovery is allowing your muscle roots to get a bit of rest because you don't grow in the act of doing the activity. You don't grow bigger muscles while you're lifting. You grow bigger muscles while you're resting. And that's how I think about active recovery. And then there's a handful of tools and things that I love to use. I love a cold punch. I love a hot sauna. I love a good Netflix with my feet up. I love a lot of outside.
I think we're going to start to see more and more the impact of our environment on our ability to recover and our central nervous system.
And I would say that the harder the training, the more robust the recovery.
Recovery is not the following.
After a soul cycle or after pelotonin, it's not a massive carbohydrate smoothie.
That is not recovery.
If we don't have access to a cold plunge, how does a cold shower strike you?
I'm good with it. I'm good with it. It could be cold, get it on the back of the neck again. I want to be clear. The data on a cold plunge, why do I like a cold plunge? It reduces inflammation, helps me be less sore. You could definitely fill up a bathtub in cold water. It doesn't have to be super cold. It could be 54 degrees. That's not super freezing. It doesn't have to be 39. Put some ice in it if you want. It feels really good if you are a woman.
in menopause or carrying menopause, maybe you're having hot flashes. This is something that
one could utilize. It doesn't have to be a cold punch. Most of us have bathtubs. If you don't
have a bathtub, you can face plunge. The question is, how are you using it? For me, I use it
for mental resilience. Nothing gets me out of a mood or a state. You cannot think of anything else
when you dunk yourself into a book. You just cannot. If I'm having the worst day, the second I
immerse myself in a cold, but I don't even remember what time it is. I couldn't even tell you what
month it is. It is so cold that for that moment, it completely interrupts whatever repetitive thought,
whatever is happening. There is a moment of interrupt. You know, there is some, um,
Victor Frankl, I'm sure you read the book, Mansearch for Meaning. And he talks about the stimulus
and the response. The cold plunge creates just enough stimulus for you then to pause and
choose a response. And I have found that to be true. Again, your question is, could a cold shower work?
Yes. Could also cold bath work? Yes. Could you also get a trash bin and fill it up and put ice in it? Yes.
Where there is a will, there is a way to execute.
Final thing I want to ask you about, we kind of did this and asked backwards because the playbook
starts really with how to think before moving on to eating exercise and recovery. People, again,
can go check out the playbook, but there's one aspect of the how to think part that I want to get
you to talk about. And it really does relate to the cold plunge. And it's something, this is a breadcom
on picking up from earlier in our discussion, where we talked about friction. Modern life
has reduced the amount of friction in our lives. Like we can swipe for a date, for,
groceries for food, all of human knowledge. We therefore don't have to work as hard as we used to
for this stuff. And your argument is that we need friction. So can you hold forth on that?
We live in a culture where we're constantly trying to remove the hard thing. And we shouldn't.
We will thrive on it. And there's all sorts of ways to add friction. People just think of physical
friction, of doing the physically hard thing. I'll give you an example of friction. My husband, who is
in the Navy is now a surgical resident. He is training to be a urologist and he runs to work every day,
which is super annoying because he has to wake up very early and the worst of weather it is,
the earlier it has to get up. And he said to me, I was like, honey, can you please just drive to
work? Just, just, it is thunderstorming outside to do my driving uses.
Honey, what kind of man would I be if I only lived up to my state?
standards when it was convenient. And I thought to myself, hmm, that's pretty cool. And then the second
thought was get the heck out of the room because it's way too early and I need to go back to red.
So, and I say that because it's just an example, a real life example of adding friction.
There are a million different ways to reduce it. But it's this idea of setting standards.
And we always think about the physical nature of the friction of doing the hard things. But doing the hard thing, but doing the hard thing,
can come in the bucket of emotional. It can come in the bucket of social. It could come in the bucket of
our own personal discomfort. Friction could be as simple as flipping a coin. Heads you get that Starbucks,
tails you don't. I am someone who loves to listen to loud music, rock out, have my amino acids,
have some creatine, and just hype myself up for the gym. I flip a coin. Heads, I get that loud
music and tails I don't. It's really annoying the first five times that unfortunately I have flipped
the coin where I don't get to actually get the loud music. And then after a while, I have to move on to
something that is more friction generating because I've mastered that. Sometimes it's having the
hard conversation and I do think that you should pick one domain of friction every single day
and challenge yourself. It's really uncomfortable. For example, I'll give you,
I hate social media.
I don't want to force myself to go on social media.
That's just a little level of friction or call and have a difficult conversation.
The idea ripping the band-aid off.
There's a whole host of ways of generating friction, holding eye contact that you don't want to.
Or again, doing things that are intentionally uncomfortable, but not just the standard of, you know, putting yourself on a social media detox or,
you know, doing something physically hard. There's a million different ways, not entertaining all of our
wants, not entertaining the ability. Give yourself a friction challenge. Don't use a microwave or any
type of packaged food for a week. That's annoying. You can't have your oatmeal. You don't get to go
into the container of almonds. You have to eat the almond or mash it yourself. And in the book,
I outline ways to add in friction. And I think it just ends up pushing us to a
a higher standard. Well, this has been an education, and I think you've pushed us all to a higher
standard here. Dr. Gabrielle Lyon is the author of Forever Strong, a new science-based strategy for aging well,
and then more recently, the Forever Strong playbook. What's your website so that people know if they want
to go get more information from you? Well, first of all, I didn't call it marginally weak, right?
I could have written a book that was the opposite of Forever Strong and be like marginally weak,
and then maybe the conversation would have been totally different.
The reality is muscle and protein is just the Trojan horse for what I believe can call people
to a higher version of themselves.
And so I just want to leave that on the table that it's just the Trojan horse.
It's just the way it's the entry point.
And now I'll tell you my website.
If they haven't already turned me off like this crazy lady, it's Dr. Gabriel Lyon.com.
We have a medical practice that's all telemedicine.
strong medical. I have a podcast where we interview MDs and PhDs and have very transparent
conversations on the science and emerging science. I have a great newsletter. And yeah, social media
on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok, you name it. Dr. Lyme, thank you very much for your time.
Great to talk to you. Sir, thank you so much for having me.
Thank you so much for listening to or watching the show. And thank you so.
so much to everybody who works so hard to make this show a reality.
10% Happy is produced by Tara Anderson and Eleanor Vassili.
Our recording and engineering is handled by the great folks over at Pod People.
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