The Bossticks - Dr. Will Cole On Managing Inflammation, Gut Health, Your Nervous System, & The Right Diet For You
Episode Date: March 20, 2023#553: Today we're welcoming back to the show, Dr. Will Cole. Dr. Will Cole is a leading functional medicine expert who specializes in clinically investigating underlying factors of chronic disease and... customizing a functional medicine approach for thyroid issues, autoimmune conditions, hormonal imbalances, digestive disorders, and more. Today we sit down to talk about his newest book, Gut Feelings, he provides tangible tips for you to better your health long term & we discuss how fixing your health is not as complicated as people make it seem. To connect with Dr. WIll Cole click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential This episode is brought to you by AG1 AG1 is way more than greens. It's all of your key multi-vitamins, minerals, pre-and probiotics, and more, working together as one. Go to athleticgreens.com/SKINNY to get a free 1 year supply of vitamin D and 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. This episode is brought to you by Arrae Arrae's product line is comprised of three products, Bloat, Calm, & Sleep alchemy capsules to help solve everyday problems that women constantly deal with. Use code SKINNY at arrae.com to get 15% off your first purchase + a free Sleep Mini. This episode is brought to you by Boll & Branch Boll & Branch uses the highest quality threads on earth. Their sheets are made from slow-grown organic cotton for a superior softness and a better night's sleep. Go to bollandbranch.com and use code SKINNY at checkout to get 15% off your order. This episode is brought to you by Hiya Health Hiya Health fill in the most common gaps in modern children's diet to provide full-body nourishment our kids need with a yummy taste they love. Go to hiyahealth.com/skinny to receive 50% off your first order. This episode is brought to you by Timeline Nutrition Maintaining muscle health is critically important to longevity and enduring good health & clinical studies have shown that 500mg of Urolithin A alone significantly increase muscle strength & endurance with no other change in lifestyle. Head to Timelinenutrition.com/SKINNY and use code SKINNY at checkout to get 10% off your order of Mitopure now. This episode is brought to you by Perfect Snacks Made with freshly-ground nut butter, organic honey and 20 organic superfoods, Perfect Bar has a variety of products that are good to eat and good for you. Go to perfectsnacks.com/skinny to learn how you can receive a perfect bar for free. Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a dear media production.
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She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire. Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur. A very smart
cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness. Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her.
A big part when I wrote Got Feelings. It's that orthodox.
orthorexic spectrum that I think is a problem within wellness. It's like more is always better and I just
and it ends up being antithetical to what I want from my patients who's actually enjoying their life. It's just such a source
of obsession and dread, which is a massive problem. Look, if those tools like all the biohacking stuff,
if they serve you and you enjoy doing them and they they improve your quality of life, then wonderful.
To me, I don't have to do all the things because I just, I feel great doing what I'm doing. I don't need more tools.
Welcome back, everybody. Welcome back to the skinny confidential him and her show. Today we have our friend, Dr. Will Cole back on the show. Can't tell if this is this third, second, fourth. She's been on a few times. He's also in the Dear Media Network and family. So I just feel like I talk to him and see him all the time. So I just can't exactly remember how many times he's been on. But he's definitely been on before. And today we're jumping into all sorts of different topics. Benefits of cold plunge, how your body reacts in fight or flight, how your nervous system works, how your gut health is connected to chronic inflammation, what causes inflammation.
how to find a diet that works for you, vitamins, minerals, you name it all. We got it all here.
It's a jam-packed episode. For those of you that are unfamiliar with Dr. Will Cole, Dr. Cole,
Dr. Cole is a leading functional medicine expert who specializes in clinically investigating
underlying factors of chronic disease in customizing a functional medicine approach for thyroid
issues, autoimmune conditions, hormonal imbalance, digestive disorders, and more. Bam, I said that
all in one line without having to skip a beat. Wow, I'm good. Today, we sit down and talk about his
Newest book, Got Feelings, where he provides tangible tips for you to better your health
long term.
And we discuss how fixing your health is not as complicated as people may make it seem.
With that, Dr. Will, my friend, welcome back to the skinny confidential, him and her show.
This is the skinny confidential, him and her.
Dr. Will cold.
No, we were talking about right before this started, the cold, bolt setup, why you're thinking
about getting one.
Yeah, because I recommend these to patients, but I've never like cold, plunge therapy and alternating
cold and heat.
because we're dealing a lot with people that have different inflammatory problems, hypervigilant nervous systems.
So it's completely clinically relevant for people who are looking to deal with inflammation,
dealing with fatigue issues and sleep problems.
I don't really have those problems, but I'm looking to optimize it.
I do the cold shower myself and I have a sauna.
I have been for insana.
But I really want the proper rotation of it.
But you like yours, right?
Yeah, yeah.
I wasn't going to start with this conversation, but I think it's good.
I did it this morning.
We do it at least three times a week where we do the all the,
alternating cold in sauna. And we have an infrared as well, which I love, but I use the barrel
sauna different than I use the infrared. Like the infrared, I go in there, I relax, I read.
I feel it's like detoxification. It's kind of like, I mean, you would know maybe hormone
bounce, all that. Like the barrel, I got to find Jesus in there. I'm like, what's going on?
Is it more intense? Yeah, it's more intense. And I like to use it with the cold contrast. And the one
that we use is blue cube, which I like a lot. Yeah. I'm going to connect with them. Yeah, I'll
I'll put you on text with the guy.
He's,
yeah,
they're rad.
I think what I like about that one is it keeps the water moving.
So,
so you know,
like people get in the cold and they sit there and they like hold themselves like this.
Yeah.
You build that thermal layer so it's not as hard.
This one like,
again,
you got to find Jesus in a different way,
right?
It's just like it feels like you're in a running river.
If you're going to get one outside,
I think Blue Cube is the move because it's wooden.
It's grounding.
Like Michael said,
it moves.
And if you're going to go inside and you want something sleek and
chic. There's one called the cold plunge. Yeah, it's the white. Right. It just depends your aesthetic,
I think. Yeah. Yeah, I know some of the, I know those guys. I've talked to them before.
But yeah, it's, I think, no matter, these are great tools. I think, especially for people that have
like honed in the food stuff and the supplementation. And I think these are therapies that can be
massive needle movers for people. So when you talked, I mean, we've talked about how we do it,
but from a, from a doctor's standpoint, what do you think the main benefits of, of,
each of them are, maybe independently and then use together. Because that's how I did it today.
I use them together. But sometimes we'll do just the sauna or just the cold. Yeah. I, I, I'd
just say this. The sauna therapies in sweating, we definitely, I would say, use more for our patients
because we're dealing with a lot of people that have mold toxicity, mycotoxin. They have chronic
Lyme disease. They have things like lysate in their body, environmental toxins. So sweating and other
ways to support their detox pathways is a smart thing for our patients. But part of that for a lot of
people is a dysregulated nervous system. They're stuck in that sympathetic, fight or flight, stressed state.
Both sauna and cold therapy, cold plunges, cryotherapy, things like that, they're hormetic effects.
Hormesis. It's like a good stress, which makes our body, our cells, our nervous system,
inflammation levels, the immune system more resilient and more balance. So it can modulate things
in a positive way for people that are stuck in that stress state. And I mean, vasodilation, vaso-constriction,
increasing BDNF, allowing your brain to make new neurons when you're putting it in that
hormetic state. I notice postpartum with my first compared to my second is completely different.
And there's three things that I've really been doing that I think are so different. And that is
cold plunging. I notice, I swear, this is so crazy. When I get out of that cold punch, it balances my
hormones. I can feel it. Is that wild? Yeah, well, yeah. When you're when you're shifting your nervous
system, a lot of hormone imbalances are brain-based. It's the hypophlamic pituitary adrenal axis,
thyroid axis, ovarian axis. So it's, I could see it. You noticing that intuitively is
shifting your body into more of a parismpathetic state, which is the rest, digest, hormone,
balance state. I immediately notice it. And then I'm eating a bunch more meat, which I want to get
into with you. And I also feel like weightlifting has really helped with this postpartum experience
compared to the first one where I had a, it was a train wreck disaster basically with with postpartum
depression and anxiety. Do you notice that with postpartum people saying that with meat,
with the cold plunge with weightlifting? Yeah, absolutely. These are all tools to support homeostasis,
right? Bringing back balance, whether it's nutrient density from foods and foods that
provide your body the raw materials it needs to break make new neurons make make proper hormonal
health or it's a tool like cryotherapy so it's and it's this stuff that still i i i'm in my own
little wellness bubble i don't realize how much of the population they don't know they actually
have tools that are accessible for most people i mean if you if you can't afford the cold plunge
itself don't have the space for it i mean a cold shower will do a lot for your nervous system
and mentioned red meat.
I mean, these are all things that people have access to or most people do.
Outside of the health benefits you describe, the reason I like both of them so much is,
you know, we were talking about this previously on the episode with Lisa.
I think people really like, they do everything they can to find as much comfort in life as possible, right?
It's like the whole, our whole human existence is about being comfortable.
How do I find comfort?
And I think that that could be a real trap for many people because it can be.
make you complacent a lot of ways. It could get, you know, it could put you in a position where
you're set up for failure when uncomfortable things inevitably happen or when something goes wrong in life.
And what I like about the cold is it is so miserable, especially right now in the winter, right?
Like today I went in, it was 39 degrees outside. When I went in, there's no sun. You're like,
God damn, it's going to, this is going to suck. But you go in there and you realize, like, okay,
if you can do that and you've made yourself that uncomfortable in the morning, the rest of your day
as you go and accomplish you, it's a contrast and it shows. And the same thing.
the sauna, it gets so hot and you're sweating so much and all you're wanting to do is get out.
And it's like, okay, if you can do those two things to set up your day, I just feel like from a
mindset perspective, it's so powerful. Yeah, and it is. I think that that is, and to mention
my latest books on that, gut feelings, it's the physiological and the psychological. So that's a
great example. I talk about cold therapy, son therapy, in that book as a tool to not just get
the physiological benefits of it, which is it's modulating the nervous system, the immune system,
in a positive way. But on a psychological level, you almost use it as a meditative practice of
gaining resilience, which I do feel like so many people are fragile for a lack of it because
we're not really, many of us aren't kind of exposed to things that are very, very difficult.
I know that there's certainly exceptions to that. But I think as a general, if you look at the
totality of human history, I guess, using that as your backdrop, we live in a very comfy life.
Yeah. And to your point about meditation,
I think meditation is necessary and it's something that people do to kind of put themselves
in a relaxed state, right? You're not relaxed in any of these things we're talking about.
It's a different type of meditation. It's like, okay, I'm going to go get really uncomfortable and be
really miserable. You know, meditation. You sit there. You're in a warm place.
This is different. It's a different kind of meditation, but it almost gives you the same kind of mental
benefits. Yeah. It's uncomfortable. Exactly. It's uncomfortable, but it really anchors you in the
present moment, doesn't it? When you're freezing your ass off, you're not really,
thinking about the things in the past and the future. You're really anchored in your body.
And I think that is that that state that can really shift things, not just in a physiological level,
but a mental, emotional, spiritual level. There was a Netflix documentary recently. It's called
the Human Playground. Have you guys watched that? No. Idris Alba was the voiceover, the narrator of it.
And it was this woman that she carved the ice out of some Nordic country, I think it was,
and would jump in and actually dive underneath these glaciers.
And she did it for the same thing.
Of what I see on a micro level,
so many people are doing from a therapeutic biohacking wellness tool,
this woman was saying how it really changed your life.
She was suicidal.
She went through sexual trauma and how this sort of getting in the cold
and kind of almost in a way on a micro level facing death,
like being uncomfortable kind of got her out of her own head and in her body,
which I think is a good for a lot of people.
I mean, getting cold is a really good way to shock your system.
Yeah.
When you have your practice, what's the main thing that you're seeing people come to you for?
I see it as, I mean, when we run labs and I know the mechanisms, it's different states of inflammation.
And that manifests in different ways for different people, depending on where you're looking at.
But it's different autoimmune inflammation issue.
So there's over 100 different autoimmune diseases that we know today.
And there's a 40 different above those up 100 that at least.
have an autoimmune component. So things like Hashimoto's disease, autoimmune thyroid issues,
people that have Crohn's disease, all sort of colitis. Those are some common ones, rheumatrodot
arthritis, chokrin's. Those are diagnosed autoimmune diseases. There's about 50 million Americans
that have that, right? But there are millions more that aren't diagnosable, but there's somewhere
on that spectrum. And researchers estimate it's about four to 10 years prior to that diagnosis
when things were kind of brewing on that inflammation spectrum.
So it could be diagnosed or they could deal with things like fatigue.
I have fatigue.
I have brain fog.
I have anxiety.
And they tell me with things like, I don't have anything to be anxious about.
But I'm like always anxious.
And they'll use the phrase like wired and tired.
I'm anxious but exhausted.
But it's different manifestations of chronic inflammation.
That's the people that I see.
Are you seeing people that have implants inflamed a lot?
I'm hearing more and more about that.
Yeah, so that's a factor for some people, certainly people that have autoimmunity, that have
different methylation gene variants. You'll see in a lot of the breast implant illness community,
the connection between and the correlation between different MTHR gene variants, which are genes
that make enzymes that help facilitate something called methylation, which you need for detoxing
and regulating of inflammation, one specifically this homocysteine inflammatory marker.
Those people, plus another set of gene variants.
that are called HLA gene variants.
So there's something there that a lot of people will tell you when they got the explant,
it really was a tool within their toolbox for many people because it's a source of inflammation
for some people's immune system.
So that's the sort of the bucket analogy, right?
Some people have massive buckets, some people have smaller buckets.
That's your genetic tolerance for stressors.
So it's not just about the implants, but it's food, it's toxins, it's stress, it's trauma.
and implants can be the tipping point for some people.
And they'll know ever since I got the implant,
it's never been the same.
And those people, an ex-plan, can be a tool in the right direction.
Are you seeing a lot of ex-plants?
Yeah.
And it's obviously not someone, a surgeon that is on board with it for health reasons,
it's not every surgeon.
So there are definitely certain doctors throughout the country
that are seeing this more and more,
and they really specialize in it.
So yes, it's a part of some of my patient's journey.
Is inflammation coming from our gut? Where is it coming from? Yeah, it's 75% of our immune systems in our gut. So inflammation's a product of that. So it's a massive component of the gut-centric components to it. But it's what's driving the inflammation is really my job. Is it something physiological, like an underlying gut problem, like leaky gut syndrome. Is it a food sensitivity? Is it a nutrient deficiency? Or is it something that's something that's,
psychological, like on a mental, emotional, spiritual level that's driving inflammation levels
and impacting your physical? What would that be? Would that be like being overly stressed?
Chronic stress. Yeah, chronic stress, unresolved trauma. Just, yeah, low-grade, like, shame around
health and wellness. That can also, stressing about healthy things is going to be a source of
inflammation levels, too. So it can be insidious for some people because it's less prescriptive
to say, you know, it's easy for me to say, well, these foods can raise inflammation, look at
the data. Let's like shift the way you're doing food and supplementation can help for that.
It's a lot more nebulous to say don't stress, right? Don't have shame or don't have trauma.
To unpack that takes a lot more work, but it's important work for people that need to address it.
I also think that a lot of these high cortisol workouts that people are doing for me,
I noticed when I cut those out, I was less inflamed. Like I was, I remember like a couple years ago,
I was doing like these like boot camp type cortisol inducing workouts that are in the dark
with lights everywhere.
Like you're in a club and the teacher's screaming at you.
And the second I cut that out, I noticed less inflammation.
Have you seen that?
Yeah.
And that's where labs can be helpful labs in health history and context.
But it's, I mean, exercise impacts cortisol, especially the more intense, shorter periods of time.
it's that hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis, the benefits of exercise is bouts of cortisol being
increased. But for somebody that's already having a stressed out nervous system, like people
that are postpartum is a good example, right? They're already going through hormonal shifts.
That may be the season that you don't just hit it hard with a hit training. It's like just
maybe something more restorative or something a little bit lower and slower can be, you know,
meeting your body where it's at and have sort of that mindful of place.
approach and pivot and not see it as failure, but see as just where you're at right now and serving
your body. What about parasites? I'm seeing more and more. I've been on Twitter lately running around
on there and I see this topic trending, but I'm reading and they could be completely wrong and
you may say that's not true, these horror stories about people that basically identify parasites in the
gut and then have the task of trying to get that parasite removed. I don't know if you see any of this
or if this is just total like myths. No, it happens for some people. I'm glad people are having
conversations around this because I think gut health as a whole is vastly under-talked about.
So labs would show us, there's no perfect labs of this, especially when you're looking at
one stool sample, one snapshot in time, you can miss things like parasites, like you can miss
bacterial overgrowth or anything else like that, used in fungal overgrowth.
But it's interesting that people are having this conversation.
I think sometimes the parasite conversation can happen around some antiparicitic, some
herbal thing that they're selling online that's like clearing it.
I look people there's the vast majority of people have some sort of gut health problem so the fact that
people are talking about these and finding things doesn't surprise me I would say parasites aren't
the top of my list of things that I see on labs sometimes and this is like kind of nasty maybe for some
people but they will have like mucus production because there's so much inflammation in their gut
so sometimes when they go into the bathroom what they think is a parasite is actually mucus production
because there's so much inflammation.
What does mucus produce?
I don't know.
What does mucus in your shit look like?
I'm actually curious.
Looks like you what one would think is like a worm.
It's like a gelatinous type of worm like thing.
I'm not saying people don't have parasites.
I'm saying sometimes people can get confused.
Like I just saw this thing in the toilet.
It's a parasite.
But it's like it's actually mucus production.
Okay.
So say someone has mucus in their shit.
Yeah.
What do you do about it?
What a medical way to say that.
That's the technical.
Hold on.
way to say it. Like what's the right way to say? It's not that. How do you say it, Dr. Well?
I mean, mucus in the stool. Mewkis in the stool. Excuse me, Michael. Yeah. And just sometimes when you say
things, it just hit, it feels like a punch in the face. But you know what? That's why I do what I do,
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So when you say environmental toxin, are you talking about cleaning supplies?
Are you talking about detergent?
I, for so long, kept getting this rash on my legs.
And I was like, what is going on?
And it was every time I would travel to a hotel.
And it was because I must have been allergic to the detergent,
that they were using in their sheets.
Is that what you're talking about when you say that?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's the products that people are using on their skin, cleaning their home.
Yeah, it's all of that.
And we can quantify the most common ones, not all of them,
but we can quantify a lot of them that we would expect to see on test,
blood tests, urine tests, or kind of see,
is it accumulated in the body,
things that are found in things like herbicides and insecticides,
in cleaning products, and things that people don't think about,
but can be accumulated over time.
And some people have the smaller buckets to use that analogy again.
And it's hit that tipping point.
And it's creating inflammation levels in their body.
My opinion, I'm not a doctor.
But I think that cleaning supplies are the new Roundup.
You know, Roundup?
Yeah, round up they found after people were in it all the time back in the day, like 40 years ago.
Yeah.
They found all these things that were so cancerous in it.
Now they're all talking about it.
And you see those commercials.
It's like, if you have, da, da, da, da, da, da, da.
call this number, I think that cleaning supplies are the next roundup.
I hope that people realize that because you should be a doctor, Lauren.
You should, you should.
Oh, John, I'm never to hear the end of this.
Let's join the leg.
Maybe team up.
Laura can walk into to see you on your patients.
Listen, your shit has mucus.
Michael, let him continue about how I should be a doctor.
Go on.
I agree with you.
And it's glyphosate's still high in a lot of people too, especially maybe this is
controversial, but I see people that are more plant-based that try to do the right thing
and are eating better than most Americans are. So there's no shade on that. But it's the messed-up
food supply that we have that I'm measuring glyphosate at high levels in these people's
coming out in their urine. But same with environmental toxins found in cleaning products, too.
Well, they've been talking about plant-based. Like, again, this is controversial, but
I don't get why this. Well, no, because people get all riled up if you attack any kind of plant-based
diet. But I think people don't realize some of the plant supply is not nearly as clean as they believe
it to be. Right? They think, oh, I'm doing good because I'm eating a bushel of kale every week.
Like, I won't touch kale with a 10-foot pole. I don't, I think that, look, all the shit they spray
all over that stuff, right? Here's what I'll also say. There's a big kale community, though.
I started really, really eating a lot of red meat. A lot of red meat. We talked, but hold on this.
We talked, one time we went on the show and we were talking about how, like, I don't believe
that kale is the, is the most optimal leafy green. People got really upset. Like, it's not
a doctor shouldn't be bashing kale, but there's no discussion about the way that they're
farming all this stuff and all the stuff that goes on to these plants. Oftentimes, when you're talking
about plant foods, it's what we've done to it, and that's why sourcing's good. But, you know,
you don't really know what the farm next to you's going to be doing as well. So there's a lot of,
when you're looking at soil and water and the impact that our food has, on top of the fact that
kale specifically, we're talking about kale, it's high in oxalids. It's not necessarily the best
It's used as this sort of epitomization of the healthy screen.
You can cook it and it breaks some of that down.
So if you want to have your kale, just look at preparing it properly.
It's a pain in the ass.
It sounds good for your thyroid either.
Yeah, I mean, excess level.
I mean, that's the oxalids.
I have, I'm just saying I've been told to stay away from it because of my thyroid.
I've been eating so much meat lately, so much red meat.
And my hair has never been thicker and I have so much more energy.
And I feel so much better.
Do you hear that a lot?
I mean, it's, it's a con.
conversation because we get a lot of born plant-based people. It's like, okay, what are you willing
to do, meet a person where they're at, an optimized nutrient density, but not just nutrient
density, but the bioavailability of the nutrients that you're having. Because you could say
something like kale has lots of nutrients, right? That's wonderful. But how bioavailable are those
nutrients? And that's the thing with red meat and fish and pescatarian options. It's not only
nutrient dense, but it's bioavailable because plant foods have a lot of anti-nutrients, like phytic acid
and lectins that can slow down the use of it.
It basically binds to minerals, making any nutrients that it does have less usable
or even accessible to your body.
What's your perfect day of eating?
Like, let's say you just went to the gym, you worked out.
Do you eat before?
Like, tell us the perfect day.
I want people to find out with sustainable for them.
Okay.
So with my job, with patients, it's the bio-individuality.
I still am curious about you.
Yeah, so for me, I'll talk about me all day.
Thank you.
I want to know what you eat.
Well, I mean, I do the Holy Main every day. You like Holy Main.
I'm obsessed with that. That too, I think really- What the hell is the Holy Main?
No, see, this is what people, this is what happens. I've hit it from you.
It's, it's, it's, it's, it's the blue powder. I know what that is, but I didn't know it's called the Holy
Maine. No, it's a good name. Thanks. It's with Agent Nator.
Okay. No, I know. First of all, huge fan of her brand. I didn't know it was called, I know
the stuff that you're talking about. It's in the blue shiny package.
It was like, you have to try this. And so what I do is I mix it in with my,
greens every morning I put a scoop of my greens and then I scoop the holy main in there.
Yeah.
With a frother.
I do the same thing.
I do athletic greens with with the holy main because it's collagen, pearl in it.
Exactly what I do.
You know what she does?
I should be a doctor.
She hides the good stuff for me.
What's that?
She hides the good stuff.
Where are you hiding it in the house is what I want in.
I'm actually, I'm hiding it.
I'm going to send you a picture of it after this.
It's hidden in our supplement drawer in the back.
I just figure he wouldn't like it because it does like it's not like the most.
masculine looking packaging on the planet. So I thought he would think it was like a beauty thing.
Yeah, yeah. You have like a hidden door that's like behind. You know there's seven grams of protein or seven
grams of protein in that, right? Yeah. Which is amazing, right? It's collagen protein. Yeah. And for someone
that has gut problems, it's one of the most like usable, accessible form of protein. So food,
like I'm in Austin right now. So I've been living at picnic and true food kitchen. I love it. I
I freaking love it, but I don't have that where I live.
So it's just like a treat.
But I'll typically fast until lunch and break my fast with some grass-fed beef, some greens.
Okay, I'm going to ask you details.
When you say fast, the only thing you're doing is water or you're doing the wholly made and athletic greens?
I will, that's not breaking the fast to have the greens and the collagen.
It's not.
Okay.
Because it's, even if you look at the research on fasting, mimicking and the amount of protein
that can have in calories, it's not, if something's not impacting insulin and glucose,
or it's negligibly impacting insulin glucose.
And when you're talking about protein,
and it's not at all.
So that's why people were doing like the butters and the MCTs
because these fats and small amounts of protein are negligible.
But I will typically have mine around lunchtime.
And are you drinking coffee during your fast?
Yes, coffee.
And what I do for my fast is I will just have coffee and tea.
So really keep it as simple as possible.
And the reason why even the collagen is,
if you want to get super granular about this, there's a pathway called mTOR, the mammalian or
mechanistic target of rapamycin, which you technically want to be lower during your fast.
So a lot of the longevity, beauty benefits, the anti-aging benefits of autophagy, you want
to be lower periodically, not all the time because you want to build muscle and be healthy,
but cyclical times of mTOR being low.
So technically speaking, mTOR is sensitive to protein?
So is that one scoop of the collagen protein really going to throw you?
No, it's not. And you could test your ketones and the CGM to see if this is true. But for most people,
it's going to be negligible. So if you enjoy it and if it makes your fast easier, because the greens
powder is going to provide you some fiber, which could actually make your fast quite easier if it
gives you some satiety in that time of fasting. So you break your fast with what you said steak?
Yeah, I mean, it depends. I may have like, like I get the wild planet tuna. Do you ever get the canned tuna from
I eat that every night in bed and Michael makes fun of me.
This is the one I was telling you.
I eat it every night in bed.
He goes, oh, Lauren, you're eating tuna again.
It smells.
No, no, listen.
I eat it every night in bed.
The wild tuna.
I think the tuna is great.
I think eating tuna in the bed is atrocious.
10 p.m. at night.
Yeah.
And by the way, Lauren, I think you're eating too close to bed.
Dr. Will, listen to my tuna recipe.
I take that can that you just said.
And then I do a scoop of chili flake like maca.
I think it's called.
It's like a salsa.
Okay.
It's like chili.
And then I do a little bit of mustard and avocado mayo and it's perfect.
I basically do the same thing like you should be a doctor.
Would you bring that in the bed?
No.
Okay.
No.
My wife would not let me have it in the bed to be honest with you.
I'm in a negligent eating fucking tuna for things.
It is atrocious.
Honestly, it's like.
Smells up the whole bedroom.
It is.
The dogs are crying.
Well, say, hey, you want to hook up?
I'm like, not anymore.
The wolves are howling outside of coyotes.
But don't you think that she probably shouldn't be eating in bed because don't you want to allow a little time before you sleep?
It's not 10.
It's 8.
But still, you go to bed right after.
Tell me how bad it is you.
So ideally, no shame.
Look, look, if you like it, but ideally from a mechanistic standpoint, allowing, let's just say two to three hours after dinner before you go to bed allows your body to get a better night.
You're basically fasting through the night until the next day.
If you're digesting food in the middle of the night.
So go tell me, you break your fast at 12.
Tell me what you do and then tell me what you're eating throughout the day.
And then when you stop eating, explain.
So I eat enough calories.
I'm eating until satiety within my window.
I'm not super dogmatic about it.
It's a probably six, seven hour eating window, sometimes eight hour eating window.
So I will eat just different sources of protein so that could be wild caught fish,
like we've talked about the tuna, grass fed,
beef, chicken, turkey, something like that, or some plant-based protein. I don't do it so much,
but I'll have some beans occasionally, pressure-cooked beans. And I think prioritizing protein
throughout the day is important when it comes to blood sugar regulation, neurotransmitter health,
and it's definitely important. And then have lots of fruits and vegetables. I don't do lots
of nuts and seeds that don't work well with me digestively. Then I mention healthy fats,
things like avocados and olives, and I love the avocado oil-based mayo. I have lots of
eggs throughout the day too. So it's a combination of that. And I just kind of eat and enjoy the
food during those windows. What time exactly do you stop eating? Seven o'clock, eight o'clock,
yeah. And besides your holy mane and your athletic greens, are you doing other supplements
throughout the day? Oh, yeah. So I'm doing vitamin D3 every day. I'm doing a methylated B vitamin,
which you're getting some of that in the greens, but I have a double MTHFR gene variant, which just means
I need a little bit more support in that avenue.
Do you have a specific B vitamin you like or a specific vitamin?
Yeah, I have my own, but it's a methylated B vitamins.
But we have it at Dr. Boccal.com.
But it's just things that we recommend to patients.
You know, I take a D, a B vitamin complex.
A D3 has the K2 combination, which are two fat-soluble vitamins.
And what else do I do?
Magnesium?
I take a magnesium as well.
Is it from your brand?
Yeah, we have, we have, it's a blend of magnesium,
threanate and glyclicinate. Yeah, it's the magnesium, we call it. So it's, that's basically it.
And the reason being is because those are deficient in most people, B vitamins, vitamin D, magnesium.
It's nothing too crazy. And then occasionally I'll have like a Dapogenic blends when I want to.
I'm not dealing with any active. I'm not super stressed. I'm not like dealing with any sleep issues,
thankfully. So I mainly focus on food and then fill in the gaps with any nutrient deficiency.
So pretty like basic in many ways. And what is your workout schedule?
So I'm a fan of Peloton and I do all of their workouts.
I do like the full body workouts, upper body, lower body, sort of do a circuit with them throughout the week.
So three to four times a week is what I'm doing.
Nothing too crazy.
I should be doing working out more, but I don't.
And what about your sleep schedule just while we're on your schedule?
So I don't go to bed as early as I should.
And I track it on an aura ring and I know that I don't.
But I get home later.
because I'm seeing patients all day long.
So for me, it's like my time to just hang out and chill out, hang out with my family.
But I'm going to bed like 10, 11 o'clock.
That's not too late.
Yeah, it's not so bad.
But I know I could go to bed at 9 and it'd be even better from my body.
And then I wake up at 6 a.m. to 7 a.m.
And do you have a wellness strategy that you do throughout the week?
Or is it just go straight to work?
I have micro moments, nothing big.
I'm not a super biohacker.
I don't really, during the work week, I don't have the time to do it.
I could get up earlier and do it.
But to me, I like the simplicity of just doing things that I know are sustainable.
It's not overwhelming for me.
It's nothing super arduous.
So I get up.
I do some mindfulness and prayer.
We actually do it as a clinic.
We do it together when I get to the clinic.
We do prayer and meditation together.
So I guess that's a morning sort of ritual.
Nothing too much, like 15 minutes that we're doing a practice together.
And then we jump right into the day.
So I'm going over case reviews.
and we are hit the ground running with seeing patients via telehealth.
You know, like what I think, especially like on a lot of these podcasts,
I think sometimes people get overwhelmed because you'll see these people that are like so
into these routines and so into, like they're deep in the wellness, right?
So I imagine when you're starting with patients, like you're not telling them to jump into
the cold plunge right away and get in the sauna and go lift three times weights and eat all that.
You got to kind of like, again, meet people where they are.
And I feel like when I'm listening to you, you don't have to do all these.
kind of, I don't want to say crazy, but you don't have to do all these intense things because
your life is already kind of well-rounded and well-balanced. You're getting the regular workouts
and you're getting the right supplementation. You're eating the right windows. You're doing the
things that the majority of people probably should be doing. But most people have their life so out
of balance where it's like they're not taking care of themselves. They're drinking too much. They're not
exercising all. They're eating the worst kind of foods. They're overstressing themselves and work.
And so it sounds like sometimes when you hear these people, you've got to go to these extremes.
Like, no, you just got to kind of get your life in order somewhat. And they're
you can figure out how extreme you want to be with it after you've got the basis covered.
Exactly. That's exactly how I feel about it. And that's a big part when I wrote gut feelings.
It's that orthorexic spectrum that I think is a problem within wellness. It's like more is always better.
And it ends up being antithetical to what I want from my patients was actually enjoying their life.
It's just such a source of obsession and dread, which is a massive problem. Look, if those tools, like all the biohacking stuff, if they serve you and you enjoy doing them and they improve your quality of
life than wonderful. But to me, I don't have to do all the things because I, you know, I'm,
I just, I feel great doing what I'm doing. I don't need more tools. You know, I feel, I feel the same way
and, you know, my, I think sometimes this intent, like you see these people that are so deep in the
wellness community and I feel they do a disservice of the majority of people a lot of time because
they're too deep, right? Like, you don't need to get in, and you don't need to do all these crazy
things. Like, for me, it's work out three to five days a week, lift some heavy weights.
get in a couple thousand steps as much as you can, maybe do a little bit of cold hot therapy,
eat well, fast the majority of the week, you know, in a decent window, at least 12 hours.
You can get that done. You're in the 1%.
Exactly. And that to me, like all the things you just said are like to my tools within my toolbox.
And if you have a health issue, you may need more tools. But to me, it's like if you don't have it
and then you're just doing, you're right. I think a lot of people are like, dang, I'm so,
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Perfect bar saved our life the other day.
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We are obsessed with the dark chocolate chip peanut butter with sea salt.
I like to do this thing where I like cut it up and even roll it into balls.
I do this with Zaza.
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today. Happy snacking. I also think if you're interested in something, you can start small. And what I mean by
that is if you're interested in the cold punch, people will see the cold punch at our house and they'll
be like, well, I can't do a cold punch. I don't have one. For 10 years, though, I took a
a freezing cold shower for three minutes. Like you said, I hung eucalyptus trees in my shower.
Leaves, not trees, but leaves. Leaves, leaves. Trees would be a total. And I, like, had freezing cold water
cascading over me with the eucalyptus leaf that was $3 for 10 years. And slowly I started
implementing cryotherapy. Yeah. And then now a cold punch. So it doesn't have to be all at once right
away. I think you can just use what you have. I would like to know. When I was a kid, I just did
pushups and sit-ups in my bedroom. That was it. There was nothing.
else. I mean, I would hang on a tree branch and do a couple pull-ups. That was it. There's no, like,
fancy membership. Downward dog butt naked while I'm eating tuna in the bed. I still do that.
I still do that every day. What do you do with your kids? How do you have your kids take on healthy
habits? Because it's not easy. It's not easy. I would say it depends. We as parents, like if we're
decent parents, we know our kids and we know to meet them where they're at. And so I think it depends on
the child that you're talking about in the situation. But make it age appropriate. But I would really
start making it fun. Like making eating healthy fun and not restrictive, get them in the kitchen,
get them involved, get them cutting things when it's appropriate age-wise, get them mixing things
when it's appropriate age-wise. Most of us in the West are kind of divorced from where our food
comes from. A parent told me years ago, they said, I thought that fries came from McDonald's. I didn't
know they came from potatoes. It's like we don't even.
know where our food comes from. It's like always the prepared version. We don't know like the root
of it. So I think getting kids involved, first of all, is important. Second is, I mean, up until when
they're of like 17, 18 years old, we as parents determine what's in the house. So I think make your
home a sanctuary of foods that love us back and focus on not these are things you can't have,
but just say we want foods that make us feel good and focus on feeling good and nourishing yourself
and not about weight and not sort of someone someone on my team told me about the almond mom trend on TikTok.
Michael doesn't know.
It's like apparently, I don't know the origins of it, but basically it's like a mother that you had when you were little that was obsessed with counting calories and would project her own insecurities around food onto you.
So like, say you're the kid and you have the almond mom and you're eating.
Sunday and the almond mom would be like, ooh, do you really want to eat that?
That's 5,000 calories.
I would never eat that, honey.
Right.
And we're like, I'm really hungry.
I'll chew that almond really slowly.
Just like, savor that one almond.
Yeah.
Like don't make, that's not wellness.
That's sort of unhealthy.
But I think just eating nutrient dense foods until satiety,
teaching about sort of mindful eating to not like just eat when you're bored or eat when
you're stressed.
But like what is actual like nutrient density and healthy relationship?
with food. What does that look like? So I think that's the first step, but don't be maniacal.
Like I, my son is super picky. He's 16 years old now and limited on what type of foods he'd eat,
but it was healthy-ish foods because it was in our house. But now I see him at 16 years old.
I'm walking down in the kitchen in the morning. He's mixing himself like a supplement,
adaptogenic blend. The dude's picky. And the fact that he's doing that at 16, I think we as
parents need to plant seeds so later on they can make the decision for themselves to
say, hey, I want to feel good. And he knows when he has that whatever food, that junk food,
he doesn't like the way it makes him feel. So he tends to do less of that. And I want every
person to have that agency for themselves. Or what I call it for patients in the book, I call it food
piece. It's not like diet culture or it's not, and it's not anti-diet culture. It's like,
no, I like feeling great more than I thought I wanted something that's going to make me feel like
shit the next day.
Yeah, I have a tip for moms that, for like a one year old or a two year old, a frother.
They think it's so cool.
Like that thing right there?
Like the chromoth frother.
They, Zaza thinks this chroma frother is so cool.
And so I'll be like, do you want to froth my minerals?
Do you want to froth my holy mien?
Do you want to froth my bone broth?
And when she frost it, she wants to drink it after she frost it because she feels like she
put in work.
I like that.
I swear it works.
But it's like, it also, it's not just.
with wellness, like I think you can work out in front of your children. You could read in front of your
children. You could do, you know, you could take a walk. Like all of these wellness practices. I mean,
you know, for me, I became a big reader. But when I think about my childhood, I would see my dad sitting
on the couch with a book all the time and like that translated because I'm like, oh, I want to kind
to do what he's doing. Or, you know, same thing with a workout. Like, if you're sitting there
and you're not, you know, doing these kind of things and you're expecting your kid to do it,
like they're modeling after you, right? So if you're just sitting on your ass all day along playing
video games and eating shit, like that's what your kid's going to do. Yeah. Lead by
example and that they pick it up. You're absolutely right. In defense of almond moms,
in defense of them, if anyone's listening and they had an almond mom, I think that we need to have
and practice extreme empathy from where they came from. They came from a time when it was pushed
in their face to have fat-free. They came into a time when calorie counting was all the rage.
That's the education that they were brought up on. So I think that instead of like,
like TikTok sometimes it's like
bashes the almond mom. Like I think
we need to like give space to what
they were being fed when they were little.
Absolutely. And I think in many ways it's a good point.
And I think empathy and compassion
and just like self compassion are all great
tools for humanity,
but also for our health. They move
the needle to some degree because I think you could probably
look back and be like they actually improved
things a little bit and hopefully we can do the same.
Yeah, it's social media, right?
We just pile on and it's not
it's we lack
empathy a lot of times. Well, especially if it's a platform, and Lornell gets mad when I talk about
age gaps, but like if it's a platform with a high, high majority of that platform being people
that have not experienced enough of life yet. And I'm not, you know, I'm not just, it's not their
fault. It's like say that a platform is primarily catering to 13 to 22 year old kids. Yeah.
Like those people have not experienced enough of life to develop empathy for older people because
they haven't had it go through any of the difficulty themselves yet. Yeah. Right. And it's just
this echo chamber of stuff. Yeah. So, hey, give the almond mom some love, man. Give the almond.
They didn't have, they didn't have, they didn't happen to both of you know. Now you're going to be
attacked for defending the almond moms. They didn't have got feelings. They didn't have the book.
They didn't have access to everything that we have access to. So give the almond moms a break.
It's like Maya Angela said, right? When you know better, you do better. And many of them just didn't know.
They thought they were doing the best thing. They could. But out of all the podcast episodes that
you've done because you've done a lot. What has been the most popular topic? It's interesting.
People like myth busting. People like to know, okay, give an example, like myth busting about cleanses
or myth busting about fats, myth busting about veganism or plant, like eating meat. So I think that's
part of it. People like that. People love it when I talk about mold toxicity and like healing from
these mystery illnesses that we see a lot clinically. They want to know like what the protocol is,
what supplements they should take, what does healing look like, what labs they should run.
And they want to know about longevity too. So I find that those episodes when we talk about
longevity. I saw you just did a mold topic on coffee. You did a post about coffee and then
molds and you recommended some as you look. How much mold is in in most coffees? I guess the question
that I'm asking you're asked in the wrong way. But you get what I'm good at.
Yeah, I get you saying.
You're going to have, it probably varies.
And that's why I'm always careful with my words of like,
this is most likely to be higher in mold.
But you're going to obviously have to test each brand.
And that's the problem is that if these things aren't being tested,
then you don't know.
So it's like an unknown variable.
So I would just,
that's why I like tend to recommend patients who like coffee,
which I like coffee myself,
to go towards brand.
They're actually looking at this.
Because when you have a crop, like coffee,
just like other foods that can be higher in molds,
like nuts and seeds, you want to be able to know that you're going to a brand that's pure,
not just for mold, but other toxins as well. My patient base are people that are sensitive to
biotoxins. So they have to be a little bit more careful. The average person, maybe they don't
care about a little bit of mold in there. I don't think mold in foods are the primary drivers
of mold toxicity. I think it's a contributing factor for somebody who's already mold sensitive.
What do you think the most contributing factor or the biggest contributing factor to mold toxicity is?
Sick homes. Sick homes. Yeah, homes that are built. Like the way that construction workers have
explained it to me is that homes built today oftentimes can't breathe. Like they used to be able to
breathe. There's a lot of like moisture when it's even built. And it kind of builds mold. It tends to
mold faster today. And we see a lot of new builds that have pervasive amount of toxic mold.
And again, these people without autoimmunity, they don't have the big buckets, the big messenger
us to handle this. Guess what, Dr. Will. I am having.
test my home come out to my house on Monday.
Michael has made fun of me.
No, I'm not making fun of you.
Test my home comes out for nine hours and they check all the bones of the house.
They check outside.
They check for like carbon dioxide leakage.
They check for mold.
They check for new builds, which our house is.
They check for everything.
And then after 10 hours of checking, they give you a checklist.
They give you a huge bill.
And then they say you got to move out of this house.
If everyone doesn't think I should be a doctor after this episode, I don't know what I should say.
the title of the episode.
Lauren's a doctor.
You were like,
we don't need to test our home.
Yes,
we do need to test our home.
I swear to God,
there's a true story.
She does stuff in the neighborhood
was she like one time she smelled gas.
And like somebody told her she had a great nose.
And now stop,
no,
stop.
I'm telling the story.
And now she calls the gas company multiple times a month.
And they come out and they shut down everyone in the neighborhood's gas.
And they're sitting and they haven't found anything.
That's not the story.
Yes, it is the story.
I was outside working one day and I have a nose for gas.
I can smell when there's a speck of leakage.
You're like a hound dog.
A bloodhound.
100%.
So I called the gas company.
They came out and the man came up to me afterwards and he said,
damn, you have a nose.
I wouldn't want to cheat on you.
And he said there was 1% of gas leaking that I smell.
Yes, but so now she's got the orthorexia of gas sensitivity.
And she's calling and shutting down the neighborhood.
Our neighbors are probably like, what is this woman doing?
They're freezing them.
You're freezing them out of their house.
The gas company shows up with a swathing.
team every other week. There is a company, though, called Test My Home. They come out and they test your
home. So if you feel like you have mold, I don't feel like that. I just am interested to talk about it and
share it with other people. You can call them or you can like DM them on Instagram and they come out and
they test your home. Yeah. It's an issue for some people. And look, I talked to a patient the other
week. She was telling me, I was having so much marriage problems. Like I just thought he was horrible and
our life was not in a good place. And then I found out I had mold toxicity, underlying gut problems.
was impacting her mood. And she thought it wasn't him. She realized when she got healthy,
it wasn't him. It was just, she just had so little resilience. So I think how many people
have these underlying issues. They're doing all the things, they're eating clean, but they're still
struggling with things like anxiety and depression. And it's impacting not just their health,
but the health of their family. But I hope there's no mold in your home. I hope so too.
Or no gasoline, no big bills. Praying for that. What is the, so we're talking a lot about gut issues
and gut health, and I know that's what you focus on all the time. What is the commitment?
Like, if I'm somebody and I start working with, you, like, we've identified a gut, like, what is
the commitment of time and energy and healing yourself? Because I feel like this, to your point,
like if you've done something for 20 years to yourself, it's not just going to fix itself overnight.
Yeah. Most people are actively with us for at least four months. And my goal, for many people at
that point are able to get to enough of self-confidence and have enough tools and agency of their
health to do it on their own where they know they feel better, their labs are looking better,
and they may come in one, two, three times a year to get retested on things and we adjust things
accordingly as far as the foods and their other aspects of their protocols. People that are
more further down that inflammation spectrum, they have autoimmunity, they're very sensitive,
they have like things like histamine intolerance and mass cell activation syndrome.
and all these more like gnarly for lack of better words, things.
They're with us for about a year and a half to two years where they're not with me every
day for that long, but every two, three months, we're at a cadence of retesting, checking
in, pivoting, refining, because healing is nonlinear.
These are not quick fix issues.
So it depends on where you're at, like how far, where are you at health wise and where
do you need to go?
And I may have, this may be an ignorant question, but say that I work with you and then I've
healed my gut, how much armor do I now have on that gut? Or how do I have to be, like, once it's
healed, do I have to be so careful, or just like, I could do one thing again and it gets back? Or do
I have a little bit of armor and staying power now to have a healthy gut? My, it depends on that
person's system. Like, how much resilience do they have? And that's back to that bucket analogy.
Like, some people have small buckets. That's genetics, like your tolerance for stressors.
Even when you empty the bucket with a like clear of environmental toxins and glyphosate and
cleaning environmental toxins and mold toxicity and underlying gut problems. You can't change that
bucket size, but you change what you put in it. But those buckets are still small, meaning they can't
pivot much and go off the reservation or they're going to get a flare up. But the reality is
even those people that we clear things out, they still know their north. They still know how much
wiggle room they have and they have a lot more resilience than when they started. So it depends on
the person's own resilience and what they can quote unquote get away with. But they don't even
see it like that because they feel great. They really don't really need to pivot much because they just
feel fantastic. They appreciate life because they're not struggling with these health issues.
So they don't really have much of a desire to go for things that don't love them back because
it's just like this deep sort of respect, I think, and honored for what they've built for themselves.
I have a confession to make.
I was supposed to do labs with you the first time you came on the podcast, but I'm so scared
of needles.
Hey, what do I do?
No shame.
I'm so scared of needles.
I'm like so scared of needles.
Is there anything else I can do?
Yeah, you could do, it depends on what we're testing for.
Yeah.
You could do stool test, which you did stool test.
You could do urine, saliva test.
There's other tests out there.
And we have patients that are really, really afraid of blood, and we find, we'll do,
other, we'll test other things. We'll get the data we can get. So whenever you're ready,
just let me know. I'm ready, I think. Okay. I'm going to do my blood work again soon and I'll,
and I'll send you. Yeah. I'm ready. Your new book, what can everyone expect? Where can everyone
find it? What, what tangible takeaways are they going to get out of this book? So it's called
gut feelings and it's a lot of the things. This is your second or third? This is my fourth book.
Fourth book. Thank you for having me on. You've had me on the first, yeah, past three other than
Ketotarian, I think. But yeah, this is my fourth book, which is crazy. I hope that we knew each other at
ketotarian, but I would have. Yeah, thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Now, but I appreciate your
support. And even me being part of the Dear Media family for the podcast, I love it. I just love being a part of
this group. So it's called gut feelings. The subtitle is healing, the shame-fueled relationship between
what you eat and how you feel. So it's really talking about how in the West we like to separate
mental health from physical health. But the fact is mental health is physical health. And all these
things we've talked about, like environmental toxins and mold toxicity and underlying gut problems,
those things are going to impact how you feel. They're going to impact things like anxiety and
depression and fatigue. But then also, that's why it's called gut feelings. It's the gut and the
feelings, the physiological and the psychological, the mental, emotional, spiritual stuff like stress
and trauma and that science around intergenerational trauma is shocking. Like through generations,
things can be past and stored in ourselves. How those things will impact our physical body,
raising inflammation levels, impacting your nervous system. So it's just born out of my clinical
experience with patients and how when you deal with both and not either or like the gut and the
feelings, the physical and the mental emotional spiritual, that is where you will overcome these
really difficult health issues or just feel your best if you're struggling with even low grade
problems. Last question. What is the right household cleaner in your opinion? Oh my gosh. I mean,
I don't even know. I'm ashamed to not know, but I would say this is a good resource. The
environmental working group has a whole database where you can go and vet what you are using in your
home or on your skin. So, I mean, there's so many products out there. Andrea, my clinic
managers here. I mean, I like branch basics. I love branch basics. They're wonderful.
I like Molly Suds. You know what's so funny is Michelle Pfeiffer just came on and we talked all about
her fragrance line. Huge fan of her fragrance line. It's the only
EWG verified fragrance that's out there. Michael and I just switched to her
fragrances. You can stack them. They're so beautiful. And I feel so much better. I know this
sounds crazy already of not wearing a perfume. Yeah. It like doesn't bother me. But she also
said the same thing you just said about the EWG. EWG, the environmental work. Yeah. She said check
everything on there. Yeah. It's a great resource.
Yeah, and they do the same with food.
They have the Clean 15 and the Dirty Dozen.
If you want to, like, if you maybe budget-wise can't get all organic or don't have access to it,
then use that list.
And, like, the dirty dozen, then maybe try to get organic there or wash it really well.
But the Clean 15, maybe don't buy organic.
It just wash it off well.
And that's the fruits and vegetables that have the lowest amounts of pesticides and herbicides.
What's one of those?
I mean, some of the highest are things like strawberries tends to be, but they update it every year.
So you have to look at it.
updates based on the latest data.
Dr. Will.
You're amazing.
Guys, he's been on.
This is his third time.
We're doing a fourth time about cleansing coming soon.
Where can everyone find you?
Everything is at Dr.willcoll.com.
Dr. W-I-L-C-O-L-E.com.
I podcast, The Art of Being Well, listen to it.
Yeah, the book, gut feelings.
It's wherever books are sold, Barnes & Noble, Amazon, Target, independent books.
Can we give one away?
Yeah.
Do we give a couple away that are signed copies?
Yeah, we can do how many do you want to do? Five, six. Sure. That's amazing.
Handful of books. Signed by Dr. Will.
Absolutely. All you guys have to do is tell us your favorite part of this episode on my latest post at Lauren Bostic and then follow at Dr. Will Cole.
Thanks for coming on. Thanks, friends. Thank you, buddy. Appreciate it.
Thank you guys so much for listening to the episode with Dr. Will Cole. Be sure to go back and listen to him the first two times he came on the podcast. He is a wealth of knowledge.
If you want to win a copy of his book that's signed sealed and delivered straight to your door,
all you have to do is tell us your favorite episode of this podcast on my latest post at Lauren Bostick
and follow him on Instagram at Dr. Will Cole.
See you next time.
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