The Bossticks - How To Improve Your Memory & Focus Ft. Just Thrive Founder, Tina Anderson & Chief Microbioligist Kiran Krishnan
Episode Date: March 8, 2024#670: Today, we're sitting down with Tina Anderson, Founder of Just Thrive, and Kiran Krishnan, Chief Microbiologist of Just Thrive, a company created to empower people to live their best lives and ta...ke health into their own hands. We're having a conversation on how to enhance your memory and focus. We delve into the links between stress and your gut and brain, how inflammation is caused in the body as a response to stress and nutrition, and what the long-term effects of stress are on the brain and gut. We delve deep into the science behind everything that happens in the body when it comes to stress, focus, memory problems, and how to heal from a multitude of symptoms. To connect with Just Thrive click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts Bosstick click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE To watch the show click 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 Just Thrive. Visit justthrivehealth.com and enter code SKINNY at checkout for 20% off your order Find previous episodes with the founders HERE and HERE. Produced by Dear Media.
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The following podcast is a Dear Media production.
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.
Aha.
Imagine if cortisol and epinephinephine, nor epinephinephine,
is supposed to happen in two or three small waves throughout the day,
but they're happening constantly throughout the day.
You're constantly in this activated state.
What happens is those glands actually get tired,
and they can't produce the same level of those hormones,
and which means you can't activate your systems, your bodies.
So then you go into adrenal fatigue, which then leads to chronic fatigue syndrome.
So what do you do there?
Well, you have to learn to manage stress.
This one example that just comes to mind my son plays college basketball,
and this season, Billy and I decided not to say a word to him,
not to say like, you know, oh, why didn't you take that shot or, oh, you could be playing better
defense or to get a rebound or you should box out better. We just said nothing. We loved watching
you play and he had the best season of his career. Hello, everybody. Welcome back to the skinny
confidential him and her show. Today we have a fabulous episode all around how to focus better,
make your brain healthier, feel better. This episode is definitely tailored around health and
wellness, mostly around focus and why so many of us have such a hard time focusing and being
productive these days.
We dive into it.
The duo joining this episode are joining us for their fourth appearance.
Tina Anderson and Karan Krishna from Just Thrive.
We've had multiple conversations with this duo and they're always fabulous.
We've dove into gut health, overall health, probiotics.
We've gotten into parenting.
There's been so many topics that we've covered with them.
And this episode, just like the others, packs a punch.
So if you're someone who wants to learn how to focus more, feel better, take
care of your brain, learn about daily practices to manage your stress levels, manage your anxiety levels,
then this episode is for you. With that, let's jump into the episode. This is the skinny confidential,
him and her. I just want to start by saying, Tina, thank God you do not wear that outfit last night
to dinner. I was thinking the same thing. Because Lauren, we went to dinner last night and Lauren
bare paw swiped a massive glass of red wine all over Tina. And if you were wearing, I don't, I don't, we both
find that out later. If you were wearing that last night, we would have had a little bit of a
different scenario on our hands. You know what's not good for focus and memory? Wine. We literally
did the opposite last night. This is true. This is true. But it was fun. This episode is going to be
all about focus and memory, how we're less focused than ever and how we can improve our focus
in memory. I think to start off, let's just give a quick intro to the audience. You guys have
been on four times because the episodes have been so successful, but just like a
little blurb about each of you before we get into it. I'm Tina Anderson. I'm the co-founder and
CEO of Just Thrive. My background was in litigation for many years and then I went into a family
pharmaceutical business where we kind of got dismayed by a lot of the abuses in the pharmaceutical
industry and we wanted to do something that was more in line with how we lived our lives with our
three children. And so we dove into the field of gut health and researched and we were able to
license these very exclusive strains of probiotics, which I know your audience has already come to
know. And from there, Just Thrive was born. And it's been the most gratifying career journey I've
ever been on. So I'm Kieran, Christian, and I'm a research microbiologists. I've spent most of my
career doing research and development and innovation in the world of nutritional science. So a lot of
focus on the gut, of course, as a microbiologist, because we have all these microbes that dictate how we
function. And so my goal is to understand who they are, what they do, and how do we work with them
in order to optimize our life. I started working with Tina, I don't know, now about 10 years ago,
at least, right? And finding brands that are really focused on science and research is really my
goal. And then working with them to bring the science and research to it. And then education.
I spend a lot of time talking. And for those of you that are newer listeners or maybe miss the last
episodes with these two, I'll link them in the show notes or we'll link them in the show notes and
make sure because they're phenomenal episodes, especially if you're interested in the topic of gut health
and all sorts of stuff we've dove into. They've been really successful episodes. So we'll link them.
But anyways, guys, welcome back to the show. I want to discuss the underlying cause of why people are
less focused than ever. Like, what is it coming from? Because everyone says, I have ADD. I can't focus.
I can't multi. Like, why is that? Well, I think what we're seeing is that these little devices called
smartphones are inducing a sort of ADHD.
society. I mean, we are so distracted more than we ever have been in history before. And when you
think about just the device itself, you know, it takes us to thousands of different places within a
matter of minutes. So we're constantly being distracted between, you know, email, we get an email,
we got a Slack message. Notifications are on our text messages. We're getting text messages.
We're just distracted as a society from, you know, societal demands, home demands. We're working
from home. That's another big one. There's way more distractions at home. I mean, I'm aging,
myself right now, but 30 years ago I'd be in my office. The only distraction I had was someone
knocking on my office door. Now we're working on a spreadsheet and you get a text notification.
And your Slack comes through and we're just, we're distracted. It's funny because my daughter and
I yesterday were watching home videos of me when I was a little girl. And I'm watching the way my
mom was engaging with us as babies. And she's so focused on doing that singular task. And now it's
it's like even when we're with our kids at home, there's six million things to do. And it's a different
energy. She didn't have a phone to pick up or someone to text or emails to respond to. It's like
she was like really like present. And you almost can sense it. Does that make sense? Absolutely.
Yeah. And to answer that question from a science perspective, right? So what is happening with our brain?
So Tina mentioned all these distractions. The way we're wired and the way our brain is supposed to work,
there are these neurotransmitters that elicit activity within us, especially activity that's
good for us, right? So dopamine, for example. Dopamine is a substance that's largely made in the
gut that functions in the brain. And the big effect of dopamine is to give you focus, attention to
something, and make you feel elation when you, when you reward yourself with the act that you do that's a
benefit to you. So for example, when we eat food, we get a dopamine rush, right? And the reason for that is
your body's trying to tell you, hey, this is a good thing. Make sure you go out and eat food.
If you work on something and you're diligently building something, you get a dopamine rush.
And that's your body telling you this is good for you. Now, that's supposed to happen at a certain level throughout the day.
When we have this overstimulation, what's happening is we're creating so much dopamine release throughout our day and our brain that the levels that we need to feel something keep increasing.
right? So it's no different than like insulin resistance or leptin resistance in weight loss issues.
We can develop this dopamine resistant type of issue where we need more and more dopamine to feel the
effects of it. Now on top of that, we've got inflammation. Inflammation is damaging the brain's
ability to use dopamine. A lot of that inflammation comes from the gut, comes from all the toxins
and things that we experience and stress that we experience throughout the day. So not only are we
stimulating this dopamine as a stimulant all day long through all of these devices and all that.
But on top of that, we can't utilize dopamine as well. So between the two, we're constantly
fighting to stoke the dopamine response, right? And so when you look at things like Adderall or
Vivance or Ritalin, they're all dopaminergic substances. The way they work in the brain to try
to increase focus is it releases more dopamine and releases norapinephrine, which is a stress hormone,
which gets you to focus and pay attention on things, right? So that,
That's what's happening scientifically in the brain.
Adderall is being prescribed more than ever, or the other versions that you just said.
If you had a kid that was prescribed to Adderall and you know everything you know,
what are you going to do before you even entertain if you entertain an Adderall prescription?
Yeah, and I wouldn't entertain it.
And the reason I wouldn't entertain it is because it becomes almost a lifelong crutch.
Right, because what the Adderall is doing is it's artificially stimulating the release of dopamine and epinephrine.
So it's giving an artificial outcome.
Now, it does improve function, right?
Absolutely.
But do I want my child having that issue and having to use that crutch for the rest of their lives?
That is the risk that you're facing.
So my mind, I go, okay, what is wrong?
Number one, they're probably overstimulated to begin with, right?
So can we dampen some of the overstimulation like this?
Too many devices.
they're doing too many things, they're not having any downtime.
You're talking about when your mom was interacting with you, right?
Am I focused enough on them, right?
Am I giving them one-on-one focused time without any other distraction
so that they can build that mechanism in their brain to focus and enhance on something?
Are they getting rewards from tasks appropriately if they sit down and draw something, right?
Are they getting elation or rewards from that so that their brain knows,
if I focus on this task and I get it done, this is good, right?
there's a benefit to me there.
Then on top of that, I would go, what's going on with their gut?
Because they may not be producing enough dopamine.
A good amount of dopamine is actually produced in the gut.
So they might have inflammation or leaky gut.
So they're not producing enough dopamine.
And then are they sleeping enough?
Are they protecting the brain enough so that the brain can actually utilize dopamine?
Because if you have inflammation, you have damage to the brain that occurs throughout the day,
you can't utilize the dopamine you're making.
So those would be the few things I'd start looking at before considering the prescription.
Some cases, maybe you need to use it. No judgment, right? We need to do what we need to do to get pie. But that's how I would look at it. You mentioned that our kids are watching us be distracted and us not focus. I think that's a big one because kids are always watching us. I call my daughter Big Eye. She's always watching everything. But like they're always watching everything. Do you think that's a huge part?
of they're sort of like mirroring our behavior.
Yep.
So one of the most important things is parents.
We can say what we want.
We can lecture them all we want and all that.
It's the modeling that's the most important, right?
We know that.
And that's throughout the animal kingdom, every species, the parents model behavior for the child.
And the modeling creates the neurotransmitter networks or the networks in the brain to gear the child towards behavior.
And I notice just myself, right?
because it's hard for me to watch TV without looking on my phone, right?
And I noticed this, and I'm conscious of this from time to time,
and I'm watching something that is entertaining me,
and still I'm looking at my phone for stuff, right?
Which is, that's just so strange to me.
And my kids notice that and they pointed out.
Right?
They go, Dad, you're not even watching.
You're looking at your phone.
Right.
And I'm like, they notice that.
And that modeling absolutely creates networks in their brain
that show them that this is how you function, right?
and they do the same thing.
Yeah, you know, I think one of the downsides, too, to this device,
and I don't know if you guys feel the same,
there is this like artificial sense of urgency in all things.
Yes.
And I, you know, Lauren and I didn't have smartphones until we got out of school.
And I just never, when I look back on my life and maybe you can relate,
as older people have the table,
I never felt as much sense of urgency when I was younger.
Like something would come through.
Like, I wouldn't see it in my email until I got on a computer and looked at it.
I know that strange people are like, what do you mean?
Like most people get their email and out of their phone.
Like there was a time when you had to get on a computer to see if you got anything.
Or something happened, you know, going way back and like you'd have to listen to a voicemail at home or you'd have to like answer.
And so like you had all this time and I feel like it's creating this big public sense of anxiety because everything feels so urgent.
When really it's not.
It's just people are able to get to you much faster and are able to see the message much quicker.
I do think though that is that the power lies in the person that's holding the phone.
and you have to take extreme accountability around your phone and make boundaries.
And I think we can point and blame and say, and this is not my fault.
But at the end of the day, you're the user.
So for me, I look at it like a sign on a shop that says closed for the night.
Like it's closed.
What I think, though, people, like, there's just many people that just aren't aware
that they're exhibiting these behaviors.
And like, we've all slowly been lulled into it.
You know what I mean?
Like these phones just get faster and faster and more capable, more capable.
now we're wearing headsets on our face to run around.
Who knows, that's only going to get faster and faster and, you know, smaller and smaller.
And so I think it's a weird, like you can't resist technology and it's part of the human exists.
We're going to have to use these tools.
But I think it's very easy to slip into a pattern of behavior that you're unaware of where all of a sudden you're running around anxious, unfocused, feeling like everything in the world's an emergency that has to be answered right away.
You know, the gnarliest is when it comes in and says like, urgent email and you read it.
Like, why is this so urgent?
Like, you know, urgent.
We got to get this paid.
I'm like, you know, the company will survive if you wait till Monday.
Like, you know, and if not, we got bigger problems.
You know, I just look at this stuff now.
I'm like, not everything is really urgent.
And I think we throw that word around now way too freely.
Yeah.
And I think what we're seeing too is that because we're doing this, we have shorter attention spans.
I mean, we used to have an average attention span of like two and a half minutes.
Now it's less than 40 seconds.
Of course, that's just going down.
And that lack of attention span is the reason why we're spending all these crazy hours
at work.
It's not because we're working more or more efficiently.
We're just distracted throughout the days.
And now we're working 24-7.
So to Lauren's point, I mean, we definitely need to be working on disciplining ourselves more
with our phone, but most people aren't.
Yeah, I think it all starts with awareness.
You just have to be aware, like catch yourself in the moment of what you're doing.
Like, do I really need to walk into the bathroom?
my phone or is that excessive?
Yeah.
Can I put my phone down when I wake up?
Like, it's like Iqabod crane when people wake up.
It's like they roll over and like slam the phone in their face.
There's something.
We talked about this last night in relation to children and children feeling okay coming
home and like maybe missing that party.
Yeah.
And I think it's ingrained in all of us to feel like I can't miss out on whatever's
going on.
And we do the same thing on the phone.
Like I have to see what's going on throughout every hour of the day to make sure
that I'm participating in society and then I don't miss anything.
Or maybe control.
No, I think it's a behavioral thing where humans don't want to feel left out or like they
will miss something.
The older I get, the more I want to miss out.
Yeah.
And the neurotransmitter component to that is dopamine.
So our phone gives us that dopamine kick, right?
And we're constantly seeking that.
And that's why it's addictive.
That's why scrolling is addictive because it gives you that little bit of dopamine kick.
And to me, that underlying issue as to why we want or need.
need that dopamine kick, that's the part that scares me a little bit. Right. So when, when Tina,
when we first talked about doing a memory and cognition product, the part that interested me about
it was, why is it that people need a memory and cognition product? Why is it that people need
neurological stimulants, right? We all use stimulants. Coffee, I was just drinking coffee earlier,
and I like it because it is a stimulant, right? Nicotine. And then, of course, all the
prescription versions of this, why do we need it? And what does that say about what's happening to our
brains. That's the part that keeps me up a little bit at night because what you start to realize
when you look at the biology of it is that we're all waking up every morning with the brain
that's slightly more damaged than the brain we had the day before. Right? Slightly amaged,
right? And this is why we see dementia, Alzheimer's, and all those rates increasing dramatically.
The early, early stages of that are memory, cognitive dysfunction, focus, and then anxiety and
depression as well. The pathologies of all those things are very, very similar. So the part that
really keeps me up tonight is looking at data that shows 20 and 30-year-olds, when they do
cognitive dysfunctional tests, they have measured levels of reduced cognitive function, right? When they're
supposed to be at their peaks, right, they can measure them the same way they measure it in 60-year-olds
who are undergoing dementia. The same kind of dysfunction is measurable in 20 and 30-year-olds. But we don't
necessarily address it until we're in our 60s, right?
So what is the underlying root cause that we're starting to see that so much younger?
Yeah.
So the big thing is a couple of things.
One is inflammation and inflammatory damage.
Number two is the inability of the brain to repair itself throughout at night, especially, right?
So we're not sleeping enough.
Sleep is really important to repair the brain, providing the right type of cellular activation.
So you've got these mechanisms in the brain that turn on things like glutathione.
Glutothion is a very powerful antioxidant.
It helps, you know, neutralize the free radicals and the oxidation that occurs in the brain throughout the day.
Stress is another driver of damage to the brain and inflammation. And then, of course, the overt distractions, right?
The overt distractions stoke too much dopamine, too much epinephrine, too much serotonin in some cases as well.
And all of those things are overstimulating to the brain without enough rest and recovery.
How much sleep should we be getting?
So it varies from person to person.
But I would say that deep sleep.
So I wear the aura ring, right?
So it's a great way for me to keep track of what I'm actually doing from a sleep perspective.
I think you need a minimum of around our hour and 10 minutes of deep sleep and around
an hour and 30 minutes of REM sleep.
That's where most of the recovery is happening.
For me, I can get by fine with around six and a half to seven hours of sleep on a regular
basis.
And then I can go several days with four or five hours of sleep and still be functioning.
But that's just, that's unique to me because I think I function well with adrenaline.
My mom's like that, right?
So my mom is, she would say 72, but she's probably 74, 75.
And so she is a physician.
She runs an ICU and an ER night shift.
Oh, wow.
That's a lot of cortisol.
Yeah, that's a lot of cortisol, right?
She's the only attending on the floor in both the ICU, which is like a 30-bed ICU.
Wow.
And an emergency department overnight.
So she does a 7 p.m. to like 9 a.m. shift.
Damn.
Seven days a week.
Right?
Wait, well, how is that possible?
Seven days a week?
Seven days a week and then she takes seven days off.
Seven days on, seven days off.
But she keeps shifting.
So one week, she's sleeping in the daytime.
The very next week, she's sleeping at night.
But she runs fine because she runs on adrenaline really well, even at her age, right?
And so that's kind of like me.
I do the same thing.
I probably do the same thing.
Yeah.
Like, this morning is like, how hell are you so awake in the morning?
I'm like, I don't know.
I just say.
He woke up this morning.
It was like, I was like, get back in the jack in the box.
Get away from.
he's talking mid-sentence. I'm like, I got to get a coffee.
Maybe my ancestors must have been running for their life.
Right. Exactly. All the time. Right. And at the end of the day, stress, right? So if you don't mind,
let's talk about stress for a moment. Right. I think everybody knows stress is bad for you.
But if you put it in this context, it's really almost whimsical to think about it.
So the stress response, the fight-of-flight response has been a very, very important response for every
type of living creature there has been since the dawn of time, right? The same cortisol fight-of-flight
response that we experience, some dinosaur is experiencing the same exact thing 100 million years ago as
it's running away from a predator. And that's the beauty of this biology. It's been sustained through
the course of evolution because it's so important for survival, right? So you think about a wilder beast
in the Serengeti, and the wildebeest is sitting there quite happily eating grass. And then it hears a rustling or some
steps and it notices a lion. The fight of flight response kicks in in the wilderbees. Blood pressure
goes way up. Inflammation goes way up. All non-essential function shut down. The muscles are activated
and the wildebeest is literally running for its life, right? And let's say it's a clumsy line,
so he falls over and it doesn't catch the wildebeest. The moment the threat is done,
the wildebeest goes back to eating grass, doesn't have any emotional trauma from it, right? Doesn't
even think about it and it's just moving on with his or her life, right?
If that happened to a human, we'd have hypertension for the next two months from it.
We'd be going to a therapist.
We'd be thinking about it.
We'd be not sleeping at night and all that from that one incident.
Well, why is that, right?
We have the curse of having higher cognition, right?
That's put us at the top of the evolutionary ladder because we have consciousness, right, that other animals don't.
But the other side of the coin of consciousness is we have anticipatory stress, psychological stress.
We're thinking about the next time that's going to happen.
Exactly. And what it means and what is it, did I do something wrong? Should I not have been there? You know, was I wearing something off? Like all these things we think about, right? The anticipatory stress. The stress that wildebeest feels when he or she's running for their life is the same stress biologically that we feel when we're sitting in traffic.
Or when you spill a grass of red wine on someone's tag or scarf.
Exactly. Exactly at dinner, right? And so the crazy thing about it is that biological mechanism,
is designed to work for a few seconds to a few minutes.
Where the only species there is, with the exception of maybe one other,
that induces that throughout the day all the time.
And our systems aren't designed to handle that.
So stress damages your brain.
So let me, in that line of reasoning,
would it be fair to say that if we are in that mindset or in that fight or flight for
long periods of time,
it is also shutting down critical functions of the body for long periods of time
where they maybe should not be shut down?
That's exactly right.
So the easy way to illustrate that is they call the fight-of-flight response, the sympathetic activation, right?
And they call it fight-of-flight.
The opposite effect is rest and digest.
It's really rest-digest and repair.
So you've got these different neurological mechanisms fighting against each other throughout the day.
If you're in fight-of-flight, you're not resting, digesting, or repairing.
You can't sleep.
You can't regenerate the body.
You can't assimilate nutrients.
You can't digest food.
So you can't do all the important things.
you're constantly in this survival mode. How come certain people run more stress than other people?
Like, I feel a lot less stressed than I feel like Michael feels. And I don't know if I'm
dissociating and it's like bad. Like maybe it's bad. Like I'm not saying I'm the winner here.
I'm saying I might be dissociating or like or detaching is a good word from it. But he doesn't,
he runs way more stress. What's interesting is.
Because we had our brain scanned by Dr. Aiman.
I don't know if you know him.
And he was showing that that's kind of the right.
Like that what she just articulated is true.
Like for whatever reason, I tend to run more like stress and hyper.
But at the same time.
He was surprised because typically the woman is the one to run more stress.
But interestingly enough is like I also feel like I have way more energy.
No offense.
Yeah.
You know.
Yeah.
Well, yeah.
So then if you think about, right, all the things associated with stress, it's the
release of cortisol epineph and nor epinephineph.
Those are things that stimulate the system. Your muscles are getting more blood than hers are. Your adrenals are kicking off, right? Your cells are making more energy. This is why you can wake up in the morning and be more alert and she takes some time to start catching up. But the same thing is happening also in the brain. Right. So when the brain is undergoing stress and you're awakened, that means your brain is inflamed. The way the body gets blood to the brain when it's going through this flight of fright response is using inflammation.
it actually uses your immune system.
So immune cells called microglia cells.
These are like these macrophages of the brain.
They go to the brain and they elicit this inflammatory response
because what your body is trying to do is get more blood to the brain.
When you're undergoing this kind of stress response,
it wants to get blood to the heart, the brain, and the muscles.
Everywhere else doesn't need blood at the moment.
So your brain is active and all that,
but it's not necessarily a healthy state to be in unless you can come down from it
as well as you went into it.
So that releasing of the stress response and going back into parasympathetic, that's the key part.
So for Lauren, for example, it might take you longer to get into that stress state.
It may take more stimulus to put you there.
Your adrenal cortex and your HPA axis, so the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis doesn't perceive stressors in the same way that Michael does.
And part of that may be the types of brain waves that you activate.
Right. So if you take someone that is a meditation expert and has been doing meditation for years and they've really accomplished in that, when they encounter a stressor, they tap into something called theta waves. Theta waves are the low frequency brain waves, right? And when you're in the low frequency brainwaves, there are parts of your brain called the coping centers of the brain that are activated. They go, do I really need to be stressed about that? No, it should be okay. People who tap into the beta waves, the high frequency brain waves, the stressor becomes more.
much more multiplied, right? And the difference is, like, imagine you're both sitting there right now.
You're both pretty calm, right? And if someone runs into the room and goes, oh, my God, there's something
going on, if you can turn to them and look at what that stimulus is in a low frequency brainwave,
but you turn to them and look at it in a high frequency brainwave, the stressor is going to be
much more profound for you. That is exactly our personalities. And it's funny because,
no offense, babe. What do you think I'm going to say? You're going to say that if we were in the
Serengetty and a lion chase us, I would get away and you'd be fucked.
I would just make friends with the lion.
I meditate every day and I rely on it.
I rely on it to manage my stress.
No, no, but what I do, I mean, like I've learned a lot doing this show and talking to people like yourself for so long that I am able to, I think I am hardwired since birth to maybe have more of a beta brainwave response.
Yeah.
Then a thing.
And so I've, over the years, I've had to do a lot to start managing that stress in a much more productive way.
Do you want to be one or the other or does it not matter?
Do you even have a choice, depending on how?
You do.
You can adjust it.
So one of the funny things about it is psychobiotics.
So probiotics, I think last time we were on, we talked about it, right?
The calm product.
I love the psychobiotic.
And so it really services you well because one of the things it does is it helps you tap into
the low frequency brain wave even better.
Maybe that's why I'm so calm.
My psychobiotic.
And you might need to double your dose, right?
So that may be the difference there.
So where you want to be, actually, the healthiest form that you want to be is when you are
productive, you want to be really dominant in your beta waves and alpha waves, right? Because that's what
makes you productive. That's what really gives you that diligence and focus. And then the moment you
encounter a stressor or something is negative, you need your brain to go into the low frequency
brainwave so you can handle that better. Or if you do handle it in a high frequency brainwave,
you need to be able to come back to a low frequency brainwave so you're not in the flight or fight
all the time. And how can he work on that? Is it through things like breathwork and meditation,
a psychobiotic, what are the other things he can do that are free?
Yeah.
So the meditative work, right?
So having stillness throughout the day.
Stillness throughout the day is really important because if you just sit down and do some
deep diaphragmatic breathing or box breathing even, right?
So some sort of practice where you're trying to calm the mind down and you reward yourself
by telling yourself that that's a good thing that you're doing, what it tells is it trains
your brain to go, hey, stillness and calmness is good, right? They do this in neurological
training, for example. There's a type of therapy, for example, if you do, if you have a lot of
anxiety, you can go and they'll map your brain waves, right? And then you wear this cap that measures
your brainwave activity. And you watch a movie. Any movie you like, you can put anything in there.
When I tried this, I was watching the born identity, for example. And what happens as you're
watching the movie, the movie starts getting pixelated. You can still hear it and all that,
but now you can't see it.
And your brain's like going,
what,
I can't,
what's happening,
right?
And then as your brain
goes through many different iterations
of trying to figure out the problem,
the moment it hits a low frequency brainwave,
the picture comes back, right?
And then you do that many times over several days,
and you start to train the brain that you get rewarded
when you go into the low frequency brainwave.
So what you want to do is reward yourself.
Look,
for example,
is there something exciting that you like to,
like you like to work out,
for example,
that gives you a good dopamine kick.
Before you allow yourself,
to go work out. Sit down still for 10 to 15 minutes and breathe and tell yourself that your reward
for doing that is going to work out. Then your brain goes, oh, okay, this is the reward I get for this
activity. It's a good thing. Or like say I like to read maybe before I read. I could do the same thing.
Yeah, exactly. It's funny because when he's like on one, I'm like, go take a sauna and a cold plunge
out and he will walk in with a whole different frequency. Does cold hot therapy give you that
same energy that we're talking about? It does. Yeah, it does. So anytime you go through discomfort or
stress the body, physically stress the body, and you come out of it, you go through this,
like, release of that, that anxiousness. Because stepping into cold water or hot sauna automatically
puts your body into kind of a fight-of-flight response, right? But it's not a prolonged thing because
you're removing yourself from the stimulant immediately. So it's not a psychological stress. It's a physical
stress. So that's closer to what the wilderbees and the Sarendi is experiencing, right? We're
some of the only species that can do psychological stress. The other ones are baboons. Baboons are
very interesting because they have these really crazy social orders where they spend most of their
day tormenting each other. And they're a very good study for humans. And in fact, there's some
brilliant researchers, neuroscientists that have spent decades studying baboons as a model of human
stress because baboons elicit so much psychological stress on one another, and that's how they
determine their hierarchy and the social order. It's, you know, who is ranked above the other,
and then they torment the people below them. And it's an interesting study of like human existence
and socioeconomic differences and all that stuff. And the lower rung baboons more often than not
get sick and they end up dying off, right? Are people just born with different frequencies in their
brain or is it something that's developed through childhood or trauma? Like, why is his brain one way
and minds the other when it comes to these frequencies? I think it's a mix of how you were born,
right? So the birthing process itself. So everything's from simple from C-section versus vaginal
birth. Was there any trauma in the birthing period, right? Was it a long, arduous labor for your
mom or was it an easy labor for your mom? Those kind of things can start to map your brainwave
activity and also your microbiome. Your microbiome plays a huge role in how your brain wave activity
functions. And then also, also, were you breastfed, right? How many course of antibiotics did you have?
And then how did your parents model these behaviors, right? Were they kind of anxious, you know,
moving people all the time, very active? They didn't sit still. My mom. You know, yeah. Exactly.
Always blame the mom. And then, you know, and always blame the mom. It always blames the mom.
I know.
If the mom gets blamed for everything, it's some bullshit.
You and my mom joke with each other.
We probably run, like, we're pretty similar her and I.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't say it as a dig.
Okay.
There's something that I see people complaining about all the time, especially women.
Chronic fatigue.
What's it from?
And what can we do for free to support chronic fatigue?
Yeah.
And then you can give me some ones that maybe aren't free that you think are worth
investing in.
There's a couple of mechanisms behind chronic fatigue syndrome. And they call it syndrome because there's
numerous variables in it, right? To me, probably the most common version of that is what we call
like adrenal fatigue. And that's because your your adrenals, which produce the stress hormones,
so epinephinephin, nor epinephin cortisol, those adrenals are tired from constant production of those
stress hormones, right? The adrenals are designed to be able to produce these stress hormones
in small waves throughout the day to get you going.
This is why a lot of people when you wake up or everyone really has a cortisol awakening response, right?
Cortisol is very high during the morning time and very high in the afternoon when we all start
to get a little slumpy at two, three o'clock in the afternoon.
Or when Michael flicks the lights on at 7 a.m. as bright as he possibly can and stomps around.
Exactly.
Your cortisol, the reason why you're not fully alert at that point, your cortisol, your natural
cortisol awakening response hasn't kicked in yet, right? So you're, you, it's hard to be awake at that
point because you don't have that natural wake-up call. Imagine if cortisol and epinephinephine
is supposed to happen in two or three small waves throughout the day, but they're happening
constantly throughout the day, right? You're constantly in this activated state. What happens is
those glands actually get tired and they can't produce the same level of those hormones, and which
means you can't activate your systems, your bodies. So then you go into adrenal fatigue,
which then leads to chronic fatigue syndrome. So that to me is one of the biggest things,
one of the biggest reasons. So what do you do there? Well, you have to learn to manage stress.
Stress management, I think, could be one of the biggest things that people do for free,
whether it's mindfulness, work, disengaging from things, getting all the stimulants away
for a short period of time throughout the day, exercise, whatever may be, reduced stress
and cortisol in people. We were at dinner last night, Tina and your husband.
has been Billy, and we were taught, we were kind of picking your brain about parenting because you've raised
three great kids, not to get too personal with you, but when you, for the new parents out there
that are thinking about what they should do or what they should incorporate to kind of manage some of
this stuff for their kids. And Lauren and I are asking questions about like, are you born like this?
You're not like, what are some of the things maybe you've done or that you've learned running
just thrive that you can do as a parent or a new parent? I think parents do their best, but many are just
not equipped and don't know. And there's all sorts of new technology. The fact of the
matters. A lot of this stuff we're talking about just didn't exist when even our parents were raising
us. So I just, I wonder from your perspective, especially with what you know and what you've learned
running this company, like, what are you actually doing for your kids? Well, I think a lot of it is
just like not taking everything so seriously. You know, I mean, I think even with grades as your kids
start getting older, we, what I notice now that I have my youngest is a junior in college. I have three
kids that are now two are out of college. And I just see there was such an emphasis with my firstborn about
grades and performing and being the best that you could be. And I realized it didn't really always
always serve them that well when I put that much emphasis on it. And, you know, I'm always about even
education about like learning, focus on learning. Don't focus so much about what your GPA is or are you
going to get into this school or that school. It's more about, you know, doing your best and just
being calm about it. And I really tried to implement that because I was not doing a great job modeling
when we started this business, three kids all playing lots, multiple sports and running a business.
And then I really have been very prescriptive now about trying to teach my kids that because I didn't always do a great job of it.
And now my son in college, I mean, my motto is C's get degrees, you know?
And I mean, that's okay.
I feel fine with it because I'm always like, you need to learn.
That is my goal is like that you need to learn and not put so much pressure.
I think parents wear a lot of their kids honors, you know, as badges themselves.
And the kids feel that.
And yeah, I feel my, I just, this one example that just comes to my son plays.
college basketball. And we had a, this season, Billy and I decided not to say a word to him,
not to say like, you know, oh, why didn't you take that shot or, oh, you could be playing better
defense or to get a rebound or you should box out better. We just said nothing. Just we loved
watching you play and he had the best season of, you know, his career. Yeah, I think that's a good
perspective because I remember as a young kid stressing a lot about my grades, while also
inherently knowing that that academic path that for me personally was not going to pan out.
Like I just, I think there's some people that that school system is incredible for,
especially for certain roles. But for me, like, I knew that it was like inherently just knew
it was not the right path. And I was so stressed all the time because I was like, okay, like I am not
going to get these grades, Cs, Ds are where my model, I get degrees as well. But then if you look at
how my life has manifested since, like some of that skill set of maybe kind of not being such
academic panned in other ways. And I, and I think my parents at the time, you know, they're doing their best,
but they come from a generation where it was like GPA, grades, get into the good school. And so
it was probably a lot of maybe unnecessary stress, which in the end, you know, it's maybe who I am,
but also really like none of those degrees or that traditional schooling, like have anything to do
with kind of what I'm doing now successfully. Does that make sense? Oh, it totally makes sense.
That's what I'm preaching all the time to my kids. Absolutely. All kids are different. Like, meaning, you know,
my daughter, she loves to sing and she loves to create. And like, I'm going to let her lean into that instead of be like, you have to get A's in math. If like her thing is, is being creative, I think it's important to like let them flourish in the area that they're good in as opposed to being like, you have to do it this way because the school system said this way. Well, think about like a company even. There are some people that probably accelerated in things like math and they go into.
the finance world or have finance roles. And there are some people that are on the completely other
and they're going to creative. But imagine trying to put a creative in your finance department.
Right. Right. It's like, imagine if you're running a company, you're like, hey, the person that's like
really into the arts and the graphic design. Could I be a microbiology? Yeah. Yeah. And that's exactly what
we're doing with our kids every single day. Yeah. Something that has come up a lot on this
and I feel like you both are the perfect people to answer. I just did Instagram stories on this is a lot
of people were given antibiotics at birth, meaning their mom was given antibiotics. It ran through
their system. And then from there out there on a Z-pack for having a cold, maybe they're a woman and
they got a UTI or a man. But the point is, is they've been on antibiotics throughout their life.
And now they're adults and they want to reverse the damage that antibiotics has made on their gut.
Where should they start? Well, the biggest thing is, you know, support.
your microbiome on a regular basis by avoiding antibiotics. Obviously, we know the antibiotics
was the cause, but antibiotics are not just found in the capsule. They're found in our animal
products that we're eating. Glyphosate, which is the active ingredient roundup sprayed all over our
produce. We need to try to eat as organic as possible, trying to calm ourselves down, like
Karan mentioned. I mean, our gut is, our brain is speaking to our gut all the time. There's a
communication going back and forth between the gut and the brain. So there's a lot of
lifestyle changes that we can make to support our gut, as well as taking, you know, a spore-based
probiotic, which are the type of strains that we work with, we know we've done double-blind human
clinical trials on these strains, knowing that they are sealing up the tight junctions and sealing
up that gut lining. What does spore-based mean?
Spore-based means they have an endospore shell around themselves. And so these bacteria strains
that we work with have this endospore shell around itself and it allows it to get to the
intestines alive. The problem with the overwhelming majority of probiotics on the market is they
don't arrive in the intestines alive. And just to be defined as a probiotic, it needs to arrive
alive in the intestines. And most of them don't even meet that part of the definition. So the
spores have the spore shell around itself, allows it to get through the stomach acid.
The stomach acid, it's meant to be the gastric barrier. It's very, very, you would burn your
finger if you touch the acid in your stomach. Most probiotics die in that stomach acid. The spores have the
ability to naturally survive and get to the intestines alive. And then they stay there for about 21 to
28 days where they're working throughout the entire intestinal tract. What are some other mistakes
that you see that are talked about online that's bullshit? Meaning like, this is just a random
question. Like, is sauerkraut really good for your gut? Like, what are things that, like,
maybe if you guys could do like a myth busters on what actually is good when it comes to probiotics?
Well, I'll start with my two favorite ones. One is.
that a good probiotic needs to be refrigerated. And that is, it makes no sense when you think about it,
because if a probiotic needs to be refrigerated, it means it can't even withstand the room temperature
of the store shelf. So if it can't withstand the room temperature of the store shelf, how in the world
would it ever survive your body temperature, which is 98.6? And the answer is it does, they don't.
I mean, we've studied this time and time again, we've done gastric survivability studies on
some of the leading probiotics out there with 50 billion CFUs, and they're all dying by the time
they get to the intestines. And then the other big.
myth out there is taking a probiotic with like 10, 15, 25 different strains in the product. And
Quran famously calls those the kitchen sink formulas because it's like they're throwing in a
whole bunch of probiotics strains. But the problem with those is you don't know what they're
doing in the gut because these are live microorganisms and they are put together in a vat
and they're grown together. And so one strain in there could take over another strain. And
then or worse yet, two strains could come together and create a whole new strain that's never
been studied. We don't know if it's safe. We don't know if it's beneficial. We just don't know.
And this is happening. This is rampant in the industry where you're seeing probiotics with
15 different strains and not a study on the finished formulation. And that's one of the things
we pride ourselves in is that we've actually done a study on the finished formulation
with our strains and to know how they work in the body. And one example of that is we are
psychobiotic strain that we talked about earlier, just calm product. This psychobiotic strain
is Bifidolongum 1714. There's crazy amount.
of research behind us eight clinical trials on showing the great effects it has on reducing cortisol.
When you mix, we decided, oh, let's try to mix that bifidolongum 1714 with another bifidolongum
strain and all of the positive effects of that bifidolongum 1714 were negated when we mixed
it with this other bifidolongum strain. So we can't assume that because you have studies from
this one strain and then you take studies from another strain that they're all going to work
together. You don't know that unless you study it. And so that's one of the biggest
travesties, in my opinion, that's happening in the probiotic industry. And we're seeing as people are
launching probiotics like crazy because everyone's getting on the gut health fan wagon, but nobody has
studies on the finished formulation. So I'd be careful about getting some of these like kitchen
sink formula probiotics. When you guys launch a product, do you work together to make sure that it's
the best of the best? Absolutely. I mean, we don't launch products unless they're missing and needed in
the market. And Quran's brains have been, you know, the brains behind all of our products that we've launched.
Yeah, you know, we put a lot of thought into what mechanisms we need to support in the system, right?
What is missing? Number one, what should we be doing naturally through non-cost systems, you know,
the meditations, the diets and things like that, exercise and so on? And then what should we support
the body with through supplementation? Just because we can't get the same resources in the natural world anymore.
So if you think about the brain topic that we're talking about today, why did we create this mood and focus product?
Well, we were very concerned about the brain as a part of the body that we're just not paying enough attention to.
From the perspective of protecting it, supporting it, nurturing it, and so on, we do that to almost every other part of our body, right?
Everyone that works out or cares about fitness probably takes protein, probably takes creatine, right?
It takes branching amino acids to support muscle growth, eats enough calories.
They also know that you don't work out the same part of the body twice in a row, right?
Why do we do that?
Well, because we go, we know we need rest and recovery for that part of the body.
We don't work legs today because we worked it yesterday.
But the brain is undergoing stressors every single day more so than any other part of the body,
and we're not providing it the tools to recover throughout the night, right?
So the main important thing is the gut has to be healthy because of the gut brain axis.
If the gut's not healthy, then it's not producing the dopamine, the serotonin, the BDNF, and so on,
that the brain needs to recover.
In addition to that, an unhealthy gut provides so much inflammation to the brain that it causes
significant damage to the brain over time, right?
So we need the gut to be healthy.
That's where the probiotic addresses it, and then all the other beneficial things you can do.
On top of that, the reason we created this product is it has nutrients in it that actually
improve the reparative function of the central nervous system.
So when you take things like Lyons Main, for example, or cytokoline, these are compounds that enhance repair in the central nervous system, which is what we need when we go to sleep at night, right?
We need that repair to be happening.
We have compounds in there that increase energy production in brain cells so that your brain is functional.
You have more energy and focus.
You can think about things and work diligently on things without having to use stimulants.
Now, if you have to use stimulants, that's fine.
I use them from time to time as well.
That's perfectly fine.
But the fact that you need it tells you a story that your brain is not necessarily recovering appropriately each day.
So we layer this in.
You fix the gut.
Then you support the brain through nutrition through these compounds.
And then, of course, you're just lifestyle as well.
If I'm just starting, you know, we, Lauren and I've been on the gut protocol.
How long has it been now?
Long has been a long time?
Four years.
We don't travel without it.
We go everywhere we go.
I sprinkle it in my daughter's smoothie.
My dogs take it.
Yes.
And again, I literally sprinkled some on the floor for the dogs the other day.
They're like, looking it up.
I really got to stress, like for people that are interested in gut,
health and the topics we've covered with these two before. Like, you've got to go back and listen to
those episodes because we go in depth onto all the reasons why gut health is important, which we
always harp on. But if I'm going to start now taking this regularly, what's a protocol that you
would say is right for everybody just getting going? Would you just say two? I just had two on the show.
Do you just take two per day and just going there? And you're talking about the focus and memory,
which I'm eating right now. I mean, if you want to go slow, you can, but there would probably wouldn't
be a reason necessarily for you could do two a day. And it's super easy. They're gummy. They
taste delicious and yeah.
What are the things that you would start to, like, you would tell people to start looking
to notice?
You know, increase focus.
That's what's great is like, well, you should notice something on this.
But then while you're noticing it, you're also doing this reparative.
There's this whole reparative aspect that Quran was talking about.
That's so exciting.
So some things you won't notice that are happening.
They're super beneficial.
So increasing in memory, you know, being maybe less brain fog and just, you know, not forgetting
things all the time.
and being able to, like, focus on having a longer attention span.
Well, like, take, like, four of them, Warren.
And you may notice, you know, your need for certain stimulants reducing, right?
So many people are taking nicotine gum, for example, which can be very effective at increasing focus.
I think it's a perfectly good tool, right?
I think if you have to use it, you have to ask your question, why do I have to use it?
But to get by if you're using it, it's okay, right?
No judgments there.
I've tried it before.
I don't feel like I need it so much.
But I've tried it just to see what it feels.
And it does definitely give you focus.
Maybe you get your perspective on it.
Nicotine, in my opinion, some people are going to be screaming, has really bad PR.
Because I think it got looped in with cigarettes and tobacco and stuff like that.
But nicotine purely as just nicotine isolated substance, in my opinion, can be really
beneficial as a tool at times.
And I take it a step further, talking about some of these more, I guess, prescription products.
like if I had to, like I would rather go to the nicotine than jump to some of the other things we've talked about adderals and medications and all of that.
Yep.
From your, as a scientist.
I would, I would as well.
So nicotine has other added benefits, right?
So nicotine is a what they call a mitochondrial uncoppler, which does improve the ability of the mitochondria to produce energy.
That's a good native thing to happen.
It does increase dopamine as well, which is a good thing, right?
But not to the level that an adderol or a prescription drug does.
I think nicotine is a interesting longevity tool for people to use.
But if you find that you need coffee in the morning, nicotine throughout the afternoon and all that, just to function,
then you have to start thinking about what are some of the underlying mechanisms I'm not addressing,
which is causing me to need these so much.
Yeah, I would say the same, like if you find yourself also drinking three cups of coffee followed by a tea and a machina and all.
Like there's, you know, I think all of the, any substance can be abused, if not used in moderation.
And if you're needing these things to get you through normal human function throughout the day,
like there's probably an underlying issue that you should address.
What's your prescription for hangovers?
Like if you're going to be hungover tomorrow, tell me exactly what you're going to do when you wake up.
Tell me what supplements you're taking.
What kind of water you're drinking, what you're doing.
Yep.
So step one is how do I reduce my risk of getting hungover, right?
So then you have to be very specific about what you drink.
I like really high-end spirits and I drink them straight without mixers.
in it because I think if you're starting to add sugary mixers and all that, that increases
the risk for being hungover. So, for example, high-end tequila, whiskeys and all that. And for me,
it's easier to manage the amount that I end up drinking if I'm drinking it that way. Number two is
hydration while drinking. So there have been some studies that show that one of the biggest factors
in whether or not you experience a hangover and how much you can tolerate of alcohol is the amount
of hydration you have in your body at that time. We always had this. I
idea that a small person can't handle as much alcohol as a large person. They're like, oh, he's
300 pounds. He can drink more. That's not actually true necessarily. It's about how much water
they hold in their system. So I hydrate a lot when I'm drinking at night. So then the next day,
I have less of a hangover. And I will say I almost never get hangovers. I don't think I ever have,
even through our college. That may be one time I can remember because we were on a cruise ship and that
sea sickness probably didn't help it. But so then the next morning, one of the things I do is the
night before hydration, and I try to drink clean spirits, and I take liver support. So I take
milk thistle. And then I'd hit my probiotic during the drinking period as well so that my gut
is aligned properly. When I wake up in the morning, it's a lot of water, it's coffee,
and it's liver support. I forgot about milk this. So I took a bunch of that in college. He's going to go
buy so much when you lived at it. I basically had crates of milk thistle. And it's so effective.
It can be so effective. And then if you, if you do some B vitamins, so for example, I'll take, you know,
there's an energy drink packet that I use called Celsius, right? The one with stevia in it.
I don't like the other one. I'll drink that in the morning as well. It gives you some B vitamins,
a little bit of caffeine and things like that, just to keep me going. And then a nice hot shower
to kind of sweat it out a little bit. And I typically feel perfectly fine. The other thing that
helps me a lot with reducing the risk of hangover is eating, actually. Now, this is not great
for you. I'm not advocating eating late at night, right? But if you've been drinking, I always like
to eat something before bed. And it may be just, you know, a banana, a sandwich or something like
that, right? That seems to help me feel much better the next morning as well. If our audience was to
start with one of your products and you could wave a wand and give everyone one product, which would
it be? It would be our just, just thrive probiotic for sure. That's what I think so too. It's so foundational
to everything we've talked about. So many of our audience already have the just thrive probiotic. And I
selfishly want to know what maybe the second product is, I'm going to guess you're going to say
focus in memory. Well, I think it depends on what your goals are. You know, if you're someone who's
super stressed out, you can't get your cortisol levels down. You're just constantly stressed out.
Maybe that one's for me. Yeah, yeah, right. That's for Michael. Exactly. I would do the just calm product,
which is the psychobiotic we were talking about. But if you're looking for some real laser sharp focus
and being able to concentrate and have a longer attention span and protecting your brain cells,
then I would go with the focus of memory product.
But you could take all three of them
and they're not going to counteract or imbalance.
Absolutely.
Yeah, they work beautifully together.
The idea is layering on one another.
The gut probiotic affects the foundational issue, right?
And then the psychobiotic, if you have stress and anxiety,
actually modulates neurological response.
So if your neurons are too inflamed and fired up
because of a lot of anxiety and a lot of sympathetic activity,
the calm helps that.
And then almost everybody needs a focus in memory product.
one that's formulated like this that is nurturing to the brain, right? That's the idea.
It's not stimulating to the brain. It's nurturing to the brain. That's what we need.
What can we do for our kids with your products? What are some little tips and tricks and how would
you implement this if we have kids under five? Yeah, well, for the probiotic, like you mentioned,
you could sprinkle them and mix them with food. You could bake with them. We've tested them up to
455 degrees and they remain completely stable. And if your child needs to be on an antibiotic,
These also remain stable in the presence of an antibiotic, which is a key point.
But I would just sprinkle them and they won't even know that they're there because they're tasteless,
colorless or odorless.
Don't even think about going on an antibiotic without a probiotic, by the way.
That is called yeastinfection.com.
Sorry, Michael, plug your ears.
Don't ever even think about taking a probiotic, man, woman.
If you have kids on an antibiotic, and please tell me if I'm wrong, this is my own theory.
you have to balance it with a probiotic.
You really do.
Yeah.
So here's what happens when you take an antibiotic, right?
So people understand an antibiotic, most broad spectrum antibiotics are like an atom bomb for your gut.
In fact, there was a study out of Yale that showed that you've got trillions of organisms
in your gut, right?
Represented by maybe, say, 150, 200 different species of bacteria, but trillions of organisms.
You take an antibiotic, broad spectrum antibiotic.
Within the first three hours, you knock down like 98% of all of them, right?
You start having small representations of each species still left, but you knock down the vast
majority of the microbes.
So you go from a system that is teeming with microbes are nearly sterile in that view.
And then what happens is good thing for us, bacteria bounce back very quickly, right?
So then after about three and a half hours, the antibiotics gone out of the gut.
It's now in the liver and gone to the rest of the body.
Now the microbes start to come back.
The problem is the ecosystem is now different because prior to the antibiotic, you're not a
you had a lot of good microbes producing lactic acid.
So it's an acidic environment.
That controls who comes back and why the yeast come back fast in the case of antibiotics
is yeast don't do well in an acidic environment.
So part of the way the bacteria control the yeast is by producing lactic acid and keeping
the environment acidic.
Now imagine all those lactic acid bacteria are knocked down.
Now you have no acid.
The pH is going up.
The yeast go, hey, this is my time to come back.
They come back faster than the bacteria.
So every dose of the antibiotic you take keeps skewing what that ecosystem looks like and who gets to win at the end of that.
Now, if you take a probiotic that functions in the presence of the antibiotic, what happens is that probiotic produces lactic acid for you.
And that probiotic prevents the growth of certain dysfunctional bacteria as they're trying to come back.
They stifle their growth and allows your microbiome to look more like how you started before you had the antibiotic.
So even if you're on the fence about should I do a probiotic, which you should,
you should always do a probiotic.
But if you're on the fence and you're going to take an antibiotic whether you have a surgery,
you got sick rid of it.
You should definitely then.
Absolutely.
That's one time that it should be no questions.
I mean,
they're even doing this in hospitals now.
Hospitals are so far behind on most modern medicine and research.
Even in hospitals,
they'll give you at the least a yogurt if you're on antibiotics and you're admitted
in the hospital.
They give you a yogurt because of the antibiotic use.
I take my probiotic in the morning with hot lemon water.
Is that approved?
It is. It's good to take it with some food, though. If that does well for your body, then I would say your next meal, whenever you're, if you're not eating anything at that time, the meal, you should take some with your meal as well.
I take it at lunch. Yeah, that's perfect. It works better in the presence of food. We've actually studied that. I'll have a sausage link tomorrow. I can't eat too much. Just like one sausage link.
That's enough. With my coffee. I am on subscription with you guys because I think that it's most efficient because it just gets delivered straight.
to my door. There is a subscription offer on your site. We also got a code from you guys. So for a
limited time, try focus and memory, which are the gummies that we've been eating here or any other
Just Thrive products, probiotics. You guys, you can't go wrong with psychobiotics. And you get 20%
off your order. So everyone can go to Just Thrivehealth.com and use code Skinny. And can we do a giveaway?
Yeah, definitely. And I also wanted to mention that we don't have the focus of memory on Amazon.
right now because last time we launched Just Calm or other brain health supplement, we sold out immediately.
And so we wanted to make sure that we kept it on our website. So it's not available on Amazon for those.
And plus you get the coupon code using the code skinny on our site at just thrivehealth.com.
We'll do a big cute basket of a bunch of Just Thrive products. I'm such a fan because you guys bring the education and the value and the integrity of the brand.
We're going to do a big, big basket to one winner. All you have to do is follow at Just Thrive Health on Instagram.
Instagram and tell us your favorite takeaway. There's a lot from this episode on my latest post at
Lauren Bostic. Where can everyone find you guys? Where can we stocked? Just Thriverive. Tell us all the
things. Just Thrivehealth.com and on Instagram, Just Thrive Health. Amazing. We could talk to you guys
for hours. We've got to get you on a flight. That's right. Thank you guys so much. Or the cortisol goes up.
Oh my God. Michael's cortisol on a flight. I'm in a fucking mainline here. I have stressed. I am going to
literally IV.
I know when you told me your flat, I have stress for you for the time.
Give them a suppository.
I will carry the stress until I know you're safely on that.
Thank you, Bob.
Thank you, guys.
