The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - The Food Doctor: The 4 Foods You MUST Avoid If You Want To Be Healthy! - Dr. Will Cole
Episode Date: March 20, 2023At some point in your life you have felt how your thoughts and emotions have had impacts on your body, whether that is not sleeping because of stress or stomach aches from anxiety. While we’ve all f...elt that modern medicine denies any connection between the two and the effects they have on each other. Dr Will Cole believes that we can’t just separate mental health from physical health as they so obviously affect each other. He believes that the way to heal ourselves fully and not just treat symptoms is to be aware of what we our putting into our bodies, from thoughts to nutrition. In this revolutionary conversation Dr Will Cole teaches all you need to relearn about wellness and how your body works to become healthier and happier in body and mind. His new book ‘Gut Feelings’ is available now: https://amzn.to/3ZMzcp5 Dr Will Cole: Instagram: http://bit.ly/3Z2Cq77 Website: http://bit.ly/3TmQur6 Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. If you care about mental
health, care about your weight and your energy levels, you have to care about them.
Because if it's not healthy, you're not healthy.
Dr. Will Cole, best-selling author, one of the top 50 functional medicine practitioners,
and is a health expert for the world's largest wellness brands such as Goop.
There's so much medical gaslighting going on. The average conventional doctor would fail a basic nutrition test.
And I find that to be problematic because
you have the worst health care system yet you're criticizing people that are trying to do something
different. You define yourself as a functional medicine doctor? The differences between
mainstream medicine and functional medicine is they're trained to diagnose a disease and match
it with the medication but I think a nutrition forward approach to healthcare
is vastly important.
Why?
Because the vast majority of health problems
are lifestyle driven.
Foods we eat, exposure to toxins,
these lifestyle things are really what's plaguing our society.
60 to 80% of all Western countries
are dealing with some massive metabolic issues.
In part, fed by chronic stress.
Part of our trauma in our life has to do with the trauma that our ancestors have gone through.
It sounds science fiction, but looking at how trauma is literally stored in the cells
and then passed through family lines is very much science.
Are you optimistic that there's things we can do to change it?
As trauma can be inherited, so can healing. there's three main things first thing is number two the third would be
dr will my friend thanks for having me i'm gonna start this um conversation where i started it
quite recently when i spoke to max who i think you you're familiar with um which is what you do
and why do you do it i've always been a health nerd i guess you could call it. And in hindsight, I now look back and think of how,
what a weird kid I was. My first job was at the finish line, but I don't know if you have those
in the UK, but the basically tennis shoes, like sneaker stores. And I would use my paycheck at
16 years old to go to the health food store and buy the latest superfood that I'd see research on, the latest supplement.
And that was always fascinating to me.
How could you optimize your health using natural things,
using things that are of the planet and food to feel great?
And needless to say, I was packing my lunch in this,
in the brown bags with the peppers and bananas
and these whole grain,
the crunchy things in the 90s.
And my friends weren't doing that.
So that evolved in me being interested in that,
food and nutrition,
to want to be formally trained.
And I have a family history of autoimmune conditions.
And I just have a passion to figure out these complex puzzles.
And it's a sacred responsibility for me to then take my own passion
and how can I problem solve for these people and hold space for them?
Because I see in the topic of autoimmunity specifically,
it's a vast, in many ways, a silent epidemic of
people that are struggling. There's so much medical gaslighting going on. They're told
they're just depressed, given antidepressants. They're told they are just stressed out. But
the research speaks for itself. The statistics speak for itself that we have in the United
States alone, about 50 million
Americans having an autoimmune condition. But millions more are somewhere on this autoimmune
inflammation spectrum where they're labeled with things like chronic fatigue syndrome and
fibromyalgia. And they may not even be diagnosable, but they're feeling that sort of anxiety and
fatigue and brain fog and digestive
problems and different iterations of inflammation. So if you know anything, I guess to answer your
question pointedly, my Enneagram, if you know anything about that sort of personality study,
I'm an Enneagram 5, which means I'm a researcher. So I'm sort of this voracious, like, let's figure
this out and get to the root cause of why you're struggling. So I'm sort of this voracious, like, let's figure this out,
and get to the root cause of why you're struggling. So that's why I do what I do.
And you define yourself in terms of your job title as a functional medicine doctor?
Yes, I'm a functional medicine doctor.
What does that mean?
So if I had to break it down, the differences between conventional medicine and functional
medicine, mainstream medicine and functional medicine.
First thing is we interpret labs using a thinner reference range. If you know you get your lab
and you have your number and you have this X to Y interval, this reference range that your GP or
PCP is comparing you to, we get that reference range largely from a statistical bell curve average of people who go
to that lab. It's non-standardized for the most part. People that are predominantly going to labs
are people sadly going through health problems. So a lot of people know intuitively something's
off here. My fatigue, my brain fog, my digestive issue, my hair loss, whatever it is. They go to
the doctor and the doctor runs the basic labs and they say, look, the labs pretty much look normal. You're just
depressed. You're just, you're stressed out. What they're unintentionally telling the patient
is they're a lot like the other people with health problems that they're being compared to.
Just because something's common doesn't necessarily mean it's normal. Comparing yourself
to people with health problems is no way for you to find out how you can feel your best and why you
feel the way that you do. So in functional medicine, we're looking at optimal, not average.
So the Cleveland Clinic here in the United States has a functional medicine center. Many mainstream
institutions have functional medicine and integrative medicine institutions.
And all of us in functional medicine are trained through what's called the Institute for Functional
Medicine.
So we're looking at optimal, not average.
We're running more comprehensive labs to get to the root cause.
Because ultimately speaking, none of us are sick from a pharmaceutical deficiency.
You're not going to pharmaceutical your way into health one day.
They are disease-managing medications and are needed many times. But ultimately, we ask the
question, what is your most effective option that causes you the least amount of side effects?
And for some people, medications fit that criteria and they need to be on it. But oftentimes,
medications really don't fit that criteria, yet it's the only option given to them. And there's a root upstream causation as to why they have to be on that disease-modifying
medication in the first place.
So we're looking at things like underlying gut problems, chronic infections, nutrient
deficiencies, hormonal imbalances, or things like trauma and shame, the things that I'm
talking about in my latest book.
And ultimately, it's predicated on bioindividuality. We're all
different. And even good things, even healthy things that's relevant, that's pertinent for
one person may not be relevant for you. And even healthy foods, what works for one person may not
work for you. So it's really curated, customized, evidence-based medicine in short.
When you think about conventional medicine
and conventional i guess health advice and then you contrast that to your perspective
your view of health and medicine what are the real stark differences well i think the the
diagnostic aspect is that is one of them because they are trained in the standard model of care to diagnose a disease
and match it with the medication. So that sort of medicinal matching game, if you will,
is a major part of the conventional model of care. And I think a nutrition forward approach
to healthcare is another one. And I mentioned a study in Gut Feelings,
how it was a study in a medical journal
and showed that in this one group
that the average conventional doctor
would fail a basic nutrition test
because of the training that's not there.
And any conventional doctor will tell you,
and actually most of my colleagues in functional medicine are conventionally trained, and they will tell you they have to go to
post-doctorate training to even learn about nutrition. And I find that to be problematic
because we're dealing with the vast majority of health problems that people are seeing
are lifestyle driven, meaning that the foods we eat or not eating, our stress levels, our sleep,
our exposure to toxins, these epigenetic lifestyle things are really what's fueling
what is plaguing our society and what the major endocrinologists, PCP, GP are seeing
on their day-to-day visits. So I would say the approach is different because there's a place
for medication. Again, I mentioned that sort of litmus test of maybe a piece to your
puzzle, but ultimately it is not the totality of what's going on here. And we have to look at,
in my opinion, a both and, not an either or sort of reductive tribal approach. And that's where I
think functional medicine attempts to bring things together, where it's not us versus them. It's,
well, what is the most effective tools
within this person's toolbox and medications may be part of it but there are oftentimes a lot more
effective a lot less side effects tools within than that tool block within that toolbox you
mentioned earlier that you you had family members that had autoimmune yeah um inflammation conditions
yeah what was that and how did that have an impact on you at all
well i mean i could go to both sides of my family really there's there's different neurological
autoimmune issues like ms type symptoms if you know anything about that uh different type one
diabetes on both sides of the family where the immune system attacks the pancreas and then
the body cannot produce insulin. So you have
to take insulin to manage your blood sugar. People have autoimmune thyroid issues. Hashimoto's
disease is really one of our top patient base today is people that have autoimmune thyroid
issues. And different and other inflammatory problems. So how it impacted me, I think was just seeing how it impacted the quality of life.
And health and life on earth,
I think in many ways is just so fragile.
I mean, we take things for granted so much
until it's not there.
And I'm reminded on an hourly basis
with my patients now too,
it's just a sacred thing that I wanna do everything i can to help them regain it
gut feelings book you've just finished writing i believe um why did you write a book called gut
feelings what was the you know i always say this when i speak to authors that writing a book is an
absolute labor of love i mean it takes forever to do. It's a painful process.
So to do that, you must really have found a topic,
subject matter that really, really mattered to you.
Why gut feelings?
Why did you call it that?
Why did you write that book?
It's like any, this is my fourth book.
And as with anything that I've written,
it's really born out of my passion for my patients
and just seeing things play out.
And I think in many ways, my patients are kind of like, you know, that saying canaries in the
coal mine. I think they're canaries in the coal mine for the rest of the world because they tend
to be, you know, further down that autoimmune inflammation spectrum. They're struggling with
different inflammatory problems. But then I look at the statistics and I realize it's just,
they're the tip of the iceberg of really what's going on.
So gut feelings is really a conversation around mental health and autoimmunity
and people's, I would say, diet culture as a whole.
And talking about the sort of duality within wellness, both gut and feelings, the physiological
and the psychological, the physical and the mental, emotional, spiritual.
And again, this both and approach, I think, is needed to have sustainable healing in people's
lives, whether they're going through anxiety and depression, brain fog or fatigue, or they're
going through an autoimmune condition or a different inflammatory
problem. You have to deal with this both physical and mental, emotional, spiritual.
And I love the fact that I think in our culture in the past years, we've made great strides to
normalize mental health care and destigmatize people getting access to mental health care.
Wonderful. I just feel like it's in many ways, this is sort of the next stage in that conversation,
because I think in many ways, it's an incomplete conversation around mental health care,
because in the West, we still like to separate mental health from physical health. You know,
it's a mental health problem. We sort of relegate it as
sort of this abstract, sort of philosophical chemical imbalance, if you will, which is in
now it's coming out, it's flimsy science at best anyways, that we have to realize that mental health
is physical health and our brain is a part of our body just like anything else. So it's really
in a part gut feelings is a conversation around
what's known in the research as the cytokine model of cognitive function. Cytokines are
pro-inflammatory cells, right? So it's research looking at how does inflammation impact how my
brain works? How does inflammation impact mental health? So things like anxiety, depression,
brain fog, fatigue have this inflammatory component. But then the question is, what I really talk about in the book is what's driving the inflammation? Because inflammation
is a normal part of the immune system. But what's triggering this chronic inflammation,
that sort of this forest fire that's burning in perpetuity, that's the problem of what's
triggering people's mental health issues, just like it's triggering their autoimmune issues.
So both the gut and the feelings part of it are the things that we know from the research. And I have a lot of clinical
experience to show how these things impact people's health. So the gut things, i.e. like
underlying gut problems, 75% of the immune system. Inflammation is a product of the immune system.
Our gut and brain are actually formed from the same fetal tissue. So when babies are
growing in their mother's womb, the gut and brain are formed from that same fetal tissue,
and they're inextricably linked for the rest of our life through what's known as the gut-brain
axis, or the connection between the gut and the brain. And if you think about it, the intestines
kind of even resemble the brain. 95% of serotonin is made in the gut. 50% of dopamine is made in the gut, stored in the gut.
Researchers call it the second brain for a reason, because of this. This is a lot of far-reaching
implications to underlying gut problems, to not only inflammatory problems, i.e. autoimmune issues,
but also to mental health issues, because it is the second brain. But then conversely,
the feeling stuff, like I really talk about in the book, the research
around chronic stress and trauma and even intergenerational trauma, how these big complex
things, these mental, emotional, spiritual things are literally stored in ourselves,
dysregulating our nervous system, raising inflammation levels, impacting how our hormones
are expressed. So it's both a gut and
a feeling side of two sides of the same coin that impact so many people and i don't you know i just
i had these conversations with my patients all the time it just was a matter of when
i had the conversation in book form inflammation i don't really know what that word means
how would you summarize or um simplify that word for anybody that also doesn't really know what that word means how would you summarize or um simplify that
word for anybody that also doesn't really understand the term inflammation yeah it is
abstract i think to your point it's i use it so flippantly that i realize i'm in this weird
health bubble but it is a nebulous term it's not inherently bad it's a product of the immune system
the immune system makes different proteins,
different amino acids,
different chemical messengers, if you will,
that fights viruses, fights bacteria, heals wounds.
So when you think of inflammation
in this sort of normal acute state,
it's if somebody gets a sporting injury
and their knee swells up, right?
That's acute inflammation rushing nutrients and healing and oxygen and white blood cells
to the area to repair it, to rejuvenate it.
That's normal measured human inflammation.
We would be goners as a species without a normal inflammatory response.
It's when inflammation goes chronic that there's a
problem. Chronic inflammation, it's associated with just about every health problem under the
sun. When you're looking at what researchers are looking at these inflammatory components,
you're looking at autoimmune issues, metabolic issues like type 2 diabetes. And you look at cancer, heart disease, to mental
health issues, as I mentioned, this sort of cytokine looking at the neuroinflammatory component
to things like anxiety and depression. So that's what inflammation is. When it goes chronic,
it really sets off a lot of cascade of dysregulation in the body because it's a lack
of homeostasis. It's the Goldilocks principle. It's not too high, not too low, but just right.
That's where you want inflammation, just like many things in the body, just like the gut bacteria in
our microbiome. We don't want bacterial overgrowth. We don't want a deficit of beneficial bacteria
like hormones. We don't want too much hormones, like a dominance of hormones. We don't want a deficit of beneficial bacteria, like hormones. We don't want too much hormones, like a dominance of hormones.
We don't want a deficiency of hormones either.
Inflammation is the same thing.
We don't want excess inflammation.
That's what's associated with all of these chronic health problems.
And we don't want a deficiency that's immunosuppressed people,
that people have immunodeficiencies.
That's not good either.
So it's about modulating and supporting healthy inflammatory pathways is
really the clinical objective for my patients and for the average person out there that's looking
to optimize how they want to feel that should be their goal as well so i've got two questions that
what what is a symptom that one might notice in themselves of chronic inflammation and what are
in your practice what are the leading sort of causes of that chronic inflammation sure so there's three the way that we see it in functional medicine
there's three main stages if you will on this continuum this inflammation spectrum on one end
there's silent inflammation silent autoimmunity meaning if you ran labs you'd see some some
markers off like a high sensitivity C
reactive protein, which is quite a conventional marker. You'd see that spiked. You see maybe a
homocysteine level elevated, another inflammatory protein, but the person feels all right. They say
everything's cool. Stage two is the inflammation reactivity. That's the vast majority of people
living on our planet today are in stage
two or three. Stage two, a lot of people are there. They have things like brain fog. They
have things like fatigue. They have some sort of dysregulated nervous system response, a way that
people typically will say it. They'll say, I'm anxious, but I'm exhausted or wired and tired
is the other way of putting it. They have different
digestive problems. I mean, the amount of people that have chronic constipation or IBS or some sort
of digestive issue that, again, it's their everyday, so they normalize it. But these things are anything
but normal. They're just ubiquitous. And I would put under that category mental health issues,
anxiety and depression, autoimmune reactivity issues, and people that have hormonal problems.
And then stage three is a full-blown diagnosable issue. Like they're going to their doctor and
they're given an ICD-10 code in the States. They're given some diagnostic code and they're
given a medication or recommended some conventional treatment.
But researchers estimate it's about four to 10 years prior to that diagnosis when things were
brewing on the spectrum, meaning by the time somebody gets diagnosed officially, it didn't
happen overnight for most people. So it's no matter where you're at, how can you be supporting
your gut and your feelings? How can you be supporting your physical health and your mental, emotional, spiritual health?
So to answer the second part of your question is like, what are the most common causes of it?
It really stems, like the broad umbrella of it has to do with what researchers refer to
as an evolutionary mismatch or an epigenetic genetic mismatch. Our genetics, it's estimated,
hasn't changed, haven't changed in about 10,000 years. But yet our world has changed dramatically
in a really finite period of time when you're putting that into context with
the totality of human history. So the foods we're eating or the foods we're not eating,
our stress levels, our collective and personal traumas,000 years,
but they're being triggered like never before in human history because of this onslaught
of this chasm between our DNA and the world around us.
So on that point, then the world we live in is maybe misaligned to our genetics,
which is kind of what I heard there. Let's with the the emotional stuff one of the topics you introduce in chapter one of your book is this idea of shameflation never had that term
before yeah shameflammation shame okay shameflammation um what does that mean and what's
what science have you got to support that that's a real thing yeah well it's it's it's really a
commentary on inflammation it's not that shameflammation is a literal real thing it's a real thing. Yeah, well, it's really a commentary on inflammation. It's not that shame
inflammation is a literal real thing. It's a commentary on how does what's shown in the
research as far as in things like chronic stress, which is so well researched, and trauma. And I
talk about in the book something called intergenerational or transgenerational trauma. How do these things impact our body, our physical health? So shame is sort of a term that a lot of my patients feel
varying degrees of shame. They feel shame that they're not perfect enough with their body or
around food or around life itself, not being the best parent or the best whatever in their life. There's a lot of health
related shame in our world and just shame in general when it comes to life. So shame is sort
of the term that I used in the book of how to explain the sort of mental, emotional, spiritual
feeling that people have. How does impacting their health in the book, I talk about this study around self-compassion,
which is really the antithesis of someone that's shaming themselves, is someone that has sort of
grace and a lightness and a self-compassion around it. And the study had people do, they had them
speak in public or do math, which apparently that's what we hate the most as humans, but they measured their
inflammation levels when they were doing these stressful things, right? And their inflammation
levels were high. Interleukin-6 is IL-6 inflammatory protein. But the people that
practiced self-compassion during this time had the lowest levels of inflammation. And on day two,
you'd expect, okay, the person would sort of adapt
and the people that were doing the math or the public speaking, maybe the inflammation would
come down. Actually, the inflammation levels were higher on day two than day one, sort of this
cumulative effect. But again, the people with that practice self-compassion, which I talked about the
different practices in the book that I've seen effective for my patients, it attenuates, calms
that inflammatory response. And that's just one of many. But we know
most health problems of why people are visiting their doctor are stress-related, that are either
exacerbated by stress, that are flared up by stress, or literally caused by stress. When you're
looking at things like autoimmune issues, we have patients fill out what's called an adverse childhood experience score, every
telehealth patient that we have. And research has shown that people that have these higher ACE
scores, these cumulative childhood and beyond childhood lifestyle, like life stressors,
whether physical abuse, sexual abuse, mental, emotional abuse, alcohol abuse in the home,
growing up, people that have
gone through these things in life have an increased likelihood of an autoimmune issue later on in life
or a mental health issue later on in life or a metabolic like type 2 diabetes issue later on in
life. So again, there's a lot of shame around that stuff too as far as what people have gone through.
So shameflammation is really just my term to explain this phenomenon that's in the scientific literature that I see out,
I see play out in people's lives on a daily basis. You talked about how, how vicious stress is as a
cause, I guess, for inflammation. You know, people tend to think of stress as being a really,
really bad thing. I hear often that some kind of stress is a good stress.
What is in particular the type of stress you're talking about that is leading to this shame
flammation?
I'm assuming it's chronic stress.
Yeah, the human species wouldn't be here without some grit and resilience.
And I think in some ways you could argue that we're really lacking a resilience and grit. And that's something that I'm teaching
my patients and in the book for people to sort of gain a resilience to handle stress. There's
nothing wrong inherently with stress. And even if you look at the research around hormetic effects
or hormesis, like people are doing the cold plunges you see all around the wellness space or sauna therapy or high intensity interval training or even things like fasting.
These are all hormetic effects that humans would have spent times in, like difficult times,
periodic times of stress. That actually makes ourselves more resilient and our souls more
resilient in many ways. But it's the chronic stress where it's out of alignment
with that ancestral health perspective.
There's that evolutionary mismatch that I mentioned earlier.
That is something that we haven't aligned with.
We have these different stress adaptation responses in the body
and the body's releasing things like cortisol and
adrenaline and we never allow this sympathetic fight or flight stress aspect of our autonomic
nervous system to calm down so we're always in this fight or flight stressed state to varying
degrees that people never are able to regulate themselves and never able to support that parasympathetic,
that resting, digesting, that hormone balance
state of their nervous system.
So yeah, it could look different for different people.
But the things that I hear the most with from people,
it's their jobs.
It's like a lack of, I would say,
healthy boundaries with their jobs.
And their family can be a source of stressor finances can be a sort of
stress and their health i think when you don't feel well that's stressful as well those are the
most common things that i hear from people this fight or flight response this sort of prolonged
state of feeling like you're kind of in fight or flight which is sort of characterized by being
short of breath or feeling a bit on edge or nervous what is the consequence of being in that state for too long because a lot of people can probably
relate to that yeah well it's that is in part what's driving these these vast epidemic of
health problems in our world today when you you're talking about 50 million Americans having auto immune condition, hundreds of millions worldwide are having autoimmune condition, type 2 diabetes.
I mean, it's the vast majority of people in the West are somewhere on this insulin resistance
spectrum, meaning they have things like PCOS or weight loss resistance or insatiable cravings or prediabetes or type 2 diabetes, all of these health problems that we
are plagued with as a world are in part fed by chronic stress. It's just a matter of
how much your body can handle. And that's sort of the conversation in the book about
bioindividuality, right? Some people have the analogies, sort of the conversation in the book about bioindividuality right some people have the buck
analogies sort of that bucket analogy some people have massive buckets and they can handle a lot of
things in their life before it's going to hit that tipping point what is the tipping point the
tipping point is health problems where something's got to give and they realize they're diagnosed
with a health problem and it's stressors the foods we eat trauma all of these
things accumulate you can't change your bucket size but you can change what you put in it you
can't change your genetic tolerance for stressors but you can change what you put in it so it's
really a message of agency right it's a message of what can i do we all have different abilities
or thresholds to handle things in our life but we all have the ability to clear these things out and to heal ultimately you know hearing all of this it makes me feel so deeply
that the way we've chosen to live our lives is really unhuman and when i think about what we
can do to change that from like a real systemic level it seems like it might just be too big of
a job because of the direction of travel of
everything technology the way we're organizing our lives in terms of like cities and
work and professionalism and social media etc etc are you optimistic that there's things we
can do to change it and what are those like real systemic things we have to do within our own lives
as individuals but also as a society yeah i mean it's something I think often about. And I think
that there's a growing amount of pockets of people, if you will, that are that know intuitively,
they have to do something different to see something different. And being in functional
medicine, for the past 13 plus years years at this point, I have to say
what was once considered radical or fringe 13 years ago, the idea that stress and trauma
could trigger autoimmune issues is now very much talked about in conventional settings.
And the things that may have seemed woo-woo and strange 13 years ago, now is being researched by
reputable institutions. I talk about the research of the book around Shinrin-yoku, which is the
Japanese term that translates as forest bathing, which sounds weird when you think of it in English,
but it's actually a beautiful description, I believe, of the Japanese art of using nature as a meditation, using nature
as a medicine, and how researchers show that just spending a few minutes in nature and taking in
with all of your senses, like a sensorial effect of nature, lowers inflammation levels, lowers
stress hormones, balances the human immune system, actually improves the human microbiome
because of the things you're smelling in
and taking in with all of your senses.
So I think the fact that researchers are looking at these ancient arts
is a good sign that we as a culture are looking for something different.
Because I think in many ways, do you remember that Pixar film, WALL-E? I think WALL-E is prophetic in many ways of like the path we could go down
where people are just sitting, looking at a screen and we've lost all sense of reality.
I don't, I think whoever wrote WALL-E, the people at Pixar, we can go a different direction.
You know, this is such a an interesting strange question to
ask based on what you've said but i was just just as you finished speaking then i was thinking about
how we know this stuff like you know this stuff i know this stuff it's not the in terms of like
getting back to being a little bit more human in the way that we organize our lives but we i was
going to ask you the question like do you do it yeah i mean to me i don't think you have to pick between modernity
and decreasing that chasm between genetics and epigenetics so i live in a modern world i run a
telehealth clinic so i use technology to speak to people around the world at for the past 13 years
and we ship labs to them and so i very much am a fan of technology and people are listening to us right now around
the world. I love the decentralization, the democratization of health information because
of technology. It's wonderful. But I think the sort of unfettered lack of healthy boundaries
with this phenomenon that we only have relatively a few years of experience with as a world, I think that that's
something we just have to learn how to check ourselves. And we are all trying to figure it
out right now. So do I live it? Yes, I live it. But I live it in a balanced way where I have
boundaries with technology. Like my son's here in the studio with us right now. He's 16 years old. He just got a
phone at 16. And so as a parent, I'm making these decisions of kids that are like eight, nine years
old having social media. And we have the U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. Vivek Murthy, say recently
that he says, and this is the U.S. government saying, children under the age of 14 shouldn't
have social media. If the U.S. government's saying it, who takes well-measured conservative
advice for these type of things when it comes to wellness historically, if they're recommending it,
I could only assume that we have an issue at hand. So yes, I think it's just a matter of all of us to
make these decisions for ourselves out of self-respect, not out of shame, but out of self-respect.
What do I need?
What healthy margins, what healthy boundaries do I need to live a more sane life, to live a more joyous, to live a more meaningful life?
Some people can handle probably more technology than me.
Some people could probably.
We all have, again, this bio-individuality when it comes to these things.
But I think we just need to, out of self-respect check ourselves it's i'm thinking
even beyond technology into things like you know we're becoming more lonely than ever before but
we all know that's not good for our health or our happiness we know that being in a community is
great for our health and happiness we're eating things that we all know are not great for our
health and happiness as well and and so like the really and many of the things you've said i was like you know i know that to be true but like
why don't i do all of those things and my my conclusion in my head was that i think i optimize
for something else i think a lot of us actually optimize our lives not for like health or really
even for what we know at our deepest level would make us happiest we optimize for other things like status
and success and we're all reproductive reproductive um pursuits and i was just thinking i was just
trying to mull it over there why that is why like everything you've said in terms of being healthy
and being happy um we all understand and even i think about myself here i think
i could go do all of those things but what i'd have to do is probably log off the internet you know probably wind things down a little bit
be a little bit less ambitious um would i be happier probably but i'm not doing it and would
i be healthier yeah probably but i'm not doing it and that's really what i'm trying to get at
it's like why people don't do what they know they should do and why they seem to be optimizing for like success
and happiness yeah i think it's it's our culture's priorities right it's like burnout is this badge
of honor and like status and how many followers you have on social media how many downloads you
have is seen as it's deified it it's glorified in many ways.
And I think this unsexy stuff,
like, you know, getting whatever,
fasting or eating well,
isn't as alluring because people don't see it all the time.
So I think it's human nature.
I think our culture is really,
sells us a lot of things as far as what's important and how we look and things that are
materialistic tend to be top of the list. So I don't think it's about, it's not just you,
it's me, it's all of us. We all are in this culture that tells us this is what's important.
But ultimately, my experience is to be the best you like to be
the best CEO, to be the best successful human being to be the best partner, we have to have
our health. And I see a lot of high performing, successful people that don't want to choose
either or they want to be successful, but they realize they cannot be the highest performing person if they don't have their health
And I see people start
Their health eroding because it is unsustainable to always be in that sympathetic fight-or-flight stress state and they know intuitively
Something's off here. I got away with it in my 20s
I'm getting away with it mostly in my 30s, but they start to erode. And then when you have your health look not as sustainable and impenetrable as you thought
it was, then at that point, oftentimes it's that motivation that you just said that actually
motivates them to get healthy.
One of the things that orientates us and changes our priorities is trauma.
And that's something you talk about in the book as well.
The really fascinating thing that I've always been keen to ask somebody is about this idea of intergenerational trauma which you've referenced a second ago because i wasn't sure
if intergenerational trauma was just like woo-woo spiritual stuff or whether it was real science i.e
that the idea that your parents trauma can be passed on to you somehow is that true yeah well
and that's yes it is true it is true it's what researchers are really exploring of how it's
expressed in our descendants and then we all have trauma just in our own life right and we all
these are things that we can accumulate and through things like therapy and somatic experiences and things like EMDR that I talk about, you can work on your trauma in your life.
But for some of us, that were big things in our world
really were explored in the scientific literature to see how this plays out.
One was a Ukrainian genocide, man-made famine in the early 20th century.
Joseph Stalin, the Ukrainian people wanted to have freedom.
Really nothing new is under the sun. Every time the Ukrainian people wanted to have freedom. Really, nothing new is under the sun.
Every time the Ukrainian people wanted to have freedom,
there was some sort of authoritarian squash on their efforts.
But this famine in the early 1900s was done on the Ukrainian people.
Millions of people died.
And what researchers have found is not just the people that went through this atrocity,
their children and their grandchildren had the same methylation gene variants.
Methylation is something that we quantify on labs.
It's interconnected different biochemical pathways that impact inflammation levels,
impact neurotransmitters and how our brain works,
different detoxification pathways, that literally this trauma that the people went through during
this Ukrainian genocide was passed on like an epigenetic heirloom of how genes were expressed
by their experience. Similar research was done in the Holocaust and the descendants of people
that went through the Holocaust in Germany and Poland. So yes, it's sound science fiction,
but intergenerational trauma or transgenerational trauma, looking at how trauma is literally stored
in the cells and then passed on through family lines is very much science. And it's shown that
these people have increased likelihood of mental health issues,
autoimmune issues, type 2 diabetes, different hormonal problems. And this is what's being
explored in science, but I could only imagine that it exists on a spectrum that maybe all of
our descendants haven't gone through the same things. But I think intuitively, again, we can
know that there's certain behaviors and certain ways that people live in part because of what our ancestors have gone through.
So, yeah, that's what's being explored.
It feels a bit like a lot to deal with, like having to deal with my own trauma, let alone my great grandparents trauma as well, having a role in my life.
And in that way, I think that can make a lot of people can think about
this it's like wow i'm screwed like i if it wasn't a i have my own junk let alone my ancestors stuff
i'm gonna pass my junk on to my kids right but i think so for the average person you don't
necessarily to even have to think about it because it's just where you're at today. But I would say this,
if you shift your perspective and almost give yourself a little bit more grace,
a little bit more forgiveness and compassion to say, wow, there are some big things at play here.
And I see people up against seemingly insurmountable things that have gone through a lot of personal trauma,
as well as ancestral trauma, break the chains of dysfunction, break the chains of disease
and disorder in their life, and heal not only themselves, but heal their families,
heal their children's children, heal generations they'll never get to see.
So I think it's how you look at it. Yes's heavy but as trauma can be inherited so can healing interesting
in that chapter where you talk about intergenerational trauma you also talk about um
polyvaginal theory big word yeah phrase yeah what is what is polyvaginal theory polyvagal
polyvagal of course i've got vaginal jesus christ
we'll keep that in is there anything called polyvaginal probably i have to we have to learn
about that together i don't know let's talk about polyvagal theory instead then if you don't know
anything about polyvaginal that'll be the next episode the after dark episode
polyvagal theory is well it gets its name in part because of the vagus nerve. It's the
largest cranial nerve in the body, right? And it translates from the word wandering or wanderer,
and it sort of wanders from the brain down into the gut. And it's the main nerve that's
responsible for our parasympathetic, our resting, digesting,
our zenned out hormone balanced state of which that aspect of our autonomic nervous system
is weakened or what researchers call a, many of us have a poor vagal tone.
Our vagus nerve is weak.
Our parasympathetic is weak because our sympathetic that fight or flight stressed super productive always on the go type a is very strong it's really overactive so the sympathetic
nervous system is is where the the fight or flight the stress responses happen and then the
parasympathetic nervous system is ultimately what calms us down yes exactly and both are important
okay both are important it's about but many of us have a dysregulated nervous system response because of this sort
of imbalance within the autonomic nervous system.
And then the enteric nervous system is sort of the third aspect of our autonomic nervous
system.
But polyvagal theory is a way to understand how trauma can be stored in our body.
So there's three main,
in this sort of study of the human nervous system,
there's the dorsal vagal, sympathetic, the ventral vagal.
It's understanding how upon this continuum can the human nervous system reside.
So can we be in this sort of,
I'm in a state of calm and protected and I'm grounded
and I'm in balance all the way to sympathetic fight or flight, all the way to I am under
threat, I am shutting down, I'm in hypervigilance.
And the end stage of that is something called dysautonomia or dysautonomia.
It is when the nervous system is perpetually stuck in that fight or flight state, which
that's a diagnosable disorder.
But again, Polyvagal attempts to describe how these things exist on a spectrum
to understand how things like thoughts and emotions, trauma, shame, our bodies are like
cellular libraries where we're storing all of these things. And the thoughts we speak,
the thoughts we're thinking the words we
speak are literally stored in ourselves and we have trillions of cells that are listening intently
to how we speak and how we how we live our life so that's what polyvagal theory is talking about
so in essence there's these three states where you're relaxed in state one state two you have
sort of acute stress small small amounts of stress and state one state two you have sort of acute stress
small small amounts of stress and then in state three you have severe things like burnout and
you know physiological collapse i guess yeah um and what what sort of proportion of the population
do you think are living in each state there yeah i mean i would assume when you look at the
statistics of chronic disease and the fact that you're talking, depending on the study that you look at, 60 to 80 percent of the West, U.S., U.K., all Western countries or is also stressful. But also the mental, emotional, spiritual stress of it.
When you look at the phenomenon of insulin resistance, which is the leading cause of heart disease in the world and doubles the risk of many cancers as well.
That phenomenon of metabolic issues and hyperinsulinemia or excess insulin and glucose issues that's the vast majority of people
so the vast you really can't have a regulated nervous system when you're looking at that so
i would venture to say that between stage two and three between the sympathetic to all that
that system hypervigilance it's the vast majority of the human race right now i always think about
you know there's i have stress in my life and um i worry that at some point ongoing stress will put
me into that state of hypervigilance my understanding of hypervigilance is basically
where really regardless of stimuli or environment you just can't shake the the feeling of stress
some people like you know
they're just kind of stressed on it on edge anxious at all times i've always thought that
that state is reached after a prolonged period maybe in state two um is that accurate is that
kind of how how it works where you're in sort of chronic stress for too long that you fall into
this category of hyper vigilance where you're basically just anxious forever yeah i think in most of the cases it's cumulative like that it takes time i mentioned that that
sort of general statistic of most people that have metabolic issues most people that have an
autoimmune issue these sort of end like more diagnosable things right it's about four to ten years prior that things were
brewing so yes i think for most people like it's it's like that but then you have sort of the
outlier that i think that goes to just such intense trauma there's such intense loss in their life
that things could happen speed up if you, speed up that degradation of how the nervous system
and immune system is regulating itself.
And you mentioned food a second ago and the role that plays,
the foods that don't love us back.
What are the foods that don't love us back?
I'm going to lose some friends right now on this podcast,
but what I would call the inflammatory core four,
plus one, if I can,
but that would be gluten-containing grains
would be on the list.
That's things like wheat and rye and barley and spelt.
And it's a nuanced conversation about this.
Is it really the grain
or is it what we've done to the grain?
I think it's more of what we've done to it.
We're not properly preparing it,
plus we're hybridizing it. We're spraying it with tons of stuff, and then we're over-consuming it, right?
We're over-consuming a famine food. We're feasting on a famine food that historically was stored well,
and now we're always consuming it, let alone what we've done to the crop and the soil in which it's
grown. But for the sake of simplicity, I think the average of wheat that people are consuming is triggering a lot of inflammation levels. Definitely doesn't love the human species back
very much. And number two would be industrial seed oils, things like canola oil, vegetable oil,
soybean oil, these things that are not, this is kind of controversial for me to say in the health space. I don't think that
they are inherently bad. I think they are just over-consumed because we need healthy ratios of
omegas-3, 6, and 9. When you think of omegas-3s, it's like the healthy fish, right? The people
are like the healthy long-chain omega fats you get predominantly from fish. People are not having enough of those healthy omega-3s.
They're having a lot of these seed oils that are in a lot of packaged foods.
So I think it's just the overconsumption of one and not eating enough of the other.
The third would be conventional dairy.
By conventional, I mean the average dairy that you're getting,
the milk that you're getting at the grocery store.
There are better versions of it when you're looking at grass-fed organic, A2 milk you'll
see popping up because beta-A2 casein is the subtype of casein that would have been consumed
by humans for thousands of years.
Now, because of the crossbreeding of cows, most casein is beta-A1 casein, which has been
shown to be more inflammatory because,
again, of this evolutionary mismatch. Our ancestors wouldn't have consumed all of this.
The fermentation of dairy can make it more digestible because it's breaking down the
casein, the dairy protein, and those dairy sugars. So things like kefir or cheeses and yogurts
can be more digestible. And the fourth would be sugar and the overconsumption of that.
But most people know that.
But I would be more mindful of even the nice sounding euphemisms for sugar, you know, where
it's like, oh, it sounds like agave nectar.
I think of that, right?
Agave just sounds so natural, like they're squeezing the agave in the cup and just consuming
it.
It's mostly marketing because it's still sugar and it's still high in fructose. So I would be just mindful for the listener out there to look at the grams of added sugar
you're consuming in a day, no matter where it comes from.
And then the plus one would be alcohol, which is really a saboteur to our gut feeling connection.
It will impact our gut microbiome.
It's been shown to increase leaky gut syndrome, really raise systemic inflammation, and it's
a neurotoxin.
Researchers have shown that even drinking a small amount a few times a week is associated
with lower brain volume, lower hippocampus size, which we need for focus and energy and having optimal cognition.
This term gut microbiome is one that I've only come across in the last couple of months,
maybe the last three to four months roughly, and the importance of the gut microbiome.
For anybody who is new to this term term gut microbiome why does it matter and
what is it yeah it's vastly important and as i mentioned earlier the gut and brain are formed
from the same fetal tissue right that's our gastrointestinal system within it we have upwards
depending on the study that you look at, upwards of 100 trillion bacteria
in our gut. And it's sort of this gut garden that influences a lot of things in our body.
As I mentioned, about 95% of serotonin is made in the gut, 50% of dopamine. So our happy pleasure,
joyous chemicals, neurotransmitters are made in the gut, stored in the gut, almost exclusively when you're
talking about serotonin and dopamine. And these bacteria also regulate the immune system. So
we're talking about the way that two-thirds of the immune system is living in the gut or
an inflammation, as I mentioned, so ubiquitous, most of it's originating in the gut. So there's a lot
of gut-centric components, both from a gastrointestinal system and nervous system standpoint,
but part of that crosstalk between the gut and the brain and the nervous system
and the immune system has to do with the microbiome, which is the collective term
for all the bacteria and yeast and parasites living in the human gut,
which we co-evolved with. And in some ways, it kind of made us. We would not be here without
the microbiome. If the microbiome all of a sudden left, we would not be able to produce
neurotransmitters. We would not be able to have an immune system. We would not be able to produce neurotransmitters. We would not be able to have an immune system. We would not be able to digest food. We would not be able to convert hormones.
20% of the thyroid hormone is converted in the gut, in the presence of healthy bacteria. So the
point is, we are, it is regulating these bacteria, which are not us, is regulating how we think,
how we feel, how we operate, what we crave.
I mentioned a study in the book where there's bacterial imbalances in many people's guts
actually causing them to crave certain foods because it wants to eat, it eats what we eat.
So again, this message of really, I think, grace in many ways where it's not your lack of willpower.
Sometimes it's just these gut bacteria that need to be tended to and pruned so we can actually have proper signaling as far as our blood sugar control and craving control.
So if you care about mental health, if you care about your overall health as far as inflammation
is concerned, if you care about your weight and your energy levels, you have to care about the
microbiome. Because if it's not healthy, you're not healthy.
How do I go about caring about my gut microbiome?
So it starts with the foods you eat. So I would say that there's that inflammatory four plus one, decreasing those, and then focusing on foods that love us back.
One of the action items that I talk about in the book is those soups and stews that I mentioned.
It comes from what's called a GAPS protocol.
It's an acronym.
It stands for gut and psychology syndrome or gut and physiology syndrome.
So it's a food tool that we use within functional medicine, or at least I do,
that's really helpful for calming a lot of gut-centric inflammation.
And it's sort of a proverbial siesta for your gut
because it's almost pre-digesting the foods
when you're cooking things.
Again, our ancestors would have known all of this
because they would have,
if you talk about just ancestrally,
soups and stews were a thing that people did,
especially when you're going through a health problem.
When you think of chicken soup and someone's sick,
it wasn't the noodles
that were the health benefits of the soup. It was these broths and these cooked vegetables and cooked
meats that were easy to digest and break down. So somebody that's going through a digestive problem,
gut health problem, or has inflammation levels and suspects there's gut-centric components to
that inflammation, or they're going through things like anxiety and depression or fatigue i really would implement i mean put a lot of recipes in the book so people
can really learn how to cook this way that's really quite easy and it's an affordable way to
do it and you can batch cook it and really have it throughout the week as well so that's one thing
and then like these feeling action items of breath work it's huge for vagal tone and huge for microbiome health.
It's simple meditation, simple breath work,
all the way to the holotropic
and more of the advanced tools that I talk about.
There's a really way to support vagal tone.
The more you're supporting your vagal tone,
the more you're supporting your gut-brain axis,
the connection between the two,
which is innervating the gut.
There's something called the migrating motor complex or the MMC, which is your gut kind of keeping the bacteria
in this large intestine and the colon. But your brain has to be the one that's regulating
this bidirectional relationship between your gut and the brain and the brain and the gut.
So breathwork and meditation. i mentioned the forest bathing huga
like acts of stillness is what i call it in the book pick which one you want but stay consistent
with it because these supporters of the parasympathetic these acts of stillness are hugely
restorative to your vagus nerve and in turn your microbiome if someone's in a supermarket or on
their way to a supermarket today
and they've heard your first comment there
about the importance of food
and the foods we pick,
about the broths and the stews, et cetera,
as they're walking through those supermarket aisles,
what things should they be picking up
if they are trying to be good to their gut?
Well, I would start with fiber-rich vegetables
because you're going to be cooking those in the soups.
So you really could pick any of your favorite vegetables that you would want to be having.
And then your favorite protein that you'd be having. You could do chicken, grass fed beef,
you could do fish, really, or a plant based protein. And you could do what stock you want
to be having. You could do a bone broth. You could do a plant-based broth,
like a glangle or ginger broth or seaweed broth. And just of your choice, really curating
these soups and stews. And think of it, again, as sort of this nourishing, grounding, healing time
for you and your gut. That's what I would do. So wherever that's at in the supermarket,
go find those things. And then I would say fermented foods
can be something that people could consider.
Starting off low and slow
because they are kind of potent things,
but things like sauerkraut and kimchi and kefir,
those can be good too for many people.
You were vegan for 10 years, weren't you?
Why are you not vegan anymore?
You did your research on me.
Yeah.
I was a vegan for a while um it didn't love me back it worked for a while and i think that's that's
and my first book was called keto terry and it really was that exploration of being that health
nerd and trying something new and feeling great and doing it in a whole food based way
and then evolving from it
and realizing it didn't love me back.
And just because something's better,
meaning just because something's better
than the standard Western diet,
which it certainly was,
doesn't necessarily mean it's optimal.
And it's okay to pivot.
It's okay to evolve.
So for me, I talk about it in Ketotarian, but
I wasn't getting the complete protein that I needed, and a lot of the proteins that I was
getting really wasn't working for me on a digestive standpoint. It just was like a lot
to digest. It was kind of irritating my system, and there were some nutrient deficiencies from a bioavailable iron standpoint, bioavailable
B vitamins, like folate and B12 standpoint, and true vitamin A, retinol, which you cannot get in
plant-based form. Now, in theory, I could have supplemented with all of those things. I could
have supplemented with iron. I could have supplemented with B12, which I was. And I could
have supplemented with vitamin A, which I was. but they're synthetic mainly. The retinol that you're getting from supplement form
is synthetic. It's not in its whole food form. So the question that I posed to myself was,
if I have to supplement, is it really the most ideal diet for me? So I have many patients that
are vegan for various reasons, like religious and ethical
reasons. And we want to make them the best vegan or vegetarian, if they're vegetarian,
food protocol for them. But for me, I was able to pivot out of that, where I can still be
predominantly plant-based, but still be omnivore and feel amazing. So that was my journey.
What were the physical sort of symptoms that you experienced
that made you awaken to the idea of pivoting out of being vegan?
It was fatigue more than anything.
It was fatigue, brain fog, and digestive problems more than anything.
And I thought, you know, it was just me.
And, you know, I evolved from it.
I have a, not to get super sciencey on you, but I have a
double MTHFR gene variant, which just, we all have different gene variants, right? But this
is one of those gene SNPs or single nucleotide polymorphisms that we can measure. We quantify
on labs. We get raw gene data from something like the different genetic tests that people get,
like Ancestry or 23andMe, we can look at their own genetic
bioindividuality. My body is not as good in that way at methylating, meaning that specific MTHFR
gene has a lot of science behind it. Basically, I'm not as good at converting folic acid into
folate. I'm not that good at bringing this inflammatory protein down called homocysteine. Many people
have this and higher homocysteine levels, even slightly elevated, is linked in the research to
increasing the blood-brain barrier permeability, basically contributing to, in part, neuro
inflammation. So people that are going through things like brain fog or different inflammatory
problems or fatigue, oftentimes homocysteine is implicated in that.
So for me, to get those levels optimal,
bringing in things like wild-caught fish and grass-fed beef and more soups and stews
with bone broth-based soups and stews,
like collagen-based things,
loved my body back tremendously.
Did it fix the physical symptoms?
100%.
And that's the thing.
It's science and art
like not for all my patients that are vegan or vegetarian maybe they're not willing to pivot so
i want to come let's be pragmatic and be the best option for you but for someone that is willing to
test these things out still be predominantly plant-based but still bring these things in
i think can do wonders if you're willing to do it a lot of people when they're thinking
about being good to their body or or uh good to their gut they'll have like a detox you know like
detox juice week or something yeah what's your thoughts on on that you know i think it's a lot of
probably well first of all it's such an ambiguous term right it's like you don't know what they're
actually talking about when people say that or it's mentioned on a bottle or a protocol that
you saw online seven day juice detox yeah yeah so i i get why people want to do it because we
live in quite a toxic world and eat a lot of foods that don't love us back. So people are looking for some reprieve. But I find in many ways, it's sort of like diet culture
has snuck its way into wellness in that way, where it's like, it's this yo-yo dieting of the 90s is
now in the form of like juice detoxes, where you sort of drink and eat like crap, and you go and
do a juice detox. To me,
it's not what wellness is really about. I want people to have tools whenever they do
fall off the wagon, so to speak. I don't even like that term. But you know what I mean,
when they're up against maybe a stressful time in their life or kind of have been busy and haven't
been eating the best and they want to kind of find their center again. I think that's great. I think that juice cleanses, juice detoxes probably aren't the way to go,
I would say. Again, better than the standard American diet, maybe, but not necessarily optimal.
And my point would be in thinking about this is the lack of fiber. I think if somebody wants to
eat whole foods and maybe get smoothies because
the fibers and blend it up in sort of this fruit based vegetable based smoothie, I think that has
its place because the fiber will buffer all the fructose that's in there, the fruit sugars.
If somebody is having copious amounts of fructose for seven days with no fiber, I don't feel like
that's setting them up for success. Where do you go from there? I think after the seven days with no fiber, I don't feel like that's setting them up for success.
Where do you go from there? I think after the seven days would be my mind.
And if they have a game plan long term, because look, a lot of people have unhealthy guts. We
know that. So sometimes giving your gut a break from all the junk in any form can be good. So
it's not necessarily the juice that's the most healthy thing in the world it's that you're not feeding it junk for seven days so your gut's like i'll take it i'll take the juice
over whatever the beer your son your son is sat in the studio as you said um he sat over in the
corner over there 16 years old based on everything you know about the gut about food about our
emotions about stress and the sort of causal relationship all of these things have with each other um if you could design your son's life to be optimal as
it relates to health can you talk me through the the i was going to say adjustments but
how you would design that life for him to have an optimal life in 2023 and beyond yeah so for me like if we're talking specifically my son
it i look at him now at 16 years old and i think all of us as parents like whoever the parents
listening to this right now it's plant seeds by first living it out yourself right and
living your life out of as an example instead of sort of preaching and being dogmatic
and making it about sort of diet culture. I don't think that that's healthy at all,
but it really shifts your perspective away from all the things you quote unquote can't have,
but really focuses back to all the things you get to have and avoiding things that don't love
you back isn't restrictive it's self-respect for your body and really that's something that i've
tried to do with my son and his sister is really focusing on foods that love and back so if you
want a day in the life of what it would look like,
it's funny to see at 16 years old, he starts to own it for himself.
It's not this thing that I'm just talking about or a thing that dad does.
Now I see him.
He actually said to me this the other day. He said that very thing.
He's now taking it for himself.
He said, I took it for granted for all
these years of just, it was in the house and this is what his dad was doing. But now this is like,
now he can own it for himself. So I think there's hope for us because he'd be the first one to tell
you he's a picky eater and that's okay. And it's really just meeting your kid where they're at
and planting seeds. And then at some point, the goal is for them to own it for themselves
so in the morning i mean he typically does some intermittent fasting in the morning which isn't
for everybody but 16 years old he's working out he's eating clean he does some time compressed
feeding in the morning so that's something that's not for everybody but it works for him and i we both do it why why is it good because it's a goal to
support metabolic flexibility humans would have done this they just would have called it life
because of food availability food wasn't always available for our ancestors again most of our
genes haven't changed in 10 000 years so having some intentional time where you're not eating and you're breaking your
fast a little bit later in the day or you're ending your eating window in mid-afternoon,
those are two ways that you can do it. Be sensible about it. Be moderate about it.
You have an eating disorder. I wouldn't recommend it. But for the average person that's looking to
optimize their health, most of us are in the West
stuck in this sugar burning, metabolically inflexible state where we're on this blood
sugar roller coaster. We have these insatiable cravings, even if it's for the healthier sugars.
And intermittent fasting is a way to sort of train your metabolism to be more resilient,
to be more flexible. So then break the fast around lunchtime
is how we typically would do it.
But we have lots of vegetables and clean protein
or healthy fats like avocados and extra virgin olive oil.
And you can have that whole food smoothie
with fruits and greens and some sort of protein powder
if you want to do that.
And it's similar for dinner.
And then there's lots of
things people can have, but also cultivating these feeling practices to be supportive of the
parasympathetic. If we're speaking about my son, I'm so proud of him because he, I'll walk in his
room sometimes and he'll just be on the floor meditating. And that's, we all should be doing
that. It's completely free. It's accessible.
None of us are good at it.
That's why it's called a practice.
And the people that say that meditation isn't for them,
they're probably the ones that should be doing it the most.
Because, and I'm one of those people that where our brain is always going,
that's why we should be flexing that mindfulness muscle
because it's freaking weak.
So I don't know.
Those are some things that I. That's impressive. I i mean you walk into your son's room and you sat there
meditating more than once more than one at least that's what you think he was doing
we're very good at hearing our father coming and quickly
getting the loaded
is that your trick so
he's a hand lotus position he's a down pat is that your trick Saul?
he's a hand lotus position he's a down pat
and what do you struggle with?
you know because I always ask this question
to people that know a lot about
subject matter because
I always think it's quite disarming to understand
that they're imperfect too
so what do you struggle with as it relates to these
oh man I am so imperfect
so I I'm prone to anxiety too yeah so what you struggle with as it relates to these oh man i am i am so imperfect so i
i am and i'm prone to anxiety i'm prone to thinking sort of frenetically of just like
all the things i have to do and um not spending enough really not that much time at all focusing
in the present moment back to why I suck at meditation.
And that's okay. Like I'm okay with that because that's why I need to do it and why I need to do it even more than the average person probably. So that's what I struggle with. It's really being
grounded in the present moment. My mind is thinking about all the things I have to do,
my team, my patients, my whatever, the next thing I have to do for the book or the podcast.
So that's my goal is to be better in that area.
Has your work ever moved you to tears?
Yeah. On a regular basis, actually. When you look at things that people go through, it makes you appreciative of life so much.
When you see people that are doing all the things that are really trying with all their heart to be healthy and to get out of a dark place in their health, lose it all and having trouble to find their way out of it. It is just the sacred
responsibility for me to be there for them. But it's also hugely humbling. I think of just
the brevity of life, the fragility between the line between health and health problems.
It is not lost on me at all. So I tear up pretty
consistently in a consult. It's normal for me to do that because you're holding space for people
that are going through heavy things and you're talking to them for hour, hour and a half at a
time. Yeah, it's if you aren't, you're pretty apathetic i think to this line of work that i do how do you
manage that yourself and stop that from getting you down we talked about stress it seems like a
pretty stressful position to be in yeah it is i think the first thing that comes to mind is a
great support system right i think we all need that no matter what line of work that we're in or
no matter who you are so for me professionally it professionally, it's my team. So I can really almost metabolize
that heaviness with my team. I can go and talk with them about what happened. We can rift ideas.
We can kind of get it out by kind of somatically like talking about it and the sort of mutual experience,
I think that we both, we all have
on the patient team specifically.
So that's it.
And then these practices,
the practices that I talk about in gut feelings
of just grounding practices, meditation, breath work,
getting out in nature.
These things are non-negotiables for me
because of, again, talk about my my lack of
presence sometimes and my focus on all the stuff instead of being but also my line of work and the
heaviness that comes along with it what what does your future look like in your own view like what
does when you think about your life and i often think of my life in terms of like chapters what is the next chapter in your in your point of view if you know it at all
yeah i i don't know i think it's just like in many ways it's like a tbd sort of thing it's i
i've spent my career thus far really my nose to the ground, doing what I love, staying in my lane, if that makes sense,
or just relentlessly pursuing a passion that I've had that's really just been an outpouring.
So I think of all the things that I'm doing now, talking with you right now, or writing a book,
or having a podcast, or all this stuff, it's really just ripple effects of that main focus
of just figuring out complex problems to people's health issues.
So I don't know where that would take me.
But I haven't really, and I'm probably not the norm
when it comes to people that are professional and doing all the things
because I didn't really think that much about it other than
just being of service to the person in front of me or just I mean when I'm in a consult that's
all that's there it's the consult that's there and I'm focused on it so it again it's heavy to hold
but that's basically that all that I'm doing um so I don't know. I mean, I had kids pretty young and they're getting of age
now, teenagers now. So I'm thinking of like being able to spend these years with my wife in like
newlyweds, you know? So on a personal level, I'm kind of excited for that. I'm excited to like
being a parent's heart, running a business is hard. So I'm excited to like being a parent's heart running a business is hard so i'm
excited to see them grow up and do the things that they're passionate about and then i know there's a
lot more books in me and conversations to be had in the podcast so i'm thinking of just continuing
to do what i love to do how do you manage that when you become increasingly more and more successful
so you know the book sells really well the next book sells really well you do podcasts it gets bigger
and bigger everybody wants your time and attention you've got all these opportunities flying at you
and with that comes this insidious uh thing called stress potentially chronic stress
so how i'm trying to figure out how when you're successful at something and the opportunity
comes knocking over and over again you're thinking about you used the word earlier on boundaries
creating a boundary so you can balance both the i guess the pursuit of purpose and like health and
well-being of yourself yeah well let me know if you figure this out. Why am I asking you?
So for me, it's, I'm a work in progress trying to figure it out, but I'll tell you one thing
that I'm getting better at. It's saying no to things. Cause my mind earlier in my career,
I would say yes to everything. Cause I think, oh, like it's an opportunity, right?
Or I'm so blessed to be asked,
why would I say no to that?
And if I say no, they won't ask me again, right?
All the things.
And it's like, no, at a certain point,
there's only so many hours in the day
and my team is checking me on that too.
Like you need to quit saying yes to everything. certain point there's only so many hours in the day and my team is checking me on that too like
you need to quit saying yes to everything so for me i think like letting like no it's not not
personal it's just no for me right now that goes a long way to like decreasing my stress levels
so i i'm just getting started on this path of no but so i'll let you know how it goes but uh
i think that maybe people that are the successful maybe say yes to a lot of things and we need to
get better at saying no we we have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest asks a question for the next guest. And your question is here.
What is the most controversial idea you believe within your industry
that most people disagree with?
I have a pretty middle ground approach, sort of inclusive approach.
And I can normally find a pragmatic understanding of okay it's that's
that's the art of bioindividuality right it's it's yeah but context matters who are we talking about
and how are they doing it so I could think of just about anything in wellness where it doesn't work
for one person but it does work for another person. So I'm not a hardliner, I guess is what you would say. I really seen and that's really because all I do is talk to people about their health 10 hours a lot of nuance, a lot of variables, a lot of
gray areas when it comes to somebody's health. So I don't know what I would say that's so
controversial. I think that what we in functional medicine talk about is still controversial in some
pockets of medicine. So we can put that aside. I think most people within
health and wellness would agree with most of the things I say. I'm not super dogmatic one way or
the other. My job is to find out what your body loves and what your body hates. And I don't really
have a horse in the race when it comes to specific ideologies. But I do feel like functional medicine gets a lot of
blowback from conventional medicine. I talk about it in gut feelings, actually, the sort of
God complex that I think sometimes happens with the conventional medicine against functional medicine. And the idea that, you know, food is
influential to somebody's health, I don't think it's controversial, but I still hear it from time
to time, not super common these days. And it's increasing, it's over the past 13 years, it's
happening less and less, is that 13 years ago, it was so radical. I would get phone calls at the clinic saying,
how dare you say that you could reverse type two diabetes with food? How dare you say that food
plays a role in many people's autoimmune conditions? Now, I don't get those phone
calls anymore. And we have a bigger platform than ever. So I have a feeling that it's just
more normalized now. But it's still, I think, it's interesting to me the pushback that some of
us get within functional medicine with conventional medicine. It's that they will say that we're
quacks or we're woo-woo. But look, I bring it back to this point. It's ultimately the United
States spends more on healthcare than the next 10 top spending countries combined.
Yet we have the worst, we have the most disease and the shortest lifespan of all industrialized
nations. So I think that when you look at those statistics, we have to realize we have to do
something different to see something different. And when you look at the statistics, what we do
in functional medicine, it speaks for itself.
We're getting people healthy.
We're able to reduce and eliminate
their need for medications when it's possible.
And we're improving the quality of life.
And I think it speaks loudly
when you talk about mainstream institutions
like the Cleveland Clinic
opening up functional medicine centers.
They're not opening it up.
Millions of dollars of work
they're putting into these clinics off of quackery and woo-woo. They're not opening it up. Millions of dollars of putting it into these clinics
off of quackery and woo-woo. They're doing it because the statistics and the data speak for
itself. So I think you're on the wrong side of history if you still think functional medicine
is controversial. It's not. We're getting people healthy. Healthy shouldn't be controversial. And
I think it says more about the system that's calling us controversial than it does about us getting people healthy.
So that's the first thing that comes to mind is that still we have this sort of archaic dinosaurs critiquing people that are getting people healthy.
But it's almost like the analogy that I use in the book.
It's like the I use the analogy of school.
It's like you have the failing student judging the grade A student.
And I feel like in many ways,
that's sort of the poo-pooing of functional medicine
from conventional world.
It's like, well, how dare you?
But yet look at the statistics.
You have the worst healthcare system
in the industrialized nation nation but yet you're criticizing
people that are trying to do something different to see something different
dr will cole thank you so much thank you my friend a pleasure speaking to you likewise
and everybody should go and get your book because it's incredible gut feelings out now Thank you.