The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - World No. 1 Biohacking Expert: "I Tested 100,000 People's DNA. This Diet Will Kill You!". Fix This Hormone And You'll Fix Your Anxiety! - Gary Brecka
Episode Date: April 22, 2024His old job was to know when you would die, his passion is to extend and improve people’s lives Gary Brecka is the co-founder of 10X Health System and is one of the world’s leading experts in hum...an biology and biohacking. He has worked with CEOs, models, to athletes from the UFC, NFL, and professional boxers. Gary is also the host of the ‘Ultimate Human’ podcast. In this conversation Gary and Steven discuss topics such as, the common supplement mistakes that people make, the vitamin that most people are deficient in, how we are in a pre-diabetic epidemic, and the impact of loneliness at a cellular level. 00:00 Intro 02:18 What We're Getting Wrong About Supplements & Deficiencies 09:20 Humans Aren't Functioning Optimally 11:49 The Biomarkers That Predict Your Health Outcomes 17:53 The Link Between Your Genes & Anxiety & Trauma 22:16 Common Deficiencies That Keep Us Away from Our Optimal Health 30:24 Working with High Profile People 32:00 How Your Life & Business Changed In The Last Year 34:43 Life Insurances Know When You're Going to Die 41:51 I Knew Thousands of People Would Die but They Wouldn't Let Me Help Them 43:18 Fixing Your Deficiencies Could Save Your Life 50:44 What I Learned Analysing Thousands of Medical Reports 51:57 Fix the Simple Things Before It's Too Late 54:52 The Importance of Grounding for Your Blood Cells 01:00:02 The Most Important Exercise to Oxygenate Your Blood Cells 01:04:26 The Incredibly Health Benefits of Red Light 01:12:15 How Hydrogen Gas Helps Your Body 01:15:23 The Issues with Ozempic 01:16:42 How Is Gary's Life and His Pain 01:18:18 Advice to His Kids 01:19:18 The Loneliness Epidemic 01:25:13 Unethical Insurance 01:27:09 Gene Test Results 01:42:10 Last Guest Question You can listen to the ‘Ultimate Human’ podcast and purchase Gary’s products here: https://bit.ly/3w2m8mr Follow Gary: Instagram - http://bit.ly/3IVf6Dw Twitter - http://bit.ly/41w492P YouTube - https://bit.ly/4aLbmA7 Studies mentioned: 1. https://academic.oup.com/ajh/article/28/7/943/2743393 2.https://headachejournal.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/head.12792#:~:text=This%20study%20is%20the%20first,sodium%20concentrations%20and%20neuronal%20excitability Watch the episodes on Youtube - https://g2ul0.app.link/3kxINCANKsb My new book! 'The 33 Laws Of Business & Life' is out now - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo Sponsors: Zoe: http://joinzoe.com with an exclusive code CEO10 for 10% off
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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. No one really tells people
that have anxiety what it is. And this is why very often people don't have a specific trigger they can point to.
So they're trying to pin it on their outside environment.
But the truth is that they are deficient.
Usually in...
Gary Brekka.
He's a human biologist.
To spend 20 years working in life insurance, predicting when people are going to die to the nearest month.
And now, he's on a mission to extend your life.
A couple of days ago, someone did a swab inside of my mouth.
What was that test and why did I do it?
You did it to look at whether your parents gave you a gene mutation.
And it's one of the most overlooked things in all of modern medicine
because it's this deficiency that leads to some of the most common ailments that we suffer from.
Mental illness, ADHD, OCD, manic depression, bipolar,
sleep disorders, very severe gut issues. I mean, there are so many that don't seem to be fixable
with conventional therapies or dietary changes because very often disease is not happening to
us. It's happening within us. And I'm not going to stop getting the message out to the masses
because I just think about all the times I could have made a real material change
in somebody's life and I didn't have the opportunity to do it and felt like I was
you know sitting behind a thick glass wall just watching blind people walk into traffic
now I got a chance to make a difference so what are like the simple things that we can be doing
to prevent us even getting these chronic diseases so there's five things that I would commit to doing on a regular
basis. Number one is upon waking, I would... I wanted to invite in Dr. Kari Sada, who's going
to give me those results of my test. I want to know if there's any sort of health implications
that I should be aware of. Okay. So that right there is an issue. Congratulations, Dario Vecchio gang,
we've made some progress. 63% of you that listen to this podcast regularly don't subscribe,
which is down from 69%. Our goal is 50%. So if you've ever liked any of the videos we've posted,
if you like this channel, can you do me a quick favor and hit the subscribe button?
It helps this channel more than you know, and the bigger the channel gets,
as you've seen, the bigger the guests get. Thank you and enjoy this episode.
Gary. Stephen. Good to see you back.
Don't throw me off. I know I threw your game off there. Stephen. Great to be back, man. It's good. I know. I knew I threw your game off there, Stephen.
Great to be back, man.
It really is.
If someone's just clicked on this podcast and they're wondering why they should stay and listen,
you're going to direct the conversation.
I'm going to go where you want to go.
I'm going to follow my curiosity and ask questions.
But what are they going to get from this conversation today
if you are at the driving wheel?
Just date on how to live a healthier, happier, longer life and maybe answers to some of the most pesky health related challenges that
they're having. And when I say pesky health related challenges, I mean, everybody has these
little tiny anchors off their stern, right? Weight gain, water retention, brain fog,
lack of focus and concentration, poor waking energy, lack of deep sleep. It's shocking how many of these conditions have a common repository.
I mean, like the hub of the wheel where they all meet.
All these individual spokes come together at the common hub of methylation.
And methylation is essentially nutrient deficiencies in the human body.
And I don't usually start off with this analogy, but I'll
start off with an analogy. When I was in grad school, first of all, I'm a human biologist,
I'm not a physician. My undergraduate degrees are in biology, my postgraduate degrees are in human
biology. But when I was in my second four years of grad school, getting a human biology degree,
I had to take all these plant botany courses, which I hated because I was like, I wanted to study like anatomy and physiology and human beings, but I'm studying algae.
And, but the one thing that stood out to me about plant physiology was, let's say you have a palm
leaf that's rotting in a palm tree and you call a true arborist, a true botanist out to your house
and they see that that leaf is rotting in the tree, they won't touch that leaf. They will
core test the soil. And then they'll say, you won't touch that leaf. They will core test the soil.
And then they'll say, you know what, Stephen,
there's no nitrogen in this soil.
And they'll add nitrogen to the soil and the leaf will heal.
Only we've stopped thinking about human beings this way.
We've lost a lot of faith in humanity and mankind,
the body's ability for this to heal this.
And we believe very often,
and this is true in some cases,
that disease and pathology are
happening to us, not something that happens within us, and if you go back to the tree analogy,
you know, you could put anything you wanted on that soil, right, you could supplement for the
sake of supplementing, and I think a lot of people get lost in this realm where, well, I heard NMN is
good, and resveratrol is good, and CoQ10, and St. John's Wort John's Wort and ashwagandha and vitamin C and I should take a multivitamin.
You know, pretty soon you have this paralysis of analysis because you're supplementing for
the sake of supplementing.
And in the trees case, if you didn't find the nitrogen, the leaf never would have healed.
And the reason why most of us supplement for the sake of supplementing is that we don't
have data.
We just don't get data on our bodies.
You know, when I bring,
and you run into a lot more young entrepreneurs than I do,
but when I run into them
and I'll bring them up sometimes
when I'm doing a stage talk,
and you can question them about their priorities.
Like, what's the most important thing to you?
My health.
How important is health to you?
Oh, it's the number one priority I have.
And I say, well, come on up here
and let's talk about, you know, how much you're prioritizing your health. And you say, what
kind of business do you have? A marketing agency. What does your business earn on a monthly basis?
$148,000 a month. What's your net income? $38,250 a month. How many employees do you have? 16. What's your hemoglobin A1C? Blank, right?
Where are your testosterone levels? How about your triglycerides? Do you ever look at your
C-reactive protein and their face is just blank? And we have more data on our businesses
than we do on our temple. And I actually saw you on a stage talk, I believe it was.
And you talked about how you could take anything away from me in my life.
You know, you referred to your dog and your girlfriend.
Yeah.
Hopefully you still have the dog and the girlfriend.
But you said, you know, if you took my girlfriend away, you took my dog away.
I don't want to get you in a fight with your girlfriend.
So let's talk about the dog.
So you took my dog away. I still have my business. I still have my
life, right? But if you took away my health, I'd lose everything, right? And I think most of us
don't realize the importance of it until it is taken away. And so recognizing that the temple
is the most important vehicle that we have, I just really encourage people to get data, basic data on their
body so they have some kind of roadmap. So they are supplementing for deficiency, not just the
sake of supplementing and that they're getting the most out of their body because that's what
they're going to get. That's how they're going to get the most out of their business. You know,
I mean, just picking up these little tiny anchors that are nibbling away at productivity. You know, people that suffer from ADD and ADHD don't really realize that ADD and ADHD very often are not attention deficit disorders or attention deficit hyperactivity disorders.
They're actually attention overload disorders.
And we characterize people that have ADD as not being able to pay attention.
But the truth is they don't lack the
ability to pay attention. They lack the ability to pay attention to so many things. And if we
understand that this is an overactive mind, not a mind that's trying to pay attention to too many
things, then we can go about quieting the mind and not stimulating the central nervous system
to match that pace of the mind, which
is kind of what Adderall and Vyvanse and amphetamines do when you take them for ADD and ADHD.
So if we understood that as normal or as good as we think we feel, we have no idea how good
normal feels until we find the missing raw material in our body and we put it back.
You want to see magic happen in human beings? Find the raw material that's missing and put it
back in their body. And by raw material, I mean simple things. I mean, depending on who you talk
to, there's 72 minerals. I think 16 of those are essential minerals. There are two essential fatty
acids. There are eight essential amino acids. It is astounding how many people are clinically deficient in some of those basics.
And then they go searching in all of the esoteric super supplements and red light therapy and
NAD boosting supplements, and they're actually just missing that one of those raw materials,
basic essential amino acids, basic fatty acids, and basic minerals.
And that's where all human beings should start. And then from there, we should do some testing,
biomarkers in the blood. In my opinion, every human being should do a genetic methylation test,
the very same test that you did, whether they do it through me or not. A genetic methylation test
is a test you'll do once in your lifetime. And it will tell you exactly what raw materials
your body can convert into the usable form
and what it can't.
Because in human beings,
just like in that tree analogy,
when you have a deficiency,
you get the expression of disease.
You know, when you talk about deficiencies,
it brings me back to something
I think we talked about briefly last time,
which is it makes me feel like humans are being born broken.
Is that true?
Because if I'm deficient in something that my body needs,
then does that not mean that my body was born broken?
It's not that it's born broken.
It's just not functioning optimally, right?
And all of us have genetic SNPs.
We have these single nucleotide polymorphs.
We have these genes which are coding for enzymes to conduct these different activities in the body.
And what is astounding about human beings is how beautifully intricate the human body is.
We take one raw material, we put it into a physiologic process,
and then we take the waste product from that process,
and we feed another process, and on and on.
So for example, we'll take folate from green leafy vegetables.
We'll convert that into methylfolate.
Methylfolate becomes one of the most prevalent nutrients in the human body.
It helps to downregulate an inflammatory amino acid called homocysteine, which then turns into something called methionine,
which then goes up to the brain and helps to quiet the mind.
So you start with this green leafy vegetable,
and it winds its way all the way up to helping you sleep.
And it's not that the spinach leaf is helping you sleep,
it's what the spinach leaf has become that's helping you sleep.
And this sequence of events is called methylation.
And what's astounding about
methylation is that in many cases when it's broken, while we can't fix the gene, we can just
supplement for its function. So the most common gene mutation in the world, which we talked about
last time on your podcast, MTHFR, affectionately called the motherfucker gene, 44% of the population
has this gene mutation. I talk about it all the time. And it's a simple inability to convert folic acid and its derivatives, folate,
into the usable form called methylfolate. Well, it's very easy to supplement with methylfolate
and very inexpensive, I might add, to supplement with methylfolate. And deficiencies in methylfolate
are linked to all kinds of
conditions, including neural tube defects, because it's not folic acid that prevents
neural tube defects. It's methylfolate that prevents neural tube defects. It's what the
body converts it into, the usable form. And so when we look at methylation in the human body,
we get an exact roadmap of what we need to supplement with so that we're not wandering around
just supplementing for the sake of just supplementing.
You mentioned the entrepreneurs that you meet
that you bring up on stage
and you ask them various questions
and then you ask them about
sort of biomarkers in their body.
What are the simple biomarkers
you think that everyone needs to understand?
Because listen, I'm not a chemist,
I'm not going to be a biologist.
So if there's a couple of them,
I can probably get my head around them
and stay on top of them,
but I can't stay on top of everything.
Yeah, so there's, I would say three.
Number one is what's called glycemic profile,
which is a check of how well
your insulin and sugar metabolism is.
And it has three markers,
glucose, hemoglobin A1c,
three month average of your blood sugar, and insulin. So
definitely your glycemic profile because blood sugar, I promise you, is the root of all evil.
So first, I would do your glycemic profile. Second, I would do your hormones.
Can I just check on the glycemic profile? That's basically my relationship with sugar.
That's your relationship with sugar. And it's also your relationship with insulin.
Because very often, even people that don't eat high amounts of refined sugar and Ben and Jerry's
ice cream every night have issues with insulin sensitivity. And so as insulin rises, it causes
a whole myriad of conditions. It's one of the hallmarks of something called metabolic syndrome,
which we're seeing in younger and younger populations. And it's generally easy to catch early on. You have three markers
that look at how well you're regulating your blood sugar. Glucose, which is a measure of the amount
of sugar in your blood right now. Hemoglobin A1c, which is essentially a three-month average of your
blood sugar. And then you have your insulin. And the higher your insulin relative to your blood
sugar, the more insulin resistant you are, right? So the more insulin it takes the higher your insulin relative to your blood sugar, the more insulin resistant you
are, right? So the more insulin it takes to drop your blood sugar, the more resistant you are to
insulin. This is an early warning sign of metabolic syndrome. But it's not just the metabolic syndrome.
It's that when insulin rises, there's a whole downstream cascade of events because insulin is
not just responsible for helping us metabolize sugar. It's also responsible for
blocking other forms of energy use in the body, one of which is fatty acid metabolism. And so
generally people that have very high insulin have very high blood triglycerides. They have high
blood fat. And high blood fat and elevated cholesterol are other markers for cardiovascular
disease. So by actually bringing down one biomarker,
you have a positive effect all the way downstream.
And I would say, if you're only going to look at three things,
I would look at your glycemic profile,
your blood sugar and your insulin and your hemoglobin A1C,
hormone panel.
Okay.
So looking at your hormones
and then specifically looking at
what contributes to healthy hormone production, DHEA and a protein called SHPG.
And then I would look at basic nutrient deficiencies, vitamin D3, magnesium, potassium, and vitamin B12, which are on most blood panels.
And that is a great place to start to get the basics.
How am I regulating my blood sugar? Are my hormones balanced? What nutrient deficiencies
do I have? And then the second piece of information I would get, which you only do once in your entire
lifetime, is a methylation test. And these are widely available all over the world. I'm sure
they're very easy to get in the UK. And you want to look at five genes, MTHFR, MTR, MTRR, AHCY, and COMT. And just to be clear, so I can dumb this down for myself here,
those five genes relate to how my body processes the things that I put into it
at different stages in that sort of processing line. Yes, I mean, so take, for example, that gene at the top, COMT.
If you look at what COMT does, it stands for catechol-O-methyltransferase.
So it's a fancy way of saying it transfers a methyl group
from the category of neurotransmitters called catecholamines.
And that's a huge mouthful, but essentially what this means is
these four neurotransmitters that are called catecholamines
are responsible for our fight or flight response.
So, for example, if you drove home tonight and you got out of your car and somebody was standing in front of you with a knife, right, you would instantly have a fight or flight response.
Your pupils would dilate.
Your heart rate would increase.
Your extremities would flood with blood.
You would begin to have a fight or flight response based on that stimulus. But you could also be laying in your bed at night and you could start thinking about getting eaten
by a shark. And you could have the exact same response because the brain doesn't really know
the difference between perception and reality. The similarity between these two events, a very
real fear and a reaction to it and an imagined fear is they both meet at catecholamines. It's a rise in the same class of neurotransmitters.
So now some people are very slow to break these down. And what are the consequences of this?
Well, if you've ever had anxiety or know somebody that's suffered from anxiety,
no one really tells people that have anxiety what it is. They describe
the feeling. So they say it's a fear of the future. It's a sense of impending doom. It's a
sense of anxiousness. But what is it? Physiologically, what's going on in the body? Well, very often it
is a rise in catecholamines, the same class of neurotransmitters that are involved in a fight
or flight response.
And this is why very often people that suffer from anxiety don't have a specific trigger they can point to.
They could be on a podcast like you and I are doing right now, and all of a sudden as those catecholamines rise, they get that sensation of anxiety.
And they're trying to pin it on their outside environment.
They're trying to look for a cluster of symptoms outside their body. But this is because they are deficient, usually, in a complex of B vitamins,
a very specific form of B12 called methylcobalamin, methylfolate,
these methylated nutrients that downregulate these catecholamines.
What else could it be?
Well, I mean, there are true anxiety disorders, right? And generally, people that have true anxiety actually know what the trigger is.
They're afraid of heights.
They walk to the edge of a 30th floor balcony.
They have an anxiety attack.
They have a fear of flights.
Is this different from, so someone's been through a trauma in their life.
So they had an early trauma and then certain things in their adult life end up triggering that.
That's very different from what you're saying here.
So some people that have trauma and they wake up, for example,
consistently in the past, right?
Their first thought of the day
is about the pain that they are already suffering from.
Well, these thoughts, fight or flight thoughts,
these thoughts have a tendency to be worst case scenario
because they are also highly related to catecholamines.
In fact, people that have that gene mutation
fall into one of two categories.
Think about it this way.
If catecholamines rise very fast, you're a warrior.
And the nickname for that gene
is either a worrier or a warrior.
Because as those catecholamines,
they call it fast-comp-T or slow-comp-T.
So just looking at this one gene mutation,
if you're slow to break these catecholamines down
and they rise, what are the consequences of that?
I lay down to go to sleep at night
and I'm body tired, but I'm mind awake, right?
My mind is just clicking through the day,
thinking about the most innocuous little thoughts.
I have a tendency when I consider scenarios
to go straight to worst case scenario.
I'm an overthinker.
I am prone to anxiousness and anxiety. I walk around at a six instead of walking around at a
two. So things that would only move somebody from a zero to a two take me from a six to an eight.
Very often people in their surrounding environment will say the punishment doesn't fit the crime,
the way that they react to certain situations.
So this means that the mind is in awakened state, a heightened state of alertness. Think about a fight or flight response, but not quite to that level, but they're in a heightened state of
alertness. And this gives you that feeling of anxiety. Now what's driving the catecholamines
can have different drivers. It could be this gene mutation. It could be trauma. It could be the presence of a real fear. It could be that you're claustrophobic and stepping on a
crowded elevator. But for people that have not isolated trauma in their life, they have a
tendency to consider worst case scenario. They find that their mind is very active at night,
interrupts their sleep. Or if they get up to go to sleep at night and they go back to bed and they
can't fall asleep because their mind is awake, thinking about the most innocuous little
thoughts. They have a tendency to be anxious. They have a tendency to be a worrier. They have
a tendency to have feelings of anxiety that are not tied to their outside environment.
Those are all hallmarks of that gene mutation. So can I view this as a predisposition? I often
wonder why we can all be in the same situation,
but we can have entirely different experiences.
In the case of anxiety, some people, as you report,
just for some reason, they're just more anxious in the modern world
than some other people aren't.
The modern world has changed.
We use screens and we have notifications.
We have all this stimuli.
They're struggling more in the modern world than others.
What you're suggesting is that they could have a predisposition
to worry more because of these catecholamines?
Because of the catecholamines, yes.
Because of these catecholamines.
Norepinephrine, epinephrine, ephedrone, dopamine.
One of those we also call adrenaline.
And so you have the main driver of behavior
and you have catecholamines.
And we all know that adrenaline does in the body.
So when these four neurotransmitters are not downregulated, right, then our mind is awake and it is very often fearful.
Think about somebody who has a sensation of impending doom or anxiety without any trigger.
And the other hallmark is they will have had it on and off throughout their entire
lifetime, even when they were a child. When they were a child, they might have understood the
complex sensation of anxiety, but they had that sensation. And then as they grew to be an adult,
they understood that this is anxiety. I mean, when you're a child, you're just fearful, right? I mean,
you don't know how to explain to your mom, hey, I'm worried about something
that might happen in the future
that's probably not likely to happen,
that's never happened,
but I'm still afraid it's gonna happen.
It's a very complex emotion, right?
So they've had it on and off their entire lifetime.
It's very hard for them to point
to the specific trigger that causes it.
The majority of the time,
if they try anti-anxiety medications, they don't work.
They just make them feel like a zombie.
So this is time to look inside
and make sure the body has the raw material
it needs to do its job,
which is the complex of B vitamins
to dismantle catecholamines.
So if we went out onto the street now
and I pulled in 100 people
just off the street that were walking past
and we did these three tests on them
to look at their glycemic profile,
their hormone panel,
their nutrient deficiencies.
What are some of the most popular things that a random group of people off the street
would be missing that are central to their high performance?
So let's take men and then we'll take women so we can be specific about hormones.
So in 50% of that population, you would see a clinical deficiency in vitamin D3. I have to say, you actually run a lot of tests every single month.
Yes. Tens of thousands.
We run 20,000 a month. We do about 20,000 gene tests a month. So one of the unique things about
the perspective that I come from is we have voluminous amounts of data. We see 20,000 of these new patients a month testing for genetic
methylation. And on a lot of these patients, we also have blood work. So we have a full,
what's called a CBC, comprehensive metabolic panel, lipid panel, hormone profile, a full
thyroid panel. We have their nutrient deficiencies that I'm speaking of. We have cholesterol
triglycerides. So we have about
74 biomarkers on them. Then we also get this genetic test. And then we look at what happens
to certain biomarkers on average when you simply supplement for deficiency. So for example,
I'm not saying that every person that has high blood pressure or hypertension has this gene
mutation, but two of these genes are highly linked to poor homocysteine
metabolism. And there have been plenty of peer-reviewed studies, we can put the link to
the one below in the Journal of Hypertension, which linked higher levels of urinary catecholamines
and urinary homocysteine to cardiovascular disease. Because what happens is when you have
a certain amino acid, in particular, rise in the
blood called homocysteine, as this amino acid rises, it has a tendency to cause the vascular
system to constrict. And if we make the pipes smaller in a fixed system, pressure goes up.
But there's nothing wrong with heart, right? And so think about the fact that 85% of all
diagnosis of hypertension is idiopathic.
It's of unknown origin.
Well, of unknown origin means we can't find anything wrong with the heart.
We've tested the heart, EKGs, EEGs, stress tests,
die contrast studies, cardiac cath, what have you.
But we haven't looked at the vascular system.
We haven't looked to see, was there a simple nutrient deficiency
keeping this person from breaking down homocysteine,
which caused the vascular system to constrict. Because we know that there's a correlation between
this amino acid homocysteine and its elevated nature and increased risk of cardiovascular
disease. So before we actually went the routes of chemicals and synthetics and pharmaceuticals,
why wouldn't we just test to see if we have an issue dismantling this amino acid, breaking this amino acid down into something called methionine?
And why don't we supplement for that deficiency and see if by putting that raw material back into
the body and bringing homocysteine metabolism into normal, we can normalize this person.
So back to your question about the people in the street, you would see that 50% of them are clinically deficient in vitamin D3, cholecalciferol,
you know, the sunshine vitamin. The darker their complexion, the higher the risk that they would be
clinically deficient in vitamin D3. And if you put vitamin D3 at the center of a hub of a wheel
and looked at all of the different spokes, it's one of the only vitamins that human beings make on our own. I have argued and people have counter-argued, but I take the position that it's
arguably one of the most, if not the most important nutrient in the human body. You need a lot of
essential nutrients, but if you really start isolating them, vitamin D3 is the only vitamin
that human beings make on our own. Every cell in the body has a receptor site for vitamin D3 is the only vitamin that human beings make on our own. Every cell in the body has a receptor
site for vitamin D3. When we're deficient in this vitamin, this nutrient acts like a hormone
sometimes. It acts like a vitamin other times. We make it from sunlight and cholesterol. When it's
deficient, we have a compromised immune system. We know that it leads to osteopenia, osteoporosis.
There are all kinds of consequences that you wouldn't think stem from a simple nutrient
deficiency, but they do. One that we get from going outside in the sun.
We get it from going outside in the sun. We make it from sunlight and cholesterol.
And if you look at COVID statistics, it was the second leading cause of morbidity in COVID.
And so first you would see that they're D3 deficient. The majority of them are also B12
deficient. If you look at the vitamin B12, you'd see it's less than 500. The higher end of B12 is around 1,250. And then you would see 25 to 40% of that population
would be hormone deficient, meaning that their hormones would be out of the optimal range,
but not because they have an endocrine system issue per se,
generally because they have,
especially in younger ages, nutrient deficiencies,
things like elevated SHBG,
sex hormone binding globulin,
deficiencies in DHEA,
raw materials that the body needs to manufacture hormones.
So a good hormone panel will tell you
not only what your hormone levels are,
but what some of the nutrients are that your body's using to make those hormones. So a good hormone panel will tell you not only what your hormone levels are, but what some of the nutrients are that your body's using to make those hormones.
And again, by putting some of these raw materials very often, DHEA, not all the time,
but very often putting DHEA and vitamin D3 alone back into men with deficient levels of testosterone
or deficient levels of free testosterone, or looking at a protein that interrupts the conversion of testosterone into free testosterone
called SHBG, by actually just addressing these,
you see that the hormone levels rise back
to the normal range.
They don't need to take hormones from outside the body
and shut their production down.
They need to put nutrients and raw materials
back into the body so their body can produce hormones
on their own.
And then if you looked at their glycemic control, you would see a shockingly high percentage of people that are pre-diabetic.
It is an absolute pandemic right now because the amount of processed foods. We think that
the pre-diabetes is only because people that are eating a ton of sugar. So they must be drinking
soda and eating chocolate cake and Ben and Jerry's every night. But that's actually not true. When we
overload the body with high glycemic carbohydrates, even if they ate a lot of white flour, white rice,
white bread, white pasta, white potatoes, and fruit, you know, they, I'm not saying any of
those things are going to kill you. But when we eat diets high in refined carbohydrates,
even things that we don't consider to be sweets,
it overpowers our pancreas
and our blood sugar gets out of control.
But wouldn't you want to know that?
Wouldn't you want to know that,
do I have some of these nutrient deficiencies
or hormone imbalances or poor blood sugar control
that could be nibbling away at my performance?
Am I maybe one raw material, one methylated multivitamin away
or an amino acid away from being in a state of being optimal?
Maybe even not having to deal with little things like
intermittent feelings of anxiousness and anxiety
or poor focus and concentration or even mild states of mood numbness.
Remember that nutrients,
amino acids, for example, in our gut become neurotransmitters. Neurotransmitters form
the basis of all mood. They drive our emotion. They govern our behavior. And so is it possible
that an amino acid like tryptophan or phenylalanine or tyrosine,
which becomes serotonin and dopamine,
the deficiencies in these amino acids could lead to deficiencies in hormones,
which could actually lead to deficiencies in neurotransmitters
that would be labeled a mental illness?
Yes.
So again, I feel like I'm eating your face a little bit,
but what I really mean to say is that
if we would get basic information, basic data on the body, hormone balance, glycemic control,
nutrient deficiencies, if we would actually look at what our body can convert into the usable form
and what it can't and supplement for that deficiency, you would see your body begin
to thrive in ways you never thought possible. You work with a lot of high profile individuals as well.
I do.
What are some of the high profile names that you have permission to share?
Well, clearly anyone that's shared their journey with me on the podcast.
There's a great hit piece on me in the Daily Mail that I've listed a lot of them.
But Dana White, Steve Harvey, Stephen A. Smith, Steve Aoki,
Kendall Jenner and I were on one of her Hulu specials together running some IVs.
There are a few others that will be public here very shortly that have got on podcasts with me. And I don't necessarily want to be known as
like a celebrity biologist or just working with professional athletes and A-listers.
My message is actually for the non-woke biohacker. I don't feel like my job is to sit here and impress
you with how smart I am. I feel like my job is to put information out to the masses that is educational enough to inspire them to make a change.
And I think all too often, we're all competing for eyeballs in this space,
and we're trying to become the biggest influencer.
And we really forget about the mission of speaking to the masses,
and we just start speaking to each other.
We want to get on podcasts and stage talks and interviews and impress people with how much we
know about the carboxylic acid cycle or you know electron transport chain or something going on
inside the mitochondria and and those minute nuances are not what's going to impact humanity
a lot has changed since we last sat down in your life. It has. Yeah, it really has.
I feel like I live somebody else's life.
I really do.
What's changed?
I mean, when I first reached out to you,
it was because I saw a clip on YouTube which had 20,000 views.
And that clip on YouTube I found really interesting.
So I think I personally sent you a DM and said,
hey, Gary, do you want to come on my show?
Which I, to be honest, never personally send a DM. Really? Yeah, because my team, the way our system works here is
they understand what I'm interested in and curious about right now. So they'll go out
into the market and try and find people for me. They'll bring those people to me as a
pitch. They'll pitch the individuals to me. And then I have to say whether I'm curious
enough to sit down and have the conversation right now. So I met it twice.
So in this case, I've seen something you'd done online, I don't know, more than a year ago now it feels like, and it was really compelling to me, so I wanted to sit down with you.
Since then, I've observed you've kind of had this sort of meteoric rise on loads of
different podcasts and social media and your business has exploded.
There is something different about you.
And the thing that's different about you that strikes me is
you strike me as a man that has been through some shit.
Oh, yeah.
Frankly.
Yeah.
Because the Gary that I met the first time versus this Gary,
slightly different.
And it's the type of thing when someone's been through some shit.
And with all good things come the opposite. Yeah. It's unavoidable.
Yeah. I mean, you go under a level of scrutiny. You start off, you're like so excited. You're
like, I'm going to get the message out. God's blessed me with the ability to take ultra
complicated information, distill it down and get it to the masses. And then you realize that
there are people that are watching your videos, like a three-hour podcast, and they're looking
for the one gotcha moment, right? He said, sodium chloride, not sodium hydroxide, scam artists,
charlatan, you know, he pretends to be a doctor. He's not a doctor. I've never pretended to be a
doctor. You will not find a video, a stage talk, a podcast, anything in the media where I've ever
represented that I'm a doctor. I go out of my way to say that I'm not licensed to practice medicine.
So yeah, I have become a little more gun-shy and a little more guarded with what I say. It's an
effort to be more precise with what I'm saying. But I'm not going to stop getting the message
out to the masses because I know that this is God's calling for me. I know that because I
spent so many years of my life not in service to humanity. And I think a lot of people find
their purpose in their pleasure. And I found my purpose from my pain.
What pain?
You know, when I was doing life expectancies and mortality predictions,
we were sort of brainwashed to believe
that this was just data, right?
You weren't responsible for it.
You didn't have anything to do with this was just data, right? You weren't responsible for it. You didn't have
anything to do with this person. I was on a mortality team and we were charged with predicting
the life expectancy of people for large life insurance and investment companies.
So when you apply for a large life insurance policy, everybody's on an actuarial curve,
right? So you're on one, I'm on one. Everybody listening to this podcast is on an actuarial curve, right? So you're on one, I'm on one,
everybody listening to this podcast is on an actuarial curve. What happens is when a life
insurance company is getting ready to put 10 million or 20 million or $50 million worth of
risk on your life, only one thing matters. How many more months do you have left on earth?
And the science of predicting that mortality is a very accurate science.
I get a lot of flack about it, but if you want to know how accurate life insurance companies are at predicting death,
just look at what happened during the 2008-2009 financial services crisis.
We had 364 banks fail.
Not a single life insurance company failed.
A valid death claim in the United States has never
failed to have been paid. They are some of the most solvent institutions in the world. There's
not another financial services enterprise anywhere on the planet that would take that level of risk
on one variable. I mean, you have an investment fund. You wouldn't put that level of risk on a
single variable, right? How many more months does this person have left on earth? And they have data
that no other medical enterprise has. They have data that no other collegiate university has, not even
the government has. They know the day, the date, the time, the location, and the cause of death
for millions and millions of lives. So they know what leads to early mortality. And so-
How do they get your sort of health biomarkers to overlap that with?
Well, first of all, they do a blood test on you.
So if you've ever had a large life...
I'm not talking about term life insurance
where you get $100,000 or $200,000
or even a million-dollar term life insurance policy.
I'm talking about permanent universal life
or whole life insurance.
Also, annuities.
When you...
There's something in the States called a SPIA,
a single premium immediate annuity,
where you give the insurance company, for example, a check for a million dollars.
They guarantee you an income stream for life. Well, how do you think they're determining that
income stream? They're predicting how many more months you have left on earth. And they use
morbidity factors and comorbidity factors. And yes, they factor into your recreational profile,
your demographic profile. It's not as simple as a blood test or a gene test.
But essentially what you do is you start on a curve in a pool of a thousand lives that are
similar to yours. And your life expectancy is the dead center of that curve. So if your life
expectancy is 200 months, that means in 200 months, you have the exact same chance of
being dead as you do of being alive. Now, what determines your increased probability of death
or your mortality factors? Are you obese, diabetic, anemic? Do you have cognitive decline?
Are you compliant with your medication? There are all of these different debits.
And then there are certain debits that we call comorbidities, right? So if you're
hypertensive, that was a debit. If you were diabetic, that was a debit. If you were obese,
that was a debit. But if you were hypertensive, diabetic, and obese, it wasn't one plus one plus
one. It was one plus one plus one equal 10, right? These were massive comorbidity factors. My job was to read the
medical record and do the medical record extraction. And we had incredible data on
these people. You saw their trust and you saw their wills, their trust, their divorce decrees.
You knew that they were treating their children differently in their estate, bank accounts,
brokerage accounts, tax returns, and their medical records.
And you have recent blood work on them. But when you read a medical record on somebody,
there's more than just their height, weight, and blood pressure and the medications that they're
on. You really start to get a profile for the person. And a lot of times I felt like I was
really getting to know these people, oddly, because I had so much personal information on them.
And, you know, a lot of these people came alive to me.
I know that sounds very strange, but when you're reading about their repeated, you know, visits to the doctor and they're constantly talking about their grandchildren.
And then all of a sudden you see in the medical record
where the husband passed away
and then you see the antidepressants creeping in
and you see their weight gain,
their body mass index change.
And you actually,
as you're going through years of their medical record,
you really get a real profile for them.
And I started to realize that
there were human beings on the other side of these spreadsheets. And there were cases where
I knew that if I could have picked up the phone and just contacted that patient,
I could have completely changed the trajectory of their life. And I was prohibited from doing so by law.
And even at one point in my career,
I was threatened with prosecution
for threatening to call a patient
and warn them about a life-threatening,
potential life-threatening drug interaction
that I'd spotted in the medical record
between two physicians that had written contraindicated scripts and something called the MIB, the Medical Information Bureau, hadn't
picked it up. And the data that I had said that this was going to lead to a thrombolytic event,
a blood clot, a stroke, a heart attack, an embolism. And I remember calling the human
resources director and just basically saying that I'm going to contact this patient and being threatened with prosecution.
And I think about it a lot.
And I just think about all the times I could have picked up the phone
and just made a real material change in somebody's life,
and I didn't have the opportunity to do it.
And a big part of my career
felt like I was sitting behind a thick glass wall, just watching blind people walk into traffic.
And so I wasn't in service to humanity. All I wanted to do was be wealthy. I was very unauthentic.
And then I just woke up one day and said, what the hell am I doing? I mean, I have so much information.
I'm a human biologist, and I've been studying this database for 20 years.
I could help people live healthier, happier, longer lives.
And I quit my career, and I went home and told my fiancée at the time,
now my wife, that I wanted to start a wellness firm.
And that was the genesis of my firm's dream line
and part of the trajectory that I'm on.
And so...
It still sits with you?
Every day.
Really?
Oh, dude, it's...
Well, it sits with me in a good way because,
you know, whereas before,
it's really hard to imagine you know
somebody coming into your office and going hey you know gary oh my god remember the um you know
the mrs smith life expectancy we we did 13 years ago you know you did this life expectancy was 188
months you predict 188 months she died in 184 months. Oh my God, great job. It's amazing. That claim just paid. And I'm
like, is it really amazing? You know, when you start to realize that it was somebody's, you know,
it was like somebody's sister or somebody's daughter or somebody's mother, you start to
realize that I allow myself to be brainwashed and just think that it was data and forget that there was human beings on the other side of the spreadsheet.
And so now, I'm sorry, I'm getting emotional, but, you know, now I wake up every day and I like open my eyes and I go, fuck, yeah, you know, I got a chance to make a difference.
And I talk about the research and the fact patterns that we saw in predicting death
and I want to counter those so that we can extend life,
so we can help people live longer, healthier, happier lives.
So the counter-arguments that you've experienced,
you know, you use the word counter-argument in hippies,
what do those sort of counter-arguments tend to center on as it relates to your work? Obviously,
you talked about the doctor thing. I've definitely made some mistakes. You know,
I made a mistake earlier in my career of quoting articles and not research, which I regret. And I've
made some of those mistakes. I think very often what I try to do is simplify
the message. I talked, for example, about a 2018 study. We should put the link to this,
which was in the Journal of Headaches and Face Pain. There's a Journal of Headaches and Face
Pain. I want to say it was 2018. There were 8,819 participants in this meta-analysis, so a very large analysis.
And they found a direct inverse relationship
between sodium intake and migraine headaches,
meaning that as sodium levels went up, migraine headaches went down.
Now, by no means am I telling everybody that has a migraine headache
that you need to take a little bit of salt and you're going to be fine.
What I'm saying is on your comprehensive metabolic panel, you can see your sodium level.
When your sodium level gets to a critically low level, which believe it or not, quite a few people
have, people that regularly sauna, people that exercise and don't remineralize with electrolytes,
people that drink filtered bottled water in an effort to filter out fluoride and microplastics,
but don't remineralize their water, get nutrient deficient
sodium. And, you know, remembering that the brain actually doesn't have any pain receptors,
but the covering of the brain does, you know, something called the dura. And the dura hates
two things. It hates being stretched and it hates being contracted. And what determines whether or
not it's stretching or contracting is something called the osmotic gradient, the movement of
water across the membrane. And yes, it can be as simple as supplementing with sodium. My preference
would be Baja Gold Sea Salt or Celtic Salt so that you get all of the other trace minerals as well
to permanently put migraine headaches into remission. And then I'll come home with a
physician saying there's no evidence of that. Well, there are clinical trials on that. And the other tool that I have in my chest is for 20 years,
I worked with one of the largest databases in the world.
And we're at the point now where we see 20,000 new gene tests a month.
I don't know many clinics that are that busy.
So we have voluminous amounts of data.
We see what happens when you have a high homocysteine
and you put a patient on an amino
acid called trimethylglycine and the homocysteine comes down and then they go to their doctor and
their blood pressure is normalized. Not once, not twice, not anecdotally, thousands and thousands
of times. You see what happens to people when you bring their hemoglobin A1C and their insulin back
down into the optimal level and their triglycerides return to normal and their risk for cardiovascular disease declines,
you see what happens to C-reactive proteins when people take simple things like silica clays
and activated charcoals. And so I want to keep getting the message out that
very often disease is not happening to us, it's happening within us. And very often it's happening because of deficiencies in the human body, not pathology in the human body.
And, you know, in the United States, we're by far the largest spender on healthcare. You know,
we spend four and a half trillion dollars a year on healthcare in the US. We have the highest
infant mortality rate. We have the highest maternal mortality rate.
Even though we lead the world in flu vaccinations
and breast cancer screening and colorectal screening,
we also lead the world in cancer.
We're ranked 52nd in life expectancy.
We're ranked 39th in healthcare delivery.
We're one of the most obese nations on the planet,
twice the rate of obesity of any other
civilized nation. And yet modern medicine being, you know, medical era being the third leading
cause of death is where we're going to get information on how we extend our life.
And I watched in medical records, I've probably read thousands of times more medical records than
most physicians because I read medical records all day, every day, six days a week for almost 20 years.
And I would see what would happen when simple deficiencies would be mistaken as a pathological condition.
And I've talked about these a lot.
Like clinical deficiencies in vitamin D3 for prolonged periods of time
eventually present as rheumatoid arthritis-like symptoms.
People get joint aches and pains and stiff and sore ankles,
and they have a hard time making a fist.
And when you're speaking to the wrong physician,
very often a doctor will diagnose you based on your medical history,
not before they do SED rates and rheumatoid arthritis,
actual blood checks. They'll say, you know what, Stephen, you've got rheumatoid arthritis.
And they put you on things like corticosteroids.
And in the mortality space, we had data.
So we had data on all of these pharmaceuticals.
So we knew the trajectory of hormones and cell walls and cell membranes and production of vitamin D3 when somebody took a statin and reduced
cholesterol. And we looked at, the studies will look at cholesterol in a complete vacuum.
So LDL cholesterol high, so that's bad. Let's bring LDL cholesterol down with a statin so we
decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease. But then you have a concomitant outcome where you're
reducing the ability for the body to make hormones and cell walls and cell membranes. And so you buy yourself a consequence downstream. When really, if we go
back to just studying the physiology of the human body in the mortality space, I don't think I saw
a single centenarian once, and we processed hundreds of these death claims, I don't think
I saw a single centenarian that at the time of death did not have clinically elevated levels of LDL cholesterol. So it begs the question, is simply having high
LDL cholesterol a marker for longevity or is it a marker for cardiovascular disease that needs to
be intervened with a chemical or a synthetic? And these corticosteroids that people are put on,
you know, very often they're anti-inflammatory
in the beginning, but then they eat the joint like a termite. And so these were resulting in
voluminous amounts of joint replacements so accurately that we were able to predict that
the course of some of these medications would result in a joint replacement in roughly six years.
And so we would artificially advance people's age six years, and we would actually schedule the joint replacement for them.
And then we would reduce what's called their ambulatory profile, how well they ambulated, how well they moved.
And as we reduced their mobility, we could bring in all of these diseases that exacerbated with reduced mobility. And in my mind, I'm just watching all this happen.
I wanted to call these people and say,
I'm not qualified to do that
because I'm not licensed to practice medicine.
But I wanted to call them and just say,
Mrs. Jones, stop taking the corticosteroid.
Start supplementing with vitamin D3.
Get your B12 level to here.
Let's fix your hormones
because this is killing your red blood cell count
and this is what's leading you to be so exhausted.
And no one was looking at these basic nutrient deficiencies that we would see run in blood work
that would cause all of these diseases to exacerbate
and people were succumbing much earlier to death
or to the loss of their health span.
How many records do you think you saw in your time
where you saw the full picture?
I would be working on two or three of these,
four of these cases at a time.
Some were shorter cases,
some were longer cases, thousands.
I mean, thousands.
And in the tail end of my career,
I started to manipulate the record artificially
just to see what would happen to the life expectancy.
I would never submit that as a report, but I would say, what if I fixed the anemia? What if I actually just corrected
the D3 deficiency? What if, you know, and I was able to take out the pre-diabetic condition
or reduce their hemoglobin A1C and you would see the life expectancy jump, right? And so these are
modifiable risk factors. And I think how many times,
you know, I would be reading a medical record and I go, well, I know what this is going to happen.
This is just going to get worse because this patient has anemia. Like the classic treatment
for some anemias is folic acid, B12 and iron. And they would give them folic acid, B12 and iron,
and it wouldn't correct. And they give them folic acid, B12 and iron, they wouldn't correct.
Folic acid, B12 and iron wouldn't correct. And they give them folic acid, B12 and iron, they wouldn't correct. Folic acid, B12 and iron, wouldn't correct. And they wouldn't realize that
that person can't process folic acid.
If they gave them methylfolate,
methylcobalamin,
and iron bisglycinate,
the anemia would correct.
But these are all sort of symptoms
of further upstream issues, right?
Like something that,
a decision that someone has made in their life,
typically,
typically,
that has caused them to develop these conditions, which far Like something that, a decision that someone has made in their life typically, typically, that has caused them to develop these conditions
which far down the stream, like the tree you
talked about with the bad leaf,
doctors then point at the leaf and go,
we need to fix the leaf. But it's down in the
roots somewhere. So what are the
societal and individual
level things that we can be doing
to prevent us even getting these chronic diseases?
Like the simple, simple things.
I'll tell you the simplest thing that we can do.
First, we should think about
having an invisible fence around us, right?
Like a little force field.
And we should filter things
before they make it to the temple.
Because either we can filter things for the temple or we can let the temple
be the filter. So you can drink tap water. And if you drink tap water, your body will filter out
the fluoride, the chlorine, the microplastics, the pharmaceuticals, or you can filter your water
before you drink it, right? And take one toxic load off your body. So what I would say is probably
five things that I would commit to doing on a regular basis. Number one is upon waking, I would say is probably five things that I would commit to doing on a regular basis.
Number one is upon waking, I would drink a mineralized water.
I would take 10 ounces of water and I would add either a Celtic sea salt or a Baja gold salt to my water.
The reason for that is that most of us are deficient in some or several of the trace minerals in our body. The boring ones,
boron, manganese, molybdenum, selenium, and stir it up and just whack it back.
The second thing I would do is- You're not talking about table salt here?
No, no, no, not sodium chloride. No, I'm talking about Baja Gold Sea Salt. That's probably the
best salt that you can put in the human body because it has all 91 trace minerals it's tested down to 250 parts
per billion um from microplastics and glyphosates um only about 75 of that sodium crystal is actually
sodium the rest of them is all of these trace minerals you can get very close to that with
celtic salt right and if you can't get celtic salt then you could move to a pink himalayan sea salt
the problem with pink himalayan sea salt recently is that a lot of it has heavy metals
because it's coming out of China.
So I would say the best salt is Baja gold.
A great salt is Celtic salt.
And a decent salt is pink Himalayan sea salt.
Forget table salt.
I would just get that permanently out of your life.
Okay, so number one, I have my Baja.
Mineralize, mineralize.
And then number two, I would take a DHEA, EPA fish oil supplement or a fatty acid supplement with DHEA
or EPA oil, an MCT oil. I would take a fatty acid oil in the morning. An omega supplement. An omega.
Omega-3. An omega-3 supplement. And then I would
develop a morning routine that included the basics from mother nature, sunlight, grounding, breathwork,
cold shower. Okay. So I want to zoom in here on grounding. I'm a huge fan of grounding.
My girlfriend grounds. And again, listen, my girlfriend's much smarter than I am at transpires
because everything she says, I think I said this to you last time,
everything she says to me,
eventually I sit here with like a neuroscientist a year later and turns out she was absolutely right.
And I thought she was a little bit cuckoo for thinking that
getting outside in the morning and putting her feet on the ground
were at all beneficial.
But I've been told time and time again, it is.
What is grounding and why does it help?
So we get three things from Mother Nature, right?
We get magnetism from the earth,
we get oxygen from the air,
we get light from the sun.
The further we get away from those things,
the sicker we become.
Really?
Yes, absolutely.
So the magnetism piece,
it sounds like spiritual cuckoo stuff.
Yeah, I mean, probably 10,000 years ago,
they probably thought the same thing about gravity,
you know, but the earth has a low Gauss current, right? I mean, we were meant to spend 85% of our time outside. We spend 97% of
our time indoors now. The truth is most of us are not getting enough sun. We're not getting too much
sun. We're not getting enough sun. And, you know, because of the way we eat and seed oils and
everything that are, that are oxidizing in our skin, our cancer rates are exploding,
but not because of our sun exposure. It's because of our diet. And we can talk about that later.
But when you touch the surface of the earth, when bare feet touch bare soil, grass, sand,
we discharge into the earth. And by that, I mean, you actually change the polarity in the body.
And this is measurable. In fact, if you want to do a little experiment, find somebody that has
a microscope, a basic microscope and get a little experiment, find somebody that has a microscope,
a basic microscope, and get a slide and just take a prick, prick your finger and take a drop of your blood and put it on that slide, smear it around and look at it under the microscope. I think I
have a video of this on my Instagram. And what you'll see when you look at your blood in real
time is you'll see most of your red blood cells are stuck together and clumped up, not clotted,
but they're attracted to each other because when cells have the same charge, they repel. When they repel, it increases the amount
of surface area that that cell has to contact the outside environment. So now it can exchange
waste. It can eliminate waste, detoxify, repair, can regenerate. So imagine that you have a blood
stream full of red blood cells and they start to get opposite charges. So they attract.
And when they attract, they touch.
And everywhere that they touch, that cell loses surface area
to exchange with the outside environment.
When you touch the surface of the earth for a few minutes,
you will repolarize those.
Prick your finger 10 minutes after you come inside,
put it back on that same slide, look at your blood.
It's going to look like eggs slithering around in a bowl of oil. They will bump into each other and they'll be sliding
around, but they will not be clumped together and stuck. So what's going on then? May I speak
what? Coming through my feet, the charge coming through my feet. Yeah. So you're actually
discharging into the earth. You know, you're exchanging ions. It's a low Gauss current. So
like a magnet, you're exchanging ions with the
earth and you're discharging you're you're you're grounding what if i live on the ground floor do i
still have to go outside yes you got to touch bare dirt soil grass sand why can't i if i live on the
ground floor why doesn't the floor in the lower floor of the house because they that insulates
you from um from the earth's magnetic field is usually steel, concrete, wood. There's other barriers,
tile, asphalt. There are things that actually prevent you from actually contacting the surface
of the Earth. There are grounding mattresses that you plug into the ground wire. And then
that ground wire, if you look at how grounding a circuit occurs, at some point is running
directly into the ground. There will be a pole in the ground
that is connected usually by copper to that wire and connected to your outlet to ground that outlet
can't i just get some kind of mat that has the same charge you could get a pemf mat but again
you know one of the things i get a lot of flack of is is saying that you have to buy all this
expensive equipment so there's two ways to do it. You can buy a pulse electromagnetic field mat,
a PEMF mat.
I have one.
They cost about five grand.
So if you got five grand lying around,
it's one of the best investments you can make.
You put it in your bed,
you go to sleep on it,
you run a low-gauss current at night,
it will help get you into a deep sleep.
You'll wake up alkaline every morning.
It will push the electrosmog right out of your body
because PEMF gets rid of electrosmog right out of your body because PMF gets rid of
electrosmog, 5G, Wi-Fi. When you say you wake up alkaline every morning?
So when you change the... So the pH of the blood is a pretty narrow range. It's about five-tenths
of a point. It's about half a point. And it's a complete fallacy that you can change the pH
of the blood by drinking alkaline water. Alkaline water will
not actually change the pH of your blood. If you want to change the pH of your blood, amongst other
things, you apply a low-gauss current. pH stands for potential hydrogen. It's a charge. And so by
running a low-gauss current through the body or touching the surface of the earth, you actually
can move the pH of the blood slightly. And that does? An alkaline state is a disease-free state.
The more acidic we get, the sicker we become.
And so if we want to move the pH of the blood slightly,
if we want to wake up alkaline,
if we want to run a low-gas current through our body,
we can either touch the surface of the earth or buy a PMF mat.
So they've done tests where someone lays on a PMF mat for a certain amount of time. They then do a blood test and they find that their blood is more alkaline.
Yes. Yes. And that separation of blood cells, you can see instantly I'm getting off of a PMF mat.
Again, I've got videos of me doing this to my production manager in my house,
breaking his finger, putting it on a slide, putting it on a PMF and actually looking at it afterwards.
The second thing I would do is I would learn to do breath work.
I use something called a Hypermax, which is based on Dr. Van Arden and Dr. Otto Warburg's Nobel Prize winning work.
And that is the, it's called multi-step oxygen therapy, where you actually take an oxygen concentrator,
you fill up a bag full of 900 liters of 95% O2,
and you actually just breathe that 95% O2
for 10 to 12 minutes while you're active on a treadmill.
But if you don't want to have an EWOT,
exercise with oxygen therapy machine,
you can learn to do breath work,
engage the auxiliary muscles of respiration,
get oxygen down into the lobes of your lungs
and out of the apex of your lungs.
One of the articles
that I quoted that turned out not to be a study, and I still can't find the reference for it, was
that after age 35, 90% of people will never sprint again. And again, I haven't been able to find if
that came from a clinical study or if it was an article, but whether or not that's true, the vast majority of people stop engaging their
auxiliary muscles of respiration, you know, really exercising our diaphragm, using the intercostal
muscles between our ribs, pushing air down into lobes of our body. And as our posture collapses
and our CO2 rises, you know, if you think about the expired air in your body from the tip of your
nose and the tip of your mouth
all the way down your esophagus,
out your bronchioles,
into the farthest reaches of your lungs,
that's all expired air.
Until you get the oxygen all the way down
and out to the edges of the lung,
you're not getting oxygen into the bloodstream.
So as we age and our posture collapse,
our respiratory rate gets more and more shallow,
we're essentially hyperventilating carbon dioxide, right? And which is accelerating aging. I mean, aging is,
the presence of oxygen is the absence of disease. And so by just learning how to do breath work,
so one, I would ground, two, I would learn to do breath work. I do a Wim Hof style of breath work.
I do three rounds of 30 breaths with an extended breath hold every single morning. It is the one thing that I never, ever, ever, ever miss. Why? Ever. Because I make
little promises to myself and I try to keep them. And I find that I lose confidence in myself when
I consistently break really small promises to myself.
And I think a lot of people do this.
And our bodies crave consistency.
And so... You lose confidence in yourself.
You say, you know, I'm going to go to bed at, you know, 10.30 tonight.
And you go to bed at 1 a.m.
And then you say, I'm going to work out first thing in the morning.
And you actually don't work out. Or you get up in the morning and you say, I listened to that podcast. I'm going to work out first thing in the morning, and you actually don't work out.
Or you get up in the morning and you say, I listened to that podcast.
I'm going to do what Gary said.
I'm going to ground and get some sunlight, and I'm going to do some breath work.
And then you actually don't do it.
So the little internal promises that you make to yourself.
And I feel like a lot of people break these little promises to themselves.
They're not making them to their spouse or to their kids or to their partners.
They're not the big promises that everybody knows about.
And I think it nibbles away at our self-confidence
and our own ability to trust ourselves.
And so I have a morning routine.
I'm very consistent with it.
But the one thing that is portable for me
is the ability to get outside and ground and do breath work.
And I never, ever, ever miss.
I can't even tell you how many years I've gone without missing a single morning of breath work.
The other thing that it does for me, because human beings crave consistency. So if within 30
minutes of waking every day, no matter what time zone you're in, you're doing three rounds of 30
breaths, your body begins to zero in on that and it begins to
understand that that's the morning. This is go time. And so simple to do. You know, when I'm
here, I wake up, I might be at a different time because I'm usually on the East Coast. So I wake
up earlier here, but I go, I open the door, I go out on the balcony, I sit on the chair. It's nice
and cool outside. I face the sun and I do three rounds of 30 breaths every single day.
My partner brought me
one of those
big red light panels
for Christmas.
It was my Christmas present.
And funnily enough,
guess what my Christmas present
to her was as well?
The fucking one.
Yeah.
You get a bed
or did you get the panels?
The panels.
It was so funny.
What did you get,
like Juvexo?
I have no idea.
What did you get?
Okay.
I have no idea the brand.
But she brought me one. It's like a small one and then I was like babe open your present
and then I opened
she opened hers and hers was like a big one
she's like literally half the size of me
so we swapped
but we now both use it it's a bit of a routine
in the morning we wake up we go and sit down
buy it and
I'm not really sure what it's doing.
I've just heard a lot of positive things.
I've done a little bit of my own research on it
and how to use it to make sure I'm not killing myself somehow.
But what is it doing, and why should everyone consider getting one?
So it's referred to in the literature as photobiomodulation.
Photobiomodulation.
So if you want to look up any of the clinical studies,
put photobiomodulation, and then put, to look up any of the clinical studies, put photobiomodulation
and then put and dementia and Alzheimer's and skin and inflammation and the studies will come up.
But basically different nanometers of light have different effects in the body. And so they are
well researched and publicized to reduce inflammation, increase microvascular circulation.
So the smallest of the capillaries in our body are affected by light.
They have a very specific effect in the mitochondria, the powerhouse of the cell.
So if you actually went through the wall of a cell and into the cytoplasm and found the mitochondria and you went into the mitochondria,
you'd see that there's a motor in there that's spinning around. It's called the Krebs cycle.
And this motor, when it spits out energy called ATP, essentially it has two choices every time
it makes a revolution, right? It can either create two units of energy or it creates 36
units of energy. It's either 16 times more efficient or 16 times less efficient.
And what determines that is whether or not oxygen enters that cycle. So one of the things that red
light does is it goes through the wall of the mitochondria and it kicks out a gas called
mitochondrial nitric oxide and forces oxygen to dock. So when you get into a red light therapy
bed or use red light therapy panels, one of the things that's happening
is you're essentially forcing oxygen into the mitochondria.
You're forcing the oxygen to use mitochondria
and release a gas called mitochondrial nitric oxide.
This is also measurable, by the way.
You can get saliva nitric oxide strips.
You can put it in your mouth.
And before you got in a red light therapy bed,
you could look at the amount of nitric oxide in your saliva
and you'd see it's like a
pale kind of yellowish pink. Then you get in one of those red light therapy beds for 20 minutes
and about 10 minutes after you get out, test it again, you'll see that your nitric oxide levels
are through the roof. That's a positive sign that the mitochondria has thrown this gas out
and brought oxygen in. And just imagine what happens in a cell when you give it 16 times the amount of energy.
So imagine upstaging trillions of cells to allow them to eliminate waste, repair, detoxify, regenerate just by using light.
It also has a very positive effect on collagen, elastin, fibrin.
It's known to improve angiogenesis, the new blood vessel formation.
I was on Joe Rogan's podcast a few months ago,
and he ended up buying one of these red light beds from me. And we installed it in his house.
And he told me about four or five weeks ago that he's no longer wearing readers anymore.
Like his eyesight has improved that much. And he said he's starting to really notice the changes in his skin. So photobiomodulation is very real and it absolutely works.
But, you know, without people having to think
that they have to spend that kind of money on a red light therapy bed,
you can also just expose your skin to sunlight,
especially during first light, the first 45 minutes of the day.
When there's no UVA, there's no UVB,
there's high amounts of healthy blue light,
you can still generate vitamin D3.
Let me just run that back so I'm clear.
On the point about Rogan's eyesight,
I was looking through some research
about the impact of red light on eyesight,
and it said that it's good for eyesight.
Incredibly good for eyesight.
Because I was wondering whether I should be looking at this thing
while it's on.
Yes.
And then I went online, Googled it,
had a rummage around,
and it said you can look at it, you can stare at it.
You can.
Yeah?
You can.
Because remember, there's no UVA, there's no UVB.
And some of the marginal information that comes out
about red light being damaging to you,
you have to remember that red light is a spectrum.
Infrared, for example, is a spectrum.
Most red light therapy beds run from 600 nanometers to about
1,000 nanometers wavelength of light. As you get above that, you're in the infrared spectrum,
but you're going all the way to 1,100, maybe even above. So in other words, when you say infrared
light, this is a non-visible spectrum of light, but there's a broad number of wavelengths, right? So an infrared
red light bed will have infrared light, but it will be very low in the spectrum. So it doesn't
create heat. It doesn't excite a chromophore that creates vibration and makes you sweat.
When you get an infrared sauna, you're getting very high into those wavelengths.
You're exciting a different chromophore in the body, in your water
to be specific, and it vibrates and creates heat and you start to sweat. So you don't sweat in a
red light therapy bed, even though it's infrared, low in the spectrum, but you do sweat in an
infrared sauna, even though it's infrared light, it's high in the spectrum. So the infrared light
and the red light that comes from red um red light beds and red
light panels and face masks is incredibly beneficial for you i mean i i would be scared to even tell
you all the the positive outcomes that we see in people that regularly use red light therapy
because you know you can't really make medical claims around them but i can tell you firsthand
we have seen just astounding things that people would probably consider miracles
with red light therapy.
You mentioned the first 45 minutes of sunlight.
First light.
I always try and figure out the evolutionary
backstory to red light and
where it came from in nature and why it was good
for us as humans and why we've lost it.
Those are the three
sort of questions. Well, we're really photovoltaic beings.
I mean, we're very tied to the circadian cycle of the sun. I mean, light causes the body to behave in very
special ways. I mean, you probably heard that getting first light can actually reset your
circadian cycle and do more for you to sleep that night than probably just about any other sleep
habit. So your sleep routine really starts with your morning routine. And it has an effect on cortisol receptors. It has effect on dopamine, I mean, on melatonin
receptors. Remember, cortisol is a hormone that responds to light, right? I mean, when our eyes
are closed and light is passing through our eyelids, it has a tendency to raise our cortisol
levels, which is why they tell you not to use blue light at night, right? You're stimulating cortisol
and you're stimulating a waking hormone when you actually are trying to go to sleep. So by getting first light,
you're telling the body that it's morning. You know, you're raising cortisol, you're
down-regulating your melatonin receptors, you're getting healthy blue light into your eyes,
you're getting healthy light onto your skin. There's no UVA. There's no UVB. None of the damaging rays of the sun.
And in 15 or 20 minutes,
if you stack them all together,
you can ground,
do breath work,
and get sunlight.
Just try it for seven days.
What if I have the red light at nighttime?
Is that going to trick my body
into thinking it's the morning?
No.
The red light won't do that.
It's completely different.
It's not the blue light spectrum that we're talking about.
So I can have red light anytime?
You can have red light anytime.
In fact, red light, I find it very relaxing.
I sometimes will do my red light bed right before bed,
sleep like a baby.
We've been doing that as well at home,
so I was just checking.
Awesome.
I did Google to see if it was something that would wake me up,
but no, you're right.
Blue light is the thing that wakes us.
Bit of a tangent,
but I just saw you have a gulp of that water.
What is in that water?
Hydrogen water.
Why hydrogen water?
This is a little hydrogen generator.
I don't know if you can still see that,
but there's,
what it's doing is there's a little.
Pick it up and you'll be able to see it in the camera.
Yeah, a little electrolysis pump down there.
And it's basically adding hydrogen gas to the camera. Yeah, a little electrolysis pump down there and it's
basically adding hydrogen gas to the
water. There's not much left in there, but if
you fill it with water, you can see that.
I mean, it is fascinating.
I am so convinced that hydrogen
water is the best water that you can put in the human body.
And there's
a website called hydrogenstudies.com
that has about
1,350 studies on the site. You can go to hydrogenstudies.com that has about 1,350 studies on the site.
You can go to hydrogenstudies.com.
When you get to that site, you can actually search by human clinical trials or animal clinical trials. Hydrogen gas is used in therapeutic treatments, reducing inflammation, improving the absorption of supplements,
improving athletic performance,
addressing delayed onset muscle soreness,
and reducing neural inflammation.
I mean, there are so many clinical trials
proving the efficacy of hydrogen gas in the body.
And people do hydrogen gas through a nasal cannulus,
through ear cannulus, through eye cannulises. You can breathe hydrogen gas. But by drinking hydrogen water, you have a
very positive effect on inflammation in the body. When you pump the hydrogen into that,
doesn't it just come out the top? No, it's sealed. So it's under pressure. So what it does is it
forces the gas back into the liquid. Okay. And so the liquid actually has a high part per million
concentration of hydrogen gas. The colder the liquid, has a high part per million concentration of hydrogen
gas. The colder the liquid, the more gas you can dissolve. So it takes about five hours for it to
dissipate from that. Some people use hydrogen H2 tablets. I just use this hydrogen bottle and I
take it literally everywhere I go. I notice when I don't have it. How many of you started thinking about your long-term health when you hit 30? For me,
this was a wake-up moment of me thinking to myself, okay, I probably need to start paying
a little bit more attention now. I already felt a change in myself when I hit 30 with things like
my metabolism, my energy levels. So this year is no different. Zoe, which is a company I've invested
in, but also a company that are a sponsor of this podcast,
helps me to make smarter food choices,
all based on their world-leading science
and my own test results.
If I'm ordering food,
I know how to make my takeaway so much smarter
by adding things like a side of vegetables to eat first
or choosing the option with the most fiber.
Zoe helps me to make that choice.
It guides me and coaches me.
It's my personalized nutrition coach that I have on me 24-7.
And to help you start your Zoe journey and start making smarter food choices,
I'm giving you guys 10% off when you join Zoe now.
All you've got to do is use code CEO10 at the checkout when you sign up.
Enjoy, and let me know how you get on.
One of the subjects that's been really
sort of pertinent in culture at the moment
is this subject of a Zempec.
You know, since we spoke,
it's got even more popular,
and it's everywhere.
I looked yesterday at the company
that make a Zempec,
and I believe if my Apple stock app
wasn't deceiving me,
the company's worth trillions now.
Oh, I'm sure.
Yeah, Zempec.
So a Zempec is a peptide called semaglutide.
It's a GLP-1 inhibitor.
There's another one called Terzepatide,
which actually did better in side-by-side clinical trials
than semaglutide.
And that's the Wagovie version,
or the Manjaro version.
Semaglutide, I think, is Ozempic and Wagovie.
But these are great for people that
are type 2 diabetics or that are morbidly obese and have issues with cravings and that have
either diabetes or significant obesity. I think that they've become drugs for vanity.
And what people are realizing now
is all of the issues with gastric emptying,
paralytic gut,
the fact that when you start to...
Paralytic gut.
Paralytic gut,
which is where you actually get paralysis in the gut.
Because one of the things that they slow
is gastric emptying.
And so if you slow the rate of gastric emptying, very often contents can putrefy in the gut. And it's not that I'm totally against
these peptides. If you use these peptides, you have to be in a weight training program. So you
have to be doing resistance training because a third of the weight that you lose, as much as
half of the weight that you lose in some of the
studies is lean body mass. So if you're taking a semaglutide or trisepatide, then you want to
make sure that you're also on a, our clinical team would put you on a peptide, a growth hormone
peptide like sermoralin, hypomoralin to muscle protect, and then also make sure that you're on a, a good
strength training regimen because just taking these, you don't get the spot removed fat.
And so what happens is you start to aggressively mobilize and metabolize fat very often from the
cheeks and from the face. And people are getting some aglutide face or what govi face they're
saying now where like their cheeks get really sunken in their eyes the fat pads beneath their eyes um are metabolized their eyes start to look like they're sunken in so if you're
morbidly obese or or have a significant amount of weight to lose you struggle with cravings you have
you're either severely pre-diabetic or you're diabetic i mean they can be life-changing but for
vanity purposes i i don't i i think there are a lot better peptides and a lot
better ways to do it. What's your life like these days? It's amazing. I think I was telling you
before I got on the show today that I feel like I live somebody else's life. I really do. I can't
believe that I found something that I would otherwise do for free and somehow monetized it.
And you must feel the same way when you're doing a podcast and your message starts to resonate,
the caliber of people that it attracts, the rooms that you get to get in.
And for me, I have an insatiable level of intellectual curiosity.
I'm super, super curious.
And the fact that I get to sit down with people like yourself, but some of the greatest minds in the world that are studying longevity, anti-aging, biohacking, cancer, mortality, sports performance.
It's just, I pinch myself.
I really do.
With our privilege comes our pain.
Yeah.
What's the pain?
You need to be honest with me here
because this is why we did start this podcast many years ago.
You know, for me,
the pain is that as I've become more popular, I guess,
and as the message has resonated,
I've become a little more distant from the folks that I initially sought to serve and support.
I had a lot more individual reaction. I mean, interaction in the beginning. And now I just simply can't interact with a number of people that would like me to,
that actually do need me. And I've turned my attention to trying to
train and support the training of as many qualified people as I can,
so we can really touch the masses. And I had no idea how much the message would resonate.
And it resonated in a way that overpowered my company. And, you know, one of the worst things
is kind of collapsing under the weight of your own success. And that didn't quite happen, but, you know, the message began to resonate and there
were so many people coming to take our tests and seek our services that really, really needed us.
And I felt the burden of that need. We were for a period of time unaidable to respond we were overwhelmed
and that turned to vitriol in some cases um that's stabilized now but um
you know it's kind of the it's kind of be careful what you ask for
because you might get it but by the same token i wouldn't i wouldn't change a thing
i feel like the most blessed person in the
world. What about the family impact? Because you've got kids and all that.
You know, that is the greatest blessing for me. My kids are landing at LAX within a few hours.
They're in the air right now. So I've got three children and the oldest two work for me full time.
And my daughter just graduated from nursing school.
She's starting her PhD in nursing.
My son's about 14 weeks behind her.
So they're both going for their PhDs in nursing.
So they'll both have their doctorate in nursing.
And that is the greatest blessing in life is when you see that your kids have a passion because I feel like you can teach
your kids anything, but you can't give them a passion.
And the fact that they think enough about me and what I'm doing to want to follow in
my footsteps is, that is beyond anything I can even put into words because I travel with my kids.
I see clients with my kids.
My wife is also in the business,
and I think the pace of our life would be a lot more difficult
if I didn't have my family around.
I saw Dr. Peter Attia talking on a podcast once,
and I'm paraphrasing, so I don't know if I'm getting it right,
but he said, you get 19 years with your kids. The first 18 is from when they're born to when they're 18 years
old. And then they're gone. The last year is spread out over the entirety of the rest of their
lifetime. And I thought how sad, because I spend more time with my kids now
than I did almost since the day they were born,
and they're just becoming these adults
that really inspire me,
and so I think that of all the blessings
that God has given me,
that's the biggest one.
There are a couple other things
that I was really curious about
when I knew I was going to speak to you today.
One of them was kind of what we were talking about there with your family,
which is just like the role of community,
which we're clearly in a bit of a loneliness epidemic.
Well, we knew in the life expectancy space,
and this is a material fact,
that if you wanted to cut somebody's life expectancy in half at any age,
put them in isolation.
So if you put a human being in isolation, you will cut their life expectancy in half.
How could you see that in the data?
Because there was something we called a broken heart syndrome or caregiver syndrome.
And it's well documented in the elderly. You know, when you have a companion that you've been with for 40 or 50 or 60 years,
and that companion passes, very shortly thereafter, the second companion goes.
I always thought that was a myth, like a nice tale of heartbreak and love. When we call it the broken heart syndrome, it has nothing to do with a broken heart.
But I mean, the emotional state, I i mean the frequency in their body changes um and when this surrenders this surrenders the mind and
the body when the mind surrenders the body surrenders there's a lot of emerging body of
evidence to that's actually putting some science behind the the theory that emotions can make us
sick and and i think everyone believes that
and that stress can actually lead to pathology
and lead to disease.
But so you know that when we isolate human beings,
it's hard to completely isolate them,
but we know when we isolate human beings
that it has dramatic effect on life expectancy.
Some of the worst science and research that we do is when we study
components of the body or cells from the human body in isolation. You take a cell out and you
put it in a petri dish and you look how it behaves in vitro. And then you assume when you put that
cell back into the body that it's going to behave that way because cells exist in communities too.
They exchange with their outside environment. eliminate waste they repair they detoxify
they're they're a very active community um and so um you know the impact of community as a meaning
all the way down to a cellular level they do animal studies on this kind of thing right oh yeah
no question on loneliness and loneliness and and and isolation and it And it has a dramatic effect on life expectancy.
It's been a while since I've read an animal study,
but we knew that isolation
had a dramatic effect on mortality.
So if when a loved one got moved
into an assisted care living facility,
or we looked at the proximity of family members
to a mother or a father that had just lost
a grandmother or grandfather that had just lost one or the other spouse.
And you knew that the family wasn't going to visit frequently, and that now that person was
in isolation. And when I mean isolation, not completely isolated, but they were isolated
from daily activity that had dramatic effect on life expectancy.
It was a comorbidity factor that we used,
mainly in the elderly,
but it would happen in younger ages as well.
So I think the community is increasingly important.
For me, I remember when I sold my company,
my partner Grant Cardone at the time told me,
he said, your sphere is about to get a lot smaller.
And I was like, that doesn't make sense.
My sphere is about to get a lot larger.
And it was true.
What he said was very true.
I spend the majority of my time with my kids.
They're working for me full time.
We travel together.
We see clients together. We're working for me full time. We travel together. We see clients together.
We're in the hunt together. They're big supporters of the business. They caught the bug. They're in school together. You know, my youngest still, still lives with me. So my, my circle has gotten
so much smaller, even though you see me out there with like Dana White and, you know, and, and
celebrities and athletes. And those are, those are the flashbulb moments.
But in my day-to-day and week-to-week and month-to-month,
I'm intensely surrounded by my family and a very small team
that I have a high level of trust in
that is really helping me continue to be in service
to the clients that I'm working with.
What about retirement and purpose and the role that I'm working with. What about retirement then and purpose
and the role that plays in our longevity?
It's been a while since I used to have the VBT,
the variable basic table, memorized,
but there is a probabilistic factor
for retirement and communal interaction.
And I forget exactly what the level of impact was,
but we had a probabilistic model
where we would use this demographic data.
But there is no question
that mortality accelerates post-retirement.
I don't know that I've delved enough into the science
to really accurately comment on it,
but it must have something to do
with the loss of the sense of purpose.
When you look at blue zones and centenarians,
one of the key themes, even beyond the diet,
because the diets were very different.
Singapore has one of the longest life expectancies on Earth.
They eat the highest amount of meat.
Sardinia has very long life expectancies.
They eat high amounts of bread, pasta, and flour.
The Mediterranean blue zones eat high amounts of oils, pasta, and flour. You know, the Mediterranean blue zones eat high amounts of oils, fish, and fats.
But what was a common theme between all of them was mobility into older ages and a sense of purpose.
And there was no such thing as assisted care living facilities.
Assisted care was when grandma and grandpa moved back in with their kids and lived with the kids until the
day that they died. And maybe her purpose was just to get vegetables that night for dinner.
And grandpa's purpose was maybe to continue to make belts for a leathersmith down the road,
but they had a sense of purpose. When you think back to your job in life insurance and
the role that you had, is there any parts of it that you look back on now when you think about
the industry that are unethical?
Because you can't reach out
because of law and privacy
to these people,
as you've said.
That would be a violation
of a variety of different
policies and stuff.
But is there anything else
within the practice of it
that you find unethical?
Just the fact that,
you know,
I wasn't allowed
to have any contact
with the patient or the training physician. And I understand for good reason because most of the people that I wasn't allowed to have any contact with the patient or the training physician.
And I understand for good reason because most of the people that are doing this work are not licensed to practice medicine.
They don't want them jumping into the practice of medicine.
But when you notice things that are obvious and that maybe you know that a doctor would have appreciated that phone call.
Oh my gosh, I didn't know that she was on that other script.
Thank you for calling me.
I mean, it wasn't to besmirch them
or take over their practice of medicine.
But I really wish that the database
would see the light of day.
The databases that are used in predicting mortality,
in my opinion, could change the face of humanity.
I know why they won't,
because it would upend modern medicine in a way, my opinion that would be catastrophic destroy their business as well
wouldn't it because they need people to die really they do because they don't want to be
paying out well you know annuities um need people to die life insurance wants people to live a
little bit longer okay oh yeah because the longer, because the longer they live, the more they pay.
The longer they live, the more they pay.
But annuities want...
But annuities...
You've put down a deposit, basically,
so they want that deposit.
Guarantee me an income stream for life.
Wow.
So if you could kindly expire tomorrow,
that would be good for me.
And the same companies do both?
Same companies do both.
Okay.
There's something called a life insurance,
life annuity contract, a LILAC,
where you actually put an annuity and a life insurance policy on the same life and you can't
lose. I did a genetic test with 10X. You did? I did. And like you said, you're not able to give
me the results of my test, but I wanted to invite in Dr. Kari Sada, who's going to give me those
results now. And she's going to explain a little bit to me about my results and also what the test is and what it means for me.
So I'm very excited to see the results.
I'm excited for you to see them.
Let's get her in.
A couple of days ago, I had someone come to my studio
and they did a swab inside of my mouth
for something called the 10X genetic methylation test, I believe.
What was that test and why did I do it?
You did it to look at the five major genes
of methylation. So remember that if we pulled your entire genetic code, we would get a lot of
non-actionable information. I could see that you have dark olive skin, you have dark eyes, you have
detached ear lobes, but there's nothing you can do with that genetic information. We want genetic
information that's actionable. So while you can't go in and fix the gene,
you can very often supplement for its function.
And the genes of methylation are very special
because they code for the process of converting one raw material
into the usable form.
So in other words, we take in folic acid or its derivatives,
but we convert it into a usable form called methylfolate.
And so this process is called methylation. It's one of the most important process that human beings go through.
We do it 300 billion times a day. And when you have breaks in certain genes, this means that
your body is not converting one raw material into the usable form. And this causes a deficiency.
And very often it's this deficiency that leads to
some of the most common ailments that we suffer from. Dr. Kari Sada. Hello. Thanks for having me.
Could you give us a little bit of your bio and your background?
Sure. My original training was surgical. It was obstetrical and gynecology. And I just found that more chronic
disease was happening and people weren't really getting better. And so my specialized training
has been in functional medicine, kind of a more holistic approach. I have two master's degrees in this and met up with Mr. Brekka. Eight years ago now. It's been a while.
And in a small room and we started up looking at these genetic tests and reasons that people
were not getting better. So I've got my test results here, which full disclosure, I'm yet to
see. So Jack over here has put them on my iPad
and told me that I can swipe up and look at them.
So what am I looking at here, and what does it tell me?
Okay, so with your permission that we
can share that, of course, because that's important.
Only if it's good.
I'm joking.
I do want to tell you, your parents
did you a solid. Yeah, they did. You won the
genetic lottery. So remember
that in genetics, I think people get
confused. Genes are like the genetic lottery. So remember that in genetics, I think people get confused.
Genes are like blueprints.
So your mother writes half of that blueprint and your father writes the other half.
And you're born with that. You'll take that to your grave.
So when you do have something that isn't quite exactly what you want it to be,
variant is the term that we tend to use.
When that does happen, we want to find out ways to
work around that. How we color code this to make it understandable is if you have a normal copy
and a normal copy from each parent, that's green. And if you have one copy from a parent that is
normal, but one copy that is not, we're going to color that yellow. And you have one of those. And if you
have both copies are not normal, that's red. And you don't have any of those, which is great.
And the significance to that is the green genes will code 100%. You're good to go. Yellow genes,
about 40%. Red genes, 10 or less. And kind of think of it like putting spokes in a wheel,
just kind of clogging it up. Because these genes do follow a pathway. It's the methylation pathway.
I like to think of methylation as activation. Like we talked about taking something raw,
bring it in and allowing your cells to convert it to what it can use. So if you have any glitches in the pathway, you're not going
to be as efficient. So you would want to correct for your one variant gene there. So you come in
nicely with that first gene. That's probably the most common one. And that's the real popular one.
We kind of take it next level. We follow the pathway all the way up. And the reason why this even matters is because it affects everything on you. It affects how you sleep. It affects ultimately
down the road at a deeper level, how you sleep, how your thyroid functions, how your gut functions,
your moods, how you detox, especially heavy metals, how you detox. It affects your inflammation in
your body, how well you can fight for your radicals. Those are all important things.
And that's why this is more than just data. It's real data. So if you do not correct your one
yellow, you're not going to be as good at doing all those things, detoxing, fighting inflammation, your gut movement,
those kinds of things. And it's a pretty simple fix for you. If you don't activate
those nutrients, then let's give you activated nutrients. For example, you most likely have
trouble activating B12. That's probably an issue that you are not as efficient at. Of course you
do it, but you're not as efficient at it because it wasn't green. So you would want to therefore
take the activated B12 form, the methylated B12 form. So by doing that every day, I kind of liken
it to the road is broken, but you've built a bridge over it. So that's how you can compensate
for that gene variant or that gene break, we like to kind of lovingly call them.
On my results, it says one parent passed on a gene mutation. Which one was it?
He wants to know who to blame.
So that's the thing. Unless you tested your parents, you're not going to really know who gave you what.
Okay.
You do know that you had one that gave you a normal gene
and one that gave you a variant,
and that's why it's yellow.
What else does this mean for me on a practical level?
Does this mean that I'm going to, like,
I want to know if there's any sort of health implications
that I should be aware of.
So anytime you have any kind of variant in your methylation,
especially in the lower pathway,
you have to understand that it's going to affect it all the way up.
So effects can be all the way from simple sleep issues
to all the way to not being able to sleep at all.
It can be mood, gut issues.
Okay.
But you can take it out of the loop with the supplement. Are you able to tell me about the worst sort of profile you've seen and the sort
of real world consequences of that when all five markers of there are interrupted? Yeah,
we've seen them where there's a heavy mix of red and green. Okay. And this is where you see significant personality alterations,
significant what we would refer to as mental illness,
severe ADD, ADHD, OCD, manic depression, bipolar.
You see very high propensities for addiction
because of the depleted level of dopamine.
You see significant sleep disorders,
very severe gut issues, gas, bloating, diarrhea, constipation, irritability, cramping that don't seem to be fixable with conventional therapies or dietary changes. Those are amazing cases to
watch the clinical team work with because by getting methylation right,
I have seen those cases solved by our clinical team and many of those symptoms become fully
remissive. And we get a lot of chances to make good people great, but when you can materially
change somebody's life by fixing those gene mutations, that's when you're really making an impact.
There's these five acronyms here.
COMPT, and then it says MIND.
A-H-C-Y, then it says MIND.
M-T-R-R, then it says UPPERGUT.
M-T-R, that says LOWERGUT.
That's the one that I have this yellow one on.
And then there's the motherfucker one.
I shouldn't say that.
The M-T-H-FTHFR, which is mind and gut.
These are the five sort of factors for methylation,
which is really about how I process the ingredients I put in my body.
Yes.
And I'm guessing that these are at different stages in my body.
So the ones that say mind are in my head.
The one that says upper gut is sort of higher up in my gut.
The one that says lower up is in my lower gut.
And then this MTHFR that says mind and gut,
that's direct both.
And the reason is that, remember, these are sequential, right?
So I always use the analogy that,
think of it like a sandbag pass, right?
So you have a bunch of guys lined up,
and you have one guy that's taking the sandbags off the truck
and passing it to the next guy,
and he passes it to the next guy, and so on.
Well, if early in that chain,
he was supposed to take 10 sandbags off the truck, but he dropped four,
the best the rest of the line could do is six. So in other words, if an early gene like MTHFR,
which is early in the methylation cycle, is impaired, it impairs the entire downstream.
And if several gene snips later,
you have another major gene snip,
it will impair things further downstream.
And so the reason why MTHFR is one of the worst to have
but the easiest to fix
is because it's the earliest in the methylation cycle.
Okay, it's first.
Right? It's first.
So if that's red,
meaning both parents gave you that gene mutation,
you could have consequences through the entire methylation cycle.
Ah, so is that what you tend to see if someone has the...
Yes, this is why if you Google consequences of MTHFR or MTHFR and miscarriages,
MTHFR and ADD, MTHFR and ADHD, MTHFR and anxiety,
you're going to see hordes of articles and clinical studies
linking that gene mutation to what seems like a vast myriad of consequences.
Well, that vast myriad of consequences is actually related to the gene snips that are
further downstream, but they're affected because they're not getting the raw material they
need to do their job.
And in my opinion, it's one of the most overlooked things in all of modern medicine. As simple as this test is, and as easily and widely available as it is,
I'm surprised that more frontline clinics do not do this because people do it once in their lifetime
and they supplement for deficiency. And sometimes you see miraculous changes in their life.
Gary, thank you. I'm going to put these results, my results, in the description of this episode below,
exactly as it is here in front of me, so everyone can see, and the details of how I got the
test done, etc.
will all be available there for you guys to check out.
As you know, we have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a
question for the next guest, not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for.
The question that has been left for you is this one i wish i knew who your last guest was okay so they said they're quoting
someone and it says gundalini said be the change that you want to see in the world? What is the change you want to see?
It looks like Greta Leany.
Greta Leany.
You try and read this.
Gandhi.
Gandhi said,
be the change you want to see in the world.
What is the change you want to see
and how will you be it?
Wow.
Well, I want to see people live healthier, happier,
longer lives, more fulfilling lives.
And I will be that by continuing to get the message out.
And that's why I'm here.
And that's what I wake up and do every day.
And I can't hold a candle to Gandhi.
But I will spend the balance of my adult lifetime
continuing to get the message out.
Gary, thank you so much.
Getting to know you on and off camera,
you're such a genuine, true, lovely human.
Thank you.
And your intent and your intentions
are so clear to me and so pure.
So I've had loads of people reach out to me
since our last conversation
and speak to the value that your advice
has had on their lives.
Thousands and thousands of people.
I mean, I mean, I looked at the last conversation.
I looked at my emails around that time.
I searched your name.
And when I say thousands,
I mean thousands and thousands of people
that are reporting to have better lives,
happier lives,
because they listened to that conversation.
So awesome.
They probably won't be able to reach you.
So on behalf of those people,
I wanted to say thank you so much for doing what you do,
because it's very important.
Oh man, that's...
It's not always easy.
Yeah.
But you know, it's an occupational hazard.
Yeah, it is.
Putting yourself out there in the world, as I would know.
So thank you so much, Gary.
I appreciate your time.
Super welcome. Thank you.