The Dr. Hyman Show - A Free Tool To Promote Health And Wellbeing
Episode Date: July 9, 2021A Free Tool To Promote Health And Wellbeing | This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley Research has shown that journaling practices can have a range of health benefits including reduction of infl...ammation, promotion of mental wellbeing, and even improved ventricular function. Whether it be through a focus on gratitude or expressive writing, journaling allows you to have an uninhibited discussion with yourself, oftentimes leading to an “aha” moment that was hiding under the surface all along. In this mini-episode, Dr. Hyman speaks with Dr. Leonard Calabrese, Dr. Andrea Pennington, Matthew McConaughey, and Dr. Rangan Chatterjee about the psychological and mental benefits that various types of journaling can have on our overall health and wellbeing. Dr. Leonard Calabrese is a Professor of Medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University and Vice Chair of the Department of Rheumatic and Immunologic Diseases. Dr. Calabrese is also the director of the RJ Fasenmyer Center for Clinical Immunology at Cleveland Clinic and holds joint appointments in the Department of Infectious Diseases and the Wellness Institute. Dr. Calabrese has made significant contributions to science in the fields of chronic viral infections and autoimmunity and vascular inflammatory diseases of the brain. Dr. Andrea Pennington is an integrative physician, acupuncturist, meditation teacher, and #1 international bestselling author. She received her Doctor of Medicine from Washington University School of Medicine, trained at Georgetown University Hospital, and received certification in Age Management Medicine with the Cenegenics Medical Institute. Her extensive study of medical nutrition, positive psychology, and neuroscience-inspired biohacking led her to create a holistic media platform, In8Vitality, to teach people how to blend ancient wisdom and modern science for enhanced vitality and life mastery. In Andrea’s latest book, The Real Self Love Handbook, she explores her personal journey from depression to real self-love and how The Cornerstone Process, a 5-step self-discovery framework, is setting people free from the drama of past trauma. Academy Award–winning actor Matthew McConaughey is a husband, father of three children, and a loyal son and brother. He considers himself a storyteller by occupation, believes it’s okay to have a beer on the way to the temple, feels better with a day’s sweat on him, and is an aspiring orchestral conductor. In 2009, Matthew and his wife, Camila, founded the just keep livin Foundation, which helps at-risk high school students make healthier mind, body, and spirit choices. In 2019, McConaughey became a professor of practice at the University of Texas at Austin, as well as Minister of Culture/M.O.C. for the University of Texas and the City of Austin. McConaughey is also brand ambassador for Lincoln Motor Company, an owner of the Major League Soccer Club Austin FC, and co-creator of his favorite bourbon on the planet, Wild Turkey Longbranch. Dr. Rangan Chatterjee is regarded as one of the most influential medical doctors in the UK and hosts the most listened to health podcast in the UK and Europe, Feel Better, Live More. His first three books have all been #1 Sunday Times bestsellers and his latest, Feel Better in 5, shows people how to transform their health in just 5 minutes. It has been a smash hit in the UK, selling almost 100,000 copies in just 7 months, and has just been published in the United States. Professor BJ Fogg, the world’s leading expert in human behavior, calls this book, "One of the best habit change programs he has seen—deceptively simple but remarkably effective.” Dr. Chatterjee regularly appears on BBC News and Television and has been featured in numerous international publications including The New York Times, Forbes, The Guardian and Vogue, and his TED Talk, “How To Make Disease Disappear,” has been viewed almost 3 million times. This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley. Paleovalley is offering 15% off your entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal. Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Dr. Leonard Calabrese, “The Secrets to Creating a Healthy Immune System” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/DrCalabrese Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Dr. Andrea Pennington, “Is Self-Love Medicine?” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/DrAndreaPennington Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Matthew McConaughey, “Reflections On Living An Authentic Life” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/MatthewMcConaughey Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Dr. Rangan Chatterjee, “Simple Hacks To Feel Better In Five Minutes” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/DrRanganChatterjee2 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
We are all on a hero's journey,
and it's up to us to start to pick up that pen
and decide that I want to be the one
who gets to write the rest of my life story.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Hyman here.
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back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Hi, I'm Kea Perowit, one of the producers
of The Doctor's Pharmacy podcast. Whether you're seeking to improve your physical, emotional, or
spiritual health, the act of writing and journaling is a free and effective tool we can all use to
improve our overall well-being.
This is a topic Dr. Hyman has explored with multiple guests on his podcast.
Here he is with Dr. Leonard Calabrese.
I remember reading one study in JAMA about patients with rheumatoid arthritis and asthma, both inflammatory diseases,
and they had the patients just write in a journal 20 minutes a day.
Now it couldn't be, you know, I went to the grocery store and I walked my dog.
It had to be about what was happening below, underneath the hood.
And what were your emotional state?
How are you feeling?
What was affecting you?
And they found that it dramatically reduced asthma, even by objective measures,
and even rheumatoid arthritis symptoms by objective measures.
And there's a woman named Candice Pert who studied neuroimmunology.
There's a whole field of psychoneuroimmunology
at the NIH, National Institute of Health.
And she found that the immune system
was listening to our thoughts.
She calls this molecules of emotion.
Can you tell us more about that?
Yeah, it's such an incredible area.
So, you know, everyone, everyone, it's well accepted that stress is bad for your immune
system. I mean, classic chronic stress, you know, acute stress run from the saber tooth tiger.
That's really good. Chronic stress of my job, my life, the environment, politics, and the world is bad.
We are now starting to appreciate that the opposite of that, the immunology of joy can be immunologically potentiating. And you mentioned a very nice example. I call this the immunology
of gratitude. And gratitude has wide-ranging biologic effects. There's a recent
study done at UC San Diego that showed that patients with asymptomatic, echocardiographically
documented congestive heart failure with six weeks of gratitude journaling could improve
ventricular function. Here's Dr. Hyman with Dr. Andrea Pennington.
One of the things I learned very early on in my positive psychology days
was about the benefit of just writing and journaling.
And what we've discovered is that many of our patients,
they did it because I told them it was their homework,
but they were finding out over time that by writing their experiences, it can be the mundane stuff of just daily life, but also revisiting their past,
they were able to recognize that same concept of all of the programming that led them to where
they were. And then we would take them through other exercises of writing. So for example,
writing about a peak experience in your life, a time where you felt
bliss or a time where you did feel loved and accepted. And by getting it out of your head
and onto paper or onto a screen, you're able to start to reflect back on what elements are actually
you that are not just, I was coerced into doing this by my parents or by the media or whatever. And it's these regular
experiences of the self that little by little gets strengthened. We are all on a hero's journey.
And it's up to us to start to pick up that pen and decide that I want to be the one who gets to
write the rest of my life story. Right. You get to be the author of your life instead of being the
victim of your life. Exactly. Dr. Hyman also spoke about this in his conversation with Matthew McConaughey.
When I was 17, I was riding a train and hitting in Italy. And I was sitting next to this professor
of English from Cambridge University. And he said to me, Mark, he said, an unexamined life is not
worth living, which I think he quoted from Shakespeare somewhere else. But he said, you
need to write your life.
And so I was 17.
I started writing a journal.
And like you, I've been keeping a journal for decades.
And the question I have for you is, you know, did that introspection and exploration of your own mind help you become who you were? Like, in other words, without that, it was at the tool because
it's, it's, it's not just, I'm just writing my story. You're literally using it as a spiritual
tool to wake up and notice your mind and notice what's going on in your life and to think about
it differently and ask questions. And, you know, most of us just go through and we're on our
devices and we're distracted and we're not present. And when you sit and you write, you literally call in your higher self. You're like, hey, what do you think
up there? As opposed to your lower self, which is constantly operating in a monkey, you know,
reactive way. So I write things down so I can forget them. And so jot things down knowing that
you will forget them if you don't.
But so you can forget them and be more present when you write them down in the situation.
And then when you get home at night in bed or the next day or on the weekend, go back over your notes, have a read of them.
You'll start to find a little lineage of poetry or you'll find things you go like, well, I think that's right.
I laughed at that time at that line in the movie. But I thought was the funniest line when nobody else in the entire theater laughed.
But you know what? The one where everybody laughed is the one I didn't think was that funny.
Yeah. Now, does that make me odd? Well, maybe, but dive into those places where you're the
individual. Dive into those places where, you know, many times I've written, why do I cry so
much at birth, but not so much at death? Why am I the one weeping over here at the birth or someone
getting let out of prison because they were wrongly convicted? That's the stuff that makes me just
bawl. But death, I don't really cry. I'm like, I haven't found out. I can mourn. But so little things
where you find your specific and it's not a wrong or right thing. And don't judge yourself on it.
I guess what I'm saying, if you write things down, it's awareness. And the simple act of
writing something down, which you know, lets us become slightly objective. And we have the
subjective and we have the objective. It just puts us on the jumbotron for a second.
A little look at ourselves going, how are we doing there?
And it's a good view for awareness.
It's why I'm a proponent of people speaking in the third person.
It's a form of awareness.
We call it arrogance, but it's actually going,
no, I'm having a little look back.
You know, I'll tell you what's in the future, Mike Tyson.
Well, you know, it's just Mike Tyson.
What are you doing?
It's a little pop out.
It's a little projection.
We have to look back down at ourselves.
Dr. Rangan Chatterjee also shares a writing exercise he prescribes.
For anxiety, one of the first recommendations in the book is what I call a morning download.
This is where we download all the junk and anxiety that we've accumulated in our brains overnight onto a piece of paper.
This is like the practice of journaling, basically. And I've given people two options. I said, journaling,
you know, when you wake up, you've often got anxieties whirring around your brain and your
mind. And if you don't do anything to process them, they can stay there all day. They can
impact your relationships. They can impact the way you
feel about yourself and your stress levels. But simply writing them down on paper literally and
metaphorically takes them out of your head, puts them down onto paper. And it is really transformative.
And I say to people, you can write anything you want. It's not the manuscript for your next book.
It's not a letter to your boss.
It's whatever you want to write.
Now, for some people, they think that's incredible.
And I remember the week after the book came out, a couple of people messaged me and they said,
Dr. Chessy, it's really interesting.
I didn't realize I was worried about anything until I started doing this.
And there was four or five really key things in my life that I was worried about that until I started doing this. And there was four or five
really key things in my life that I was worried about that I was writing down every day, but it
was buried inside their brain. So they weren't even aware of it. So that's another one that they
could do for their mind. But if that's too free form, if people prefer a bit more structure,
I've created this exercise called the five-step release.
So these are five simple questions you ask yourself basically to help.
And it's really good if you've got anxiety or you really struggle with a lot of thoughts and you can't quite focus.
And it's called a five-step release.
So if you're interested, Mark, I can talk you through it.
Go for it.
Go for it.
Okay.
Yeah, so I think people find this super, super useful. So the first question is, what's one thing I'm anxious
about today? So you just write down, I'm anxious about this today. What's one practical thing I
could do to prevent or prepare for it? That's question number two. Question number three,
what's one reason it's probably not going to be as bad as I think it is? Question number four,
what's one reason I know I can probably handle it? Question number five, it's what's one upside
of the situation? And I could tell you Mark, it is so simple, but it is so effective. And I really
would challenge anyone listening to this who struggles with anxiety to pause,
rewind that, write those five questions down. It's not going to cost you anything. Try it for
the next few mornings when you wake up and just see how it makes you feel. Because I've seen over
and over again that it makes a massive difference. Feeling good and cultivating health is about so
much more than the quality of our diets, sleep, and exercise habits. As you've just heard, there
are so many benefits we can achieve through journaling, and there is no right way to journal.
As Dr. Hyman says, 80% of health happens outside of the doctor's office. If you've never journaled
or have moved away from the practice, consider incorporating writing into your daily life.
Your mental and physical health will thank you for it. If you enjoyed this episode,
please consider sharing it with a friend and leaving us a
comment below.
Thanks for tuning in.
Hi, everyone.
I hope you enjoyed this week's episode.
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