The Dr. Hyman Show - Cancer Can't Stand This Diet: Dr. William Li's Anti-Cancer Nutrition Breakthroughs
Episode Date: May 1, 2024View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal Each bite of food we eat has the potential to modulate our genetics and ...impact every cell of the body—don’t you want those levers to be moving in the right direction? Eating for health is one thing, but eating to beat disease is an even more intentional step toward prevention and longevity. I was so excited to sit down with internationally renowned physician, scientist, and author Dr. William Li to discuss how we can leverage food to optimize every system of the body. We dig into: How Dr. Li got interested in “Food As Medicine” while developing cancer treatments Why eating to beat disease is not the same as eating for health What food would Dr. Li bring with him if he was going to be stuck on an island? One thing Dr. Li knows everyone needs to do better Is dairy good or bad? What’s the deal with soy? The 5 defense systems to support optimal health and Dr. Li’s 5 x 5 x 5 plan We talk about this and so much more. I know you’ll love this conversation as much as I did! This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, BIOptimizers, Timeline Nutrition, and Momentous. Streamline your lab orders with Rupa Health. Access more than 3,000 specialty lab tests and register for a FREE live demo at RupaHealth.com. Tackle an overlooked root cause of stress with Magnesium Breakthrough. Visit bioptimizers.com/hyman and use code HYMAN10 to save 10%. Support essential mitochondrial health and save 10% on Mitopure. Visit TimelineNutrition.com/Drhyman and use code DRHYMAN10. Head over to LiveMomentous.com/Mark for 20% off creatine, collagen, and all of their best-in-class products.
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
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Welcome to Doctors Pharmacy.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman.
That's pharmacy with F, a place for conversations that matter.
And today, this conversation about food is really important because we're talking with one of the world's experts in many aspects of nutrition and food, Dr. William Lee.
He's a renowned physician, scientist. He's the author of the New York Times bestseller, Eat to Beat Disease, the new science of how your body can heal itself.
We're going to talk about how that works with food.
His groundbreaking research has led to the development of more than 40 new medical treatments impacting the care for more than 70 diseases. He's a legend. And these diseases
include diabetes, blindness, heart disease, and obesity. His TED Talk, Can We Eat to Starve Cancer,
has garnered more than 11 million views. He's appeared on Good Morning America, CNN, CNBC,
Rachel Ray, Live with Kelly and Ryan. And he's featured in many, many newspapers, including USA
Today, Time Magazine, The Atlantic, O Magazine, and lots more. He's the president and medical director of the Angiogenesis Foundation,
and he's leading global initiatives on food as medicine, which is why I love him so much.
His latest book and a New York Times bestseller is Eat to Beat Your Diet, Burn Fat, Heal Your
Metabolism, and Live Longer. Now, we get into a wide-ranging bunch of topics today. It's kind of
a free-for-all between two guys who are kind of nerdy about food nutrition. We talk about the
underlying healing mechanisms in the body, which I think are really important
to know. These five key defense systems that he talks about that allow our bodies to heal and
maintain. We discuss how food can regulate those fundamental systems in the body to keep us
healthy. We get in and out of different topics like, is dairy good or bad? Is coffee good or
bad? Should we be eating soy? What about other foods? What about alcohol? So we get into all
this important stuff that you need to know to optimize your health. I think you're going to love this conversation. It's going to be very
interesting. He's a brilliant guy and I hope you love it. And let's get into the conversation with
Dr. William Lee. William, so great to have you back on the Doctors Pharmacy Podcast. Welcome back.
Thanks very much. Always great to be here. Yeah. So William and I go way back and he is an
extraordinary physician. As you heard from the intro. He is a leading scientist and an incredible visionary about the future of medicine and health.
He works in all sorts of sectors, changing the world.
And what his passion is now is about food as medicine and how we use food to beat disease.
And he's written a number of great books.
We talked about Eat to Beat Disease. He wrote just an incredible book that I think set the stage for thinking about using food
not as prevention, but as treatment, right?
And one of the most impressive things I ever saw was at a conference we were at together,
it was I think the Milken Institute, and you presented a slide and you showed, here's the
effect of these bioactive compounds in plants, really these phytochemicals, and here's the effect of drugs on the same pathway.
And the phytochemicals actually seem to be more effective than a lot of the drugs, which
was kind of blew my mind.
Yeah.
No, I mean, listen, that's how I got into this whole area of food is medicine is I started
with developing new medicines for cancer, diabetes, vision loss, cardiovascular disease,
and really getting at the underpinning
of how is our body being derailed from health?
And the pharmaceutical biotech world
is all focused on that derailment.
Everything in healthcare that we've ever been trained on
in medicine is about diagnosing the train wreck
and figuring out how to tease apart the carcass of the cars
that actually have run into each other and crushed and smoking hulks, right?
Yeah.
And so for me, with the success of developing cancer treatments, I realized, you know,
we should probably up our game and throwing foods into the same systems that drugs are being tested on.
And that's the same slide that you were just referring to.
50% of the food extracts that I tested were as or more potent than the drugs we were testing
at the time.
And so to me, that was my eureka moment that what we should be doing is taking a hardcore
scientific evidence-based approach to thinking
about how foods could benefit us, not just hand-waving, you know, like the, you know, look,
the salad bar is great, but if you just pick up a kale leaf and wave it around,
somebody who is critical is going to say, well, how do you know? Well, so that's what I do
is to figure out how do we know. That's incredible, William.
You know, as you're talking, it kind of made me think about this patient I had who was so sick.
She was 65.
She had type 2 diabetes on insulin for 10 years.
She had heart failure with an injection fraction of 35%,
which is sort of on your way to a heart transplant.
For those who are listening, you don't know what that means.
It's basically how much blood your heart can pump out,
and it should be over 50.
And she had fatty liver.
She had kidneys that were starting to fail with protein and urine.
She had high blood pressure.
She had a load of other things.
She had multiple stents and coronary artery disease
and was 65 and on her way to a heart and kidney transplant.
And she was seeing the best doctors at Cleveland Clinic.
She was on the best medical protocols, the best drug combinations you could get.
And everything was, quote, optimized.
And she was still sick as you know what.
And so she came into our group program.
And I gave her basically an anti-inflammatory, microbiome-enriching,
low-glycemic, high high quality fat, good protein diet,
just real whole food, got off all the ultra processed food she was on. And it was a freaking
miracle, but it wasn't a miracle. It's just science. In other words, in three days, she was
off her insulin. In three months, she was off all of her meds, her heart failure reversed,
which we don't see. Her kidneys normalized, her fatty liver normalized, her blood pressure
normalized. In a year, she lost 116 pounds and all those diseases went away. So, there is no drug on
the planet that can actually achieve that effect. And it was food.
Because you gave her health care while she was getting sick care.
Yeah, right. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. That's kind of ghost what we were chatting about before we
started the podcast, which is what are the root causes of health?
It's a really interesting question.
And I don't think you had that class in med school, did you?
I didn't.
No, no.
Listen, I'm sure you and I had very similar experiences walking down the corridors with a gaggle of students, you know, wearing the amateur white coats and carrying the stethoscopes clumsily.
And you have the professor towing you around, teaching you from patient to patient about
disease to disease, and have to memorize everything and regurgitate it like the next week on a
test, right?
Yeah.
I mean, that's how doctors are trained.
And so what happened to me is that I always wondered, why do we even stay healthy?
Why don't we get more disease?
So, you know, here you're looking at cancer and lung cancer and kidney cancer and liver cancer and colon cancer.
I wanted to know, and all the causes of those cancers, alcohol, cigarette smoking, you know, eating red meat.
What I wanted to know is, well, how come we don't get cancer more often?
Yeah.
How do I probably stay healthy in the first place?
Exactly.
Exactly.
Right.
And when I asked my professors that question while I was in medical school and in residency
training, I would get back this look like, what a silly question.
Yeah.
If you're not sick, you're healthy.
And why would you want to even ask anything more than that?
That's right.
And yet I found that to be the most unsatisfying
answer to my driving question. So that's really what I've set out to do is to figure out what are
the common tenants? What are the common denominators of health? Cause we have to figure that out, uh,
in order to be able to hack into our own body, you know, like you're going to be a biohacker.
There's so all these different ways to actually think about things. But at the end of the day,
the average person, myself included, I don't want to have to think about things. But at the end of the day, the average person, myself included,
I don't want to have to think about everything.
No.
I just want to know that it's working by itself.
I mean, it's true.
What are the biomarkers of health?
We learn about the biomarkers of disease, right?
Your kidney function tests are up.
Your liver function tests are up.
Your electrolytes are off.
Your blood counts low.
We learn about the biomarkers of disease.
But when you look at those tests, normally they don't necessarily always tell you if you're healthy, the ones we normally do.
And so, you know, I created a company called Function Health, co-founded it, and we allow
people to get access to all these lab tests that actually measure deviations from health. And we
look at optimal ranges and we look at things that most doctors don't because we want to say, okay,
how do we measure health? Right. Well, I mean, that gets at something really, really important, which is, you know, when
you go to the doctor and they order a blood test, you get the standard panel of blood
chemistries and maybe a complete blood count.
Maybe some lipid tests.
Maybe some lipid tests.
And that's about it.
Right.
So like whatever your dozen ish, less than two dozen tests that haven't changed in 50 years.
Yeah, exactly.
Right?
Exactly.
And yet our knowledge of how our body functions and the ways that we can measure things like
just are skyrocketing.
Every day we're making more discoveries.
And so there's this gigantic mismatch in the mainstream medical system between assessing
our health versus just looking for a couple of
warning signs for disease, right? So this is where AI comes into play. This is where
data gathering comes into play. This is where people, I think, you know, like you have been
thinking about functional health for a long time. You know, you want to scrape it all together
and then figure it out on an individual level. Because there's no universal signature that works for everyone categorically,
but everyone is their own control group,
meaning everyone actually starts off with who they are.
And then how do you make that better?
Or how do you know when that actually gets worse?
Yeah, people call that anecdotes, but it's actually N of 1 research,
which is the highest level of evidence that the NIH says is possible.
And that's actually where real diseases like heart disease and cancer
treatments are actually going.
We now know that this one size fits all the instruction sheet for doctors,
the playbook, the rule rule book.
It really is underestimates the power of one. one yeah individual we need to actually listen to the
patient the individual uh for their own story we need to appreciate they're coming from a context
and we need to understand that we just can't pull a formula out and apply it to everyone
yeah which is how we were taught exactly it's it's kind of it's embarrassing to admit this and
i may be spilling the beans for the medical profession but basically once you make the
diagnosis meaning once you label the symptoms with a name doesn't tell it mean anything about
the cause right if you have you know you know heart disease or diabetes or cancer alzheimer's
autoimmune disease it just tells you what the symptoms it doesn't tell you because once you
do that once you have the label, we call that differential diagnosis, then
it's all cookbook.
You literally just look it up and here's the standard of care today and here's a set of
drugs you use and here's the order you use them and here's the options you have.
And it's really kind of agnostic to the individual.
It's like this is just what it is.
Diner style medicine.
Diner style medicine.
And so, you know, as you're saying,
you didn't really take a course in the science of creating health. And one of the revolutionary
ideas that I think you've introduced is this framework of not only eating for health, but how
to eat to beat disease. You didn't say health, you said eat to beat disease. And that's a very
important distinction because if what you're saying is true, it's revolutionary. If you can use food not just to prevent disease and stay healthy, but actually to beat disease, that's like a game-changing concept.
That's a paradigm-shifting concept.
You know, what you're saying is so true from a paradigm shift.
But I want to actually tell you, it's a paradigm shift because that's not how we view medicine today or how it has been taught.
But I'll tell you, before the 1930s, okay, so go back only 100 years, all right, before the development of antibiotics and all these, before pharmaceutical companies, the industry started to rise.
What did we have?
We only had really food, diet, and lifestyle in our
toolbox. And this one went back 10,000 years, right to the beginning of humanity. We only had
food and lifestyle as our medicine. So what's happened is that in the last hundred years,
we've lost our way because we've over-focused on just a few things. So we've lost the forest for
the trees, literally right so
now what we're doing is rediscovering how food diet and lifestyle can actually make a huge
difference but the difference is that we're not just back to the future and discovering past
sort of wisdoms the grandma's chicken soup kind of thing we're now beginning to be able to take
a look at what that chicken soup actually does yeah and at the cellular level at the molecular level at the genetic level and that gives us power the average
person doesn't need to know what genes or what cells chicken soup actually activates but for
those of us who are trying to help people protect their health regain their health use food as a
important health intervention while they're fighting
disease, right?
I mean, that's the distinction you're talking about.
Doctors deliver sick care, but when you're at home as a patient, you're doing the health
care yourself.
Yes.
So let's get into it, William, because you're the kind of master of this.
People want to know, if you were locked on some island somewhere in the middle of nowhere
and you had only certain foods to bring with you to help you have a long and healthy life,
to increase your health span and your lifespan, and to reverse and beat disease,
what would you be bringing with you?
Like if you had a cargo ship of food and you could bring it on the island
and that was your kind of stock, what would you bring with you?
You know, I had a conversation at the national institutes of medicine uh with a bunch of astronauts uh
including you know the the flight surgeons to talk about what would humankind need to be able
to bring on a ship to go to another planet yeah right it's exactly the same thing so forget about
the desert island because that might be too harsh to survive. Space is a lot worse because you can't go back and have Amazon deliver anything to you. That's it. Right. So what are you going to bring? What are you going to grow? Yeah. Right. So here are some of the things that come to my mind. And again, you know, I always get asked, you know, like, what are the top five things you recommend? There's no top five. But here are here are a couple of things that do come to mind. You know, we need to stay hydrated, so water is absolutely critical.
But you can make water do more for you if you're using it to brew tea or coffee, right?
So both are easy to carry around.
Both are very natural products that contain bioactives, tea with the canikins and other polyphenols.
Coffee has got its own polyphenols and a little bit of caffeine as well.
You know, I mean, I couldn't have gotten through medical school without my hit of coffee in
the morning.
But both of those, you know, the chlorogenic acid in coffee and the catechins in tea have
a range of benefits to our body's hardwired health defense system.
So while you're hydrating, you might as well get a little extra out of it yeah by having your espresso or coffee i wouldn't put dairy in it if
you can avoid it and definitely not added sugar uh same deal with tea but there's a great way of
actually having your beverage let's start with basic hydration that's a great idea so this is
a this is a twofer it's really three if you actually talk about coffee and tea with water.
You've actually taken the number one, number two, number three beverages in the world,
water, coffee, and tea, combined them into one, put it in your gunny sack, and take it with you.
Yeah, that's great.
Actually, I was in Ikaria researching the blue zones,
and I went to this guy who was sort of making goat cheese,
and I was milking goats and making cheese with him.
It was kind of fun. And then after, he's like, let's have some tea. And he serves me this tea, and I'm milking goats and like making cheese with him. That was kind of fun.
And then after he's like, let's have some tea.
And he serves me this tea.
And I'm like, what is that?
And he's like, cause it's had a different taste.
I'd never had it before.
Oh, this is the wild sage bush.
It's growing everywhere here.
I'm like, oh, that's kind of cool.
So I, I saw this plant.
I looked at, I looked it up and it actually has higher levels of catechins than green
tea.
And this is one of the longevity molecules.
Yeah.
Right?
So it's quite interesting.
Well, I mean, I think that that's the other thing is that really Mother Nature has created
a pharmacy with an F, kind of in the spirit of how you do things.
You know, the pharmacy with an F actually is way more diverse than anything you'd find
in a drugstore, in a hospital, pharmacy, stockhouse.
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Hey, so you got tea, water, coffee.
So here's something else I would bring.
I'd bring tree nuts with me.
Tree nuts.
Okay.
Walnuts, almonds, pecan.
Walnuts, almonds, pistachios, macadamias, cashews.
You know, number one, I love the diversity of the different types of tree nuts.
Yeah.
Okay.
But they're a great source of protein.
We need protein to be healthy, right?
Especially as we get older.
People are always asking like, well, what's a good source of protein?
Well, you know, tree nuts gives you some nice protein,
but it also gives you dietary fiber, which is important for our gut health. And if there's
one thing that I carry around with me now, knowledge-wise, that I know everyone needs
to do better on, everyone can up their own game, is to get better gut health. I don't care if you're a super athlete, triathlon, you know,
every single person can do better the next day, tomorrow to get,
to improve their gut. That is so powerful.
I have colleagues who are, I mean, I do cancer research,
but I also have colleagues who are doing gut microbiome research in cancer
patients. So talk about life and death, right? I mean, you know, gut health,
you have, you know, more regular stool
or whatever, anti-inflammatory.
It all comes into sharp focus
if you're talking about cancer patients.
And it turns out that the quality
and nature of your gut microbiome
can make the distinction between life or death
if you have cancer.
And I've been talking to oncologists about this, cancer docs,
and they're just starting to wake up to this idea.
And, you know, cancer patients are going to flooding into the clinics every single day,
getting chemo, worse, getting antibiotics for various things.
I mean, look, you might need antibiotics.
And steroids, which all mess up your microbiome.
But you're not resurrecting, you're not protecting the gut microbiome.
And if that makes a difference between life or death, that is something that everyone needs to focus on.
So a study out of the MD Anderson Cancer Center looking at people with one type of cancer, melanoma, that spread.
So we're talking about metastatic melanoma, bad disease, that responds well to immune therapies.
Not chemo.
Checkpoint inhibitors.
Checkpoint inhibitors that actually explain to people listening, a checkpoint inhibitor is
not chemo. It's giving you an infusion of a medicine that wakes up your own immune system
to spot where cancer is. It actually helps your immune system do what it's supposed to do.
Find cancer and scrub it out. Think about the dry erase board. You know, if you've got some
notes on there, just scrub it all out to zero or a clean slate. I did for my mom. I've seen many other patients who have actually had a complete response.
It turns out not everybody responds. Only about 20% of people have a good response.
80% of people don't. And we're beginning to realize that 80% don't have the right gut
microbiome makeup. Now, a few years ago, we talked, I remember we had this conversation at Milken
about acromancia, which, you know,
is everyone's talking about now.
And good thing too, because it's important.
But now we're beginning to realize
other bacteria are also important.
There's about eight bacteria have been discovered
and dietary fiber matters.
So the study that my colleague at MD Anderson led on
showed that for melanoma, given immunotherapy,
for every five to six grams of dietary fiber,
it decreases mortality from that cancer by 30%.
Oh, wow.
Like you basically, I mean, think about if you want to-
And by the way, people eat about eight grams of fiber a day.
I was at the Haza tribe in Tanzanzania they eat 150 grams a day and so you know we need to boost
it up to about 50 but you think five just five grams reduces by 30 percent you and you can eat
25 30 50 grams that's a lot of that's a lot of percent reduction and you know you don't want to
just order in a bottle right i mean or in a jar i mean like i know we tend to want to include you
want it in food because the foods, fruits and vegetables, especially the whole foods,
contain the polyphenols that are the prebiotics that work along with the fiber to feed the
actual healthy gut bacteria.
And you want diversity.
Yeah.
So, you want to eat, you know, that whole idea of eating the rainbow is, you know, I
always think about the rainbow being a nice visual allegory.
But really, this is a life and death thing. Like, the more diversity you can put in your plate about the rainbow being a nice visual allegory, but really this
is a life and death thing.
Like the more diversity you can put in your plate, the more diversity you're going to
have in your gut.
When your gut diversity is really rich, meaning you have a lot of different types of gut bacteria,
it pays you back.
Your health gets paid back by improving your immune system.
Yeah.
That's so important.
I wasn't going to highlight that because the polyphenols, you sort of whiz by that. But we think about prebiotics and probiotics for our gut. But
there's another incredibly important category of compounds that are called polyphenols,
which are all the colorful plant compounds you see that make your vegetables and fruit
the colors they are. And those are medicines. And those seem to be fertilizers for the good bugs.
Now, we were talking about the reduction in cancer from having more fiber. How does that work when
you eat nuts? Well, basically, you can probably explain it better than I can, but there's an
important compound that healthy bacteria make in your gut called butyrate. And butyrate has many
effects on the body. It's anti-inflammatory. It keeps your gut lining healthy.
It's the fuel for the gut.
Colonocytes.
But it also suppresses P53 oncogene,
which is essentially a cancer-promoting gene,
which is why dietary fiber reduces colon cancer and many other cancers.
So we actually now know the mechanisms by this word.
So it's kind of amazing if you're geeky like us,
it's like, holy cow,
we understand how to get from A to Z
and why it's happening.
Not just eat fiber, you're not going to get cancer, but we understand the linkages all the way along.
I want to unpack something you just said because it's so interesting and important, but also to
bring a little bit of clarity to the audience. You heard the term oncogene, right? Like Mark,
you just talked about oncogene. An oncogene is a gene which is made of our DNA that's associated
with causing cancer.
And a lot of people, including myself,
for many years thought that,
and you've heard of BRCA
and there's a lot of other oncogenes.
It turns out that P53 is one of those oncogenes.
But it turns out that P53,
the way that we're born to have P53 p53 normal p53 is protective against cancer it's only when
p53 is mutated when there's a problem with p53 that it actually sets up for cancer so p53 normally
actually protects us against cancer it's basically it's the bullets in our gun against cancer fight
cancer normally and it's only when it's actually mutated.
Now, let me tell you how powerful this is.
There are animals like elephants that rarely get cancer that have more than one copy of P53 in their genome. And so P53 is protective.
What we want to do is prevent those mutations that can occur.
And this is the real purpose of this antioxidant story that's been floating around for decades.
Yeah.
Right.
So antioxidants are neutralized, these harmful activated atoms that, you know, are in our environment that we eat sometimes with ultra processed foods.
And those can actually come in there and basically like a samurai warrior, like slice and dice, like a ninja slice and dice our DNA.
Yeah.
And when your P53 gets sliced and diced, that's when you run into trouble.
Exactly.
So you need to protect it.
Polyphenols can have antioxidant properties.
They also activate all of these other protective aspects of our body so that we are more resistant
against diseases, including cancer.
Yeah, it's quite amazing.
Okay, so we got tea, coffee, water, nuts of all kinds.
What else you bringing with you?
You know, I, so.
To Mars, let's say, to Mars.
What are you bringing with you to Mars?
You know, I mean, look, perishable goods,
the things we talked about,
you can actually carry with you because they're,
you can put them in a tin and you can hang with it. But actually, you can actually carry with you because they're there. You can put them in a tin. Yeah, exactly.
But actually, you know, fresh foods, produce is really, really important.
And, you know, and I know that everybody kind of rolls their eyes when they hear about another story about broccoli or kale.
I like to present it as brassica, which is like a gigantic class of green vegetables.
Yeah.
You can choose a cauliflower, bok choy,oy you know broccolini it's a
lot of different types of vegetables you can actually get mother nature's really smart she
actually created the same types of polyphenols and bioactives and put them in all this entire class
of vegetables uh and and if you have any of those things, what are some of my favorite ones? I mean, I like bok choy.
You go to an Asian market.
Chinese broccoli is my favorite.
And you know,
Chinese broccoli is a great one.
Gai Lan, which is another one.
Anybody that wants to change their mind
about the same old, same old with broccoli
just needs to step into an Asian grocery store.
Oh my God. Yeah.
Right?
I mean, the thing about Chinese broccoli, I don't know, it's sweet.
It's got this like sweet flavor.
Yeah.
So it's like almost like eating candy, but it's broccoli.
It's like so good.
Well, and by the way, you know, because I like to cook.
So for me, talking about food as ingredients is important because people like to nail it
down in their heads.
But really, Chinese broccoli, what do you do with it?
First, you got to wash it, you trim it, you heat up some oil,
puts a little bit of garlic slices or chopped garlic in there.
And then literally you stir fry it quickly.
Okay, not with a lot of oil.
And then you can add oyster sauce, soy sauce, a little chili pepper,
whatever you want to do to really light up your taste buds.
Food has to taste good.
Healthy food has to taste good.
Yeah.
Nobody wants to eat sawdust and cardboard.
Exactly.
Okay.
So we got the whole brassica family, collards, cabbage, brussel sprouts,
broccoli, broccolini, broccoli rabe.
I mean, the list goes on.
You can look it up.
They're called cruciferous vegetables, brassicas. You can find them. we'll link to them in the show notes but this is something i eat every
day and i try to eat a cup or two every day of these foods at least so um okay so you got water
tea coffee nuts brassicas what's next well i you know i didn't include water because i'm just saying
that you're gonna have to drink water anyway to survive so I put coffee and tea okay coffee and tea nuts brassicas okay all right how many do I have left
you can do as many as you want all right you know what so so another thing that I personally love
and again you know this is my informed opinion I like this category of food called stone fruit
and it's seasonal ah right like so a peach peaches right and those are very seasonal
and they grow in trees and they have a little stone in the middle like an apricot but it turns
out the flesh and the color of the of these are very bright um and they're they actually have a
lot of sweetness to them rich with polyphenols and the skin of these fruits also contain something called ursolic acid, which actually is
not only good for your immune system, but ursolic acid also helps your circulation. So you want to
have good blood flow. As we get older, our blood flow naturally kind of slows down, doesn't get as,
isn't as good as it should be. You know, it's kind of like an old set of piping, a plumbing.
So you want to keep the plumbing working really, really that's our circulation so our salic acid helps us keep good blood flow helps us
regenerate our blood vessels when we need to critical for brain health so gut health and brain
health it's not just simply the gut brain access through the microbiome the circulation is also
really important yeah i mean i i think the problem with that for me, William, is that I love peaches, but like
there's like maybe a few weeks in the summer where you can get a really ripe, delicious
peach that doesn't taste mealy and gross.
Right.
No, no, you're actually right.
I love that.
But you can get them frozen, which I use.
And frozen for itself.
But it doesn't have the skin, usually.
Usually not, but you get the polyphenols in it.
And that's, by the way, that's another kind of important practical tip for people that always ask me, like, well, I can't get fresh food all the time.
Should I just go for the frozen?
Is it going to be, it's going to lose a lot of the nutrients?
No, it's more.
It turns out more.
More, yeah.
Because people that create frozen fruit, they pick it.
They wait until it's really ripe.
And they freeze it.
And they pick it when it's super ripe
because it's got to taste great.
And they skin it and they freeze it right away.
It's flash frozen.
It's got, it doesn't degrade.
Polyphenols degrade while it's on a truck.
All right.
This doesn't have a chance to even degrade.
So I encourage people to get fresh fruit if they can.
You know, my only thing is that I wish
they would actually pack fresh fruit
in something other than plastic bags because now we're beginning to look at microplastics.
Nanoplastics, microplastics.
Yeah, nanoplastics, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I think, you know, it's always hard, because fruit is something that degrades really fast.
So they pick it when it's not ripe.
When tomatoes, they pick them when they're not ripe.
So you're kind of not getting really the full explosion in polyphenols.
OK, so we got stone fruits, brassicas, nuts, coffee and tea.
All right, and berries. And berries. I put berries in there, because I'll tell fruits, brassicas, nuts, coffee and tea. All right, and berries.
And berries.
I put berries in there because I'll tell you the amazing thing about berries,
they are kind of the candy of nature, right?
They're small, they're beautiful, they're sweet.
You can eat a bunch of them.
That's why candies, there are candies that are shaped like berries, right?
So the thing about berries, though, is that they are a great source of vitamin C.
They've got great antioxidants.
They also have these polyphenols that are kick-ass.
And fiber.
And dietary fiber as well, of course.
The key thing is, you know, people always say, well, is the sugar in berries going to be harmful or in fruit going to be harmful?
You know, this is where not all calories are the same.
Yeah. is going to be harmful or fruit going to be harmful. You know, this is where not all calories are the same.
Fruit contains so many other good things that along with the natural sugars,
which are most for most people, your body can actually tackle.
You're getting all this other benefits that you wouldn't be getting if you had a can of soda with just added sugar to it.
Right.
So that's a key thing.
Sugar isn't all sugar because the thing that it's contained in is going to be different.
And it's also when you eat the fruit.
Like if you eat it at the end of a meal as opposed to at the beginning, it's going to change your blood sugar, which is going to have an impact.
Exactly.
So it's not only important what you eat, it's when you eat too.
And how you eat it as well, right?
Because basically if you put sugar on top of fruit, which is kind of an old school way of eating a grapefruit.
Yeah, your peaches and syrup, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
So, you know, again, this is why I think
when we talk about ingredients, you know,
it's easy for us to talk about polyphenols
and dietary fiber, but at the end of the day,
people eat food in context and together.
And so how we eat what we eat is really, really important.
How we prepare it is also really important.
So like for fruits, I like to eat it just fresh, right?
Yeah.
Seasonal and berries would be something that I would to eat it just fresh, ripe, seasonal.
And berries would be something that I would relive.
You know, there's a study- So you're going to need a greenhouse on Mars, basically.
Yeah.
Or Desert Island, right?
I mean, you know, you need to be able to grow all this stuff.
But dried fruit, by the way, is also a great way because you can get dried berries.
You can get dried stone fruit.
You can't get apricots all year round,
but you can get dried apricots.
Or dehydrated ones.
Or dehydrated ones, exactly.
That may be less sugar, right?
Yeah, yeah.
If you get dried fruits,
you actually get the skin on it, right?
So like if I had to eat six apricots whole,
I might have difficulty doing it on a regular basis,
but I could easily eat six dried apricots as a snack.
So if you want that fruit skin,
but that brings up a whole other issue
about organic versus non-organic.
Yeah.
Because interesting thing that's been discovered
by botanists, people who study plants,
not doctors, not health and wellness people,
but botanists have studied polyphenols.
And they found out that polyphenols are produced by most plants.
The polyphenols are good for our body, are produced by most plants as a wound healing
substance for the plant itself.
Yeah, yeah.
They're not for us.
They're for the plant's own defenses and repair and healing and protection, right?
Right.
So what happens is that when a plant is growing,
vegetable, fruit, tree, bush, shrub,
is growing in its natural state, right?
We're looking at a planet now.
We don't want to be adding the crap to the planet.
We need to kind of let everything restore.
We need the planet to go back into its homeostatic state.
Regenerate.
To regenerate by itself, okay?
In that balanced state,
plants that we eat or parts of the plants are growing with little insects. It's natural in the environment. And
these insects are nibbling on the leaves and stems of these plants. And what they do is they
produce polyphenols in response to the nibbling, in response to the injury as part of healing.
This is what the botanists are saying. Now, so if you grow a plant in its natural state
without pesticides, it's going to make more polyphenols
because it's healing itself all the time.
It's under stress, yeah.
If you spray with pesticides,
not only do you get the bad stuff on the skin
that you can't easily wash off.
A study out of University of Massachusetts
showed that about 20% of pesticides
gets absorbed into the skin of an apple.
You can't wash that off.
It's just in there.
So if you're going to get dried fruit, get the organic kind.
And you're going to get more polyphenols as a fringe benefit.
I think that's a really incredible thing that most people probably never thought of.
It didn't really occur to me.
But you're right.
When you have plants that are coddled by pesticides and herbicides and fertilizers,
they don't have a lot of stress.
They're not getting attacked.
They're basically kind of basically coddled.
They don't develop any resistance
to disease or stress molecules.
And those stress molecules that they create
are their protection, but they're also our protection.
That's really the whole crux
of what we're talking about here.
And by the way, let's dive a little deeper on that. Uh, not only are they protection for our human cells, but now because they are also
prebiotics, they're also protection for our gut bacteria as well. I was thinking that I was like,
you are not only getting polyphenols for all these other benefits for your biology, but actually
you're helping your microbiome. You know, it's a, it's a grand slammer, right? Baseball analogy,
you know, you hit the ball and you drive all the runs in.
Okay.
And that's basically what these polyphenols are.
And it all starts with how we treat the plants.
And I know you've written about this, you know, sort of like, how do we actually do
regenerative agriculture?
How do we cake tape?
Look, it's a bigger problem than any one person can actually solve.
But as a one person, we can make that decision of what we're actually going to feed ourselves
when we go to the market.
All right.
So I want to get into like specifics of different foods and controversies and things.
But first, what else would you bring quickly to Mars if you're going that you absolutely need for optimizing your health and beating disease?
I mean, that's my list.
I'm curious what you're like.
Yeah.
You know, I have to say I'm assuming there's not going to be any easily fishable oceans on another planet.
You just have it there.
Not you have to grow it or have it grown there.
But it's there.
What are you eating?
You know, like I think food, I think finding a source of omega-3s.
Absolutely.
Is absolutely critical because.
I was next on my list.
Yeah.
Well, our body doesn't make them.
Right.
And a lot of foods don't make them either.
All the plants do make the precursor to omega-3s but it's hard for most people to eat enough of them to actually get what they need and so you know this is one of the instances where i
do think that you should eat as much marine omega-3s as you can get your hands on and you
should eat plant-based sources of omega-3s but then you know if you still have struggling then
you should actually get dietary supplement,
a good high quality dietary supplement.
And the key about omega-3s, it's good for gut health,
it's good for brain health, good for immune health.
It's one of these strange molecules
that has been discovered to have virtually no bad effects
and almost all good effects.
You know, I'm always cynical and a little suspicious
when something does everything.
But Omega-3s really kind of hit it out of the park.
All right.
So basically your meal on Mars is grilled wild salmon, rich in Omega-3s and also polyphenol.
So that's the yellow color with a nice side of broccoli and a side of green tea to sip along with it.
And dessert, you're having berries and peaches and nuts.
Yeah, pretty much.
I love that.
And by the way, we were talking about omega-3s.
You talked about salmon, and it is a common perception.
I'm not calling it a misperception.
I'm calling it a perception that you need to have salmon and tuna,
really oily fish like mackerel and anchovies,
which not a lot of people eat,
but it turns out,
and I wrote about this in my book,
I do, I got some right in my bag here.
Fish that are not commonly thought as oily fish
actually also have omega-3s.
Cod, haddock, flounder,
all have omega-3s.
Sea bass has omega-3s.
By the way-
I mean, Chilean sea bass is high in mercury,
so you don't want to eat that one.
You mean- Well, Chilean sea bass is actually not really a bass. It's a Patagonian- Toothfish. Toothfish, right? Yeah. So it's not even, again, marketing, right? We get tricked
on things. But it turns out recent studies have shown that sea bass, particularly the Asian sea
bass, you'd get in a Chinese market, they'd steam it for you with a little bit of ginger and soy.
Actually, it's been discovered to not only have omega-3s, but they contain a peptide, a protein, that stimulates better circulation and wound healing.
So again, you know, this is the more we look into our foods, the more we're discovering that some of the things that we've been eating for generations actually contain good substances that can keep us healthy.
That's right.
I mean, the Rocker Health Foundation is very much focused on this.
They're spending $200 million to identify the phytochemicals in the plant kingdom that are regulating our biology and what they do.
So it's really, it's pretty amazing.
All right.
So let's talk about some controversies.
All right.
Dairy.
Is dairy good or bad?
Because the government says we should be drinking
three glasses of milk a day
as adults and two as kids
and you can't get a school lunch
if you don't have milk.
So is that a good idea?
Bad idea.
Look, you and I actually grew up
in an era where we saw television ads
on milk and we were taught
in grade school about,
yeah, the Got Milk campaign.
And now we know better,
but I want to just sort of make it. We know better. Well, we know better. And now we know better, but I want to just sort of-
We know better.
Well, we know better.
You and I know better.
I want to maybe frame things out.
As we talk about these controversies, it's sort of like good or bad, good or evil, right or wrong.
It depends.
Food is never that simple.
It depends.
It really depends.
And so when it comes to dairy,
and I think we'll come to this kind of like depends over and over again, when it comes to
dairy, it depends on how the dairy is processed. It depends on what the cows who make the dairy
are fed, right? Like cows that have our free range at grass fed cows actually have omega-3s
in their milk. Yeah.
Whereas, you know, factory cows don't or have much lower levels.
It also depends on how the milk is treated.
Yeah.
You know, some milk is turned into cheese or butter. All right.
And some cheeses, when they're fermented with healthy bacteria, become probiotic foods that are beneficial.
Right.
And so and what about yogurt
yogurt's a dairy product we know that yogurt's actually associated longevity better immune health
and so again this categorical assassination of entire categories of foods this is i think where
we're getting more sophisticated what you're talking about essentially is is focusing on the
quality the sourcing and the nature of the source of the food you're eating right so you could eat
broccoli it's bad for you you could eat milk that's good for you that's right and you know
in that bad or good category like soy is a great example you could have soy filler in a candy bar
all right and and that's not doing anything for you or it might even cause cancer or you could
actually have soy's edamame yeah right and so which could be really good for you so again i think that let's not character assassinate but let's go ahead and define
so some forms of dairy coming from a good healthy source of dairy is really beneficial
um interestingly by the way when it comes to yogurt um yogurt is considered a healthy food
uh probiotic food it's in the same category
as kimchi and sauerkraut and all those other things.
That's kind of where the whole longevity thing
came from, the Bulgarians and the Georgians.
The Bulgarian yogurt.
And the Georgians who were living to be very long
and living on yogurt every day.
The Bulgarian yogurt, you know,
they found a bacteria that's actually growing,
I think it's called-
Lactobacillus bulgaris.
Bulgaricus for the Bulgarian monks, right?
Yeah.
So the key thing though is,
and I only recently became convinced that this was true
once I looked into it.
So what have we done for years?
Like, I mean, yogurt's been a healthy food for years,
but everybody has been convinced to go to the yogurt
section and pick the low-fat yogurt and usually with a little rim of sugar on the bottom of the
fruit what a mistake right so basically what you want to get is whole fat yogurt that that that is
good like like greek yogurt and the reason is and this is something that surprised me
when you take the fat out of yogurt, it makes total sense
you're going to change the nature
and the mouthfeel and the texture of the yogurt.
No fat, the thing's going to collapse
like curdled milk, all right?
Now, what do the companies do to sell
it back as yogurt? They put emulsifiers.
Which are highly toxic to your gut
and cause leaky gut and cancer.
And some people say, well, there's not enough
evidence. Let me just put it out there.
Pauli Sorbate 80, you guess whether or not
it's good or bad for your body,
but there's beginning to be a emerging sea of evidence
that it's not good for your gut microbiome.
And causes leaky gut, which causes inflammation,
which causes all diseases and autoimmunity.
Now you've actually undone what you tried to do
by having a probiotic food that's good for your gut.
Now you've inadvertently done something to your gut
that actually makes it worse.
And so this is why the,
you don't have to be a food connoisseur,
but you just have to be selective.
Smart, smart.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting,
your sweetened yogurt that you get
and you think is good for you has more sugar per serving than soda.
Yeah.
So that's crazy.
It's like more sugar per ounce.
Always pick up the thing of yogurt and hold it up and look to see if there's any sugar added.
Of course, read the ingredient label as well.
I mean, that thin layer of purple or red or whatever it is, it might have food coloring in it as well.
Yeah, and our friends Walter Willett and Darsh Mazzafari, or maybe David Ludwig,
published an article in New England Journal of Medicine called Milk and Health.
We're going to link to it in the show notes.
But it sort of breaks down the mythology of why we thought milk was good for us,
how maybe it's not in some areas.
And I think we even get more nuance in that.
It's like, well, what's the source?
Is it a highly hybridized cow that has A1 casein,
which is potentially very inflammatory,
makes people have gut issues and inflammation?
Or is it A2 cow, which actually is an ancient sort of heirloom cow,
like the Guernsey or Jersey cows or some other cows you see in other countries?
That may be better. And is it grown in a feedlot factory farm right is it milk while it's pregnant is it or is it regenerative and is it is it living out in the
middle of nowhere and eating grass and or or is it like in the in sardinia and where i was which
was quite amazing they know to take the the animals the goats and the sheep, and to feed them on certain wild plants at different times of the year.
Not because they're thinking about polyphenols, but they know if they do that, the milk and the cheese taste better.
And so they live a lot.
These are the blue zones where people are very old and they were eating a lot of milk and cheese.
But it was goat cheese.
It was sheep cheese, which is A2 casein.
And then they found that there were these plants that they were eating that actually,
like myrto and others, that actually had high levels of these catechins.
So, when they measured the catechins in the milk of these goats, it's the same or more
than you would get in the best green tea.
Right.
Well, I mean, this is the whole thing.
You know, the whole idea of you are what you eat.
You are what your food ate.
Yeah.
It's the quality of the food.
So, it's just you have to think of what's the sourcing, where did it come from?
How was it raised?
So many layers.
But at the end of the day, like I have goat and sheep cheese.
I have goat and sheep yogurt and I have goat and sheep, well, I have actually goat whey.
That's how I usually have my protein shake.
My healthy aging shake is a goat whey in the morning.
And I really find that's right.
If I have cow whey, even if it's grass fed,, sometimes I notice that it makes me congested and have symptoms.
So, there's ways around it.
Okay.
What about soy?
Because that's a big one, right?
Yeah.
You're Chinese.
And so, soy is a big part of the Chinese diet.
And, you know, tofu and, you know, and tempeh and many soy products.
Let's put it out there.
Processed soy is very common in ultra-processed foods.
It's a filler.
It has got a source of protein that they can put onto the label.
It's been used in lots of different ways by the food industry for manufactured ultra-packaged food products.
That's not the soy that's good for you.
No.
The soy that's good for you is closer to the original soy
picked off the ground as soybeans.
Think edamame.
You go to a sushi bar, you have a little steamed edamame
or just a bag of it from the frozen section.
You can steam it at home, put a little salt on it.
It's a great source of protein.
Or if you ferment the soy, as they do in Asia,
to create tofu and tempeh,
and there's hundreds of different types of naturally fermented soy products.
Yeah.
Okay.
Miso, natto, soy sauce.
Exactly.
All of those staple foods, which add diversity, add different gut bacteria to your system,
have been eaten for hundreds of years, thousands of years.
And they're actually delicious.
They're really part of that Asian diet.
And we now know when you go back into soy, in addition to fiber, in addition to protein, you have different types of polyphenols and you have other phytosterols, including genistein
and Equal.
These are really beneficial.
They improve your circulation.
They can help your body fight cancer
by cutting off the blood supply to tumors.
They can improve your metabolism
by activating your brown fat
to burn down harmful white visceral fat.
There's all kinds of,
there's a whole litany of good things
that soy products can do.
But let's talk about where the mythology
of soy being harmful for women come from.
Yeah, I love this story.
Women with breast cancer come to see me and say,
my doctor said I can't have any soy.
What do you say?
And they didn't tell me not to drink,
which we know is a huge risk for breast cancer.
In other words, just seven drinks a week
increases the risk of breast cancer by 40% in women.
But they don't say don't drink, but they don't eat soybeans.
Tell us about that.
Well, I mean, listen, it's worse when a doctor says it because it carries this, the idea
of authority to it.
But let me, can we back up?
If you hear nutrition advice from a doctor, run the other way.
Except if it's people like us who have been studying this.
Or the younger generation that actually are interested in themselves.
I mean, you got to be able to walk the walk before you can talk the talk.
And that's the key thing.
But here's the deal about soy.
Soy beans do contain a plant chemical called a phytoestrogen.
Phyto meaning plant.
Estrogen meaning that it's a category of steroid.
It's a plant steroid.
And so some well-meaning individual, I'm going to track it
down at some point who it was, but some well-meaning individual knew that some human forms of breast
cancer are stimulated by human estrogen. And so when they heard that soy had estrogen, they
naturally, and again, I'm ascribing good intention to it saying, ooh, estrogen in plants must be bad
for estrogen in humans
because it's the same thing but this is where we step in you know as uh questioning critical
thinkers if you look at the chemical structure of the plant's estrogen phytoestrogen from soybeans
and compare it to the same picture of of human estrogen they don't look at anything alike no
and in fact soy estrogen blocks human estrogen yes mother don't look anything alike. And in fact, soy estrogen blocks
human estrogen. It's mother nature's tamoxifen, which oncologists give their birth control patients.
I was just going to say that. It's like, we call this selective estrogen receptor
modifiers, right? So, or CIRMs. And these are drugs we give to people with cancer to prevent
the effect of the estrogen. So, I would think of these as, you know, a sort of a
modulator of estrogen in a beneficial way. In fact, it reduces the risk of breast cancer as a
CIRM. Yep. And what I can tell you, there are, there was a study of 5,000 women who are at the
highest risk for breast cancer. It's called the Shanghai Women's Breast Cancer Study that found
that those women who ate the most soy, 10 grams or more of soy a day,
so that's just the amount of soy protein you get in a tall glass of soy milk,
the more that they had decreased their risk of mortality by 30%, boom.
Yeah.
Okay.
And if women had their breast cancer completely treated for recurrence,
those women who had the most soy actually had had um uh almost a 30 decrease in recurrence
of the cancer as well and in asia yeah this isn't our opinion folks this is literally the literature
is so abundant on this that it's not an issue but it's in the zeitgeist and so all the oncologists
are saying don't eat soy 14 studies back to back analyzed have shown that women who eat more soy live longer. And in no case has a
study shown that women who eat soy live less, uh, less for a shorter period of time. So, you know,
look, you got to just look at the evidence, right? And so this is where urban legend, uh,
needs to be differentiated from what's true versus what people would like to think is true.
So, so those are controversial things. Um, what about the things we should really be avoiding like inflammatory foods?
What are the things that are most harmful to us that we're eating that if we avoided
it, we just take the pressure off our health and disease states?
Well, look, our, our body is, is, is enriched with health defense systems that ward off
the harms that we just have. Look,
you wake up in the morning, you walk out in the
sunlight or take a walk on the beach, which is good for
you, have some exercise. That ultraviolet
radiation actually damages
your DNA and damages your skin.
I'm not even talking about going out
to lay out for a long, to get a sunburn.
But you get into a car
and you're inhaling the fumes
when you're filling up the gas tank,
like that's also toxins.
So-
I hold my breath.
What am I doing?
I use it as a practice.
How long can I hold my breath?
You know what I always ask people?
I say, do you stand upwind or downwind from the gas tank?
And people are like, don't know why I'm asking.
And now they have those things
where you can't like make it lock and walk away.
So I actually usually jam something in there and like I walk away.
That's what exactly.
I walk, I stand upwind so I don't have to smell it and I walk away from it exactly as you do.
But here's the thing.
Our body is pretty resilient and defends itself, swashbuckles against just the harms of everyday living. And so when you talk about inflammatory foods to avoid,
it really goes to the idea that
why should you stress your body out more
by making a conscious decision to eat something
that's going to provoke more inflammation in your body
that's already fighting against inflammation,
just to be alive?
Why would you want to do that?
Like put more stress on your body.
Now look, anybody wants to eat a bag of chips
or some kind of snacks,
like neon colored snacks that we all grew up with.
Okay.
Artificial preservatives, coloring, flavoring.
You know, there's nothing good about it.
They're not really food by the true definition of food.
Right, right.
Snack.
All right.
Ultra processed snack.
You know, that's not going to be good for you.
If you ate it once in a while,
you know, your body will be resilient.
It'll bounce back.
But how many people do this on a regular basis?
And what that does, those inflammatory foods that you would categorically ultra-processed treat, you know, what you put in your pillow sack, you know, or the pumpkin, that actually, those are packed with things that spark inflammation.
Yeah.
Not something you want to be able to regularly expose yourself to.
So the ultra processed food category, I think, is becoming one of the most concerning areas.
And I think it's the new smoking.
I think we're understanding how do we define foods. And there's, you know, debates about how do you classify foods and the
classification is a perfect is whether better systems, but at the end of the day, we know what
we're talking about. We're talking about industrial agricultural products, corn, soy, wheat, and some
dairy and, and how that's processed, broken down, altered, chemically deconstructed to be reassembled
into things that actually
aren't food.
And I'm looking up the definition here of food in the dictionary, and it's very clear.
It basically means any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink or that
plants absorb in order to maintain, and this is the key part, in order to maintain life
and growth. So by the definition of food, ultra processed foods, Cheetos, Doritos, junk food,
these are not actually food because they don't maintain life and growth.
They do the opposite.
That's right.
They impede life and they impede health and they impede growth.
They slow you down.
Right.
Right.
I mean, and by the way, then you actually take the ingenious food chemistry to add things to them that addict our brain to the flavor or the taste to it.
And now you've actually diverted the purpose of food for life and growth. Right.
So this is what you're talking about. So I think soy is perfectly safe to eat if it's in its whole or naturally fermented forms, as they do in Asia.
The issue with breast cancer is a risk.
Increasing breast cancer risk is a complete urban legend, not something that people need to know.
Obviously, some people have soy allergies.
So you always got to actually, by the way, this is true for dairy as well and any other controversial food we talk about.
There's a real individual component to it because every individual is going to react to any specific food uh differently even broccoli you know so
hey listen to your body that's the other thing that we've kind of gotten away from
in our busy society is we've just like learned to drown out uh our own uh sensation you know that
that listening to how you feel. 100%. You know.
Interoception.
Interoception, yeah.
I mean, the whole idea that, you know, we are eating these foods that are driving disease or food-like substances, not actually food, is something that is probably one of the most
important issues of our time.
We talk about climate change.
We talk about politics and war and all these things.
And this gets second shift and no one's really talking about it.
But what's encouraging to me, William, is I see now in the media, in the press and in
the zeitgeist, this concept that people are understanding that ultra processed food is
the thing that is causing most deaths in the world today.
And it's an easy,
it's an easy fix. Like if you don't recognize what's on the label, like don't eat it. Minimally
processed food is fine. You know, a can of tomatoes, a can of sardines, you know, like
salmon jerky, you know, I have salmon jerky in my bag, a can of, a can of mackerel. That's okay.
That's just processed, right? It's in a can. It's altered in some way,
but it's very minimally processed. But what we're talking about is these deconstructed science
projects that are frankenfoods, that are ubiquitous, that are now 60 to 65% of our diet,
67% of kids' diets, and that are responsible for 11 million deaths a year. And there are things
that we should be addressing. And I was just in Argentina and Chile and South America.
They label their food
they like it's like black box warning it's like a cigarette box you know it says this will kill you
don't eat it and these people know now right they don't really know so one of the things we talked
about i want to kind of get get into now a little bit is this concept of the root causes of health
and in your books you talk about foods that activate and deactivate our bodies five key
defense systems.
And I would say you could also call them the root causes of health.
What are these systems in our body that if they're optimally functioning, create health, and if they're not, create disease?
So what are those defense systems quickly, and how can these systems help maintain our health and heal us when we get sick?
And what should we be eating to kind of nail these five health defense systems that you
talk about?
And you have a five by five by five plan.
So kind of take us through that.
So five health defense systems are our birthright.
Our health defenses were hardwired in our body when we're still in our mom's womb.
So dad's sperm, mom's egg, we were just a ball of cells.
Our health defenses started there.
They started forming.
They started in the health defenses actually
are our circulation, I'll call it angiogenesis,
how the body grows and maintains blood vessels.
60,000 miles in an adult, delivers oxygen and nutrients
to every single organ, every single cell in your body.
Very important thing.
How many times around the earth is that, 60,000?
That's twice.
If you were to pull out all your blood vessels,
line them end to end, it'd form a ball of yarn
and go around the earth twice.
That's amazing.
Inside every single human
so you can imagine how important that is to to be healthy and that's what covet is messing up
we don't have time to get into all that but we talked about on a previous podcast but that is
ripping up your circulation your circulation it damages the lining of the 60 000 miles and we we
have a podcast that we talked about that on so i'm going to link back to that and people can find in
the show notes but yeah so that So we want to protect that circulation.
That's the first health defense.
Second health defense is actually our stem cells.
Because when that ball of cells that we started out as started to grow a face and started to grow arms and legs and our organs started to form before we were born at nine months, we were all composed of stem cells and we had so many stem cells that form who we each individually are that we had an overage.
It was more than we needed.
So when we were born, all the extra stem cells that no longer needed to be used to form us actually got packed away.
It's kind of like, you know, extra supplies.
And the stem cells that we were born with get packed into our bone marrow, packed into our skin,
even packed into our heart, into our body fat.
And they just sit there ready to regenerate us
from the inside out.
So this is a new definition of healing
that hasn't been talked about a lot,
is that our stem cells heal us from the inside out.
I'm not talking about going to the strip mall
to get your knee injected.
That's not really ready for prime time
as somebody who's been involved with developmental therapeutics for stem cell therapy, not ready for prime time yet.
However, what is ready for prime time is what we were born with.
Our stem cells continues to regenerate.
How do we know we regenerate?
Our hair grows back.
Our skin grows back.
Our gut grows back.
By the way, surgeons know this.
If you cut off two-thirds of your liver.
It grows back.
It grows back over two years.
Yeah. If you cut off the tip of your lung. It grows back. It grows back over two years.
If you cut off the tip of your lung,
the tip will grow right back.
We do regenerate.
Kind of like a salamander when you cut off a limb.
Well, we can't do the limb yet,
but we can do many other organs.
We just don't do it very, very quickly.
But that's an internal health defense
that we don't feel and we don't see.
Okay, we don't see our stem cells, but they're there.
All right.
By the way, if you cut yourself,
paper cut, or you scrape your knee,
and, you know, if your scab comes off,
you see all this bright red bubbly stuff
underneath the scab,
those are your blood vessels that are growing.
They're also regenerating.
Two to 5% of those cells
that are underneath the scab
are stem cells that are regenerating that.
That's right.
That wound, that tissue right there.
That's your second health offense.
And just like the circulation,
there are foods that you can eat for your circulation
and your stem cells that boost it.
And the idea that we can eat foods
that stimulate our regeneration to me
is one of the most mind blowing,
exciting things that are out there.
And one of the best foods is actually cacao,
plant-based food
cacao that's actually used to make chocolate yeah right so dark chocolate obviously so wait a minute
this is a big one chocolate regenerates stem cells cocoa cacao cacao so the plant-based
polyphenols the flavanols in this plant-based food so if you've you were in south america so
we let it cracked open this big thing.
We ate the thing raw, it was amazing.
So let's demystify this, as you and I both know.
Look, if anybody has heard about,
think about chocolate is made,
dark chocolate's made, all chocolate has some cacao in it,
except for white chocolate.
Cacao actually comes from a plant.
It's a football-like shaped thing.
It could be brown or yellow.
Yeah. When you shake it,
it's kind of,
and it's kind of heavy.
You shake it,
you can feel something
inside it rattling around.
When it's ripe,
you cut it open.
There's all these little
chestnut-like looking
things inside it.
Each nut,
each bean,
actually has a little
white rim
of kind of sweet,
sour fruit.
Yeah, it's yummy.
You can eat it. Oh, it's yummy. You can eat it.
Oh, it's delicious.
Yeah.
Absolutely delicious.
You can mail order the cacao right to your home.
Yeah.
Okay, from places like Miami.
I think there's a place that sells it.
And then it's that nut, the seed in there, the bean, that actually is dried and fermented.
It's like a coffee bean, but it's a chocolate bean.
And then roasted.
And that turns into what is the core ingredient that goes into making chocolate.
And dark chocolate has more of it.
The flavanols, the polyphenols are in that bean.
It's plant-based.
You know what a great hack is?
What?
Cocoa nibs.
Okay.
Roasted.
So they basically kind of break up the cocoa bean after it's roasted into these little nibs.
And you can put them on anything.
You can eat them as a snack.
They're a little bitter, but they're really amazing.
And they're just pure cocoa.
Yeah.
Okay.
So studies have been done to show that the flavanols in cocoa stimulate stem cells to
come out of your bone marrow like bees in a beehive in your bloodstream.
And they go out and they find wherever it needs to be repaired.
If it's in your heart, they'll fix it.
If it's in your liver, they'll fix it. If it's in your liver, they'll fix it.
If it's in your skin, they'll fix it.
And so we can eat foods like high flavanol cocoa in order to be able to actually get
the stem cells to work a little bit better.
Now, how do we know this actually works in people?
Well, clinical studies have been done with high flavanol cocoa to show that in like men
who are in their 60s with heart disease, they could actually eat,
just have two cups of dark chocolate hot cocoa
a day for a month.
And they doubled the amount of stem cells
in their bloodstream
and their circulation improved measurably.
And then what's even more important and impressive
is that there was a study called the COSMOS study
that was completed recently
that showed that eating
high-flavidone cocoa decreases the risk of cardiovascular death, right?
Over a period of three decades.
Like a statin.
Like a statin.
Except made by eating the same thing that you used to make chocolate.
So we're not telling people to go out to have chocolate, which is a confection.
It's got a lot of sugar and all kinds of other stuff in it.
But it's the stuff underlying it yeah core it's so I met
Frank Mars once who is the chairman of Mars the candy company I'm thinking I'm
at this guy's prob like selling junk food and he's gonna he's like oh my god
Mark Hyman I love your stuff like food is medicine food is men he was like going
on and on about how he'd. And he was so on it.
Mars has got a big research program on this as well. So, listen, I think it's really great that the smartest food companies are paying attention to the things that people like you and I are talking about and finding ways to invest in doing more research. Look, you know, we're not telling people you got to go, you know, pick everything yourself
to eat it.
You don't have to go to the farmer's market.
If one day we can get the food industry to evolve from making only ultra processed foods
to making healthier foods, better foods and taking the planet along the way, then we all
win.
Then we all win.
Okay. So what are the next health defense we all win. Then we all win. Okay.
So what are the next health defense systems?
Okay.
So circulation, stem cells.
We talked a lot about this already.
Your gut microbiome is a third one.
39 trillion bacteria in our gut.
Not just in our gut, but it's also on our skin.
All the orifices will have some defensive bacteria.
I'm sure it's not 40 or 39 and a half trillion.
Yeah, it's hard to count.
More than in the clear sky that you can see stars.
But, you know, a lot of people don't know this.
And I only learned this in the last year.
What part of your gut, most of the microbiome actually lives?
In the large intestine.
In the large intestine, which is the colon.
So think about the intestines as a 40-foot tube.
It's as long as a school bus.
All right.
And you've got the front end, which is actually your mouth. And the mouth is a microbiome as well. Healthy mouth bacteria look like it
protects your brain against dementia, all right? Like Alzheimer's disease is now linked to unhealthy
mouth bacteria, gum disease. But when we talk about gut health, we're usually talking about
what's in the colon, which is the last several feet of the gut before the
tailpipe right okay so uh now within the colon the colon goes uh up on one side of the body
ascending colon goes across your body left to right okay right right to left and then it comes
down and then and then it actually empties out it turns out there's most of the gut microbiome lives
in a part of the colon called the cecum the bottom of the bottom of the of the ascending part of the gut microbiome lives in a part of the colon called the cecum.
The bottom of it.
The bottom of the ascending part of the colon.
It's kind of a baggy part of the colon.
It's where the appendix is.
And most of the healthy gut bacteria live right there.
And in fact, we're beginning to realize that the appendix probably plays a role to help the gut microbiome stay healthy. You mean it's not just a vestigial organ
that we need to take out?
You don't need to take it out.
Your tonsils, you don't need them taken out.
Do you remember when we were taught this in medical school,
the one organ you don't need is the appendix,
and it's totally not true for the tonsils as well.
You know, the fact of the matter is that
some people are beginning to think that the appendix
is like the PEZ dispenser for healthy gut bacteria
to reload the gut bacteria to reload
that was something i needed to kid you basically have a little pez thing with a cute little
character on top and you pull it back and this little candy pops out exactly like oh my god
so you want to keep your appendix but but listen i took part in a gut microbiome transplant fda
approved for a cancer patient we can't give the name or any details on it, but I will tell you,
we were trying to help a cancer patient
who had been bombarded with antibiotics and steroids,
was not responding to immunotherapy,
needed better gut bacteria
in order to be their health defense, okay?
And so we got stool from a super responder
who really responded well, had all the right stuff.
Healthy poop.
Okay, yeah.
You know, kind of like Navy SEAL level gut microbiome.
Okay.
And with a gastroenterologist, I was scrubbed in.
We actually were able to put through colonoscopy,
put the colonoscope back in right down to the cecum.
Yeah. And then just inject it in a syringe,
the healthy microbiome right to the cecum.
Right.
That's where most of it lives.
So that gut bacteria talks directly to your immune system,
which is also inside the wall of the gut.
It lowers inflammation.
It creates not only butyrate, as you mentioned,
but other short-chain fatty acids, acetate, propionate, and probably more things that we haven't yet discovered yet.
It text messages your brain.
You know, the gut-brain axis, a lot of people talk about it as if it were a simple thing.
This is the beginning of a new understanding of our human nature, right? If the brain is a black box, the gut is also a black box
because we're beginning to understand
that the biggest nerve coming out of our brain,
called the vagus nerve,
which comes down the side of our neck
and then like a horsetail,
kind of ramifies all throughout our gut,
that that nervous system communicates from the brain
down to our gut.
Our brain talks to our gut bacteria.
100%.
And then our gut bacteria go get the SMS from the brain.
They're listening. They're listening. They're like, you know what? I'm gonna brain talks to our gut bacteria. And then our gut bacteria go get their SMS from the brain. They're listening.
They're listening.
They're like, you know what?
I'm gonna talk back to the brain upstairs.
And so they text message our brain back and forth
all over again.
So the bottom line is how we treat our gut defense.
Not only is good for immunity, lowers inflammation,
helps us heal wounds faster,
because I did research on this,
but also helps us with our mental wellbeing,
mental health, depression.
You know, amazingly, autism seems to be linked to the gut microbiome. A hundred percent.
I treated so many patients with autism,
and the first place we started was fixing the gut.
And they all have stinky, smelly, sticky poops.
They all have gut issues.
And somehow the psychiatrist just ignored it.
Oh, I don't know what that is.
Just whatever.
And it's the key to helping them.
I had a kid once who had autism autism he had giardia wow and we put it on his giardia fixes microbiome and the kid
woke up well so let's but let's let's let's take that and by the way just so people are saying
it doesn't mean that all cases of autism are caused by that and i think this is really a
fundamental flaw in medicine which is that we think if if you have a disease name then the
same treatment applies to everybody
with that disease name.
There is no such thing as autism.
There are autisms.
There's Alzheimer's.
There's diabetes.
There's cancer.
There's breast cancer.
There's not breast cancer.
Exactly.
And by the way, you just mentioned something important.
By treating the giardia,
the giardia was not the cause of,
but the giardia disturbed the healthyardia was not the cause of, but the giardia disturbed the healthy
defense system, the gut microbiome. So it was unable to do all those complex things that the
gut microbiome does that we're just starting to discover. So that's the third health defense
system. Obviously, we talked a lot about prebiotics, probiotics that actually improve
polyphenols. Fourth health defense system is our DNA itself.
And the thing is that, you know, our DNA, it's about three feet of our DNA wound up into every single small cell in our body.
And it's our genetic instructions.
But most of our DNA is not instruction.
Most of our DNA is actually coding for how to actually protect our health.
Yeah.
Right?
But the part that we understand that codes for proteins is you know making making pieces of ourselves but the regulation of how the
software yeah of our bodies the rest of the DNA and so what we realize is that
when you actually allow that software to operate properly mmm your health is
pretty good and your body it needs to protect all that when you actually
insults that or try to mutate that or damage that coding DNA,
it's basically like downloading viruses onto your laptop.
Okay.
It's running a little slower.
Oh, now it's like, it's, it's, it's frizzing out.
Like you can damage your DNA and ruin your body's ability to protect its own health.
And this is where antioxidants really come in to protect our DNA, help our DNA build
itself back up.
So like if you have a damaged DNA, that's no problem.
By the way, DNA damage happens every single day.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, it's just a natural part of it.
100,000 hits, death by 1,000 cuts.
10,000 hits to our DNA every single day.
Our body can fix it.
But when it misses a repair, that is where at the beginning of the trouble that can lead
to cancer and other problems can occur.
So we want to have foods.
That's another defense system.
And I wrote a lot about this in my book, Young Forever.
These are the hallmarks of aging.
One of them is dysregulated DNA repair.
And we have a whole built-in repair army that's activated by sirtuins.
And we know various things activate sirtuins from NAD+, to various phytochemicals, resveratrol.
So there's a whole way we can learn how to activate our DNA repair system.
So we're just going through to the high level,
but yeah, this is all an E2B disease.
It's a great manual.
So we talked about circulation, stem cells,
gut microbiome, DNA.
And the last one is probably,
save the best for last.
Well, this is not really a best,
but it's powerful.
And that's our immune system.
And if you think about it,
our immune system had to evolve from the time that we crawled out of a swamp because the earliest form of life lived surrounded in an ecosystem ofum, right? Okay. And so from the earliest time that we evolved as a lulliform on this planet, we had to have
some form of immune defense to protect us against the creepy crawlies that might get
into us, right?
So it's not just about COVID.
It's really about everything.
And this immune system protects us from invaders on the outside of the body, like bacteria
and viruses, but it also protects us from invaders on the outside of the body like bacteria and viruses but it also protects us from invaders inside the body like cancer cells that are just abnormal mutated cells
they betray us and our immune system is like the police force that conducts surveillance the cops
on a beat to look for mutant cells and and put something back in the paddy wagon and takes them
away kills those little cancer cells so So good immunity is good health.
Bad immunity is bad health.
It's pretty simple.
And something that gets confused a lot is inflammation.
Everyone thinks that inflammation is bad.
Here's what I say.
Inflammation is part of our immune system.
It's sort of the immediate part of our immune system.
If you cut yourself, your immune system springs into action
and makes your bacteria are killed.
Wherever the wound is, the injury is, all right,
that's inflammatory cells.
So it's good and then it shuts off
when it's no longer needed and then healing occurs.
But inflammation becomes bad when it doesn't go away.
Yeah. Right?
It's the campfire that is keeping you warm.
Turns into a wildfire. That turns into a wildfire, burns the entire forest down. Yeah. Right. It's the campfire that is keeping you warm. Turns into a wildfire.
That turns into a wildfire, burns the entire forest down. Yeah, exactly. So that's amazing.
That's such a beautiful map of the root cause of health. And none of those things you talked about were things you really focus on as ways of treating disease. But the key is how do you keep
those healthy? And basically those foods that you took to Mars with you. And second is how do you keep those healthy and and basically those foods that you took to mars with you and second is how do you actually understand that they're the key to reversing disease to beat
disease so as you discuss and i think this is such a revolutionary idea that we can actually
have these built-in repair regenerative renewal healing mechanisms that are already hardwired into our biology
that we really never learned about in medical school, that we know a lot about.
And we know a lot about how to activate these through lifestyle, diet, various phytochemicals
and supplements, avoiding toxins, all these ways we can modulate this healing system.
And I think this is really what we're now understanding as the key to increasing our health span, our lifespan. This is what I wrote about on Young Forever. This is
really the fundamental frame shift in medicine from focusing on disease to focusing on health
and understand why we deviate from health and how do we create health through understanding these
five basic defense systems. And there's other ways of talking about it. They talk about hallmarks of
aging. Everybody's talking about the same stuff.
They just have a different frame of it.
But this is so critical.
And your work is just so important, William,
to kind of help us think about this,
to make it simple, fun, easy.
And you also talk about the dose,
which is really important.
So if food is medicine, okay, which drug?
What's the dose?
What's the frequency?
How long do you take it, right?
So it's like, it's that nuance.
It's not like
just eat broccoli it's like okay you need this much i think one of the foods we didn't remember
to talk about that i would have probably taken tomorrow is mushrooms one of my favorites
so just to close can you kind of walk us through what dr lee eats and what he takes as supplements
every day to eat to beat disease and to increase your healthspan on your lifespan.
OK, first of all, I recognize my body's already hardwired to stay healthy and to reverse disease every single day.
And I think this is an important message is that, you know, our body's already doing its job every single day. I try not to actually take down my health
defenses. And whenever I can, every decision I can make to shore up, to boost my health defenses,
raise my shields, I try to do it. It's just smart. You know, it's locking the door before you leave
the house, turning off the stove before you go out. I mean, it's a basic defensive mechanism. When I make a decision, it becomes second nature to me.
Now, I strongly believe, and by the way,
just I want to say one thing
about this disease reversal thing.
You know, we used to think
that you could not reverse heart disease,
you could not reverse cancer, but we're seeing it today.
You can, and it can be done with the help of food.
Yeah, if you know how.
If you know how, If you know how.
Yeah.
And, you know, we're not saying, you and I are not saying that this is a done deal.
We know everything there is to know about it.
No, of course not, yeah.
There's a magic bullet to it.
But this is where we're going.
Yeah.
As a healthy forward society.
We're beginning to figure this stuff out.
And we can all take simple steps to move it.
So what do I eat every single day?
I look at getting my nutrients in through eating mostly plant-based foods.
I want to get enough protein.
I want to get enough fiber.
I want to get my polyphenols in.
And the choices are so myriad.
If you go to the market to get stuff that I enjoy eating.
So in my books, I have like hundreds of lists.
So it's diversity too, right?
Diversity is so important.
You know, like, listen. So within each category, there's a lot of diversity right tons of protein fat carbs
right phytochemicals fiber there's a lot of diversity where you can kind of mix and match
mix and match and by the way this is what two of the healthiest societies uh in the world have done
in mediterranean society and asian societies they have such diversity in their
repertoire of recipes and people don't eat the same thing every single day there's no dog kibble
you know that everyone's actually feeding themselves it's seasonal it's day-to-day okay
take us through what you had like maybe yesterday the day before when you're at home cooking what
is it like an average day look like for you you know i like to have legumes as a core yeah uh so beans uh and and spices and herbs to
light it up i like to have leafy greens of different types i told you i love i love bok choy
yeah um i love mushrooms as well uh you know recently i cooked a chinese new year dinner
where i got fresh shiitake mushrooms kind of have the little hatch marks on the top. And I just sliced them in half,
and I sauteed them with some soy sauce,
and I found some shrimp paste to light them up.
And they put a little bit of chili pepper in there as well.
It just created this incredible umami taste
to light up the mushrooms.
You're making me lunch.
Mushrooms contain beta D-glucan,
which is really good for gut health.
It feeds the gut bacteria,
but also lights up your immune system.
Yeah, anti-cancer.
And it's got anti-cancer approach.
And I want to make one thing,
distinction between culinary mushrooms
and medicinal mushrooms,
because mushrooms are so popular now.
People are thinking, well, you know,
reishi and turkey tail and all the cordyceps
and all that kind of stuff.
You can't cook with those.
Most societies don't cook with them.
Mitake you can.
There is an overlap of culinary mushrooms and medicinal mushrooms.
Yeah, what are they?
There's two of them. Shiitake mushrooms.
And mitake.
And mitake.
Yeah, those are the ones I use all the time.
I eat those all the time. I love them. By the way, a little pro tip for you. If you're
getting mitake, which they're still far from mitake.
They're called hen of the woods, right? They're hen of the the woods they're they're foraged you know and some of them are
huge yeah um they're delicious they're like you can substitute a steak and put maitake in a grill
it's amazing but if you get maitake from the forger i i can i really urge you everyone who
tries to do this to clean it really well really well because it comes out of the woods and it's a
kind of a compact mushroomy thing.
It's got a lot of little frills and things in it,
but salamanders like to live in them.
So what you want to do is to make sure-
Make sure there's no salamanders.
Salamanders are out.
What do you mean?
A little extra protein is not going to kill you.
I love that.
Yeah, it's so good.
And what about supplements?
What do you take?
You know, people always say,
well, Dr. Lee, you're into food as medicine, so you probably
don't take supplements, right?
Wrong.
I do take supplements, but I take it in a very specific way.
Supplements I define as topping off.
Topping off whatever you would not normally get.
It's a supplement, not a replacement.
Supplement and not a replacement.
So I like to get everything I can get out of whole foods.
I like to prepare them myself so I know exactly what's in it.
I try to avoid ultra processed foods
so I get the good stuff
and not the bad stuff.
But there are some things
that are just hard to eat enough of, right?
Omega-3s is one of those things.
You know, I travel around.
I don't cook fish all the time.
I don't eat chia seeds all the time.
So listen, so omega-3s
at the dose that is really good for you,
you really need to eat a lot of it.
So I take omega-3 supplements.
Vitamin D, deficient in a lot of people. You know, so vitamin D supplements need to eat a lot of it so i take omega-3 supplements vitamin d yeah deficient in a lot of people yeah you know uh so that but it's a lot of herring or you have to
have like 10 servings of porcini mushrooms which i wouldn't mind doing because when i go to italy i
order giant plates of porcini mushrooms because you can't get them here and i just ordered that's
what i have for dinner it's like a giant plate of porcini mushrooms delicious right by the way
here's a little pro tip on mushrooms.
You know, if you get the lowly white button mushroom that you can get anywhere,
it's got some vitamin D in it.
But do you know like how our skin gets vitamin D?
You gotta expose the sunlight.
If you want your mushroom to create more vitamin D,
you slice it, put it on a plate
and stick it in front of a window
with the sunlight coming through it.
Wow.
You'll actually get the mushroom.
You do a couple of hours before you cook it.
Mushrooms are suntan.
Okay, that's a new one. You give the mushroom suntan and you get more vitamin D. I love that. It's really great, right? Yeah. And so these are like culinary
tips. Like you got to make your cooking fun and useful. Okay. So vitamin D, fish oil.
Vitamin D, fish oil. And then I do take some probiotics, but here's how I think about my
probiotics. I look for human evidence and human studies. All right. And I'm a researcher,
so I'm a little, I have an unfair advantage because I'm looking at this stuff all the time.
But when I see that lactobacillus ruderi, for example, is good for oral microbiome and good
for lower gut microbiome, and I've done a research show, it improves internal healing. It actually
causes, you know, helps the brain secrete oxytocin which
actually improves your mood i'm like you know what i'm going for some of that so i do some
lactobacillus root because the other natural sources sourdough bread i enjoy sourdough i
don't eat it all the time it's in parmigiano-reggiano cheese in italy when they actually
make the real parmigiano wheels they use lactobacillus root right that's too much i enjoy
parmigiano cheese but too much salt too much saturated fat i'm not
going to eat it all the time but you know what the the l root rye i take the children's chewable
version of it interesting because i want to also treat my gut microbiome it fights gum disease and
it kills the bacteria that causes cavities right so double hit um the acromancy we talked about
before it happens to be one of the guardian gut bacteria.
Very important.
There's a lot we don't know about it, but we do know enough that like, gosh, why wouldn't you take it?
And by the way, I've actually done research looking at gut microbiome.
I know that the acromancy you buy will actually take in your gut.
Like I've been able to triple the amount in the gut.
It's important.
I mean, I honestly, I do a lot of stool testing and they used to call me Dr. See Every Poop.
And I look at acromancy on everybody and it's amazing how many you know people have low acromancy and particularly the sickest patients yeah tend to be the ones with
autoimmune disease with cancer or heart disease it's quite amazing it's a correlation right now
but it's a pretty compelling correlation and if we and if you go back and reflect on what we've
been talking about our gut bacteria communicates to our brain communicates to our uh immune system communicates
our inflammatory system helps us heal probably many other things that we just haven't uncovered
yeah you know anyone listening to this what you got to realize is that the the medical researchers
like me and others that are doing the hard work of peeling back the layers of the
onion so to speak to figure things out we're we're doing more work we're excavating this whole field
of food as medicine every single day we're not so excited we haven't uncovered up the whole
tyrannosaurus skeleton yet but it's coming it's infinite it's infinite and it's super interesting
for us to do this but we don't have the complete uh answer yet and the more we uncover the more
questions get um that we have and the more questions that we have,
and the more discoveries we're having about just how good our food as medicine actually is for us.
Unbelievable.
And I think that's a great stack.
Vitamin D, fish oil, and probiotics.
I take those as well.
I think it's really part of the core way you can activate your defense systems, your healing system, your repair system.
So your work is just unbelievable, William. Everybody needs to check it out. You've got
so many resources, your book, eat to beat disease, eat to beat your diet. Our bestsellers are
fantastic. You have a course called eat to beat disease course, elevate your metabolism,
a masterclass. That's a free, I think a free masterclass, drwilliamlee.com forward slash free dash masterclass.
And we'll link to all of these in the show notes.
So his social media is drwilliamlee, L-I, and you can get him on everywhere.
You can find social media.
He's just a wealth of knowledge, information, a brilliant guy, a good guy, a good friend,
and everybody should check out his stuff.
Thanks for being on the Dr. Tracy podcast again and again,
and you're going to be back right now.
We have more to talk about.
Thanks very much.
It's always a real pleasure.
I mean,
look,
uh,
it's hard.
Uh,
it's a,
it's a lonely world for people that are really trying to communicate and get
the message out.
And I think we both have this mission of really trying to scale out the
impact that the simple things can have a huge impact on individual lives.
Amen.
Thanks for listening today.
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