The Dr. Hyman Show - My Top Three Longevity Tips: Foods to Avoid and Habits to Embrace
Episode Date: July 8, 2024Uncover the secrets to a longer, healthier life by understanding the impact of nutrient sensing pathways with guest Radha Agrawal and me. Today, we’re exploring the dangers of ultra-processed foods,... the benefits of regular exercise, and the power of a strong social network. Plus, I'll give you my top three tips for boosting longevity and preventing chronic diseases. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Cozy Earth, Cymbiotika, and Mitopure. Streamline your lab orders with Rupa Health. Access more than 3,500 specialty lab tests and register for a FREE live demo at RupaHealth.com. Right now, you can save 30% when you upgrade to Cozy Earth sheets. Just head over to CozyEarth.com and use code DRHYMAN. Upgrade your supplement routine with Cymbiotika. Get 20% off with free shipping on all orders. Head to Cymbiotika.com and use code HYMAN. Support essential mitochondrial health and save 10% on Mitopure. Visit TimelineNutrition.com/Drhyman and use code DRHYMAN10.
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Essentially, there's these four nutrient sensing pathways
that regulate biological aging.
One of the hallmarks is called
deregulated nutrient sensing.
Essentially, it means your body and food
are not working together to create health.
And so these pathways, when they're not properly tuned up,
will drive all the other hallmarks.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
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Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. Every week, I bring on interesting guests to discuss the latest
topics in the field of functional medicine
and do a deep dive on how these topics
pertain to your health.
In today's episode, I have some interesting discussions
with other experts in the field.
So let's just trump right in.
The single biggest input to your biology every day
are the pounce of food you eat every day.
And the information in that food
is in real time changing
your biology and regulating everything that's going on. In fact, I call them the longevity
switches, which is kind of a term I made up in the book. But essentially, there's these four
nutrient sensing pathways that regulate biological aging. And these pathways are one of the hallmarks
of aging. So one of the hallmarks
is called deregulated nutrient sensing. It's a big mumbo jumbo of medical language, but essentially
it means your body and food are not working together to create health. And so these pathways,
when they're not properly tuned up, will drive all the other hallmarks. So for example,
the amount of starch and sugar in
our diet is driving increase in insulin signaling pathways. So insulin goes up and this insulin
creates this cascade that drives all the disease of aging. So insulin resistance and poor metabolic
health, which affects now over 93% of the population, according to a new study,
is the biggest driver of heart
disease, of cancer, of diabetes, and dementia.
And not to mention all the other problems like depression and infertility and so many
other problems that occur from insulin resistance.
So this is the biggest phenomenon that's happening globally, which is caused by our
ultra-processed diet, which is about 60% of our calories in America.
And processed food could be sardines
in a can or a can of tomatoes. That's not necessarily bad, but ultra processed food
means that they take these raw materials from industrial agricultures, corn and soy and wheat,
and they highly process them into components that you wouldn't have in your kitchen. And they
recombine them into things that are food-like substances. And I've
written about this. I've written, I think, more books than I probably should have on food and
nutrition. So a lot of the fast food that's out there, a lot of the grocery store in the sort of
inner aisles that are like highly packaged foods. Yeah, all of that. Yeah, all of that is so bad for
you. And if you look at the label of ingredients and you can't recognize what it is
with covering the front of the package, you shouldn't eat it. And whether it's a corn dog
or a pop tart, you may not be able to tell the difference looking at just the ingredients on
the label. So that's the biggest driver of so many of these deregulated nutrient sensing pathways.
The other is just the constant influx of food. So we eat all day long, we snack, we eat before bed, and then we eat when
we wake up. And this doesn't give our body a rest. And so that activates this pathway called mTOR.
mTOR is really important. One of the four longevity switches versus insulin signaling,
that's mTOR. mTOR is activated by protein and by also by sugar. And when it's over-activated, it actually can drive cancer
and prevent your body from repairing and healing itself.
So you need to give your body a break from eating
and inhibit mTOR,
which then allows this process called autophagy,
which essentially means self-cannibalism.
So what's really exciting
is our body has these innate repair mechanisms.
We have the ability to clean up waste. We have the ability to rebuild new tissues. I can think
of it, you've cut your skin and all of a sudden your body then makes new skin, which is kind of
a miracle, right? This is going on inside your body too, but we don't allow that to happen.
Imagine if you had a cut in your skin, you kept scraping it and digging at it and it would never
heal. That's exactly what we do with this constant influx of food.
So we have to give our bodies a break so we can activate this process of self-cleaning, recycling, and repair.
And this is called autophagy.
Now, you can't do that all the time because if you weren't eating all the time, you're going to starve to death.
So you need to sort of have this Goldilocks balance between stimulating mTOR to create protein synthesis to build muscle, but also inhibit it at times by not eating.
We call it time-restricted eating, intermittent fasting.
There's a lot of ways to do it.
That activates autophagy, which then creates this self-cleaning process.
So think about like it's basically this cleanup crew that comes in and cleans up all the garbage and gets rid of old
proteins and old, you know, inflammatory stuff and then builds new stuff. So it's like you've
got this building construction crew and this demolition crew, and you need both to actually
maintain your health and create longevity. So food is the biggest single thing. And we can talk
a long time about how to use food to activate all the longevity switches properly.
And the other big thing that I think is driving our disease states is lack of exercise. I mean, most of us are not using our bodies as they were meant to be used. We don't carry and lift things
anymore. We don't run anymore, chasing animals to go kill them and eat them like we used to as
hunter-gatherers. So our bodies are not being used and are not fit. And that lack of exercise creates this horrible
set of consequences that drives disease across the whole spectrum of illness, whether it's dementia
or diabetes or heart disease or cancer and many, many other problems. So exercise, the right kind
of exercise, strength training and cardiovascular fitness
are medicines, just like food is medicine,
exercise is medicine,
that activates also these longevity switches and pathways.
And it also works through these four longevity switches,
mTOR, insulin signaling,
another one called sirtuins, which we can talk about,
and AMPK, which is regulated also by sugar and so forth.
So we have all these redundant
pathways that are designed to work together to repair dna to shut off inflammation to clean up
old parts to build muscle to all all these great things that our body needs to do so we can maintain
our health and what's so exciting now is we know how to turn the dials on the switches you know
it's like a jet plane you go on the jet plane and it's like a little overwhelming and you see the cockpit and you
go, man, that guy's going to fly this thing.
It's got 4,000 dials and switches.
I hope we can take off and land.
But your body is the same way.
And then the beautiful thing is though, learning a few simple principles, you can keep the
thing running without a whole lot of effort if you just know what to do.
In Okinawa, which is one of the longest lived people in the world, they form a community
at birth of babies that are kind of connected by their parents that go through life together and
go through all the ups and downs and trials and tribulations from birth to like 100 years old.
And it builds a sense of, and it's not like 100 people, it's like five people or four people.
And it's, you know, most people can't even say there's
one friend they have they can call up when they feel bad or sad who they can have a honest
transparent conversation to that's really heartbreaking and it's so much of a driver
of some of the ills of our society something people don't talk about and it's what you know
when we were with rick warren and saddleback church i had the insight of using the power of
community to help people create
health. So suicide's contagious, but health is contagious. That's right. And obesity is contagious,
but so is, you know. Good health. Good health, right. And I think that's such an important
thing you're creating in the world, is this call to belong. And not only to belong, but actually
you've created a very specific roadmap. So I'm going to get into that now. You've talked about going in to go out. So let's talk about going in and what that means and
how do you do that? Right. So I have about 20 exercises in my book that really take you by
the hand. The whole point is to get dirty in this journey of self-exploration and have fun. But
going in starts with first an audit of who are you spending your time
with,
right?
Just take a moment to write down who are the people I'm spending my time
with today at work,
at home,
around me,
family,
friends,
relatives,
who are all the people you're spending your time with?
And just write that down on a piece of paper and take a look at this map,
right?
And this map will begin
to, and what I like to do is color code it. So work friends, I'll color code in green, right?
And family, I'll color code in red. And friends that I choose, I'll color code in orange, right?
So different colors, just to sort of see, ah, okay, cool. So, you know, and then I have this
kind of axis of energy that I created in my book, in chapter one, or in part, cool. So, you know, and then I have this kind of access of energy that I created
in my book, in chapter one, or in part one of the book, where you sort of assess, okay,
who are the community members who are bringing me up? And who are the community members in my life
are bringing me down? So looking around, you begin to see, ah, cool. So all the green quadrant sort
of is up and to the right. So therefore, I realize that my work life is very positive.
I have very positive community at work.
But then maybe there's more red dots around family and friends in the negative quadrants.
So you're like, ah, okay, I need to really understand and assess what's happening in my family life
so I can really heal that or support that or ask myself you know how do i connect and
handle um family members and we've all you know we all we've all we're all uh we all go through
that and um so so really looking although i know your family they're all pretty awesome
well you know your mom's japanese my dad's yeah my sister's a doctor and your sister's
you know well you know it's and culturally it And then my sister's, you know. Well, you know, and culturally, it's interesting, right?
Like, you know, my father and my mother are some of the most loving community builders.
I know, in fact, they modeled what community looks like for us.
And yet, it's interesting because culturally, talking about love and sex and differently,
you know, you just don't talk about those things with your, you know, with your, with your kind of Asian parents. And so on one hand, they're the best community builders
I've seen. On the other hand, you know, I do long for, for a little bit more kind of emotional
honesty. Yeah. But I think again, like we all have those, those sort of issues. I'm going through the
motherhood process right now. I'm seven months pregnant. I keep asking myself every day, you know, what kind of, you know, what kind of parent do I want
to be? And anyway, so, so plotting this graph, you begin to sort of see a pattern of, ah, okay,
cool. So, you know, here is my entire life, you know, life map. And, and it begins to give you a
sort of the beginning of that story. And then from there, you ask yourself, okay, why am I spending my time with these people?
Are they grandfathered in?
Are they making excuses?
Am I being lazy?
Is it just easier to keep them around?
You know, what is it?
Are they energy givers or energy suckers?
That's right.
Exactly.
And can I sort of be honest and vulnerable with that person and share, hey, listen, this is how I'm feeling right now in this relationship.
And it's not working for me.
Or I'm really sort of wanting to spend time with sort of more positive forces.
I'm going through pregnancy right now.
And I don't necessarily, I just want to spend just some more time connecting with the joy in my life, you know,
and things like that, right? Being more honest and vulnerable and have had those conversations.
And it's and it's wonderful, either it becomes a mirror for that person to say,
oh, wow, I realize I'm not showing up the way you want me to. Or they say, okay,
I totally understand. And let's, and let's reconnect after you give birth.
So I think that there's that honesty piece there that we forget.
We end up just ghosting our people in our lives.
We end up running away, or we end up shit-talking,
and it ends up being a very negative experience.
But saying sort of, this isn't the time to spend time with somebody right now because I want to level up with my community members
is the best thing you can do for yourself
and for your friend too
because they will begin to see how they're showing up
and hopefully they'll go on the journey of self-exploration too.
So rather than just cut them off,
just have a real honest conversation with them.
That's right.
That takes courage and vulnerability on all of our ends,
but it doesn't create resentment on the other side
that leads to
negative storytelling and hurt and all other sort of, you know, larger issues. So that's the first
step in going in. So taking inventory. Yeah, taking inventory. Exactly. Auditing community
you spend time with. The second thing that I, this is what I did when I turned 30. And this is,
this is exactly what I outlined in my book is my own journey that's taken me from feeling like I don't belong to this incredible, connected, joyful community that gives me wings and lets me fly.
And the second thing I did was I wrote down a three column list and which we'll get into in just a column.
One was all the qualities I was looking for in a friend.
Right. into it and just column one was all the qualities i was looking for in a friend right so i just
wanted to write down and actually manifest and call in what were the qualities i was looking
for in a friend right we do this type of audit again for our romantic relationships we do this
for our professional careers right i want a job that pays this much i want a job that has this
type of vacation i want a job that you know right like in terms of life it's interesting in terms of life
planning we it's not a category it's like why not love work it is money exactly friend is not a
category and it is the most important when i say the most important category in life to focus on
and everyone says focus on money power fame and building your business and but really none of it
will happen and or will result in joy or joyful life experience
if you don't have a community being like, oh my gosh, Mark, high five.
Like, whoa, we get to celebrate your major win, New York Times bestseller list again?
Holy shit, let's go and throw a giant party for you.
You know what I mean?
If you're just kind of like writing by yourself in your room and have no one to celebrate,
then at the end of it,'re empty again you know so it's it's it's so critical that we continue to put our laptops down and keep
our word and go to those dinners with our friends and say yes to the dance floor and say yes to
adventure because at the end of the day no matter no amount of success will mean anything if there's
no one to celebrate it with right so um so so true. So column one was all the qualities of looking for a new friend.
So I wanted friends who talked about ideas and not each other.
I wanted friends who said,
f*** yeah, bleep that out, to life.
I wanted friends who really took care of themselves
and took care of each other.
I wanted friends who were interesting and interested, right?
Who were good listeners.
I wanted friends... So I wrote down right who are good listeners um i wanted
friends yeah i just i just so so i wrote down everything i was looking for in a friend which
was kind of vulnerable because there's so much shame around saying i don't belong or there's
so much shame around um writing down the qualities it just feels desperate for some reason in today's
society right but if we just remember really right that's what i'm saying but but if we removed all
of that stigma because there is stigma around fomo right fear of missing out and fear of being
left out you don't tell people like yeah i was left out from the party and it really hurt like
you're we're so proud we don't really talk about that right but faux blow is a concept talk in my
book quite a bit which is fear of being left out right which is a more subversive negative version
of fomo yeah right and then jomo is joy of missing out which is the joy of of of missing out and left out, right? Which is a more subversive negative version of FOMO, right? And then JOMO
is joy of missing out, which is the joy of missing out and having the confidence to know there's
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So column two is all the qualities I don't want in a friend.
So I don't want friends who are negative Nellies,
lazies, shoulder shruggers, Debbie Downers,
Netflix and chill watchers all the time, and homebodies.
I wanted friends who were just really- Say yes to life.
Say yes.
And I call it an FYF in my book.
It's a very-
And somebody else might want a friend
that they can sit around and do knitting with.
That's right.
That's what I'm saying.
So everyone's different. So your qualities are going to be very different from my qualities whoever's listening out there right and that's
exactly what you want to do right now is ask yourself where do i feel the most energized
and then column three perhaps the most important column was all the qualities that i need to embody
in order to attract the friends that i want all the qualities i need to embody so i need to embody in order to attract the friends that I want. All the qualities
I need to embody. So I need to be less of a workaholic. I love my work. You know, I need to
put my laptop down. I need to be less judgmental and nitpicky and perfectionist. And, you know,
I'm a CEO, right? I run companies for a living. And so my job is to focus on what's going wrong,
right? My job is to focus on how to improve
what's going wrong so if i bring that i used to bring that into my relationships into my friendships
i'd be nitpicking what's going wrong in those relationships instead of being grateful for
what's going right yeah so that sort of understanding your frame yes that compartmentalization of in my
work i'm going to be focused on really um on really wanting to improve service and product and whatever.
But in my personal life, to really compartmentalize and say, hey, wait, let me really focus on what's going right.
Especially as an Asian woman, you grow up in a household where it's like, you're only loved if you get an A.
A plus.
And you did all right you went to cornell and
you were on a varsity soccer team and um but yeah so so i think i think it's it's so important to
take that audit you know and look in the mirror and ask yourself you know how are you showing up
for your friends too so that was a really important going in is doing an inventory of your life and
what matters looking at yourself yeah looking at yourself where you're not the best friend and what you want that's right the quality is looking so what
what else is part of going in so going in there's also another exercise i do and there's so many
more but i'll share one by the way the book is full of these amazing practical exercises it's
not like oh you should be in a community and you should go have friends and it's like a roadmap
step by step to take you through the process of how do you create community capacity in yourself
and how do you build and find community and it's really really awesome thank you and i illustrated
the book too so every page is fun to read like i you know it's not a bunch of words it's very it's
like i really like pictures and colors and and it just makes the whole journey of of of community
building a lot more playful and and colorful so what are the other going in steps? So one more going in exercise I'll share before we move on to going out
is I have you also assess what I call your VIA chart.
So imagine a three sort of Venn diagram, three circles that you draw.
So circle one is your values.
The V in VIA is your values.
The I in the VIA chart is your interests. And the A is your values. The V in VIA is your values. The I in the VIA chart is your interests.
And the A is your abilities.
So just write down your values, your interests, and your abilities in three concentric circles.
And sit down with yourself and ask yourself, today, Mark Hyman, what do I value today?
Because what you value today is going to be different than what you valued maybe 10 years ago.
Maybe 10 years ago
you were a big party animal
and then now
you still are.
I mean, you know,
nothing's changed.
I still see a burning man
fist pumping on the dance floor.
But today, you know,
maybe you just got married
to a beautiful wife.
You're nesting.
You have a house in New York now.
And so maybe your values today are family-driven,
whereas 10 years ago it might have been different.
So I'm seven months pregnant today as well,
so my values are different.
And values are sort of kind of the guardrails
through which you live your life.
What are the things that matter to you?
And you can Google values and see sort of what values come up and there's all kinds of lists that come up in my book i list out about
100 values that you can choose from but it's also something you can find on the internet and um you
can begin to sort of map out what do i care about today and really sit with yourself and and and
connect to that that essence um so write that down in one circle and that will give you again
the beginning of a roadmap
for the type of other people
that you want to connect with.
Shared values are so critical, right?
And then the I...
Because if you name it,
then you can identify others, right?
That's right, exactly.
And then the I in your VIA chart
is your interests.
So what am I interested in today?
So it's different from your values.
And your values is more sort of kind of intrinsic qualities, family, you know, community, work, life balance, you know, that sort of thing, right?
Whereas your interests might be things like hiking and yoga and mindful meditation and music festivals and, you know.
Daybreaker.
And daybreaker.
Yeah, thank you.
And all kinds of, right?
So it's what are you interested in tangibly doing today?
And, you know, some people I do this workshop with will say,
well, I don't know.
We all have interests, right?
So dig deep.
If, you know, if you don't have an interest right now,
then start cultivating them, you know?
And that's what's so fun about this going in journey is that life is,
we have 100 years to live on this planet.
Let's really begin cultivating our interests that are outside of just work.
Only 100 years if you eat right and follow my advice and connect in the community
and follow Radha's advice.
Then you get to 100.
Exactly.
If you read all of Mark's books, yeah, for sure.
And then your abilities are, and I really think about abilities through the lens of what can you bring to your community? So one of your abilities to cook?
Are you a good cook and chef?
Can you cook for your friends?
Are you,
what was one of your abilities
to gather people in your home?
Is your home a really wonderful place to gather?
You know,
one of my-
I tell you,
you're a great DJ.
Exactly,
exactly.
So like,
two of my friends,
I love giving this example,
you know,
one of them,
she always has a purse
full of like electric candles
so that when,
you know,
she really, she doesn't like neon lighting.
So she'll walk into any room and she'll just be like,
oh, no, no, no, this is too harsh lighting.
She'll turn off all the lights and break out all these electric candles
and vibes out the place instantly.
And it's incredible.
And you have these other friends who are great artists, musicians.
Exactly, they bring instruments.
Exactly.
Play great things and do skits. That's exactly right. It's just so fun always... Exactly, they bring instruments. Exactly. Play great things and do skits.
That's exactly right.
It's just so fun.
Yeah, so they bring instruments.
Eli and I bring gold stars often to gatherings.
So we'll say, Mark, you did great.
It was a wonderful thing you just said.
Here's a gold star for you.
Right.
We went to the hospital when Eli's father was sick
and we gave all the doctors and nurses gold stars
and said, thank you for what you're doing.
Great job, you know, checking his pulse.
We looked at you like, what?
And they all started competing with each other for how many, the doctors, like serious doctors
were competing with each other for how many.
Just like kindergarten.
Yeah, for how many gold stars they got.
And they put on their badges.
And it was this like hysterical experience.
And we turned this sort of otherwise scary place into a playground.
And, you know, it's whatever we can bring that feels good for us,
that feels natural to us.
Bring that to your community and your experience
and write that in your abilities chart.
All right, so we've got the inventory.
We've got your BIA chart.
You've got three column list of where they fit
in terms of whether they're bringing you life and energy
or taking it away.
So what about going out then? You've done done this inventory you've done all these things right
what's what's the process of actually going out with this and finding your community and building
it so step one and and you know there's some people who are like i'm shy or like this isn't
gonna come naturally to me or you know it's so much easier for you rata because you know you're
naturally more extroverted um which i by the way break those labels in my book too. And part one
is we talk about the fact that we have begun to sort of label ourselves into corners. So I'm an
introvert, I'm an extrovert. That's a good example with Carl Jung, who kind of named those terms,
and people are really banding around those terms. I've seen friends who are definitely extroverted
start dating introverts, and then begin identifying as introverts and disappear from the face of the planet and so i think we've taken these terms too
literally where carl jung himself who defined these terms said that if you are only introverted
you'd be in an insane asylum if you're only extroverted you'd end up in an insane asylum so
we are on a spectrum of introvert extrovertvert, which I call metavert in my book,
right? We are all metaverts. So let's just stop. Some days I'm social. Some days I want to be at
home by myself, filling up on energy. And so I think if we stop putting these social limitations
on ourselves, we'll begin to allow so much more exploration in the communities that we're a part
of. And so exploration, so going out,
begins with first removing all of these labeling and then getting sort of a deep understanding of who we are,
like going in experience.
And then it's just putting your shoes on.
I usually say put your shoes on,
write down five communities in and around you
that align with your values, interests, and abilities,
and then begin exploring them.
So it's a light touch, right?
So for me, the first year was, okay,
when I went on this journey,
when I started at 30 years old,
I realized I didn't belong and I was going to sports bars
and doing kind of like the everyday thing.
I asked myself, okay,
what are the things that I really care about?
What am I interested in?
So I realized I'm interested in entrepreneurship.
I'm interested in music festivals, and which I'd never really explored in my 20s, right? I just
was kind of doing the city life thing. So I began looking up all the cool music festivals around,
and I stumbled upon Burning Man, Lightning in a Bottle, and different music festivals I started
going to. And I started going to entrepreneurship summits like summit series and
um you know various communities in in in New York and and um um across across um like like
nexus summit um community it's a sort of a young global leader summit um so so so I began sort of
charting this on a on a little map as well So you go to pre-existing gatherings of people who had similar interests.
Exactly.
Interests, values.
And all of a sudden, I started meeting people.
And I started realizing, oh, wow, wait a minute.
You're interested in the same things I'm interested in.
We want to solve problems for the world.
And I began to sort of find my people for the first time.
And one by one, I said, hey, let's hang out.
And whereas before, I used to have siloed relationships, right?
Like I had my friends I work out with.
I had my friends that I go travel with.
I have my party friends.
I have my intellectual friends.
But this was the first time in my life also that I wanted to remove all the compartmentalization
and just bring everybody
together fearlessly. Because I think so often, for some reason, we can get territorial with our
friendships as well. I call that the oxytocin overload, which is, you know, which is actually
a term around when you become so close to somebody, as a one-on-one, there's this sort of animal instinct.
Yeah, exactly.
Animal instinct that you don't want to share that person with somebody else.
Whether it's your kids or your family and friends, that overload is there.
And it's on us to just recognize that it's happening, to know, wait, I'm feeling irrationally jealous.
I'm feeling irrationally territorial over this friendship.
And to name it and just say, hey, I just want to let you know
that I'm feeling irrationally territorial.
And I know that's an oxymoron because I care about you so much.
But so that going out piece is so critical.
And first, like tearing down all the needs for those siloed friendships
and just bringing everybody together, which is what I did.
And again, it could work differently for everybody.
But for me, just breaking down the barriers and sort of fearlessly introducing my friends and watching them develop friendships without me,
feeling jealous of their friendship was actually something new that I didn't have in my 20s.
Right.
So in my 30s, I was like, wow, that's so cool. I did.. Right. So in my thirties, I was like,
wow,
that's so cool.
I did more is more,
more is more like I connected them.
They're now friends without me.
That's so cool.
And,
and they thank me,
you know,
when they see me every once in a while,
they're like,
oh my gosh,
thank you so much.
Like this person is such a meaningful person in my life now.
And more is more.
So like everyone listening out there,
you know,
connect your friends fearlessly,
you know, recognize that the rising tide truly lifts all boats. And, um, More is more. So like everyone listening out there, connect your friends fearlessly.
Recognize that the rising tide truly lifts all boats.
And when we actually courageously and fearlessly connect one another,
life becomes far more rich.
So then going out and exploring all these communities,
I began finding these people,
bringing them to my house, hosting dinner parties.
That weren't just wine and cheeses. Everyone everyone listening let's stop doing wine and cheeses
I think we're past that, I think it's time that we really think about gathering
as a more meaningful connection point. It's kombucha and kale chips now right?
Yeah exactly, kombucha and kale, exactly, but there's just you know I talk about entry rituals
like when someone comes into your home, how are they coming into your home? Is it just like
hey I'm here with wine, or are you greeting them with a little wishing well to say, hey,
today when you're coming into my home, I want you to share a little wish that you have for this
gathering. I mean, tribes always had rituals. That's right. Always had ceremony. And you're
saying, let's bring that back into our lives. Exactly. Because it creates meaning and context
and connection. And the question is, what are you trying to achieve with supplements in the space of longevity?
What pathways are you activating? What are the important longevity switches in the body? And
how do you regulate those? So I think aside from the foundational stuff, which has a lot to do with
extending life, you mentioned the fish oil study, vitamin study vitamin d i mean there's just so much data on this that's really impressive but in terms of specific thinking about which product
supplements are effective for longevity and aging there's there's a number that really come to mind
and you know just to kind of um kind of back up a little bit and i'm going to get a little geeky
here if it's okay uh because this is a masterclass. There are a number of things called the hallmarks of aging, which are these fundamental
dysfunctions that happen as we age, if we age abnormally. So aging should be considered a
disease. It's not normal. The way we see aging in this culture is a sign of abnormal aging.
And we think it's normal because it pretty much happens to everybody, which they get
old disease and decrepit. If you're 65 years old, it's like you're going to have three or more
chronic illnesses. Just how it goes, right? But it's not inevitable. And so one of the
hallmarks of aging is as a dysfunction of these nutrient sensing pathways. So we have exquisite
systems in our biology that sense either abundance or scarcity. Oh, there's too much of a food. We just want to start to build and grow and make stuff in our body.
But if there's scarcity, it activates all these repair and healing and general methods.
And we need both.
We need both a demolition team and we need a construction team to actually continue to
renew and rebuild our bodies.
And a lot of these supplements that we're talking about are working on some of these
key pathways. So one of them is really important. It's called NAD.
NAD, you've probably heard about it. It's an important compound that's part of your cellular
metabolism, helps produce energy, but it turns out it has a lot broader effects. And one of the key
nutrient sensing pathways is something called sirtuins. These compounds, these pathways were discovered
in 1991 by Lenny Gwarte and his colleagues at MIT. And it was a real breakthrough because they
were able to stimulate the certain sirtuins in yeast models and mice models and extend life
dramatically, double it, sometimes even up to a thousand years equivalent in a worm or, you know,
120 or 140 in a human um how they were doing it
with some of the mice studies so what turns out is nad is a sirtuin activator so when nad levels are
good which means you have energy it turns on the the sirtuins which then creates a whole downstream
series of effects that creates longevity so it sends sends out a massive DNA repair team, which is awesome because we get 100,000 hits to our
DNA every minute, basically from various insults from food, from oxidation from metabolizing food,
from environmental toxins, from all sorts of things. Second, it actually inhibits one of the
key hallmarks of aging, which is inflammation.
And we talked a lot about inflammation on the podcast, but it does so through a particularly important mechanism that is one of the master inflammation switches in the body, which is
called NF-kappa B or nuclear factor kappa B.
And essentially, this is a transcription factor.
Transcription factors are what tell your gene what to transcribe.
So how does your DNA know what to do?
Well, it's listening for messages all the time
from signals from your body.
And NF-CAPB is a signaling molecule
that tells your DNA to make more cytokines,
to make more inflammation.
So when you activate sirtuins, it shuts that off.
It also increases your metabolism,
increases your insulin sensitivity,
which we've talked about a lot on the podcast.
If you want to be healthy,
you have to be insulin sensitive. So it's through a whole series of different mechanisms. NAD
is multiple actions through sirtuins in addition to just powering up cellular energy.
And some of the studies from David Sinclair are just mind boggling. He uses derivatives. So NR,
nicotinamide riboside is made into NMN, which is then made into NAD in the body. So this is
the normal consequence of like cellular reactions. So you can give NAD as a shot or as an IV, but
if you want to take it as a pill, you have to take it as NR or NMN. And David gave NMN to these mice.
Now, these old mice, now they have these mice treadmill, which I'm not a researcher, so I don't
really know about it, but they had these mice treadmill
that they have an upper limit
because no mouse has ever run more than two kilometers,
like young, old, any mice, right?
And so they had this mouse treadmill,
it was like two kilometers
and then it would just kind of turn off.
It was like overheat and stop.
And they gave this old mice NMN
and the mouse ran three kilometers
and broke the treadmill. So it's pretty amazing.
And even in some studies, it regulates all sorts of stuff like hormones and fertility.
In some studies, they've literally been able to reverse mouse pause. So take menopausal mice
and give them NMN and they start menstruating and get fertile again. It's really trippy. So
that's just one example of one compound.
Another one I think that's really important
is something that actually,
and I think curcumin or this product,
I think are really important,
which is regulating inflammation through,
again, these very variety of effects.
But there's a compound called HTB,
Himalayan Tardary Buckwheat Derivative, that has like 132 phytochemicals,
including quercetin and rutin, which quercetin also is a longevity supplement.
So it contains a lot of these things.
But it also contains a compound only found in this ancient grain, which isn't really
a grain, it's a flower, called Himalayan Tartary Buckwheat, which has only recently
been recultivated after thousands of years of being sort of out.
And because it's in the Himalayas and it's called tuhova. And it actually is regulating some of the inflammatory systems that are involved in senescent cells and chip
cells. So as we age, some of our cells just get older and they don't really die. They're kind of
like zombie cells, but they're not just inert they're actually creating a whole
inflammatory cascade and then then they're causing other cells to become senescent zombie cells it's
like it's terrible so you get this kind of wave of inflammation and so the this can help to kill
that and there's something called chip cells which are you know cells that are from the bone marrow
from damaged damaged stem cells that produce white blood cell.
And you get these funky white blood cells in your body
that are just generating tons of inflammation.
So some of these compounds really help to regulate
this inflammatory senescent thing.
So one of the hallmarks of aging is cellular senescence,
which means the aging of your cells.
And how does that happen?
These zombie cells is essentially what happens.
And we can go into how they're created,
but it's really fascinating
how these natural plant compounds combat this.
And what's also exciting, Drew,
is there are so many other compounds,
in addition to just three,
that are super powerful,
like green tea extracts,
epiglottic catechins,
resveratrol, you might've heard about.
Resveratrol was the thing
that was first sort of discovered,
which is from red wine, that helps to activate sirtuins to extend life by a
third so if you actually take resveratrol from red wine you give it to mice they'll live a third
longer which is equivalent to humans being 120 right which is kind of cool but then how much
resveratrol do they get they got a lot lot. They got the equivalent of 1,500 bottles of red.
Well, they got the 1,500 bottles of red wine. So don't try this at home, okay? But what was
interesting is that the resveratrol, and this was fascinating, and it's kind of wild,
these pathways, these conserved longevity pathways that are really survival pathways,
when they're activated, they're so powerful that they have so many beneficial effects.
So even though the mice kept eating junk food and not exercising, their metabolism got faster,
their exercise capacity increased, what we call VO2 max. They reversed their diabetes and insulin
resistance and high blood pressure, and even while eating crap right so
i'm like wow what if you actually ate well and exercise and then use this as a booster
amazing so that's that's the and there's also incredible compounds that are
now looking at how we can actually help to extend life called fist fistine which is f-I-S-T-I-N, which is from strawberries.
It's a compound from strawberries,
but it turns out to be an incredible longevity supplement.
So, fluorophane, which comes from broccoli.
Broccoli sprouts are the highest concentration of these.
So, this is a hugely detoxifying molecule, anti-cancer.
It improves glutathione.
It really helps with some of the key longevity pathways.
So, I think, you know, you've got these incredible compounds, and there's more.
Obviously, there's compounds from persimmon.
There's compounds from lychees.
There's berries.
There's compounds in Chinese medicine.
There's all these wonderful compounds that actually help to activate these longevity
pathways.
We were talking about AMPK before, but quercetin, resveratrol, catechins, curcumin, all these
things from the plant kingdom all regulate
these pathways. So do I think we should take three yet? There's probably a lot more that are
going to be coming around the pike. And I think a basic longevity stack of supplements would be NAD,
HTB rejuvenate, and I think vitamin D is up there for sure. But, and I would like to sort of see a polyphenol blend,
like a polyphenol blend.
And if I could put it all in a pill,
I would put in catechins, I'd put in resveratrol,
I'd put in quercetin, I'd put in festine,
I'd put in curcumin.
So I put in a lot of these very important compounds
that come from plants as a cocktail
of various
phytochemicals that all have very different effects, but that's what I would do.
Thanks for listening today. If you love this podcast, please share it with your friends and
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