The Dr. Hyman Show - Practices To Stay Young Forever
Episode Date: February 20, 2023This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley, ButcherBox, and InsideTracker. I focus a lot on the importance of diet and exercise when it comes to health and longevity, but daily habits like good sle...ep hygiene, healthy stress management, living out of a sense of purpose, prioritizing self-care, and community involvement are just as important. This is because your health and longevity are determined by your individual exposome washing over your genes. In other words, your genes are not your destiny. They load the gun, but your environment pulls the trigger. And this is good news! In today’s episode of my series I’m calling Health Bites, I dive into the importance of sleep, stress management, self-care, community, purpose, and spirit and how to prioritize these things in your life. What I’ve discovered has blown my mind and changed the way I approach my own health and the health of my patients. I’ve compiled it all into a new book called Young Forever, which comes out on February 21, 2023. Learn more and preorder the book at youngforeverbook.com. This episode is brought to you by Paleovalley, ButcherBox, and InsideTracker. Paleovalley is offering my listeners 15% off their entire first order. Just go to paleovalley.com/hyman to check out all their clean Paleo products and take advantage of this deal. For a limited time, new subscribers to ButcherBox will receive ground beef FOR LIFE. When you sign up today, ButcherBox will send you two pounds of 100% grass-fed, grass-finished beef free in every box for the life of your subscription plus $20 off. To receive this offer, go to ButcherBox.com/farmacy. InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Why sleep is critical to health and longevity (4:35 / 2:28) Tips to improve your sleep (7:15 / 4:25) How self-care enhances health and longevity (11:31 / 7:05) What research shows us about the benefits of mindset and self-care (13:19 / 8:40) How to nourish your spirit (14:08 / 9:48) Mentioned in this episode Dr. Hyman’s Free Sleep Master Class
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, Doctors Pharmacy listeners, it's Dr. Mark here.
If you've been following me, you know that I'm obsessed with understanding the latest
research on longevity and how we can apply it to our daily lives.
So I wrote a book about it.
Think of it as a roadmap to optimal aging.
It's called Young Forever, and it comes out February 21st, 2023.
It's never too early or too late to take control of your health, and this book will show you
how.
Visit youngforeverbook.com to learn more and pre-order now.
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Your thoughts, your feelings, your beliefs, everything that happens to you, grief, joy,
sadness, anger, they're all translated into biological signals that change your gene
expression, impact your immune system, hormones, microbiome, brain chemistry, pretty much everything. Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark here. If you've been following me for a
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beef plus 20% off and now let's get back to this week's episode of the doctor's pharmacy
welcome to the doctor's pharmacy i'm dr mark hyman that's pharmacy with an f a place for
conversations that matter if you want to learn how to live a long healthy life listen up because
i'm going to talk about something that i love which is the science of longevity and my new book, Young Forever, in today's
health bite, which is little bites of health information that can help you live better
and longer by taking small steps every day.
So today we're going to talk about the science of helping you age in reverse and feel younger.
It's based on my new book, Young Forever.
Go to youngforeverbook.com. Now, as you've learned with my health bites on longevity, it's really
the total exposome, the total sum of all the effects, inputs, things on your genes that
determine your health and on your biology. So it's not your genes that really determine what happens.
It's what you do to those genes.
It's the food you eat.
It's exercise.
It's stress.
It's your thoughts, your relationship, your feelings,
the toxins, all of it washing over your genes.
And the good news is that your genes aren't your destiny.
They load the gun, but the environment pulls the trigger.
And that's good news because your daily behaviors,
things like sleep and stress management, self-care,
connecting with others, community purpose, meaning, they're the single biggest factor
driving your health and determining your health span and your lifespan. So what's a really
important practice to stay young forever? Sleep. Now we've kind of neglected it and I neglected it
for years as a medical student. I remember a surgery resident telling me, you know, sleep is optional.
Basically, real doctors don't sleep.
I'm like, what?
And I delivered over 500 babies.
I worked in the emergency room.
I stayed up all night.
I mean, many, many nights without sleep.
And I really learned firsthand the dangers of sleep deprivation on my health and my mood, my energy.
It may seem like not such a necessary thing, like why sleep?
But it's really critical to health and longevity.
And the whole idea that I'll sleep when I'm dead will actually lead you to have an early death.
So don't do that.
Now, what aspects of health does your sleep affect?
Pretty much everything.
Your metabolism, your weight, your
mood, your brain function. Over the last 100 years, we've kind of cut about an hour off our sleep
every night, 70, maybe up to two hours. 70 million Americans have sleep problems. And lack of sleep
not only impairs our ability to focus and learn and concentrate, but it's basically like being
drunk during the day. It decreases our attention to detail or
increases the risk of car accidents. And regularly sleeping less than seven hours a night has really
profound negative effects on our heart, on our hormones, on our immune system, and our brain.
And the side effects include obesity, diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, anxiety, depression, alcohol abuse, stroke,
and even certain types of cancer. So if you sleep less than seven hours a night,
get in bed a little earlier, make sure you get your sleep because having less than seven hours
of sleep at night increases your risk of death by 24%. So that's an easy way to extend your life.
So what is sleep essential for?
And basically healing and repair,
clean up, cellular cleanup, longevity.
It's when your body does all the repair functions,
autophagy and growth hormone production
and repair and regeneration.
There's a whole new system in your brain we've discovered
called the glymphatic system,
like the lymph system in the brain.
And it cleans up all the metabolic waste that accumulates over the course of a day. And if
you don't get enough sleep, you know, your brain's foggy. That's because you basically are having
metabolic waste in there. Also your muscles, your organs, and your brain, you just need to repair
every day. Your hormones and your circadian rhythms have to be reset and be in balance for
health and longevity. And sleep and getting enough sleep is really critical for maintaining that balance. So if you want to understand the importance of sleep, I encourage
you to check out a book. It's called Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker. He's going to be on the podcast
soon. So listen up for that. So you may be saying, okay, great. Well, how do I improve my sleep?
Well, it can actually be pretty easy. You just have to commit to daily practices. I was talking
to a patient yesterday and she was struggling with her sleep and was selling medications. I'm like, tell me about your day. She goes, well, I have new kids. I, you know,
read in bed and I, I, I basically put them to bed and then I work and then I get on my computer.
I do emails. I deal with all my obligations, commitments, and then I lay down and try to
go to sleep. Well, of course that's not going to work because you're getting one overstimulating
your brain to your, your, uh, activating all the things that you want to be calming down.
And you're getting all the blue light from the computers, which is not great.
So, uh, make sure you, you try to practice, uh, good sleep hygiene, which means regular rhythm,
waking up and going to bed at the same time every day, using your bed for romance and sleep. Don't
work in your bed. Don't, don't do TV in your bed. That's terrible. I don't know why people have TVs
in their bedroom, but it's just to be banned. Uh, create a nice environment. That's terrible. I don't know why people have TVs in their bedroom, but it's just to be banned.
Create a nice environment that's calming.
I have a dark shade in my room.
I have super quiet.
So you want soundproof, lightproof.
Total darkness really helps because it affects your pineal gland.
And get some nice colors and calm things.
And get a comfortable bed.
That's also important.
We spend basically a third of our life in bed. So don't skimp on that. Also, I sometimes use earplugs if I or eye shades,
if it's a noisy environment, I make sure I do that especially get rid of all the blue light
exposure two or three hours before bed off the computer phone or you know, there's the settings
on your phone, you can turn to red light computers a little harder, but you can do that. We're blue
blocker glasses. That's also great. Also,'t um don't drink coffee afternoon if you're really overstimulated by coffee don't
have it at all it can really affect your sleep uh also get a morning light 20 minutes of bright
light in the morning can have a huge impact on resetting your circadian rhythms your pineal
gland your you have light receptors in your eyes that go to your brain and that releases certain
chemicals and hormones that reset your circadian rhythms. They help with mood, longevity.
I mean, red light is super important at night because blue light at night often can increase
cancer risks. I've seen an animal study, so it's a little worrisome. Don't eat late.
I have an Oura Ring, and I use other sleep tracking devices, and it's interesting to see
if I eat late, I don't sleep well, my heart rate doesn't go down.
If I drink alcohol, wine, have a glass of wine, I think, oh, what's a glass of wine?
It makes a difference.
So try to cut down on alcohol or eliminate it and don't eat three hours before bed.
Also, you can use herbs, things like passionflower, valerian, helpful.
Magnesium is great as well.
I take a hot magnesium bath often almost
every time i can which is great epsom salt and you can try my sleep master class which is available
at drhyman.com forward slash sleep that's drhyman.com forward slash sleep hey everyone it's
dr mark if i've learned one thing during my two decades in functional medicine, it's that we're all unique.
No two people are alike,
which means we can all benefit from personalized medicine.
But for most of the history of medicine,
individualized healthcare just was not possible.
We couldn't look inside the body
and see what was really going on.
But now, thanks to advances in technology,
that is changing for the better,
and it's doing so in some amazing ways.
And I've got a great example
of amazing healthcare technology that I'm excited to tell you about.
It's called InsideTracker, a wellness tracker that uses science and technology to deliver
ultra-personalized healthcare guidance.
It can analyze your blood, your DNA, your lifestyle habits, and then give you actionable
recommendations to help you meet your health and wellness goals.
InsideTracker provides you with the information you need to make powerful health decisions. It gives you a customized dashboard to help you track and reach your goals.
And the numbers are calibrated to your body as opposed to just listening to the normal ranges
that your doctor might tell you. It also helps you understand those numbers and take action on them.
If you're curious about getting your own health program dialed in to meet your unique needs,
I highly recommend checking out InsideTracker. Right now, they're offering my community 20% off at
InsideTracker.com forward slash Dr. Hyman. That's D-R-H-Y-M-A-N. That's InsideTracker,
I-N-S-I-D-E-T-R-A-C-K-E-R.com slash Dr. Hyman, D-R-H-Y-M-A-N. And you'll see the discount code in your car. So what else matters in terms of lifestyle
besides sleep? Well, self-care. Now, a lot of us put ourselves last on our to-do list. Bad idea.
I have a lot to do and to do. I mean, my joke is, you know, on their tombstone, nobody said he got everything done on his to do list.
No, I actually working on my to don't list, which is a better idea than working on my to do list.
And you've got to kind of prioritize what matters first.
Work is going to be there, but friends, family and the needs of others often get prioritized.
But you often have to kind of make time for self-care and nourishing
yourself and replenishing your own tank. It makes a big difference. So, uh, try to kind of calm down
your calendar. Don't overschedule, you know, it's a lot building careers, raising families,
taking work home. It self-care has kind of gone on the back burner. And that's why we have such
a mental health crisis, a sleep crisis, stress crisis. So if you, if you go to these blue zones, they're just having fun. They're
enjoying life there. They don't have a giant to-do list and they're doing a lot of activities,
but they're often in community and they're really, really wonderful. So I encourage you to
realize that your, your, your ability to, to, to live a long, happy, fulfilled life is not really possible if you neglect your
own well-being and your mind and your spirit. One of the other things I've learned, which is
really remarkable from the science, is that your thoughts, your feelings, your beliefs,
everything that happens to you, grief, joy, sadness, anger, they're all translated into
biological signals that change your gene expression, that impact your immune system, that impact your hormones, your microbiome, your brain chemistry,
your neuroplasticity, your mitochondria. Pretty much everything is affected by your thoughts and
feelings and beliefs. So it's really important to get your mindset straight. So let's talk about
what are the studies about that? Well, getting your mindset straight is super powerful. It has
profound benefits on your health. And study after study has shown that, for example, like repressed anger
can predict who gets breast cancer and other cancers. If your emotions are inflamed, so is
your biology. If your relationships are inflamed, so literally is your biology. Carolyn Mace,
who's an author on Medical Intuitive, she said, your biography becomes your biology. So it's important to pay attention to
your quality of your thoughts. Neuroscientist Candice Pert talked about the molecules of
emotion. She was an NIH scientist and she had incredible, incredible research showing how your
immune cells listen to your thoughts and change by what you're thinking. So be careful of what's
going on in there. And there's a lot of practices you can do to sort through that.
What are the things you could do to actually help nourish your spirit and help get your
mind right?
Well, simple practices, self-compassion.
You know, often we are so hard on ourselves.
And if you literally recorded your inner dialogue of what you said to yourself about
yourself and you actually wrote it out and
then gave it to people or told other people or you said that to anybody else you wouldn't have
any friends or family if you were very long it's pretty scary what goes on in there and what we say
to ourselves so really loving yourself having some compassion is really important um you know and
often um you know there's struggles we have with abuse and different things that make it difficult
but but there are therapies and things that make it difficult,
but there are therapies and things that I talk about in Young Forever that can really help with that.
So self-care, self-compassion, really, really important.
It can really, by doing simple self-compassion exercises, it helps improving physical symptoms,
mental health outcomes, blood sugar control, resiliency against certain kinds of cancers.
So it's really powerful. Also build your social networking community. It's super important. I'm
not talking about Facebook or Instagram. I'm talking about your true friends, your community
of friends. It's important to build communities, important to build strong relationships. And it's
been associated with an increased lifespan, with better mental health, physical biomarkers of health like blood pressure, your waist circumference or your belly fat, your overall weight, inflammation.
Your mindset's important too.
So I think it's really key.
Just another feature of spiritual health which is really important is the whole idea of how we see ourselves in our life. And people who ruminate, have negative thoughts, tend to have poor life expectancy and poor
mental health.
And those who focus on positive thoughts and future goals and rewards really have much
better physical well-being and mental well-being.
Also, having a sense of purpose.
You wouldn't think that is a big deal, but it can extend your life by five to seven years.
So it increases telomere length.
It slows telomere shortening.
And chronic stress does the opposite.
It causes telomere shortening and more accelerated aging and increased oxidative stress.
So everybody's got to find their own way to heal their mind, their heart, and their spirit.
And there's some simple ways.
Develop a growth mindset.
Explore ways to learn.
Be curious about yourself and the world.
Explore different avenues for personal development. Create a personal vision statement.
What matters to you? What are your personal goals? What are your dreams? Think about that.
Do stuff for others. I was recently in Rwanda and I got to go to a little village and I gave them a bunch of money to buy clothes. I mean, these kids barely had clothes and they were poor
and I bought clothes for they were poor and I bought
clothes for the entire school. I bought them for the village kids. And, and the lady who helped me
do that, she sent me all these pictures and it was just a simple act, but I got so much joy from it,
so much happiness and, and it's good for you. Discover what you love, discover your passions,
find time to do the things that you really love and that give you joy.
Make sure you, again, as I said before, build community.
Really important.
Connect with friends or colleagues who inspire you.
Do things that are inspiring.
Listen to things that are inspiring.
Watch things that are inspiring.
There's so much bad news out there, and it does affect us.
Learn.
Read.
Learn about yourself.
Learn about different ways of thinking, being.
Expand your mind.
And learn to love and be kind to yourself.
It's not as easy as it sounds, but it's super important.
I mean, as I said, if we talk to our friends the same way we talk to ourselves, we'd find
ourselves pretty lonely.
And block out time in your schedule for self-care when you can meditate or exercise or go on
a walk or be with a friend.
It's really important.
So final thought, optimists live longer even if they're wrong.
So that's the good news.
You don't have to be right.
So I encourage you to do not just exercise and diet, which is really important, but focus
on sleep and your purpose and self-care and managing your stress and building community.
Really, really important to do.
So I think that's it for today's Health Byte.
I want you to go deep into the science on this.
I want you to learn the practical aspects of this.
I wrote the book Young Forever.
Go to youngforeverbook.com to get more information about the book and to get all the free bonus materials that come with it.
I think you'll love it.
And that's it for today's Health Byte. And if you love this podcast, share it with your friends
and family. We'd love to hear from you. Leave a comment. Have you incorporated some of these
things into your life? And we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
If you like this conversation, I know you'll love my new book, Young Forever.
If you pre-order this book now, you'll get access to my discount bundle with deals from all my favorite health and wellness brands.
Visit youngforeverbook.com to order my book and get access to these deals.
I hope you're loving this podcast.
It's one of my favorite things to do and introduce to you all the experts that I know and I love
and that I've learned so much from.
And I want to tell you about something else I'm doing, which is called Mark's Picks. It's my
weekly newsletter. And in it, I share my favorite stuff from foods to supplements to gadgets to
tools to enhance your health. It's all the cool stuff that I use and that my team uses to optimize
and enhance our health. And I'd love you to sign up for the weekly newsletter. I'll only send it to you once a week on Fridays, nothing else, I promise. And all you do is go to
drhyman.com forward slash PICS to sign up. That's drhyman.com forward slash PICS, P-I-C-K-S,
and sign up for the newsletter. And I'll share with you my favorite stuff that I use to enhance
my health and get healthier and better and live younger, longer.
Hi, everyone.
I hope you enjoyed this week's episode.
Just a reminder that this podcast is for educational purposes only.
This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical
professional.
This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other
professional advice or services.
If you're looking for help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner.
If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search
their Find a Practitioner database.
It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed
healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to
your health.