The Dylan Gemelli Podcast - BONUS Special Edition: A Discussion with Dr. Eric Berg!!! A meeting of the minds! A behind the scenes discussion on EVERYTHING HEALTH! Seed Oils, Diet Problems, Disease and Prevention and MORE!
Episode Date: November 17, 2025BONUS SPECIAL EDITION with the one and only Dr. Eric Berg!! A true meeting of the minds that was an unplanned recording. Dylan and Dr. Berg are close friends and talk often but with hectic schedul...es, travel and life in general, planning a full sit down to record can be tricky so during a general conversation, they decided to hit record and let EVERYONE hear what they discuss on their calls and this is an epic!! There is NO holding back here and while there is a wide variety of topics discussed, you are let in to see what their true thoughts are on so many aspects of health and wellness today. Both give out information on their own personal diets and habits to building longevity and true wellness. Dr. Berg opens up about many problems he sees with promotion of seed oils, processed foods and Dylan gets into deep detail about hormones, diving into the problems with low testosterone levels that we see being accepted as the norm. Dylan and Dr. Berg go back on forth on their workout routines, thoughts on mitochondrial and cellular health, understanding not only how to read food labels but also how to understand what exactly is on them, and all of their secrets in how they take care of themselves to live the longest and healthiest lives possible! This is the episode people have been demanding and asking for!! DO NOT MISS THIS Episode!! Your HEALTH will thank you! Stay Tuned for MORE from Dylan and Dr. Berg!! Subscribe to Dr. Eric Berg on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@Drberg Follow Dr. Berg on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drericberg/ Check out Dr. Berg's Homepage: https://www.drberg.com/ Join Dr. Eric Berg's Real Food Reset Group on Facebook with Dylan https://www.facebook.com/groups/3986380424973288 Today's episode is sponsored by TIMELINE To PURCHASE MITOPURE visit Dylan's landing page and use code DYLAN to save 20% OFF!! https://shop.timeline.com/DYLAN _______________________________________________________________________________ Get the Apollo Neuro for $90 OFF!! USE CODE GEMELLI to save https://apolloneuro.com/gemelli TONUM supplements for the MIND AND BODY! USE CODE "DYLAN" to save!! https://www.tonum.com/DYLAN THE BREAKTHROUGH MIMIO HEALTH FASTING MIMETIC SUPPLEMENT! 20% OFF with code Gemelli https://mimiohealth.sjv.io/c/6588260/3323599/30611 TRULY Increase Your NAD LEVELS with WONDERFEEL NMN: https://getwonderfeel.com/?utm_source=DylanGemelli&utm_medium=podcast MESCREEN: The world's first and only at home mitochondrial efficiency test Save $100 with CODE DYLAN https://mescreen.com/cart/47561239626013:1?discount=&ref=DYLAN HIRE DYLAN ON THE MINNECT APP HERE: expert.minnect.com/@DylanGemelli Follow Dylan on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Tiktok @dylangemelli and PLEASE SUBSCRIBE and leave reviews!! MAKE SURE TO GO TO DYLAN'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL for MORE video content!! https://www.youtube.com/@DylanGemelliBiohacking Email Dylan for booking, collaborations and/or to apply for the Dylan Gemelli Podcast DylanGemelli@gmail.com Visit Dylan's Homepage https://dylangemelli.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone. Dylan Jameli here today and I wanted to let everybody know that this is not a typical podcast episode.
This was not a scheduled event nor planned. You have been requesting for a very long time that I do a collaboration with Dr. Eric Berg.
And we happen to be friends and talk quite often and we decided during one of our calls to go ahead, since it's hard to plan out podcasts and settings and to just hit record so you could get some insight on the things that we discuss during our typical calls together.
So we are all over the place on topics and concepts, but this will give you an idea of the things that we're concerned about and some of the ideas that we share and hopefully provide some insight to everybody to add to your knowledge base.
So sit back, enjoy an unscripted, uncut conversation between yours truly, Dylan Jemelli and Dr. Eric Berg.
We are live.
So, of course, Dylan, I know we've been rehearsing all week, scripting us out exactly what we're going to say.
And so we can actually have this all pre-made.
And I'm being very sarcastic because this is completely raw.
We have no script.
We're just going to chat.
So let me have you take the league, my friend.
Yeah, I mean, you know how we just roll all week long,
talking about all the craziness that's going on
and everything that I see and you see.
And we kind of just kind of go back and forth,
spitballing ideas about what do we got to do to fix this?
How are we going to approach this?
And I just, I'm in awe, really, of some of the things that I've seen,
the thing that I brought to you recently that really kind of got me boiling,
I know it did you too, was this glorification that I just saw about seed oils over and over
from the same nutritionist that just says some of the most strange outlandist crap.
I just, I'm at a loss.
I mean, what are you thinking as her motive here, man?
because I just, I can't, I know we've gone back and forth a little bit and it's just,
we haven't really got into her, like credentials, studies.
I don't see it.
I just don't see it.
You know, from my definition of a nutritionist, she's not a nutritionist.
She's a dietitian.
And you have a, the thing about the dietitians, they get trained by what's called the
Academy of Nutrition in Dietetics.
It's a very large organization.
They give them continuing educational credits.
And he trained them.
And so I think we could be slightly biased.
They get millions from Big Pharma, Big Food, and the pesticide companies.
But that's only the tip of the iceberg.
That organization that is responsible for the health of our country also invests in Big Pharma and the junk food industry.
They have stocks, hundreds of thousands of dollars in stocks.
I'm like, what?
Are you kidding me?
this is like so evil and we're supposed to trust you.
And so when you see the dietitians pushing the seed oils,
it could be that they really believe it,
which is like crazy because they've been taught that.
And that's what they taught in school.
So of course, that's the reality.
But explain to me how a bucket of seed oils that you buy from the grocery store
that's sitting on the shelf for how long.
It's a very delicate oil.
how can that be preserved?
And then you don't even refrigerate it.
And it's highly omega-6.
It's inflammatory.
So when they tell you it's safe,
they're not talking about the aldehydes that are the byproduct from it.
They're not talking about,
they're talking about maybe a cold-pressed oil that no one buys cold-pressed seed oils.
Are you kidding?
They buy corn oil, soy oil, canola, cotton seed.
And so anyway, they, anytime you see a dietitian talking about that, either they're getting paid, which they are getting paid, lots of them, or they're just completely misinformed to the point where they're just been taught their own information.
It's just, it's insane.
And it's like this trickle down effect.
And there's conflicts of interest everywhere that I look, whether like, you know, with the studies, whether what they're teaching, the same thing doctors get taught now.
because I know a lot of people that have either just finished medical school or that were in it recently that tell me, you know, how they teach them about writing prescriptions for everything and they don't ask any questions about your diet or your sleep patterns or any of the important things. And so with these seed oils, let me ask you this in your view, because I just can't stand the term, oh, in moderation, oh, in moderation. You know, it's like drinking in moderation when we know one drink is just putting poison in your body.
Is there any justification to in moderation, in your opinion, with seed oils or are taking any end?
Is it okay at all?
I mean, what do you think?
The carefully crafted message, when an influencer, by the way, they can make a lot of money by X being sponsored by these companies.
I'm talking not a thousand dollars of post.
I'm talking $20,000, $150,000, $100,000, $250,000 of post.
okay so if you're getting that amount of money uh all of a sudden like wow maybe maybe i can promote
cdos so what they will do is they won't come out and say oh cidos are healthy i promote it
they'll carefully craft the message to say things like well you know there's no bad food just
just everything in moderation as long as you count your calories they kind of like offsell it
that's what that's what when you hear moderation or potion control or there is no bad
foods. No, yes there is. Then that's what you're getting. That's how they're selling it. And the big
companies are working through the influencers because the big companies lost their credibility. So they're
using the credibility of the influencer, which is unfortunately 95% of these influencers,
especially on X, they're not revealing that they're getting any money. So this is actually
the breaking the law. And if they get caught, they can pay $50,000. But they have to disclose
you know, seed oils or whatever, whatever campaign they're promoting.
It's a big scam right now.
It's just sickening and it's going to catch up with them.
And I think people can see through the lines.
But if you, like I'm getting hit on social media.
I don't know about you, but hit by like every other message is like this professional
healthcare person either attacking RFK or Maha or the wellness group or making fun of it
or promoting seed oils.
Is it, do you see that?
I see it, but you know, what I'm getting is they're trying to get them on my podcast.
So they're flooding me with trying to get them on there to speak whatever it is that they want to speak.
And you know, Eric, I'm not the kind of guy that sets people up in traps or puts them on and do these aha things.
I don't do that.
And I don't even mind giving people the opportunity to say what they want, but they have to understand when they're coming to me that I'm well educated and they're going to get some kickback on it.
oh yeah i get that a lot that they're getting invites i get 30 40 emails a day of people trying to come on
right now on the show and i have to be choosy and picky with who i am but you know if i get
somebody that really wants to press and come on i mean i i wonder sometimes if they research
who they're going on to talk to and not just looking at numbers but i will kick back and i will
have slews of questions if i do but i don't really want to spotlight anybody um on that
either. So on one hand, you know, you got the people that may want to be combative, but for me,
it's like, I don't want to put them on any kind of pedestal and let them spew that BS and nonsense.
So I've declined pretty much everybody and I'm not going to name names. I'll tell you off camera,
but they're significantly large names that would draw me a large audience, but at what cost?
I don't, I don't want that kind of audience. I don't, I do things, as you know, for the good
of everybody else. And I have a one motive and one motive only. And that is to save everybody and help
everybody from all of this nonsense and to protect as many people as I can. They don't like people
like you and me because we actually talk about the other side, the real truth, the real fact.
And when you bring up accurate points, they get angry. When I bring up something to you,
I'd never even seen you raise your voice. I can't, of all the conversations I've had with you,
I've never heard you stay at an even level. I get a little passionate sometimes I know,
but it's not out of anger, you know.
But for you, when you're asking a question,
because I know you like to ask questions as do I,
because that's how we learn.
If you ask somebody a question and they start yelling and screaming
and getting angry as opposed to calmly going back and forth
and stating facts,
what does that say to you?
Because it sets off some whistles to me.
Yeah, I mean, in the past,
because I've been in practice for 30 years
and I've done a lot of public speaking in different institutions
and I've done like,
all these seminars in the governmental agencies in D.C. for many years.
And so occasionally I'll have a heckler stand up.
I remember one day someone starts standing up yelling,
where's your proof?
What like,
I'm like,
they kind of threw me off at first, you know,
but after the years of doing it,
you kind of like,
okay,
so this person,
obviously I triggered something,
this person.
And,
you know,
what I might do is I might,
my response now is like,
wow, I haven't had a heckler like 20 years.
Let's give this person a round of applause.
And then if they keep persisting,
I will just go up to them
and just physically remove them out of the room.
You know, very nicely, but I will shut the door.
But usually, I never really get those people anymore,
only in the beginning when I didn't know how to deal with it.
And it wasn't even like,
it wasn't even an antagonistic person.
it was like a crazy person who just like, I don't know, someone off the streets is just completely
out of it and they just can't stop talking. They have diary of the mouth and they can, they just cannot
withhold anything. And so they're just going on and on. So I'm like, okay. And everyone else,
you know, sees what's going on. So it's not, you know, don't take it personally when you see
someone doing that. Let's talk about some of the other things that we're seeing though with foods in
general and additives misconceptions we've talked a ton about diet stuff but i i like to really put
it out there with somebody that really has some some background and some understanding and you know
i i've talked at nauseam about my fear of fats and overcoming that and and being misled or so many years
even as a nutritionist because it's hard man when you got people pressing you and people you
respect even telling you something you it's hard to not listen and be on your own especially
when you're younger, it's difficult, you know,
and it took me several years, she's 20 years to get over some of these things.
What are, what are some of your biggest articles that you've seen that people put on
that could create like a phobia or, you know, a fear that is just completely backwards?
You know, you, just, just the very simple way to figure out what's true is just to see what,
what the mainstream viewpoint is and go on the opposite.
That's been curving out a thousand percent of your time.
And it's opposite day because, I mean, look, let's just take, let's just take the heart.
Okay.
If we just talk about superfoods for the heart, you know, you're going to say,
oh, well, they have to be low fat, low cholesterol, low salt, you know, high fiber,
you know, like ginkable, gink, was it, Golgi berries?
berries, all these, you know, chia seeds, flaxseed.
Okay, go ahead and try to eat just those foods and see how you feel.
You're going to, first of all, you're going to be tired.
You're going to be bloated.
There's no high quality approaching in there.
So let's just take, let's talk about the healthiest foods that you can eat for the heart.
The first thing is like animal meat, red meat is the most, the healthiest thing you can eat.
It has every, if you eat grass fed, it actually has plenty of antioxidants.
Plenty of phytonutrients, plant-based chemicals in that meat.
I tap it.
It has all the vitamins, the best forms of vitamin A, vitamin B12, B1.
But the main thing it has is the high-quality amino acids that we need to repair the body.
And most of our body is protein.
And so we tend to, that's why you don't see much protein in this stuff.
Our body will keep eating to get enough protein.
The same thing with my goats and some of the horses that I have.
Like they will keep eating this carb in the spring, all this grass.
It's so high in carb and sugar.
They'll keep eating it to get enough protein and they get really fat.
So when they have legumes and stuff like that's how they get their protein,
then they're more satisfied.
They'll stop eating.
But, you know, in humans, we keep eating.
so we have to satisfy that protein.
If we just take a look at ancestral diets,
you know, we did not have, you know,
lean, tender meat.
It was filled with collagen.
It was rough, tough.
We ate nose to tail.
So we had a lot of collagen.
We ate the organ meats.
We fed the meat to the dogs.
We don't eat organ meats anymore.
Take a look at an organ meat.
Like you have, oh my gosh,
coline, which prevents the fatty liver.
and coenzym Q10 and the heart muscle.
But, you know, as much as healthy as they are, I can't, I have a hard time eating any organ
meat.
So I will put a little bit, I'll buy hamburgers with a little organ meat in there, especially
heart.
And I will feel better from that.
Or I'll do cod liver under, you ever have ever had cod liver in a can?
I have, yeah.
I like it.
It's not bad.
It's not bad.
It's the highest omega-3 fatty acid stuff that you can.
and eat. So red meat, organ meats, shellfish because of the zinc and the great minerals. And yes,
there's mercury in there, but you have selenium that actually will bind and prevent the mercury
from going in your body. So that's good. Of course, then we have fatty fish, sardines, mackerel as well.
You know, salmon is great. So these are all really good proteins. But then also, I do have a lot of
fermented stuff like all these sauerkraut, like a lot or fermented vegetables. Have you ever
heard of vitamin U? No, I haven't. This was an older vitamin. It's renamed S- Methylmethionine,
which is, they named it after ulcer because it was like the cure for ulcers. And you can
find it naturally in cabbage juice. Really? Yeah, especially.
sourcrow juice. And this is one of the best things for gastritis and ulcers and building up the
mucous layer. And even like people that have digestive problems, the only vegetable they can really do
is like cabbage in different forms. But if you're a carnivore, for example, and you want to heal the gut,
and you had just the juice of sauerkraut, just like a teaspoon a day, you're getting a good amount of vitamin U that can really help clean up inflammation like these lesions in your gut or your stomach, gets rid of dwindal ulcers.
I mean, this is like everyone should know this, right? It's like really important.
And it also has sulforaphane, which has unique properties of putting H. Pylori into remission, which is usually behind the ulcer.
sir. So there's a lot of really cool things, not to mention, the probiotics in sourcrop,
they do survive the stomach ass acidity, and they do, if you eat them consistently, they
reseed the gut. But what's really, really interesting is that when people are eating things
like yogurt and keeper, in their mind, they're thinking, oh yeah, I'm just putting more
bacteria in my gut. But there's very, very little of that.
microbe that ends up in the actual intestines. What really happens, and people don't know this,
is that these fermented foods, because of the acids and the other things in there, they change
the environment, the soil, the terrain of your gut. So your own microbes that have been in dormancy,
their dormant spores wake them up, and they start to becoming alive. And they've tested this.
It's just like mind-blowing.
It's just like in the soil where, you know, out in my pastures, like when it's springtime,
coming out of the freezing cold, all of a sudden these microbes start waking up because
the environment changes.
So this just tells us we have, even though we've had antibiotics, there's still dormant microbes
that are sitting there in the background waiting for some day that you eat healthier
so we get that environment so then they can start coming back out.
But it's not necessarily the microbe we take that ends up in our ground.
gut. You know, I love that the way you're talking because foods, foods are healing if you eat the
right foods, if you have the right foods. They're very, very healing in a variety of ways like
you've brought up. For example, like when you're talking about red meat and animal fat or animal
proteins and animal fats, people have that correlation, which like I've said, was one of my fears
over the years and it's going to be so bad for your heart and your cholesterol. You know, my
HDL has been like 45 to 47 pretty much my whole life. And when I made that switch, I started with like
937 meat and eased my way into now I'm only eaten 80, 20 essentially. And my HDL is right at 79.8.
So it's almost doubled in, I'd say, seven, eight months right around there. And that was just one of the
fats that I incorporated. But, you know, being with the red meats, the salmons, the different types of shellfish as you
talked about. And then grass-fed butter is another one that I've incorporated quite a bit that's
done really well for me. I've included all these fats, whole eggs, whole fat yogurt as opposed to
not only eating the low-fat yogurt that tastes terrible, no matter what you do to it, I can't put
it up protein powder and fruit in there to make it good. But then it's so much better for you because
you're stripping everything out. It's like eating the egg white without the yolk and you're missing
so much of the benefit.
I was another sucker for that.
I was eating literally, Eric,
15, 20 egg whites a day,
never eaten one yoke, okay?
Now I'm doing four to six yolks a day
and like four to five egg whites
just to make it a huge meal for me at a time.
But it is just made a drastic difference,
especially here.
Because what I've been studying a lot
is not just what we're talking about
with nutrition and working out
fitness. I'm putting the mind, the neurological side with it as well, because it's really a
connection of both. I'm actually going back to school to do neuroscience in January to get another
degree. And I'm piecing this together. But these foods, when you were talking about a low-fat
diet and just really taking away the nutrients that you need to focus every day, it is affecting
you in a variety of ways, not just your blood markers. I was just a jerk. I couldn't stay focused more than
30 minutes. I was real short with everybody. My, you know, everything was pissing me off for no
reason. And you start to look at yourself and say, what, what's happening here? What am I turning
into? Was that a point in your life that you, before you made the shift? Yes. Yeah. How many years ago was
that? So I've been doing that for 13, 14 years now. I've been eating that kind of diet. And then last
October, I walked in the kitchen. One day my wife was standing there and, you know, I know she's,
we're very spiraled. She prays all the time for me, you know, please let him change, fix this,
because he's just so far off. And I'm a nutritionist. And I'm just, you know, 13, 1,400 calories a day of
nothing but vegetables, yogurt, peanut butter, protein powder, no meats, no nothing, man.
Oh, my God. Oatmeal. And, you know,
know, you should have seen how miserable that I was every single day.
Oh, I just, I didn't like myself, okay?
I hear you.
I know.
But I'm telling you, I went in there one day, I said, babe, listen, I'm going to try
something because you know what, if it doesn't work, I know how to lose weight like
this.
It's, you know, let's just try it.
And then I started rattling off these things I would never touch, avocados, the salmon,
the red meat.
I said, just go buy it all.
And I said, we're going to test this for about a month and see what happens.
Eric, I have never been this lean since I was using performance enhancing drugs in my 20s.
Was there any person or was it your wife that just said, okay, I'm making the shift?
I went in one day and made the ship, but there were people that I was talking to that were telling me like, just try it.
It works.
You know, people I listen to.
I'm very particular about who I take information from, by the way, because like you said, a lot of it's paid for.
and I'm aware of it because I've been in the influencer space
so I know having agents what they do.
And I couldn't do it, man.
You know, wanting to pay me $5 and $10,000 for one story of something I don't believe in.
And I know I'm not going to make any money.
I know I'm not.
So I don't like to make money that way.
I partner with people long term on something I believe it, you know, that I really know was going to help.
And, yeah, we made that shift.
And I'm telling you, I do.
130 grams of fat a day and I was doing 20 before, 25.
And I do about 100 grams of carbs and about 210 to 230 grams of protein a day is where I'm at right now.
Jeez.
You know, it's funny because I took a different route.
I was a junk food junkie for, for years.
And then I decided eat healthy.
But the definition of healthy was a vegan diet.
So I started doing, doing care.
juice by the gallons.
Okay, I actually turned orange.
And I did
colon cleansing.
So I was convinced I just need to remove
the toxins. So I would do a,
you know, was it the
maple syrup,
lemon with cayenne pepper drink?
Eke. Remember that?
Yes, I did. But after.
I literally was, I was literally
dreaming of eating a pizza.
I can't wait until I get done with this.
And then I did Dr. Bernard Jensen's colet.
You know what a colema is?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You're combining a colonic with an enema.
So I would take a five-gallon bucket of water, bentonite clay, put it up on the toilet seat and flush it into my bowels morning and then in a night to flush with toxins and then drink the apple juice and cillium husk and the beach.
Like, okay.
And then on top of that, I was doing the ear candles to pull, I was like, I did everything.
And I was doing the, oh, yeah, I took olive oil, 12 ounces of olive oil with beet pills.
So I would down them and then drink the olive oil.
Well, they got stuck in my throat.
I almost literally died because they solidified.
And then I got into cleansing with juicing diacon radish.
So a whole glass of dicon radish.
Do you know that burns when you get it into your body?
like it'll burn all the way to the very...
You can feel it going down.
Oh my gosh.
So I did that for years and I'm like, why am I getting sicker?
I started literally getting arthritis and my wife's like, you don't look too good, you know.
And I was your going south really fast.
And then I read that book, only the first chapter.
Actually, I read the introduction to this one book.
So it's called The Zone, Mastering.
the zone and it said something about protein for breakfast and it talked about insulin and I'm like
why I haven't ever seen this before and I had a buffalo burger for breakfast no more cereal and
muffins and it was like someone took a helmet off my head I could actually had an energy in my
head and I could think I'm like oh my gosh I discovered the fountain of youth this is amazing
and then I just dove head into it and doing you know low carbon stuff and
But at that time, I didn't know about them in the fasting.
So I was telling people to have your, you know, your snacks between meals,
healthy snacks and all this other crap.
Oh, shit.
Me too.
Every different way.
Well, let's do that, though.
Let's do that.
Because I think people, because I get that question all the time.
I'm sure you do too.
Like, what's your secret?
What's your diet?
What's it like?
And so for you, and everybody's got a different opinion on breakfast and fasting in the
morning, too.
and I think that it's not a one-size-fits-all thing at all.
I'm a big proponent of figuring out what works for each individual
with the premise of there are certain things that are kind of set there
that are kind of general.
But what's your typical, like, routine for your eating patterns look like every day?
Mine changes a little bit on the days that I'm not in the gym.
I'm still doing some kind of cardio,
whether it's even just walking seven days a week.
But I eat a little less on the days I'm not in the gym.
I'm just not as hungry.
but what's your typical day like even with working out in there?
So I don't have breakfast at all.
So I'll have the first meal at noon or one or two.
And they'll have, you know, I'll do a combination of stuff.
So I have the fortunate ability to live on the farm and live off my own animals, food.
So I'll do like, you know, I have high quality pigs.
Okay.
I mean, like they eat the healthiest stuff and they root and eat.
So when people even come over and they eat the pork that we have, the sausage, they're like, they can't even talk.
They're like, what is this?
Like pork chops is like this.
I've never tasting like this.
The same thing with the lamb.
So I'll do either lamb or a beef patty or a pork patty.
And I'll do that.
And then I'll put some cheese on it.
I'll have some Bulgarian yogurt or kefir.
I'll do my raw cheese with the high vitamin K2.
Those are good.
And then I'll do a little sauerkraut.
And then I'll do some super dark, probably 90% chocolate bar.
But in the morning, I'll do one coffee.
It's super strong.
And I will put maybe some collagen in there just because it's hard to get collagen.
And we need collagen.
But I'll do that.
But then I'll have that lunch.
And then I won't eat until dinner.
And then dinner I'll have a little bit of.
Protein could be a different type of protein.
You know, we kind of rotate the protein, maybe some beef and stuff.
I do have a lot of burger stuff and ground sausage, but we have like six freezers filled
with meat that just meet my wife are just trying to get cycle through it.
And I'm like, okay, let's have some, let's smoke some pork butt or let's do a stew.
Let's do this.
And then we're kind of chipping away through this meat and like, okay, before we butcher any
animals. We got to eat what we have. But I mean, literally it lasts for, you know, years because it's
frozen. But we'll do that. And then I'll do maybe a little bit of a, I like arugula. It's high
nitric oxide. I'll do that with extra virgin olive oil with vinegar rat and maybe some
nutritional yeast. And maybe a couple pecans. And then that's pretty much, I mean, that's pretty
much when I'm eating lately. But yeah, that's what I eat. When I made my shift, I was having
like salmon every day. So I stopped doing that because it was too much. I started to get sick of it.
And then I would alternate seabass or halibut because you know how good they are. But I,
I proportioned that out now. But I kind of stew two really large meals. The eating too frequently
type of thing is really, I learned from a lot of different people that are pretty, pretty well known
in the dietary world about eating too often and how hard it is on your body.
And I was always under the impression of, you know, that old school mentality of eating
frequently throughout the day and jump starting your metabolism, which we know is just
nonsense.
But, you know, I stopped doing that.
So I really like you, I don't eat breakfast at all.
I do a drink in the morning.
I have a couple different powders that I use in the morning, creatine.
And I take, I use urolithicine.
powder in the morning mitochondrial powder and just a couple other things that I put in there just to
kind of get me woke awake and everything and going but I I wait for the coffee about after two hours
after I'm up I have two or three a day I do the aeropress and I put SCT oil in there instead of
MCT so it's a short chain triglyceride that I put in there and I have like one serving of that a day
before I do cardio because I do about 15 to 17 miles in the
elliptical and so i have i have like a half a serving of yogurt with a couple of pieces of
papaya blueberry in there before i do that i have to have something i always have had to and that
kind of it but then after that i hit like a pretty heavy meal with i do an avocado but i do
225 grams so i think a medium is normally like 120 right on there so i'm getting almost
two avocados. I do one piece of Ezekiel underneath that with six egg whites, four whole eggs.
And then I mix in, my wife makes me every day a combination of peppers, onions, mushrooms, and
green onions. And we kind of put a little bit of that in there. And then I saved the rest for dinner.
But then I sprinkle olive oil on there. And dude, I'm out a thousand calories on that meal.
So a question I have, so you probably.
You did not really abuse your body with pure junk food as a kid and teenager, right?
You haven't?
No, I mean, I, you know, I partied a lot when I was in high school, so we'd have those
late nights that Carl's Jr. or pizza.
But no, for the most part, I was a four sport athlete.
So generally speaking, when I was really little, yes, but beyond that, not really.
It was more low-fat fear of everything.
I think what you're eating now, you could very easily.
easily handle that. I couldn't, just because I, from birth until, you know, I was 25, I ate
pure ultra processed food. So I literally have destroyed my body so bad that I can't, I can't go there
anymore. I can't even, you know, have a little bit of this, a little bit of that. But, but that's fine.
But I think some people, when you find out what they can tolerate, it's like, wow, okay, so you
haven't really destroyed your system. But as far as I was going to ask you about your workout. So you
literally, you do the elliptical for how long? Generally, it's about 80 to 85 minutes. I get about
17 miles in on there. Wow. And you do that every day? I do that five days a week. I walk about
five miles every day, three on those days. And then that's my first part of the workout like midday,
depending on how busy I am. Sometimes it stretches out a little bit with work stuff and podcast. But then
I normally, unfortunately, this is not good.
I don't recommend it, but a lot of times I don't get to the gym
for lifting it till like even 9 o'clock some nights.
And that's bad.
I don't want to keep doing that.
It's not good at all.
At night, you're not done with your 18 miles.
Then you're going to go lift in the gym.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
That's the last part.
That's the, to me, that's the cool down, even though it's difficult.
So after I eat that meal, I normally, I like, like I said, like spiritual.
go set out the pool and do some prayers or just relax and get my mind right before I come back in
and work some more. And then I have the like dinner, which is you were talking about organ meats.
So you know what I do? There's a place and I don't work for them. It's force of nature.
And they have the, I buy the ancestral blends of meats they have, whether it's elk or ground beef and it's
got like 3% heart, 2% liver. And you can't even taste it. That's great. Yeah. It's phenomenal.
I love the elk. It's bomb. And then we do like, I do eight to 10 ounces of 80, 20 normally. And I cook everything in grass fed butter. But then I've been alternating organic ground pork or pork tenderloins certain days. And then I told you I eat a little less on the weekends. That's when I do 10 to 12 ounces of salmon instead of the meat and stuff. I take a couple days off. Because, you know, your stomach, I don't know. I can't do it seven days a week. So I try to rest it and alternate and get some different foods.
there. But the salmon, I get like only
sock-eye salmon, no farm raise, no, none of the fake
colored salmon. We're very picky about that. And then when I want to treat, I do
get sea bass every now and then because it is just, it tastes like you're
eating straight butter if you get a good one, you know? Wow.
Yeah. Yeah. You know, I'm in a town that's population 400.
There's no stores around. I'm in the middle of nowhere. And so it's hard
to find the fish. But I do the pond. I can go fishing.
and I can catch a bass and then eat that, which is nice.
But, you know, I think, yeah, I think the amount of workout that you're doing,
you're going to need more calories because that's crazy.
That's amazing.
So that's pretty intense.
I try to get like 25 to 27 and it's still way too low.
I've been hooked up to those machines that test you and they're telling me I need to be eaten like 4,000.
calories a day but I don't I don't there's not enough weed in the world to smoke to make me
400 4,000 calories a day I couldn't do that but I agree I think 3,500 would probably be about right
I just everybody that I visit with always wants me to eat like 300 to 350 grams of carbs and
I'd normally stick to about 100 or 120 and these are top nutritionists that want me to do that
and I metabolized fat really well but I it's just I I don't even like it's just I I don't even like
like carbs to eat that many amount of carbs.
I don't even know what I would do.
What's your thought on that?
The ultimate test, because these are all just kind of theories,
the ultimate test is to get what's called a metabolomic test.
There's not a lot of people that really understand it,
but that really tells you what's going on with your biochemistry.
You can look at the surrogate markers to see if the biochemical reactions are going
from this step, this step, and see what's missing,
to see where it's bottleneck.
And you can really see what's happening with how flexible your metabolism is.
If your metabolism is super flexible, you could probably get away with a lot of carbs.
But that's a very small percentage of the population.
Most people are very inflexible.
If you start loading them with carbs, they can't burn it.
So you're literally going to just make them super fat.
They have insulin resistance.
So one of the best biomarkers for health and to really look at,
at metabolic flexibility is that B-O-2 max.
Now, you can test this on your watch or there's some other tests,
but going somewhere and getting that test is probably a good thing.
I actually bought a portable unit, super expensive.
I still am learning how to use it.
But that is a test to determine how much oxygen you can consume,
how much oxygen goes through that mitochondria.
So in order to consume a lot of oxygen, you have to have a super healthy mildchondra.
And that would kind of tell you how many carbs you can get away with.
But one way to, because that's one of my goals, I'm 60 and I'm trying to get my VO2 max.
Of course, I need to get a baseline first.
But I want to see how high I can get it because I think the world record is like 96 or 97, which is super crazy.
That's insane.
I mean, I think for a sixth-year-old, an average is 25.
So what happens is that I have a device.
It's two oxygen machines and a huge bag.
It's called an intermittent hypoxic training.
You ever do it?
Yeah.
I'm into that.
So what you do is you get on the treadmill and you're wearing a mask.
And you first, you turn the oxygen up.
because normally oxygen in the air is like 20% roughly.
And you turn it up to 80%.
So you're getting freaking oxygen.
You're like, whoa, I feel really good right now, right?
And you're running and you're just sprinting.
And then you flip it down to 15.
Now you're starving yourselves of oxygen.
Now as a kid when you went swimming,
did you ever like with a friend see how long you can hold your breath underneath water?
All the time.
Yeah.
And then there gets to a point where,
you're like, you get this flight of fight, right?
Where you're like, you know, I'm going to panic.
So you don't want to get to that point.
You want to get right before that point of oxygen starvation.
And then you flip it to the oxygen again.
So you're starving your cells of oxygen while you're exercising and then you're flooding
it, starving it and flooding it.
What happens is your capillaries go, what the hell are what's going on?
And so you start getting bigger blood cells, more capillary growth, more, it's called
plasma oxygen.
can go into the deeper parts of your body and like you get super recovery like i'm not even
getting sore now for anything now now now you can do a a different version of that with a mask
uh and do sprints and stuff and restrict your air so you're just basically simulating like
19,000 feet you know above sea level exercise and um it's and i think it'll be probably
going to be the next trend because it's it's freaking incredible you can do your fitness and how you
could just really speed up your um your recovery and your VO2 max more than any other workout um
that i know you know that's right up my alley you're going to have to just show me that and where i can
i got to get that going man that and you you start you have to start at a very low level and of course
you're probably like me like oh no no no i'm in front of out the first time right and so
she told me with this coach was toshmi she said
Do not, do not restrict your air in the very beginning because you're going to detox.
I said, you don't know me.
No.
I'm different.
So the next day I wake up out of the bed, my whole lungs are inflamed.
I'm coughing up mucs.
I'm like, oh my gosh, she was right.
Like it just, because you're, when you do that to yourselves, you're pulling crap out of yourselves.
Yeah.
So I'm like, it took me two weeks to recover from that.
And I'm like, I will never do that again.
I get it on it.
So, I'm going to bring it slow and I'm like taking her guidance, like, tell me when to go up a little higher.
But it's, you will, from what you do, like, you need to be doing it.
Oh, I'm on it.
I'm on it.
Question.
You brought this up, and this has been a huge focus of my study.
I literally just took classes at Harvard at night, study, mitochondria and cellular health.
because of coming to the realization of just how important it is.
How overlooked is that as being one of the biggest factors in our health,
you know, our overall health.
And what do you, when you're looking at that and you're telling people,
you've got to work on your mitochondria health,
what do you tell them to do?
Because once people grasp and understand how important it is,
I think everybody would be doing something to fix it.
Yeah.
What's your method there?
Well, I spent, I was really into this metabolome.
thing and really trying to help some of these top people in the world to try to break it down
and help it make it more understandable. And I pretty much gave up because in order to understand
it, you have to know a lot about chemistry. When you go to school and you take a biochemistry class,
no one that I know of can get through that with any amount of understanding. It's purely
memorization, you pass the test, and you move on. To be able to understand the Krebs cycle,
which is a cycle of how energy is created.
You got this mitochondria, which was a bacteria in ancient time,
and it happened somehow morphed in our bodies,
and then we agreed we'll give you a home
as long as you make the energy, you specialize in the energy.
So you have two parts of the mitochondria.
You have the little factory that strips off electrons from food,
and then it sends it into this other conveyor belt
called electron transport chain, which is no longer chemistry. It's physics. So now we're loading up
this gradient of hydrogen ions, which are like, just picture a dam. We're building water on a dam.
And then at the very end, we stripped out all the electrons and everything. Now we got this dam
to run this water through a turbine. This is what's happening at a very microscopic level. And at the very
in that turbine, it's an enzyme, ATP, and it's spinning at 400 times a second making ATP. It's
fricking a motor that we have, and we have millions of them, right? And it all started from food,
so we're making ATP. But let's say, for example, you go into a cold bath therapy, cold immersion,
right? And you jump in that thing. First of all, your body has to maintain 98.5.5.5. You know,
the core has to keep that temperature.
So what the heck's happening at the mitochondria?
It switches from making ATP to making heat.
So it's a whole different thing.
And now you are wasting massive energy.
It's very inefficient just to keep your body at a certain temperature.
So this is why people lose weight when they do that, right?
So because they get like wasting all these.
But typically what you're doing is you're spinning this turbine, you're making this ATP, and it's energy on demand.
We don't have, we don't store a lot of ATP.
We store what's called ADP.
It's actually the thing that comes right before ATP.
And then when we need it, it gets converted back to ATP.
And just the structure of what ATP is, it's almost like a magnet with a rubber band.
it's like it's holding things and then it releases something. It's just, it's freaking magical
when you think about it. But what they don't talk about in biochemistry is the most important
part of this whole puzzle. To make this machine work from step from this enzyme A to B, you need
cofactors and co-enzymes. And those, those are the nutrients. The trace minerals and the vitamins.
This is why we need vitamins and minerals, by the way,
as the co-factors for all your biochemistry.
And this is the disconnect from the medical profession to a lot of people.
They don't, because I was never taught this in biochemistry, anything about nutrition.
But it really is boils down, all these cofactors for your mitochondria.
There's magnesium, coenzyme key, iron.
You need all these different key nutrients to make that mitochondria work.
So all the chronic disease are linked to a malfunction of making energy.
And that means they're linked to damaged mitochondria.
So when you get cancer, for example, you cannot get cancer without first damaging the mitochondria.
Yeah.
And it's selective to a part of your body.
So let's say you get cancer of your lungs.
Well, there's always like a predisposing damaged tissue.
like you're a smoker, and then you get pneumonia as a virus, and then bam, you get cancer.
So because you're breaking down the mitochondria, and then what happens, you get this
shift in this biochemistry from the oxygen from the mitochondria to something outside the mitochondria,
which is a crude form of making energy.
It's called glycolysis.
And basically, you no longer make 32 ATP, you make only two.
So with cancer, it's very, very, it's on the edge. It's very sick. It doesn't make a lot of energy. So it hogs a lot of energy to get to grow. So, but the interesting thing about metabolic disease, it's very similar into a lot of metabolic disease, even with Alzheimer's, it goes follow that same path where it starts to, it can't use the mitochondrial.
anymore. So it's always about energy starvation. And this is where ketosis comes in because when you're
doing ketones, you can literally bypass the damaged system and give the body fuel right away. This is why
a low carb diet is so good for metabolic disease. And so yeah, you're right. It's the metacondria is the most
important. A VO2 max is the best test to measure mitochondria performance in efficiency.
And so, I mean, you don't even need a machine to determine this. If you could do what you do as an
athlete, obviously your mitochondria are working like crazy. And you're all for exercise.
When you exercise, you're actually making more mitochondria. And then as we get older, you know,
and then we start losing our muscles called sarcopenia. And then we, well, you're losing a lot of
mitochondria and then you just kind of go down downhill.
So this is why exercise is like it's almost just as important as food because it keeps the
mitochondria the oxygen going.
Yeah.
You know, and I argue that pretty much every disease starts and ends because of something
cellular, you know, inflammation, oxidative stress, free radicals, all of these things,
but it's always cellular, cellular, cellular.
and I've really got a better understanding of every aspect of the cells in general.
And it's funny, Eric, because the subject that I hated the most in school was science.
I hated biology.
Like, I despised it, and that's all I do now.
And I have become enthralled in understanding.
And one of the things I actually was talking with one of my guests last night was about the cellular membrane
that people don't really focus on the importance.
And that's part of the reason you need cholesterol and fats, because that's the outer edge of the
membrane and how you're going to protect it and then the phospholipids that you need and that will
help you to then work on the mitochondrial and functioning as well because you have it has to be
well rounded and taking care of in all aspects and it's it's crazy to see just how how important
these little tiny cells that we've got trillions of in our body and how they function and
when you start to grasp that and understand the severity and how everything is there that it makes
you really look deeper into what can I do? Because I despise that terminology. Well, you're just getting
older and that's what's going to happen. It's inevitable. That's just not true because that's the whole
point in stimulating artophagy and mitophagy and getting the cellular cleanup, fixing senescent cells. And that's
a little bit deeper. We won't do all of that now. But there are so many keys that you brought up,
especially with the diet and the exercise that contribute to ensuring that you have this health
within your cells and that will attribute to better health and longevity.
I mean, what's the point in living a long time if you're just, it's a disaster and you have
nothing but disease and problems?
Because there are people that can live quite a long time, but it's, I mean, what's the
point?
They're miserable.
They're in and out of the hospital.
They have something wrong every other day and they're just getting by the skin of their
teeth.
I want to live a long, healthy life.
And so taking the time to address these things that we've been discussing is of just, it's up the
utmost importance but you know what once you start getting in that habit of doing these good things
eating good working out you feel like a million bucks like these bad habits that you know you and i
have done everybody's done you you you like you despise yourself because you feel like shit the whole time
not only do you look like it you feel like it you got no motivation i mean a lot of these times
when i'm sleeping five six hours i am just jacked to the brim because of the way i'm taking care of
myself. I did the metabolomic test you're talking about, but part of my sample got screwed up,
so I have to redo it. So I didn't get the diet part and some of the blood part, but I got
my mitochondrial said zero, meaning I needed zero work because it was as healthy as it could be,
because it goes, you know, zero to seven. And my testing was perfect, which made me feel quite good
about, you know, key aspects of length. And there were some toxins in there that weren't so good,
but, you know, we just moved into a new house, and I think that's part of it.
But, yeah.
I wanted to talk about toxins for a second because right now is a really huge push to, you know, detoxify and stuff like that.
And my viewpoint of that is like, yes, for sure, we need to lower that.
But toxins can affect the biochemical pathways.
But I want to let you know, if you can actually push through those pathways by increasing more nutrient-dense foods too.
So, you know, you have two things.
I can isolate you into this perfect environment, which is impossible.
And or I can kind of improve things and then just make sure you eat more nutrient-dense foods, take more of certain things.
You can force these pathways to work better.
And this is one thing that this Ph.D. that I'm working with on metabolomics showed me on these tests of like, okay, look at this is a pure toxic block.
Watch what happens when we change the diet.
Like, wow, it works.
It works.
We don't even necessarily have to be ultra perfect with every little thing,
which is important because we're swimming in a sea of toxicity.
So it's like doom and gloom for people.
Like they kind of give up.
They get overwhelmed, right?
You know, I was going to, I did this.
I live in the middle of nowhere where there's people that live on pure junk.
I think they get all their vegetables from the dollar general.
And so I went down this. This is like a month ago. I said, I'm going to do a seminar for these guys. I just need to, I can't sit back and do nothing. I'm like, hey, let's get everyone together in a room. I'm just going to show you guys the basics, right? And what blew me away is they didn't even understand these basic words of the subject. They had these huge misunderstandings, just like in bowel chemistry or any topic.
Like you're going back into neurology or brain physiology or neurophysiology.
The first thing I would do with I were you is I would go through and look at every single basic specialized definition in that topic.
And I would look it up before even sit through the class because there's always these basic confusions that will hang you up.
You cannot go further in a subject if you have this basic.
misunderstood word.
Right.
Like, and even the definition of food, no one in that group even knows the definition of food.
That which is eaten to sustain life, provide energy and promote the growth and pair of tissue.
Like, they're like, oh, I thought it was something that you fill yourself up with.
And they also didn't know that a starch, starch is actually.
a chain of sugar molecules. They didn't know that. And an industrial starch is a highly processed
chain of sugar molecules that actually behaves more like sugar than sugar. And so I started to kind of
go after these basic words with them. And of course, we look at the label and kind of got all these.
And, you know, they're like, like modified food starch. When that word modified adds 15 additional
chemicals and they're like what
if you
just if you break down what you
just said like enriched flour
modified starch like all
of these words that you don't
nobody knows what the hell those mean
no multi-dye
yeah what is this
the different types of fiber they put in
even the protein bars like Quest
I mean what is some of the fiber they're putting
in there it's just shit
horrible corn fiber here we go
yeah
here we go
Oh my gosh.
What does this stuff do?
Like what does this garbage do?
And why is it put in these foods?
This, you, are you sitting down?
Okay.
So the purpose of these starches, they're industrial starches,
modified food starch, modified corn starch,
multidextrin, you know, wheat flour or whatever.
The purpose of them is a filler.
It's just a freaking filler.
That's, that's, it's for mouthfeel.
It's a filler to put,
something in there to create bulk. And the problem is it's not classified as a sugar. It's just a
carb. And it's not on the back of the label. So you don't even know it's in there unless you read
the ingredients. And so what it does on the glycemic index, it's way higher than sugar. It can go up to
180. It basically spites your sugar. It's broken down in such small particles that it's an instant
absorption. So it's spiking your blood sugar and then it's dropping it, making you hungry,
but there's no turnoff of appetite. So you can eat a lot of it. And the average person consumes
three times as much starch than they do sugar. And I think starch is the one that people need to be
careful of, not the sugar, more than the starch is just the filler. And it's in everything. And so
it has, so it affects your blood sugars.
You consume a lot of it, like probably several hundred pounds of it a year, and it's
highly industrial processed.
And, I mean, it just basically is creating heart disease and all sorts of other issues.
And then, so there's really three things in junk food.
Starches, sugar, but not just cane sugar.
They use dextrous synthetic sugar, and then they have seed oils.
So those are the three things that make up everything.
But we talked about this before, but we didn't use that recording.
Even beyond the ingredients, I think the most evil thing is the intention of the every single ingredient in these right here.
And the intention is to hook you.
So engineered to every single ingredient to make you addicted.
So the flavor chemicals, do you know they have patents now,
of time release flavor chemicals.
Really?
Yeah.
So you chew it and you don't just get a flat.
It's like a note that spikes at the very end.
It's like, whoa, this flavor.
There's 80 different or 80 to 200 different chemicals and flavor chemicals and flavoring.
So you're getting this brain manipulation of notes that spike and they have a drop off.
So, oh, I need another one.
It's like, oh, wow, that was just like really good.
Oh, let me give me another one.
It's such a confusion to your brain.
And then also the contrast with the textures.
Crunch.
They measure the acoustics on that.
Crunch.
And then you have the creamy, the soft.
And then you have the black and the white, the colors.
And like, it's just like, holy shit.
This everything is manipulated for one thing addiction.
That's it.
When I see the amounts of things that are in so many different foods,
I always get companies trying to send me their protein bars, for example,
because I was in the fitness industry for so long.
And I'm looking at these and they're telling me,
oh, we've got the newest, cleanest bar.
And I'm looking at this.
And I'm going, to who?
Like, how is this clean compared to what?
I'm just utterly lost.
You should see some of the things they put in here that they have the audacity to send
someone like me that knows.
And I'm looking at them going, what are you talking about?
And I just, it is just mind blowing.
But you're right.
The worst thing about all of this is the intent.
It's the intent to hurt people because they know what they're eating is bad and they don't care because it all comes down to how much money can we get and can we get them to keep buying this garbage.
And that is the worst part of it.
It's not even what's in it.
It's the intent of what's in it.
And that makes me disgusted and it makes me sad and it makes me sick.
And I don't care how many people talk shit to us or say whatever.
I will not stop talking about this and bringing it to every.
as much as I humanly can because it is insane. It's wrong. And then what they do is they fill
the hospitals and they put people on all of these medications they don't need. And I'm just, I'm at the
point now where it's like, you know what, I have no fear anymore because this is so wrong that the more
people that become fearless, the more people will be able to stop it. So I'm just really thankful
we can do this together and that you have the time and I make the time and we do it together because
It takes that. It takes people that are followed that have a voice for other people to go,
you know what? If they're doing it, we're going to do it.
Yeah, I think I brought a book I want to share with you.
This is called the United States dispensary.
This is the 21st edition. This was this was the medical book they used for pharmacy and medical doctors back in 1926.
Okay. As far as the what treatments they would give people for different conditions.
Well, we got to make sure that everybody's checking that out because that'd be interesting to compare it to now.
So I went through this book. Okay. I got it on a PDF. So I was able to stick it through Chachaputee. And I looked at some of the remedies. 75% of the remedies are botanicals.
Really? Wow.
25% were synthetic, but only, but said 5%. And then so I got, so I'm ordering the next
additions. I already know what's in it. So then you went from 1926 to 1948. Then it was 50% botanicals.
1955 that went to 25% botanicals, 75% synthetics. Okay.
1972, botanicals were 11%. Take a wild guess. What percentage are the botanicals in
2024.
I would venture to guess
one to three.
Try again.
Zero.
Bro.
It's gone.
So what happened to all these remedies?
Colloidal silver.
They had, I mean, like,
literally all these
sassafras oil, sandalwood oil,
they had olive oil, vitamin D.
Like, they used, like, literally
all the natural stuff was in
here. They were using that. But
it quickly
became folk medicine, unscientific,
quackery,
and yet 40%
of the drugs were derived
from panicles.
Exactly. So you got, but now
they no longer work. And then I looked
at the, I wanted to look at
the deep dive on the ones that were
banned, like they banned certain
like Ephedra and they
banned all these, some of these other ones. They also
banned el-tryptophan and they all came from some bad batch through some manufacturing like i think it was a
setup and they just like oh we're going to ban it because there's one bad batch on purpose and then all
a sudden you have the next year it was prozac that came out and then all of a sudden after 18 years
when the patents ran out el-triptophan came back they allowed to come back so um i'm like holy shit
Like the amount of, this whole thing is just a scheme, man.
It's like the data you just gave, nobody ever looks for that type of thing.
You just, they just listen to what they're told now and have no idea how things have changed and why.
If you go look at studies that were conducted, who's actually conducting the studies when they actually are done?
And you know what's bad is a lot of this stuff is right out in front of our face and you just don't even look or no?
It's kind of like the politicians that write a hundred page bill.
and they don't tell you anything that's in there.
And then they start throwing stones at each other that, you know,
oh, they don't want to do this.
Yeah, because you got all this bullshit in there.
Well, people actually look.
Same thing with what you're talking about.
There's always a trace.
And the trace always goes back to the money.
There's no money in anything that you're saying.
There's no money in botanicals and natural treatments.
There's no way to take and corner that market.
You can't.
So, of course, they're going to do what they do,
which disgusting, because so many,
of the things can be treated easily through health changes, through using natural remedies like
you're talking about. You brought up trace minerals earlier, and I wanted to tell you, and this is not
a plug for you by any stretch of the imagination, but I searched and studied because I was lacking
in different areas, selenium and different, you know, different areas iodines. And that's when I found
your trace minerals like, I don't know, two or three years ago and started taking them and really
help before I fixed my diet.
I was kind of reliant on stuff like that.
But structurally, trace minerals, I want to ask you because they're so important,
and I didn't realize it until I really got into it how important.
I wanted you to touch on that because you made a very complete trace mineral.
When I see a lot of trace mineral products, they're very incomplete.
There's only a few things in there, and it's missing like half of what's in there.
And granted, it's probably too expensive for them to make.
but what's the importance of trace minerals and why so many in yours?
Because I've been meaning to ask you that on a personal level and I keep forgetting.
So I did change my trace mineral formula because there was about,
there's about eight of them that are really deficient in most people.
So we bump those up just a little bit more.
So it's a slight modification of when you took it.
But the trace minerals are, again, those cofactors in biochemistry that allow biochemistry to work.
The problem with trace minerals right now is if you eat food in the middle part of the United States that's grown in the middle part, not the coastline, you're not going to get any trace minerals because it's not in the soil. It's not going to be in the food because they only put three minerals, nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, NPK in back in the soil to grow things. So you don't get the replenished trace minerals like.
that were in the soil a long time ago unless they're by the sea, the coastal.
So the animals don't have the trace minerals that you want.
Like, for example, I live in a farm and I have, I have these animals.
I have a salt lick, right?
It's not a sodium chloride.
It's a trace mineral salt leck for these animals because if an animal is deficient in selenium,
They, like, their hair won't grow.
You have all this different type of problems.
So trace minerals, you know, people take them to grow their hair and stuff.
That's just because it just kind of fixes biochemical pathways.
And people don't have shellfish very much anymore.
Those are loaded with trace minerals and bioavailable trace minerals.
So that's a good way to get them.
But, yeah, I feel the best with trace minerals.
I do know, especially with men, testosterone is crashing over the years.
And that's an interesting topic I want to touch on, but zinc is totally necessary with testosterone.
And we're so zinc deficient.
And then copper, you need copper.
But let me just, I just want to touch on before I forget this testosterone, because this will blow you away.
You go to the doctor, you get a test of your testosterone, and it will give you a number, and it'll say, yeah, you're in the normal range.
Oh, sweet.
The normal ranges for testosterone are based on the average population.
You're not basing it off which your grandfather had.
You're basing it off.
It's like the blind's leading the blind.
Let's take the average of sick people out there, and that's normal.
Can you believe that?
So these normal levels of some of these hormones, especially testosterone, are bogus.
Most people are not normal to have like a 500 or even less.
You need it up to like 800 to 1,000 with testosterone.
So with all the plastics coming into and the lack of trace minerals and the lack of sleep, you're screwed.
So testosterone is not just about libido.
It's about muscle growth.
It's about maintaining your muscle.
And, you know, sarcopenia is a big problem with a lot of men and women as well.
And, you know, women, I think women complain a lot about their thighs, right?
Or their celluloid on their legs.
If you do a test or even a cat scan on their thighs, it looks like, literally it looks like Wagyu beef.
I mean, it's like they have no more muscle.
The fat has replaced the muscle.
It's like marbleized.
And so they have severe atropated.
They think it's just fat.
I'm like, no, no, no, no.
You have no more muscle.
You need more testosterone, but you need zinc on there.
And you need to actually really activate that.
What's unique about, and I'm kind of getting distracted, but with women, if they're
trying to work on their hip or thighs, all that extra glucose in there, the glycogen, and that
has to be worked off localized. So they have to actually work the legs a lot to burn off all
that extra glucose or else it goes right to fat. So women that are sedentary, especially after
menopause, they're going to basically have wagoo thighs. And it's just marbley.
are marvellized thighs
to the point where they're losing their strength
and then they exercise for a few weeks
and they give up because they didn't lose any weight
but they're getting stronger.
I'm like, no, it's working.
It's going to take two years
because you have no more muscle left.
Crazy.
You just opened up a huge can of worms with me, brother.
I don't know.
You probably don't know.
And some people that haven't followed me for years,
but my whole decade was fixing horse
hormones, coaching bodybuilders, and all I ever do is breed blood panels and deal with anti-aging
clinics. And so when you start talking about testosterone, I'm over here just like chomping
to go off on what you're saying, because that's like basically what I dedicated over a decade
of my life to. So, and I'll be very brief, because I know you have to go to, but I just want to
touch on what you said about these ratios and reference ranges, which are just absolutely
insane and they just go with whatever the lab feels like at the time. But tellings any man that a range
of 200 to 200 and 300 is a normal level is one of the most asinine and abhorrent things that I've
ever heard in my life. Secondly, they often don't look at free testosterone, which is what's going to
tell us the most of anything. Oftentimes, these guys, they want to go in and get on TRT and take testosterone
when the whole problem is they have a high sex hormone binding globulent or some other aspect that we could
easily fix, you lower that number, you free up the bound testosterone, boom, all the numbers go
up. But the diets, the garbage, the BS, the plastics, like you said, all of this nonsense,
it's draining testosterone levels and then they're trying to tell you that's normal. No man is normal
in a 300 testosterone range. Your quality of life is gone, and it's like you said. It's not just
libido. You're not going to be able to lose weight. You're not going to be able to gain muscle,
just like you just said, you're going to be feeling like you can't focus on anything.
Brain fog like to no end.
You're also going to ache.
You know that.
You're going to ache.
You're not going to be able to move well.
Every little thing you do is going to hurt.
It's going to be painful.
And women oftentimes don't realize that their need for testosterone.
I deal with a lot of menopausal women.
And we look at progesterone and testosterone and estrogen ratios and balancing them out.
And a lot of women are just gone.
Their test is gone.
And they don't, they think that taking it's bad, but you and me need estrogen.
We need small amounts, but there has to be a balance.
And if they're, if they're imbalanced and you're not hormonally balanced, me, you,
everybody else can tell you to do everything under the sun.
And you're never going to get anywhere if your hormones are completely off.
And then your stress, your cortisol goes out of whack.
If your testosterone is messed up and low, everything else will go haywire within your body and your systems.
Yeah.
And you'll crawl apart.
I didn't even know testosterone is one of the oldest hormones.
It's an ancient hormone.
In fact, your estrogen comes from testosterone.
It's like so important as a foundational hormone to take care of and preserve.
And also for blood sugars.
Yes.
For prevent diabetes and for mood, oh my gosh, you're going to be stressed out if you don't have.
Well, when you, you know, if you have low libularity,
or if you can't you have the inability to lose weight or your sluggish you get depressed so then you have
this mental aspect so you're getting like a triple whammy all the way around so all sides of the
equation are bad and your life is bad and i i don't think people understand if you have a severe
hypogonatal condition it can kill you like it can be fatal that's extreme but it can kill you if
your testosterone is too low for too long and this is what happens with uh i mean men as they get older they
get hypogonadism.
So they basically, their testicle shrink.
Yes.
Zinc can actually slow that down, by the way.
Yes.
So, yeah.
There's a lot of natural remedies that can do that because their follicle stimulating
hormone and their loutonizing hormone will tank.
And when that happens, you are screwed.
And so you have to address all of these.
You don't, it doesn't have to be inevitable.
I know guys, your age and above that have testosterone levels in the 7, 800s to a thousandth.
And they're perfectly healthy.
you do not have to accept that as fact that, oh, as you get older, your testosterone levels decline.
Naturally, yes.
But if you live properly, we can fix that all day long.
So I just want to make sure people know that because they, you fall into these sad truths that are not truths.
They're just not.
There's a little, there's a little side note that's kind of a mystery that I have not figured this out.
And I've talked to so many experts in this field.
They don't really know why.
Like, for example, so testosterone does help with erections.
So a lot of men have erectile dysfunction, right, as they get older.
And sometimes it's vascular.
Sometimes it's not.
One way to determine that is if they have erections while they're sleeping in REM sleep versus if they're awake,
they can't get erection.
But when they're sleeping, they can get an erection.
And the point is that if that's happening, you don't have a vascular problem.
Okay.
So, but then they're like, well, why can't they get an erection during the day?
And it's not necessarily directly related to testosterone.
It has to do with, I have a theory.
I think it has to do with euros of sitting behind a computer
and having these weak muscles that,
because it's really the venous supply that you lose from the private parts,
from having weakness.
This is why the Kegel exercises,
like I found a study that shows it's probably the best for men.
I think it was like over 80% improvement in erectile dysfunction
from doing the Kegel exercises over three months.
So I'm like, oh, wow.
So it must be just a muscle problem that becomes atrophy because we sit so much.
But it's kind of a mystery with as we age, you know,
someone can have an, a man can have an erection in the middle of night,
but it cannot no matter what get it in the day unless they have Viagra,
which comes with some minor complications for our erection and heart attacks and a stroke.
Yeah, not good.
But dependence, dependence, dependence, like we keep going back to.
The last thing we ever want is dependence.
I don't want to be dependent on any medication ever.
No.
No, man.
Dude, I could, I've got like 700 more topics we didn't even get to.
So we're going to have to do several of these and send them out to people because it's, I love this, man.
I could go back and forth with you forever.
It's awesome.
Yeah, it's nice to bounce something back and forth with someone who actually really is knowledgeable in these topics.
and that's real interested in it.
You know, like, I know I talk to my wife in the morning when I bring her coffee,
and she's just like, she's looking at me like, yeah, I'm interested, but she's a good listener.
And she doesn't even know what the heck I'm talking about.
But, you know, I've already had my cup of coffee, and I'm wired and just ready to go.
And she's just like, let me drink the coffee first.
Talk about mitochondria.
But, but yeah, so I think we covered a lot of topics.
We'll have to do this again.
But I think there's some interesting points that we covered.
So awesome.
Yeah, man.
We should make this a reoccurring thing for sure.
Like I said, I always got time for you, brother.
I appreciate it.
You got it, man.
Okay.
Awesome.
All right.
So I think that's a wrap for today.
Well, send me that.
