THE ED MYLETT SHOW - The Ultimate Guide To Nutrition w/ Shawn Stevenson

Episode Date: November 21, 2023

This week, we're slicing into a topic that’s as crucial as your next heartbeat: the POWER of FOOD. And who better to serve up the wisdom than SHAWN STEVENSON, a man who's turned his life around with... the secrets hidden in what we eat.At 20, Shawn was staring down a LIFE SENTENCE handed down by his own body - degenerative disc disease. Imagine having the spine of an 80-year-old in the prime of your youth!But instead of throwing in the towel, Shawn flipped the script. He dove headfirst into the world of biology and nutritional science. The result? Not just a rebuilt spine, but a reborn purpose – to guide others to a better life through smart, conscious eating.Shawn's journey didn't just give him a new lease on life; it led him to becoming an entrepreneur, host the top-charting MODEL HEALTH SHOW, and a bestselling author.So, what’s on the menu this week? We're talking FOOD – not just what’s on your plate, but what it means for your life.Shawn dishes out insights on:Food as a cornerstone of SOCIAL CONNECTION.How what we eat is packed with GENETIC information.The tricky balance of FOOD and LOVE.The void left by PROCESSED FOODS.Why real NUTRIENTS beat SUPPLEMENTS every time.Cooking OILS: the good, the bad, and the tasty.Decoding the processed food mystery.The undeniable link between food, MOOD, and your BRAIN.His top 40 foods for MAXIMUM HEALTH.It's easy to forget just how pivotal our relationship with food is. But Shawn's not just thinking about it; he's living and breathing this wisdom. And lucky for us, he's here to share his recipe for a life well-nourished.Remember, transforming your plate can transform your life. Shawn’s got the blueprint – all you need to do is dig in. 🍽🌟 

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Edd. Mylett show. All right, welcome back to the show everybody. I have a good friend here this week. He's in the three-time club. There's only been three people, as far as I know, to ever be on the show three times. So Dr. Joe D'Spenza, Tony Robbins, and Sean Stevenson, who's my guest today.
Starting point is 00:00:25 And he is one of the world's experts on health. In fact, I will just tell you this behind the scenes. A lot of these experts you follow online that are expert experts and they're all wonderful. They consult with this dude and a lot of them copy his stuff to be honest with you too. He is the expert of the experts and that's why he's been on here three times. Every time he's on the show blows up And he's got a new cookbook to last time I was on we talked about eating smarter now He's got the eat smarter family cookbook right here everybody
Starting point is 00:00:52 Which is rare that someone with this type of health background will talk to you about food and then show you how to cook it and then also Delicious recipes for all three different meals as well and snack stuff as well So we got a lot to cover today. There's gonna to be heavy note taking for so many of you. Sean Stevens, and welcome back to the show, brother. Man, I'm in esteemed category. You are. That's amazing. It is. Yes. I'm so grateful. Truly. I'm grateful you're here because I learned every single time. So let's start. We're going to talk a lot of food stuff today. And by the way, today everyone, we're talking about food. This is in your average stuff. We're gonna talk about preparation,
Starting point is 00:01:26 the right microbiome stuff, fat burning, all kinds of different sub-cognitive function, emotional function, mood. We're going deep today. I prepare when this dude comes on because you have to pack a lunch, no pun intended when you interview this man. I wanna start with something basic though
Starting point is 00:01:41 and that is families eating together. Yeah. Little research. It says 30% of families eating together. Yeah. A little research. It says 30% of families eat together. I find even that hard to believe. Like, I don't think 30% of my friends eat together every single day with their families. But talk about that a little bit,
Starting point is 00:01:54 about families eating together, why that matters, what the data really says about whether it happens or not, et cetera. Yeah, it's on the endangered species list, for sure. You know, it's kind of been something devolving out of our culture. This was something that we evolved doing. It wasn't just the family unit, we evolved in tribes. And it was a part of the process.
Starting point is 00:02:16 We hunted together, we gathered together, prepared food together, we ate together, we celebrated together. We can see a dramatization of this in something like a Luau, you know, we watch an entertainment, but really that's how it was throughout human evolution. We did this together. And so my question was, is there something protective about eating together that we're missing out on? And the
Starting point is 00:02:38 data blew my mind. So I've got a bunch of colleagues at Harvard and one team compiled a huge data set looking at eating behaviors of families and food intake. Like what happens if families eat together frequently? They found that families that eat together on a regular basis consume significantly more whole foods, so fruits and vegetables, which by nature included a lot more essential nutrients that helped them prevent diseases. So they saw lower disease incidents in these families and significantly less ultra-process food consumption
Starting point is 00:03:10 Now to tie this all together like what's the minimum effective dose? That was my question too because I'm always asking why and also like how little can we do to get away with something Right because that's how we think as a culture today and so two studies. I, I'll combine these together, I'll smoosh them together for you. So, one was published in Pediatrics, and one was published in Gemma, which is the Journal of the American Medical Association. And these researchers found that three meals a week, that's the bare minimum. If you eat three or more meals a week, your children will have far less incidents of developing obesity and eating disorders. Really?
Starting point is 00:03:46 Yeah, yeah. There's something remarkable. I'm going to talk about the why, why it's happening, but also on a reference is what about us as parents? Because sometimes getting all this stuff together could be stressful. And we'll talk about taking the stress out of that as well today. But one of these studies, this was conducted with office workers at IBM. Can they found?
Starting point is 00:04:07 They found, and you know, of course, working an attack, it could be stressful, all the things. But when folks, when folks were able to make it home and have dinner with their families, their stress levels stay low, work productivity stayed high, and work morale stayed high, which is very important. But as soon as work started cutting into family meals, their productivity dropped. Their morale dropped and stress levels
Starting point is 00:04:29 were exceedingly high. Why does this matter at the end of the day? And for all the experts that you talk with, and I want this to be the underpinning moving for for everybody to understand this. This was published in JAMA. They found that about 80% of all physician visits today are for stress-related illnesses. Stress is that seed of so many of the outer expression or symptoms that we see with diseases. And so there's something protective,
Starting point is 00:04:55 stress-reducing about eating with the people that we love. And if you wanna dig into the why, I can tell you exactly why. Oh please, you see me leaning. Yeah. So let's talk You see me leaning. Yeah. So let's talk about a couple of these factors. So number one, being around people that we love, instantly right now, our oxytocin is gone.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Yeah, you and I get together, yeah, for sure. And this is oftentimes called the love hormone, all right. It's something that creates bonding in humans. And humans do this really well, especially women are really good at oxytocin when they get around other women. But also their family as well, especially in close proximity, hugs get an extra boost of oxytocin,
Starting point is 00:05:35 but just being around people that you love. And what the research indicates is that oxytocin is one of the few hormones that really counteracts cortisol. So this kind of glorified stress hormone. No way. And so when we're eating with people that we care about, we're switching over from this fight or flight.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Bro, that's brilliant, right? Stress. Okay. And it's called the sympathetic nervous system. And it's a switch over. It's binary. It's switching over to the parasympathetic messenger digest. So we're literally changing the station on our nervous system
Starting point is 00:06:06 when we get around people that we love. So you theoretically could actually eat the same meal alone or at work or in your car and have a different metabolic influence in your body than eating around people that you love because this oxytocin is being produced. How profound is that? Holy crap, that's huge.
Starting point is 00:06:21 This is real. And also I shared one of these studies, this was from Nutrition Journal. And by the way, all this stuff we're talking about is in the book. It's in the book, and with this dude, everything is scientifically back with some kind of a study.
Starting point is 00:06:32 And his ability to recite and regurgitate these studies is some type of savant crap this man has. Just FYI, you can hear it through the whole interview. And he took on the phone with his dude, hey, I got to talk about this new study out, but blah, blah, blah, I'm like, okay, here we go. Okay, keep going though. Thank you, man.
Starting point is 00:06:45 You know, it is something unique. There's over 250 scientific references in a cookbook. It's never been done before. It's awesome. But also in a way that's entertaining, that's engaging. That is. It is. It is. And also just laying it out in a beautiful way.
Starting point is 00:06:57 And so this study was published in nutrition journal and they found that people who frequently eat in isolation, who frequently eat alone, do in fact have an overall poorer diet quality and substantially less intake of vital nutrients that help to prevent diseases. And now in particular, when I mentioned how we evolved, it's only been in the last couple of decades that it's got to this extreme where we went from eating face to face with people in our tribe or at least people in our nuclear family to now oftentimes eating an isolation in front of a screen. It's changed so dramatically in just the last couple of decades.
Starting point is 00:07:34 And the question is, and we already know this, there's probably some things that are going to happen as a result because we're not getting these epigenetic inputs. And so this is another part of this proximity thing. This is one of the biggest studies that's ever been done. This was a huge meta-analysis, and this was from researchers that bring them young university.
Starting point is 00:07:53 This was 148 studies. So it's not one study, it's looking at 148 studies, about 300,000 people. And they found that being in close proximity to people that you care about on a consistent basis or what they regarded as healthy social bonds resulted in a 50% reduction in all-cause mortality. This means a 50% reduction in your risk of dying from everything prematurely when you have healthy
Starting point is 00:08:18 social connections. Wow. Now, where do we connect most often? How are we connecting? Food is involved in so much of our culture, right? Whether it's after the baseball game, whether it's the first date, whether it's date night, whether it's, you know, the list goes on on holidays. Our lives revolve around food. It's true. You know, and now what if we can intentionally put this into our culture again? Because right now the larger culture, as you stated, about 30%, according to research at Harvard, and this was a couple of years ago, by the way, it's developed more, only about 30% of families eat together on a regular basis now.
Starting point is 00:08:54 You know what I want to show? This isn't been studied. Not only are there the nutritional benefits, all of the stuff you're describing about switching from cortisol, and you've got more of this oxytocin. I wonder though, man, I wonder if you made a study of families that eat together,
Starting point is 00:09:09 and you looked at even teenage pregnancy rates. If you looked at alcohol and drug addiction, my bet is that it is lower with families that eat together. I bet there's a lower teenage pregnancy rate. I'll bet you there's a lower drug and alcohol or use rate in teenagers when they eat with their families together. Just anecdotally, I think I'll probably write about that, don't you? Absolutely. Absolutely. There's all these other benefits. Part of this is, unless just be very practical, when we're sitting down with our children,
Starting point is 00:09:37 we're able to see them. What a concept, especially today, when everybody's kind of moving 100 miles a minute to slow down, because the dinner table is a unifier in many ways. And to see most of our communication is nonverbal as well, especially when it comes to children, they can tell you so much beyond the words of they're saying by how they're carrying themselves. And you can pick up subtlities if there is something that's brewing, or maybe something that needs to be offloaded, that they're sharing or even for you. Because one of the things that I've been able to demonstrate, which a lot of men don't get exposed to, which is like being able to demonstrate a softness and compassion. And also, of course, demonstrating strength, but also for my sons to know that this is not easy for me, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:26 because they would think, and I know my oldest son shared that with me, which he's a big part of the book too, that I make it look easy. So he never really thinks about me struggling or dealing with anything, right? That's like Superman, right? And so one of the things that we created as one of our family rituals, we occasionally do this now, but we had done this for quite some time, is we go around the table before we eat and we share one thing that we failed at that day. Failed at?
Starting point is 00:10:58 Interesting. Yeah. One thing that we failed at, slash struggled with. And it's not about advocating failure per se, but it's more so opening up the conversation of our struggle points and also to start to talk about potential solutions and reframing it. Re-framing too, reframing what it means.
Starting point is 00:11:17 I gotta tell you, one of my regrets, my kids are gone now and I try to talk to them somehow every single day at some length. Here's what's weird man. I actually have a deeper connection with them I think now that they're out of my house and it didn't need to be that way. And one of the reasons was although we did eat together, this is just a small thing. TV was on in the background most of the time.
Starting point is 00:11:39 I'm embarrassed to say that but like sports centers playing behind my son's head. I said oh Brady did this or you know or there's some political thing on TV. Just getting quiet together. Everybody put their phones down, turn the TV off and just be together for an hour. I got to think that numbers even lower than 30%. Just my opinion. Let's talk about the food part for a minute. You say the food piece of it.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And by the way, that's what's wonderful about the book because there's all this different stuff on food, which we're going to cover in a minute, the preparation of the food, different ways to do it. But let me ask you about this. Food is information, something that you say. Food is information. What, what, what the heck does that mean? How is food information? You know, first and foremost, you know, where we, where we are with science right now, everything is really even more so than just information, it's energy. And food isn't just food, it's information. And there's like a data transfer that takes place. And let me talk about this from a very practical place, and then we can get a little bit deeper. From a practical place, the microbiome is having a minute right now. It's having a moment in the sun.
Starting point is 00:12:46 A lot of people are talking about this, but I like to point out the obvious that's overlooked. And if we're talking about the influence on our microbiome, whenever you eat a food, you're eating that food's microbiome. So whenever you eat a blueberry, you're eating that blueberry's microbiome. Whenever you eat an avocado, you're eating that avocado's microbiome.
Starting point is 00:13:05 You're taking on that data. So in this context, it's a file transfer of microbial data. All right. Now to go deeper, being that food is information, one of the things I've been working to get into popular culture is this growing field of nutrigenomics. So it's nutrigenomics and nutrigenetics. And essentially we've uncovered that every bite of food that you eat changes your genetic expression. It alters how your genes are being
Starting point is 00:13:33 expressed. All right. And so for years, it is in particular when I was in my university classes, we were really taught that genes are where our destiny. Right. That's a huge statement you just made. I mean, you're saying food alters the genetic expression in our bodies. We're just paws on that everybody. I mean, I don't want to jump and interrupt you, but that's a pretty profound, somewhat revolutionary statement.
Starting point is 00:13:56 You're saying I can turn on and off particular genes based on the information I'm giving my body through food. Absolutely. So when abacrotees, a father of modern medicine has this quote that gets passed around on social media that let food be our medicine, medicine be life food, sometimes I can get lost in translation because we become kind of tunnel vision, especially medicine where medicine is medicine. Right. Medicine is medicine. Food is food. Yeah. But if we look at the sheer amount of pounds of food that we're eating compared to oftentimes
Starting point is 00:14:29 micrograms of a drug, and understanding that this food is literally changing your genes which then downstream are determining which proteins are getting built, downstream is determining what your DNA is doing. What kind of copies are getting made of you? Where's the real power at? Wow. food. Exactly. And so again, it's complimentary with medicine,
Starting point is 00:14:49 you know, conventional medicine today. But if we don't understand the food portion, we're really, really missing the mark. And this is one of the other big insights that I want to impress upon everyone. And you know, you know, a lot of Dr. Gabriel Lyon, you know, good friend. We know so many wonderful people who have worked in conventional medicine. I went to a traditional university.
Starting point is 00:15:10 I went to a conventional nutritional science class and was largely miseducated, full caveat. But my friend who's a cardiologist and award-winning, matter of fact, let me talk about my friend, Dr. Will Bolsoitz, who's an award-winning top-tier gastroenterologist. He studies the gut. And his training and his practice is revolving around the organ responsible for digestion, assimilation, and elimination of food. Guess how much you learned about food in his 12 year education? A couple of months. A couple of months. That's crazy, man.
Starting point is 00:15:49 That is absolutely crazy. 12 years, a couple of months, and it wasn't this particular food can cause this, or it was like, this is what happens when you have a rare B12 deficiency in your patient. So it's literally missing the mark because it's not just about what's traveling through there. It's what's making the tissues themselves is all made from food. Your intestinal tract is made from food. Your heart is made from food.
Starting point is 00:16:12 Your brain, top-tier cardiologists, top-tier neuroscientists and neurologists. If you don't understand that you're looking at food when you see your patient, we're really missing the point. I don't know if a lot of people know this about you, by the way. We covered it on the first show, but I'm making the assumption everybody knows this about you and they may not. How does this man have such a passion for what he's doing and a depth of knowledge that's so diverse?
Starting point is 00:16:36 And by the way, on the cutting edge, I have a funny feeling, 5, 8, 10 years from now, food will become central to all these conversations. For right now, you're one of the very few people who's describing it in this way. I mean, people talk about, hey, make sure you get so much protein and your carbs should be this and you're approaching in a much different way. I don't know of most people know how the heck you even ended up here. Let's just digress just one minute and let them know about you. You're 20 years old.
Starting point is 00:17:04 You've got this massive problem going on with your spine that they believe is deteriorating. You're headed for like a wheelchair basically, right? And then what? So at 20 I was diagnosed with a severe disc degeneration. So my interpretable disc L4, L5S1, were severely degenerated to the degree when you looked at them through the MRI, they look black. They look like thin, burnt pieces of baloney. I come from that. And so the light is supposed to be shining through it, and they were from my other disc, but those two were so severely degenerated that it was causing dysfunction with my leg, and I couldn't get it to fire correctly.
Starting point is 00:17:46 It's constant pain, but it was more like a nuisance of a pain. And after getting this MRI done, I went in to see my physician and I asked them, you know, what do we do to fix this? Because you know, being an athlete, I just, you know, I actually broke my hip a couple of years earlier at track practices I shared with you before. And this was doing a time trial. I didn't fall. This was not trauma.
Starting point is 00:18:08 It didn't happen on the football field. I was just running a 200 meter sprint in my hip broke because my bones were so brittle. My bone density was so low. And my spine was deteriorating. I basically had an extremely advanced arthritic condition. And he told me when I asked him what do we do to fix this,
Starting point is 00:18:25 he said, I'm sorry son, but you have the spine of an 80 year old man. And this is something that you're just gonna have to learn to live with. Am I young brain at the time, solution oriented, analytical, which I muted, by the way, after this conversation. Didn't really get it, didn't register.
Starting point is 00:18:44 So I asked again, I was like, well, does this have anything to do with what I'm eating? Should I change the way I'm exercising? That was just an intuitive thing. I had no grounds to talk to him about that. And he looked at me like I was from another planet. Like, Cock this head, he was like, this has nothing to do with what you're eating. Mind you, he's over 300 pounds himself. And you know, not again, not any judgment, but this individual
Starting point is 00:19:07 who is meaning, well meaning, he's in a position where he can deeply influence me about my health outcomes and he's struggling as well. And that's been another one of my missions is to help our healers to heal themselves. But we have a system that just even when I was working at the university gym for a while, for several years actually, while I was in college, a lot of the people I was working with were, you know, pre-med students and nurses and people doing clinicals. Man, they were some of the most messed up population, you know, as far as like they're struggling with their weight. They're young. We're talking early 20s. They're struggling with their weight, struggling to be able to sleep,
Starting point is 00:19:53 having manifestation of different disease symptoms, whether it's like psoriasis or, you know, anxiety, all this stuff was just, it just turned on once they started medical school. And it's kind of like a badge of honor as well. And I felt that I went to a private university in St. Charles to try to stay close to home in St. Louis and I went there to do the pre-med program based on television because I never, I didn't know anybody who let alone went to college but let alone, you know, was successful in life. I just, I didn't grow up around that. So I was a first in my family to go to college and I did that based off the Cosby show
Starting point is 00:20:25 because he was a doctor and a lawyer's like, they look happy. They got jokes and you know, Theo and you know, whatever. Hustables. The Hustables, yeah. So I'm just like, I'm gonna do that. But at the time, ironically, and this is crazy to say this, but I hated science.
Starting point is 00:20:40 I hated it. That blows my mind with you. I hated it. I would have this recurrent nightmare about this biology class. And fate had other plans for me or should I say that God doesn't call the qualified, God qualifies the call. Amen. And so life was qualifying me to revisit science from a new perspective.
Starting point is 00:21:02 And I'm so grateful for that. I got chills. I just, yeah. I'm so grateful for that. I got chills. I just, yeah. I'm so grateful for that because it wasn't the fact that I hated science. It was how it was being taught. This is why I do what I do to teach this in a way that makes sense, that empowers people,
Starting point is 00:21:18 that provides some of this connective tissue. Because as we were studying the cell in my university biology class, my teachers not telling me that your mitochondria are made from your menu, that your nucleus in your cell is made from the nutrients you eat, that your membranes of your cell are made from your meals. That was a disconnect. I didn't have any power in this.
Starting point is 00:21:42 And so fast forward that story, after getting this diagnosis and being sent on my way, got a new prescription for celibrex was hot at the time. So right around the time of viox as well, which I was a prescription pad away from potentially dying. Yeah, yeah, yeah, about 40,000 people are confirmed to die from viox, not serotonin inflammatory. And I was just want to feel better. So I would have done whatever he said. And taking celibrex though, I did have a side effect that wasn't diagnosed yet or put in the data which was restless legs syndrome.
Starting point is 00:22:12 So I struggled to sleep at night. And if you're not sleeping, you're not healing. So I felt like my, I'd go to bed, it felt like my legs were trying to get up and leave me. Right, it was like some addos family type of vibe. And so, but from that process, from that moment, I struggled for the next two years. Definitely was struggling with depression
Starting point is 00:22:31 and increasing loss of function because every physician that I saw, because I did have to wear with all to get a second and third opinion, but they gave me the same, it's really standard of care. And basically telling me that this is something I'm just gonna have to live with. We're gonna have to manage it.
Starting point is 00:22:47 Here's a new prescription. So now I'm leaving with another drug and another note for bed rest. So I don't gotta work, right? And so not only is my spine atrophying now everything is. Oh my gosh. And I'm gaining all this weight because I'm eating my dry-through diet
Starting point is 00:23:04 that I grew up eating. And now I at least had that low hanging fruit of movement prior, but here's the bottom line. After two years, I had an incredible revelation really. And it was through my grandmother, who's a big inspiration for this book and for this project. She saw something in me and I didn't see it in myself. And she living in that environment with her, I lived in two very different environments,
Starting point is 00:23:29 which we'll talk about because we got a circle back to something that you mentioned earlier. In that environment, we lived in a pretty safe neighborhood and I walked one block to go to school, to elementary school. This is when my mother was sometimes, you know, didn't have a place to stay. My mother and my stepfather.
Starting point is 00:23:48 And whenever I go to visit them, you know, I'd sleep on the floor. And there were mouse traps and like, this is real, that was my life. But living with my grandmother to go to school for those couple of years, she made me feel like I mattered. I felt seen. Your face just changed.
Starting point is 00:24:09 I also experienced a lot of certainty, which is important as well for your psyche. So we had our routines and she showed me love as many grandmothers do through food, right? And now this is also the beginning of the golden age of ultra-process foods in the 80s, you know, so this is like, and I want to eat what my friends are eating. My friend Jeff who lived across the street, who is my friend to this day. He runs this fantastic gym and say, Lewis now, both of him and I were messed up though.
Starting point is 00:24:38 And Jeff was eating like, he had Capri Sons. Yeah, when they hit the scenes, I didn't have Capri Sons, so I wanted what Jeff had. And so to kind of fit in I would like ask my grandmother to give me these foods and she did because she she loved me And so it's kind of setting the template for my eating behaviors, but And this instance my grandmother would call and check on me and It was it honestly was annoying at the time just like I'm fine grandma fine. Grandma, like, why, you keep calling me, but she knew I wasn't fine.
Starting point is 00:25:07 And I realized that all the investment that she made in me, and all the moments that she gave me of feeling like I mattered, feeling like I was special that I was gonna do something remarkable, I was just letting it die. And it was my choice. I was gonna do something remarkable, I was just letting it die. And it was my choice. I was letting it die, but I was blaming my physicians.
Starting point is 00:25:30 I was blaming the environment. I was blaming my family. Why won't somebody help me? And I realized that I was letting my dream die. And so in that moment, I decided to get well. It sounds so simple, but I decided. And we've talked about this before, but it's not like I instantly healed. Right. But that change in my perspective, I changed my filter. The decision changed your destiny. Absolutely. Absolutely. And we see what we filter for. And so now I'm looking for
Starting point is 00:26:07 wellness. Part of that, I'm looking for disease. I'm looking and affirming constantly that question, why me? Why won't anybody help me? Why am I in so much pain? Why do I have to suffer? I'm looking for data to affirm why me. And so now my You know, and so now my lens has changed, and now I'm starting to see opportunity. And crazy thing is, my path to wellness was there the whole time, I just couldn't see it. And so I had a friend who was in car practice school. And I've been seeing her off and off
Starting point is 00:26:41 for like two or three years. And it's just like that thing over there, that's weird, you guys are weird. And it's just like that thing over there. That's weird. You guys are weird. And she, after about a week, maybe a week and a half after this revelation, she took me to Wild Oats, which has since been bought by Whole Foods. And I didn't know that existed.
Starting point is 00:26:56 I drove past there a hundred times. It wasn't near my neighborhood in Ferguson, Missouri, by the way. But this was like 40 minutes away. And by the way, St. Louis is a big city. There's only one whole foods at this time, all right? In LA, you could throw a rock any direction and hit one. You also don't put whole foods in
Starting point is 00:27:15 Poverse neighborhoods either. And that's one of the other challenges we have in this country is folks that don't have the financial resources to get access to this food. What's great about this podcast and yours is that it takes no resources to get access to the information now. Thank God, right?
Starting point is 00:27:33 So times are changing, but still it's still an issue in our country. One of the reasons that people with money live long is they get access to better healthcare, yeah, and A and B, they are eating better foods most of the time. They actually can have eggs for breakfast instead of eating, processed foods like cereals and things like that. And so there's a big difference in this country
Starting point is 00:27:52 financially between food as well, but that's a whole other topic. Yeah, but it's important. It's important for us to know because there's both. There's the personal accountability and there's the environment. That's right. But in your case, you took responsibility
Starting point is 00:28:04 for your environment and it changed. That part. Exactly. Because we're not just products of our environment, we're creators of our environment. That's right. 100% and you were perpetuating it and that pattern was reinforcing it over and over again. So you make this decision, this chiropractic friend, and then what did you just change the way you were eating?
Starting point is 00:28:21 Is that what happened once you started going there? The first thing I did, I was just operating on logic. I was just like, now I'm significantly overweight. And I'm just like, to eat some of this pain maybe if I get some of this weight off of my frame. And also, I was going off of commercials for what I was, the first thing I did prior to hanging out with her, I did SlimFast.
Starting point is 00:28:39 This is true story. Based on the commercial, what is it? A shake for breakfast, a shake for lunch, and then a sensible dinner, right? So I got that nasty ass slim fat. And unfortunately, I tried it not cold the first time. And then, yeah, it was terrible. Which I lost a couple of pounds, but then from throwing up. But that's the power of marketing, too, which is like, if I don't know, I'm just doing, as you mentioned, part of the transformation for impoverished communities like I come from is awareness.
Starting point is 00:29:12 That's right. I just didn't know. I didn't know that it existed. And so, in that environment, so I did that, then I connected with her, and I go there, and I'm a research. I'm in school, and I'm just kind of known for that, helping I connected with her, and I go there, and I'm a research, I'm in school, and I'm just kind of known for that, helping friends and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:29:29 And I went directly to the books, and I was looking at my condition. There was this kind of nutrition prescription, this thick book, and I went to the reference section, because of what they were saying, it was just like, is this back by signs? And I went and looked at the reference, and I'm like, oh my God, this is a public study.
Starting point is 00:29:45 On omega-3s in bone density? Nobody ever told me that. And examining my diet, and this is not an exaggeration, I might not get a valuable source of DHA and EPA omega-3s in years. I was eating ultra-process foods, fast food, every single day. If I wasn't, if I didn't have like two dollars to go to Jack in the box and get two tacos, I wouldn't, I'd
Starting point is 00:30:11 eat like a family can of spaghetti oz or something like that. Like, that's how I was living. And it was cheap, it was accessible, and really again, living in that environment, that's all that I knew. And so the first thing that I did was I found out about these nutrients that I needed to regenerate my tissues, my bone, my spine that I was not giving my body to do it, then to provide the raw materials for the intelligence to do what it does. For your body to heal itself. And now I go to natural pill popping. So like getting all these supplements, which was hard on my college diet, you know, and can you stay on that for a second?
Starting point is 00:30:47 Because you talk about this often. A lot of people listen to go, all right, yeah, I got it food. Okay, I probably get some Omega's. I better get some vitamin E. I'm going to get a little vitamin C. But you know what, I can just get all this stuff in pills. But you make the case and talk. This is important right here, you guys. This is an interjection.
Starting point is 00:31:03 The difference between synthetically receiving these vitamins and getting them naturally from food. So you think you may be getting all that stuff, because by the way, I take supplements as well, but there's a difference in your body from getting it synthetically as a compared to getting it from food, correct? Absolutely. I'm sharing the data. I'm not just, it's not a hypothesis. I shared several studies in the book identifying this, even because again, I don't care if it's true or not. I'm just going on with the data says, and also bringing in some logic as well. What's the data say?
Starting point is 00:31:35 So one of the studies, we just use vitamin E, for example, which is critical for helping your body to manage inflammation, for cognitive function. It's a really remarkable antioxidant. There's a bunch of benefits to it. And one of the studies that I cited in the book found that synthetic, well, let's just clarify what synthetic is. Okay.
Starting point is 00:31:56 How do I best put this? So a naturally occurring nutrient or a whole food concentrate of a nutrient, which something like camel camo berry, which something like camucamu berry, which is a very dense source of vitamin C, that food-based vitamin C, and a concentrate of that camucamu berry is surrounded by thousands of other micronutrients, many that we don't even know yet,
Starting point is 00:32:20 that we haven't identified. All these cofactors have this kind of synergy that enables our body to use it better. And I'm gonna come back and talk about vitamin C in a moment. But synthetic versions of this is a highly refined, but even when we talk about synthetic, by the way, it's still coming from the planet somewhere, you know? But it's going to become from a very kind of artificial,
Starting point is 00:32:41 right, constructed man-made version of it. And so what the researchers found was that, food-based vitamin E was twice as bio-available, twice as usable by yourselves, then synthetic vitamin E. All right. There's something about food, and the thing is really simple explanation, we evolved eating food.
Starting point is 00:33:02 We evolved our genes have this interaction with food, right? Not to say that synthetic things cannot be helpful in some instances. Well, what they are is supplements. They're not the, and it means that word, at least based on reading your work, you can supplement your vitamin E, but it ought to not be your primary source of it, right? You're going to say some of vitamin C as well. I know what's in the book, but we'll give them this little flavor. I want to get, I want to's in the book, but we'll give them this little flavor. I want to get, I want to also get the book, but tell them about the Vitamin C piece too.
Starting point is 00:33:28 Sure. This is gonna be a news flash, maybe a little heartbreaking for a lot of people, but most of the Vitamin C out there in Vitamin C supplements and even the little energy packs that are like, at the checkout counter, the vast majority of it, we're talking over 90% is made from genetically modified, corn syrup and genetically modified corn syrup
Starting point is 00:33:45 and genetically modified corn starch. So like some of the worst cheapest, crappy stuff. And because they can isolate this nutrient, it gets put into all these fancy pants supplements. And so one of the studies that I that I mentioned looked at people who are exposing themselves because vitamin C we hear about their for their immune system. It does so much more. It is a it is a master antioxidant in the human body. Your skin health is dependent upon vitamin C helping to reduce the risk of cardiovascular
Starting point is 00:34:19 events. And so specifically they were looking at individuals who are doing high risk behaviors being smoking in this study and to see if taking vitamin C would have an impact on their cardiovascular and inflammation risk factors. And so this was a placebo controlled study. All right. So part of the study, the smokers are getting chamulcamu berry, which is very likely the most dense source of vitamin C of any food ever discovered. And in another part of the study, they're getting synthetic vitamin C like you would find in these different supplements.
Starting point is 00:34:54 And so at the end of the study, they found that when the individuals were taking the whole food-based vitamin C in the form of chammoo chammoo berry, they had significant reductions in their inflammatory biomarkers like C-reactive protein. So it's just showing this lowering of risk for pretty much everything, especially a cardiovascular event. And there was no change in the people taking the synthetic version of vitamin C.
Starting point is 00:35:17 That's bananas. All right. And so again, this isn't just hearsay, this is the real deal. And hearing this from me is a little bit different because I paid good money at a university, actually, to get miseducated because we were not taught about a distinction
Starting point is 00:35:37 with vitamin C. The professor would say, if you work with patients and for yourself as well, just make sure you're getting all your vitamins and minerals. Take a multivitamin. That was it! We weren't taught that there's multiple versions of vitamin C, that there's multiple versions of B12, that there's multiple versions of you name it. It's not just this, so if you're taking it in this synthetic form, are you getting the magnesium that your body is really looking for?
Starting point is 00:36:01 Right? And so, this food picture is so much bigger, but you can trust, you're gonna get a variety of these things if you're eating food. Okay, this is crazy to me. The other thing that you did, and then we're gonna tell him how to prepare food too, because that's a big part of the book.
Starting point is 00:36:14 So then there's this idea, oh, all this ultra-processed foods. Like, if you're wondering whether this is real or not, I didn't realize this till I started prepping for the interview. You're saying now that they've actually studied fat cells from like 1900. See, I prepare brother. So they studied these fat cells over time from like 1900 to now and the difference in the
Starting point is 00:36:33 makeup and the composition of these fat cells based on what we're now doing to our cells and our diet is just stark to me. So if you're wondering whether or not this stuff really matters, it's affecting you at a cellular level and it's been proven. So go ahead. Oh wow. I love you, man. All right. So one of the studies that I cite in the book, which it should be shocking for people and everybody should know this. So this was published in the BMJ, which is this is top tier, the British Medical Journal top tier of all time. We're talking top three. And this was published in BMJ Open and looking at specifically heart health.
Starting point is 00:37:11 And the researchers determined that our large consumption now of highly refined vegetable oil, canola oil, soy oil, corn oil is one of the leading dietary factors of heart attacks, strokes, and other cardiovascular events. You don't hear that every day. As a matter of fact, the marketing was the opposite of that. That's right. And another study, and I'll just throw this out there really quickly, this was published in inhalation toxicology. Just the smells of stuff, they're looking at how smells can affect you. And they found that just smelling vegetable oil during cooking, the fumes of it can damage your DNA. Oh my gosh. It's crazy. It's crazy. And it's the vast majority of these ultra-process
Starting point is 00:37:55 foods, which what is ultra-process food? Let's clarify that just for everybody. Because humans have been processing food forever. All right. Just cooking a food is processing the food. Whether it's cooking a steak, it's changing the protein availability, it's changing the chemistry of the food in many ways. Many instances, real food is making many things more bioavailable. This is one of the advantages that humans had when we started to cook our food that really helped the development of our prefrontal cortex that makes us who we are, right? And so it's basically, in some instances helping to unlock certain capacities. Now there's an extreme of that too, of course, but just in general, cooking is processing, taking olives and
Starting point is 00:38:36 pressing the oil out. That's a processing, all right. It's minimally processed and I've got a finesse in here if they're just like what oils to have olive oil, Auburn, University researchers found olive oil is one of the few foods ever discovered that can reduce inflammation in your brain and repair your blood brain barrier, which that's one of the leading risk factors for insulin resistance is actually brain inflammation. This is from researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. But anyway, insulin resistance and brain inflammation. This is from researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. But anyway, it's- Someone resistance in brain inflammation. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:39:07 So, but in the book though, you have extra virgin olive oil as a sufficient choice for oil to use. But you actually talk, actually, about organic avocado oil. You talk, I'm not going to read the book, but are there even better oils than olive oil? For cooking purposes, yes, Because those oils are sensitive. And that's exactly the point, I love you, man. That I was gonna get to was olive oil for centuries have been bottled in dark glass. Yes.
Starting point is 00:39:34 Our ancestors knew that this oil is sensitive. All right, it's like, it's the boy band, it's the journey. It's the love ballad of oils. It's still powerful, but it's a little more sensitive. But you're saying when you cook with it, there's a deterioration in its benefits. Is that what you're saying? Because these oils are volatile, they're very sensitive, they can be damaged very easily. You can cook with olive oil, don't get me wrong.
Starting point is 00:40:03 You're right. You say it's a sufficient choice. Yeah. Ideally, however, we would be cooking with oils that are more stable under high heats because you're not you're not micromanaging the heat of your food. This is a big deal. This isn't stuff anyone's talking about right here. So keep going. This is very, very good stuff right here. So what would we deemed to be something more stable? This would be something that's higher insaturated fat Mm-hmm. So this would be grass-fed butter, ghee, Talo, coconut oil Coconut oil, right? And so humans have been using these
Starting point is 00:40:34 four thousandths of years Canola oil was just invented a few decades ago. By the way, it's very different. And if you see the process of making coconut oil, if you see the process of making olive oil, extra virgin olive oil, it is very simple. They're pressing out the oil. When you see how canola oil is made, it looks like gasoline, it looks like garbage, it looks like mud.
Starting point is 00:41:00 It's terrible. So canola, corn, soybean, vegetable oils in general, no way. It's marketing. Yeah, but no way. Vegetable oil. It implies it's health washing. Yeah, right. It implies it is healthy.
Starting point is 00:41:12 My mother switched over from crisco to vegetable oil to be healthier. All right. It's like, it's nefarious. Okay, guys, this is huge right here. Now, by the way, I diverted us, but it leads down the road about what, how are process foods working in our lives. So I took us off track there, but I just feel like one of the secrets in the book to me was this because like I've always thought, by the way, and you say, you know, coconut oil, butter, avocado oil, those are sufficient choices, but I've always thought, man, the healthiest thing you can cook with is extra virgin olive oil.
Starting point is 00:41:43 And you're like, nah, once you destabilize it to some extent, there's stuff that's better, which is what you've already told us about here. So let's go back a little bit, let's stay on there. So we're back now to ultra-process foods, we kind of understand what that is, and then what did they find in these cells? Because I don't want to make sure that they get that. Precisely. And the closing point with that is ultra-process foods.
Starting point is 00:42:03 On the other hand, the minimally-process foods, who hasn't been eating that is ultra-process foods. On the other hand, of the minimally processed foods who hasn't been eating forever, ultra-process foods is when you see a field of wheat, and somehow it becomes a bowl of frosted flakes. Or you see a field of wheat, and it somehow becomes some twisted version of some cheesets, right? There's no longer any connection to anything real. some twisted version of some cheesets, right? There's no longer any connection to anything real.
Starting point is 00:42:28 All right. And so same thing with corn. That's one of my favorite snacks. Growing up in the inner city was fignans. You know, fignans, fignans. We've got puffs cereal, you know, smacks, the honey smacks, the list goes on and on. But if you were coming from an indigenous culture of like a hunter-gatherer tribe and you
Starting point is 00:42:48 saw a bowl of fruity pebbles, you had no idea where it comes from, not to mention all of these chemical additives, right? So the food dies and the, you know, the pesticides used in the growing process, the list goes on and on. It's so denatured, it's no longer real food, that's ultra-process food. And so here's what they found in those fat cells. As you mentioned, doing biopsies to look what makes up humans and our fat cells back closer to the 1900s,
Starting point is 00:43:16 only about 2% of our fat cells consisted of polyunsaturated fatty acids or poufus, all right? Which is the primary fatty acids that you're getting in these vegetable oils, by the way. More recently, biopsies taken of multiple humans find about 25% of fat cells are now made of polyinsaturated fatty acids are poufus. These are far more inflammatory fatty acids
Starting point is 00:43:44 that are fat cells are just getting packed up with And what I'm saying with this ed is that we're literally changing the ingredients that make humans Our recipe is changed This is why we're seeing all of these epidemics of disease and dysfunction We're changing what we're made up. You say in the book, 11 million people a year basically die, at least that we know of just from eating wrong. That was a massive study. That was published in the Lancet, another top tier medical journal.
Starting point is 00:44:13 They looked at all these different countries, over 100 countries. They found that poor diet is the number one cause of death in the world, in the world. You know, hearing this, he just said a minute ago on top of that, that what it is to be human is being changed by this stuff. What a composition of a human is being changed. This is crazy.
Starting point is 00:44:36 And yet, yet like someone with her dinner, like, and her should go, oh, he's got a cookbook out. That's great. No, no, no, no, we're talking to even when we were talking about this interview like brother, just just get me there. Trust me, right? And then I started reading this and I'm like, my gosh, this is unbelievable. How much people need to know this? And here's another little thing that I didn't know. I didn't really understand this stuff. You're saying there's a connection between food and mood, but food and cognitive function. Like I never thought about, man, I just ate jack in the box, I had two of those tacos, which by the way, they're still a dollar there, right?
Starting point is 00:45:11 So you can still get access to this crap food. But if I'm eating that regularly, that cognitively, I can cause myself to function at a lower level as opposed to eating what, and then there's a real connection between, because I always thought heart disease, cancer, I got all that, okay, I can definitely see the connection between pounding my body with fat, creating inflammation in my body, it's the breeding ground for disease, no question.
Starting point is 00:45:35 But cognitive function and mood is altered by food as well. Oh man. This makes complete sense once you have that revelation that your brain itself is made from the food that you eat. Yeah, you said that earlier. Number one, but it's even deeper than that. The energy exchange, how all your cells are talking, the fuel that all the processes are running on is made from the food that you're eating. And so it's kind of even with your car, you know, if you're getting the premium stuff versus you putting vegetable oil in your tank,
Starting point is 00:46:03 you're going to have very different outcomes in your car's performance. All right. And so this is what I really wanted to do was also to bring this back to simplicity. Yeah. Because we live in a mode in emoji culture. Yeah. All right. So we don't even like to use words anymore, which is cool because emojis can reflect a lot of qualities. And we can have a conversation with emojis, but because we have an emoji culture, what I wanted to do was put the top tier, 40 plus foods, science back foods for improving metabolic health, supporting fat loss, improving cognitive function, improving mood and mental health,
Starting point is 00:46:45 heart health, sleep wellness, what are the best foods? Here's a science, but each of those foods have a little emoji by it. If it's targeting metabolic health, you're going to see a little muscle emoji, if it's backing your cardiovascular fitness, it's going to see a heart emoji, etc, etc. And so taking that food and now, okay, cool, I know all this cool stuff, Sean, about sweet potatoes, right? And one of the benefits they have these really remarkable anthocyanins
Starting point is 00:47:11 that can improve your cognitive function. Now, what do I do with it? Just bake a sweet potato every day? That can be boring after a while. Now, guess what? We got you. We're gonna make some sweet potato pancakes. Yep. Right? We're gonna have a good, we're gonna take that amazing food in those you. We're gonna make some sweet potato pancakes. Yep.
Starting point is 00:47:25 Right? We're gonna have a good, we're gonna take that amazing food and those benefits and we're gonna have a really good time. Okay, do you want to have for breakfast this morning? What do you have? I'm not kidding you, I swear to you. Sweet potato pancakes.
Starting point is 00:47:39 I'm dead serious. Amazing, see? We're linked up. No, I got his book a week ago. I think it was a week ago. That's no joke. My wife's gonna hear this and laugh really hard. That's what we actually had this morning.
Starting point is 00:47:50 I actually had that this morning. I take this stuff really seriously. I don't know about all of you listening to this, but I want to know this stuff. I want to perform at my optimum rate for as long as I freaking can. I want to know how to cook my food. I want to know how to prepare it. I want it to still taste great. The same time, I want to understand. I cook my food. I want to know how to prepare it. I want it to still taste great. The same time I want to understand, I don't need just the emoji thing.
Starting point is 00:48:08 Because the book is that, it's simple on that, but it's also detailed. I mean, obviously you can listen to this man and understand this. I want to understand the mechanism at work in my body. And that's what's great about your work. Like little things that aren't little. He talks about sweeteners in the book.
Starting point is 00:48:23 I'm just gonna give you guys a little taste, okay? But this is something like you walk from this show today. You could live healthier right now. So you went through, he does this thing in the book. That's awesome. Scary choice, sufficient choice, smarter choice. So let's just talk about sweeteners. Right before you came in,
Starting point is 00:48:36 this is my third podcast of the day. You know I've got some were pretty important after this and I wanted to be my peak with my brother here. So Sasha asks me, can I get you a coffee? I'm not a big coffee drinker and I'm never a coffee drinker in the middle of the day, but I want to be on my game. Turns out the coffee machine wasn't working. That doesn't matter. What did matter was I was going to add a sweetener to my coffee. And it's changed because I read the book. So I just want to have everybody here this scary choices, artificial sweeteners, conventional sugar, corn syrup, high fruit dose corn syrup, which
Starting point is 00:49:05 most people have heard of that. Here's what surprised me. I won't say what the sufficient choices were. I was surprised that stevia is a smarter choice. I was surprised to hear that. I recommend raw honey. I got that monk fruit. But stevia is a good sweetener.
Starting point is 00:49:23 Like that's cool with you. All right, there's a distinction here. Okay. Because I've been in this field for 21 years. Okay. I've experimented more than any issue. Right. And, you know, maybe 15 years ago, I first started utilizing stevia, but I got the real
Starting point is 00:49:41 stevia leaf. The real stevia. That's the way it would be raw stevia. Is that what it is? So it's like a dehydrated leaf. Yeah. And it provides a nice little sweetness. It's so interesting that nature has that. But it has a little bit of a,
Starting point is 00:49:53 maybe like a mediciney aftertaste. Okay. And so you have to know how to manage that. Okay. And if we, because of its concentration, and it's so much sweeter than sugar, a tiny amount can make a big difference. So a couple of drops of liquid stevia can do you, okay. And we've got some data on being beneficial for the microbiome
Starting point is 00:50:16 versus artificial sweeteners having some significant downsides. And by the way, I shared some of the latest data with artificial sweeteners. And by the way, even as I'm saying that, even if something'm saying that, even if something's scary that doesn't mean you don't watch the movie. Yeah, all right.
Starting point is 00:50:29 You could still have a twist with things from time to time and also finding what works for you, but just work to stack conditions in your favor. Let's do more of the smarter choice, as often as we can. And I cannot have this conversation right now without talking a little bit about honey because I'm very bullish on honey right now.
Starting point is 00:50:46 Okay, talk about it. This is the sweetener we've been having as a species the longest. And they dig up tombs, the pharaohs, and find honey. And still good. Not that you should probably eat it, but it's, you can, you can. It's still active.
Starting point is 00:51:00 It still enzymatically alive. What can live that long? That is absolutely crazy. What is in that stuff that makes it so special? And I shared this mind blowing study on honey that found that, this by the way, to call it a sweetener is a disrespect. We're like in a radio station vibe here,
Starting point is 00:51:19 and it makes me think about, put some respect on my name, because you know, when that happened, but honey is not a mere sweetener. These researchers found that not only can honey reduce your fasting blood sugar, it can help to reduce your fasting blood sugar and normalize your blood sugar. What sweetener can do that? It does reverse.
Starting point is 00:51:39 But also reducing your blood lipids so blood fats and helping to reduce overall cardiovascular risk. So, to call it a sweetener, but raw honey, just to be clear, it's, it's, and also we've got to put this full caveat in as well. Everybody's different, okay? But even with that study, they're still going to be looking at the average. There can still be people that honey's not your, not your vibe, you're not winning the poo, all right? but for other people,
Starting point is 00:52:06 for the majority of people, honey is gonna be the ideal sweetener. But even with that, how do we use it? How do we actually use this as a sweetener when traditionally we use this other thing, which the other thing isn't off limits, but I don't wanna us to lie to ourselves, because even with stevia,
Starting point is 00:52:21 if you got that powder stevia, that looks like sugar, that looks like sugar. It looks like an elicit drug. That's an ultra-processed food and we got to be mindful of that. So glad you made that distinction. Because a lot of my colleagues are very well-meaning and of course there's degrees of this, but they're saying swap out your baking and use all of this. Use all this silatol powder or whatever the case might be.
Starting point is 00:52:46 Yeah, we might have some improvement in health, potentially versus them using conventional cane sugar. Yep. But is that an ultra-processed food? And absolutely. It is. At the definition of the word, it is an ultra-processed food as well. Okay, what about preparation of food?
Starting point is 00:53:02 We're gonna run out of time. I feel like I have Albert Einstein in front of me and I get to pepper him with like 11 questions and then we gotta go when I wanna ask you about 300 of them, right? But let's talk about the where food is being prepared as well. So there's no secret there's these issues with plastics, right?
Starting point is 00:53:21 Okay, so chemicals that make plastics, what about these thalates like in food, right? So whether we're, how do you feel about that? Like, should that be a worry about how we store our food, what we cook the food on, not just what we cook it with, but how we actually cook it? We grew up in the age of non-stick cookware, you know, it's glory days. And when that hit the scene, it's a game changer.
Starting point is 00:53:47 Like everything's easier, nonstick, it's a vibe, Teflon, right? This was just about 10 years ago, one of the components of Teflon was outlawed, it's banned. All right, so this is PFOA, so this is Pali, this is Perfloro octanolic acid. Perfluoro octanolic acid, because also sometimes I can get them combined
Starting point is 00:54:11 with these forever chemicals, right? This is a forever chemical, all right? So PFOA, it was taken out of Teflon. Why was it in the first place? But the reason it was taken out, and I share this study, this was published in one of the top cancer journals. It was found to be a strong, renal cancer,
Starting point is 00:54:29 causative agent, kidney cancer. So this was a strong, kidney carcinogen, right? So it was pulled out, no harm, no foul, right? No, there's all these other chemicals that just keep coming out. And what they're doing is just like, instead of them scrapping the thing, and like, let's create something safer,
Starting point is 00:54:48 they're just trying to keep skating by, let the data just pile up until we're forced to change it. It's crazy. Now, here's, again, we don't wanna villainize anything because if you have a couple of non-stick pans, that's okay. All right. What we did over time was just add in a piece
Starting point is 00:55:09 from time to time, right? And so what are some of the options? Well, number one, cast iron skillet. It's one of the most time tested things. It's interesting. A well-seasoned cast iron skillet. For a while, because of the industry with the non-stick, they start to go after the cast iron, and say, know, where you're going to get all this iron, you know, and
Starting point is 00:55:28 it is negligible compared to the other chemicals that you're getting from these nonstick bands. All right. But again, we can find, we can create some alternatives like ceramic. Ceramic is great as well as a nonstick option. It has some potential issues, but we know that Teflon is a problem, all right? Also stainless steel has been used for centuries as well. And, but of course, you've got to be more creative and it might not be necessarily for like nonstick cooking purposes.
Starting point is 00:56:00 But let's bring those things back into the kitchen. A well seasoned cast iron pan, some stainless steel, start swapping out pieces every now and then. But over time, as you see that non-stick pan and all those chips that are just getting scraped off, those are in your body. And they don't go anywhere. These are forever chemicals.
Starting point is 00:56:18 And so, you know, we're having a revolution. We're not just with our food. This is a big part of this mission with the new cookbook is, we're transforming the kitchen culture, right? And just providing some education, but also in this conversation, it could be a little bit more harsh, but it's a soft place to land.
Starting point is 00:56:36 It's very empowering, providing options, telling you like it is, but also like, okay, this is cool, let's do this, let's try this. Yeah. You guys, I can tell you the thing with a book, too, is like the recipes in there, the few that I have had are delicious. Like, you're not sacrificing flavor. You're actually not. I'm just telling you straight up, like, you're not like really great stuff. All right, let me, I got time for one more question. We're actually already over. Like, this flew by, brother.
Starting point is 00:57:07 Let's say you eat between, depending on how you eat and by the way He covers intermittent fasting in there. You can go through he'll give you the preferred windows Just eating in general. Let's give everybody a break or maybe we won't based on your answer Seven days a week you have seven days in a week. That means the average person is eating somewhere between let's say 20 and 40 meals a week Somewhere around there, right? Depending on the you, three times a day or twice a day or four or five times a day depending on their deal. How many of them can be not good meals? How do you feel about a cheat meal or like just eat whatever the hell you want? Go get a pizza, go get a hamburger, go blah blah blah. In your house, because
Starting point is 00:57:45 by the way, it's beautiful families on the cover of the cookbook, you can go on Instagram in a minute and you just see this man's, they walk the walk, right, as a family. How many, what percentage of my meals can I just not give a crap and eat whatever the heck I want? Give me some permission here. And I want to even know with you as fit as you are You got to eat bad once in a while like and so what's what are we allowed to do within reason? I bet you have been asked that one this week. No, I have it. Absolutely not Yeah, and where I start is I don't I don't give morality to food. There's in a bad food to me There's even a bad food to me. There's even, again, scary, sufficient, smarter.
Starting point is 00:58:27 It's still an option because if we were stranded on a deserted island and somebody left a box of honey buns, they're gonna help us survive. All right, there's a context to where all these foods still have some kind of value. And I'm a big foodie, you know. I know, that's the irony about you. We love food and I grew up in a culture.
Starting point is 00:58:48 My stepfather was an executive chef at Mortons of Chicago. And so he could cook. It was amazing, but a lot of times we didn't have much to eat ironically, you know, and not being there and all the things. So we turned towards ultra-process food, but we still have the skill set. So we're big foodies and also humans evolved chasing tasty things. Have you ever thought about why certain animals
Starting point is 00:59:08 eat certain things? What did they get? A book that said like, lambs eat this. Why are they eating this today? The lambs are like going over to those bushes. We are driven to eat things that taste good. Food scientists have manipulated our desires for tasty things absolutely, but there's nothing wrong with enjoying food. It's something special about humanity. And so with that being said, the context of ultra-process foods, 60% of American adults diet is now made of ultra-process food, according to the BMJ. Horrible. I know you said, don't make a judgment, but my gosh, that's crazy. But it's worse for our children, and this is the first book that's publishing this data. I'm grateful for that, but this is a call to arms. The Journal of the American Medical Association, they analyze US children's diet.
Starting point is 00:59:54 For 20 years tracking this, they found that in 1999, the average child in the United States, their diet was made of 61% ultra-process food by 2018 is almost 70%. And it's continuing to climb. Most of our children's diet is not real food. And in that time span, by the way, we've seen about a doubling in childhood obesity. Beauty, yeah. All right, is that an accident?
Starting point is 01:00:15 It just happened. And so with that all that being said, so now we know the domain that we're dealing with, we know that ultra-process foods are out there on the streets, but I encourage us to not give morality to the food. We don't have to have a cheat day. Even putting the term on there can evoke some changes in our chemistry for some people
Starting point is 01:00:35 that can cause them to struggle, because there are not many things that you can cheat on in our society and still be okay. Right? Relationship, that could be a business, you know sports. We put that label on there, but with food it's cool. Maybe not. It depends on your psychology. So I would drop the labels and I'll tell you this, the very best time to have a food that might not be the best for you is when you feel well.
Starting point is 01:01:05 have a food that might not be the best for you is when you feel well. When your parasympathetics nervous system is toned, when you're having a good time in your enjoying life and you feeling good, but we tend to do it when we feel bad. Absolutely right. And what we're doing is compounding the problem, right? Stress eating is a real thing. And simple things like what we're looking for, even a little hit of carbohydrates boosts your serotonin production. And so maybe we can ask them to discernment and where we get those carbs, you know, like I'm a big fan
Starting point is 01:01:33 of sweet potatoes, for example. But, you know, especially when there's joy, joyous times, times of celebration, if you want to dabble in some things, I'm a fan of that, right? We're here to experience and to taste, and I'm saying this from a person who's been in this field for 21 years, and I've lived a time period where I was very dogmatic as many people are. When they find out about all these problems,
Starting point is 01:01:59 it's hard to not be angry and wanting to revolt, but I found a place of balance and to really advocate for finding more joy because here's the cool thing. Despite all the ultra-process food out there, what we have access to when we change that ratio, which I'll give you a ratio right after I say this, when we change that ratio, what we're opening up
Starting point is 01:02:20 is the door of abundance. There are thousands, tens of thousands of foods, let alone meals that we can create with all of these real foods that have been around forever. The most amazing meal experiences that we have, if we think about it in our mental database, are often going to be incorporating real food. When something is made from scratch,
Starting point is 01:02:43 especially by somebody that you love, it's special. It's special. And so, okay, let's talk about a ratio. This is not the same for everybody. That's why I don't like to give this cookie cutter thing, but I'm a big fan of 80-20, right? 80% real food, 20% other stuff. I think it's a good balance in our society. That's fair. I think it's a pretty good balance. And doable. And doable. Yeah. Exactly. And so we get, we get a tremendous amount of these health benefits from the real food and also reducing the risk of, you know, all manner of problems if we're dabbling a little too much in the ultra-process stuff. Again, keep in mind, the average person in our society, it's almost 70, 30. The older process. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:25 And so just, what if we flip that? Right. The transformation that we can see in our families and our children can be remarkable. You're remarkable. And I love you. Just so y'all know the behind the scenes, this is also one of the best people in public life. He's just a very good man.
Starting point is 01:03:43 And he truly cares about his work. He's passionate about his work. I don't even feel like, I don't even think it's work for him. It's just a part of who he is now. It's his identity. And he's the best of the best. Today, flew by.
Starting point is 01:03:57 Flu by promise him, we are not going past this time and we blew past that time by about 15 minutes, just so you know, brother, because it went so quickly. Thank you for being here. And thank you for the work you do. I'm grateful that you exist in the world. And I hope there's a fourth time.
Starting point is 01:04:11 We can break the record, and we'll let Tony and Joe know that you came on for the fourth time. Would you come back? Absolutely. You know, I love you, man, and I really do appreciate you. Every time we get together, it's just, it's really special. It's just not frequent enough. It's, it's, it's, and I live in LA now, so.
Starting point is 01:04:25 I know while I'm leaving, but that's a whole other thing I always doesn't know about yet, so I'm not gonna tell him yet. Okay, listen to me. You guys, follow him by the way on social, okay? At Sean Model, he's got the Model Health Show as well that most of you already know about. And go get Eat Smarter, the Family Cookbook. Trust me on this one thing, on this cookbook.
Starting point is 01:04:43 The food, you're not gonna prepare every single thing in the book, but the three or four things that we've already prepared in our home were delicious. And it made me want to eat better, and I got to tell you, and eat smarter going forward. So there's no morality to the food, but at the same time, I like that 80, 20, or at least that 70, 30 that you shared with us.
Starting point is 01:05:00 All right, everybody, max out your life, share this with anybody who's alive, who you would like to live longer, healthier, and with more energy. So that's a pretty big demo to share this episode too. God bless you all, max out. you

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