THE ED MYLETT SHOW - Upgrade Yourself w/ Max Lugavere
Episode Date: November 17, 2020Protect your brain and enhance your body with these life-changing strategies! The body is a complex machine and we’re breaking down how your brain and your body works so you can TAKE ACTION to becom...e a healthier, longer living version of yourself! Max Lugavere is a health and science journalist, a New York Times best-selling author, filmmaker, and he is also the host of the #1 iTunes health podcast The Genius Life. As well as an international speaker, Max appears regularly on the Dr. Oz Show, the Rachael Ray Show, and The Doctors. He has contributed to Medscape, Vice, Fast Company, CNN, and The Daily Beast, he's been featured on NBC Nightly News, The Today Show, and in The New York Times and People Magazine. I am thrilled to have him as my next guest on The Ed Mylett Show as he delivers THE MOST detailed advice on how to be more WELL in your mind and your body. If you want to live longer, healthier, and understand how the food you eat can make all the difference, get ready to take notes! After watching his mother’s battle with a neurodegenerative disease, Max dedicated his life to helping others fight back against some of the most common diseases that plague us including dementia, high blood pressure, obesity, and cardiovascular disease. You will learn how the food you eat and your predetermined genetics can affect your body and what you can do to live longer and healthier AND how you may be preventing your body from burning more fat on a daily basis! Max exposes the real dangers of indulging in hyper-processed foods, the benefits of intermittent fasting, and a mind-blowing strategy on how to get your brain performing 10 years younger! This is an interview your body and your mind CANNOT afford to miss!
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This is the Edmmerwood show.
Hi everybody, welcome back to Max out.
Today is going to be very, very detailed stuff and it's going to be something that is going
to impact you in the way that your brain works, your body works, your entire outlook on life is going to be different.
I have a very special man with me here today.
I guess he's a health and science journalist, he's a podcaster, he's a researcher.
What I know is he's brilliant and I was telling him off camera, the IQ gap between the two
of us is rather significant today.
So I'm going to pretend to hang with Max.
Today will be the most detailed information you've ever received on your life, on food,
your body, and how to make yourself more well is the way that I would describe it.
So Max, Lou Gavir, welcome to the Max Out Show with Ed Milette.
Great to have you.
Great to be here.
And what an appropriate name.
I mean, I feel like we're really going to max out today.
Definitely hard.
I got a max.
My son's name is Max, by the way, too. So it's very easy for me to remember your name when we're really going to max out today. We are. I got a maximum. My son's name is maxed by the way, too.
So it's very easy for me to remember your name when we
prepare, but I got to tell you, in preparation for this,
blown away, when I introduce guests,
you know, I want to make sure I do them justice, but also tell
the truth.
I consider you one of a kind right now in the world
in the way that you think you articulate the breakthroughs
you've discovered already about the body, the mind, and how food,
in particular impacts it.
So today, guys, it's gonna be very, very special.
But what I wanna do, I think you found your calling,
and I think it's just important for my audience to know
that maybe a lot of people listen to my show,
they don't know what they're calling is yet.
And I don't think you knew what yours was
until the situation started with mom, right?
And that just sort of changed your life.
So just tell everybody how you even began the journey of being so great at what you do.
Yeah, thank you so much, Ed. And I've, you know, heard wonderful, wonderful things about you,
and I've been a fan for a while, so it's the real privilege to be here. But I'm glad that you've
allowed me the opportunity to start with my why, because it really was, you know, something really
tragic that occurred in my personal
life that set me off down this path.
I never, you know, if you would have asked me 10 years ago what the next 10 years of my
life was going to look like, I never would have predicted what I'm currently doing right
now.
The reality is I was a pre-medical student in college, but I ended up pivoting and going
into journalism.
So I used to work for a news and information TV network
in the United States where I got to be,
I was a bit of a generalist.
I liken myself to having been a stem cell at the time,
undifferentiated.
And although I got to cover, you know, my passions,
which, you know, tend to be health, nutrition, science,
related, I really didn't have a singular focus like I do now.
It wasn't until about six years after taking on that role,
that in my personal life, my mother got sick.
And as anybody with a sick loved one knows,
I mean, the world basically stops when that happens.
And my mom was young at the time.
She was about 58 years old.
And this was in 2011, where she started to complain
of brain fog.
And brain fog is a term that you often hear thrown
about in wellness literature, aim towards lay people.
But when from one day to the next,
your mother starts complaining about this thing
that she never had previously experienced,
it becomes really unsettling.
But I had no prior family history of any type of dementia,
any type of neurodegenerative disease.
So I was like, yeah, it's just probably part of getting older.
But in tandem with that, my mom had a,
there was a change to her gate,
which is the way that a person walks.
And the combination of the fact that it had seemed like
almost as if overnight her,
she had had a brain transplant
with somebody 30, 40 years for senior, and the fact that suddenly her stride had begun to look
more like a shuffle. It was just really, I realized that it was something that I had to step in
and get involved with and go with my mom to these various doctors appointments to try to see what
was going on. I had no framework for understanding dementia, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease,
which returns that ultimately not only would I become very familiar with, but I would end up
dedicating my career to understanding, you know, sort of the mechanisms underlying them, but
in every doctor's office, what I experienced with my mom, I've come to call diagnosed and adios.
Basically, you go to a doctor's office,
they run a battery of esoteric tests
and they send you on your way.
But it wasn't until 2011 at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.
And mind you, I grew up in New York City,
which is where my mom lives.
We have access to great hospitals in New York City,
but we literally had to travel to Cleveland, Ohio,
one of the top cathedrals to academic medicine that there is in the United States to get some kind of diagnosis for my mom.
And it was there for the first time that she was diagnosed with neurodegenerative disease.
And that was for me, it was like, you know, the sound effect in a movie with like the record stopping.
All of my prior interests, passions kind of fell to the background and I became singularly focused on understanding to the best of my ability.
Why this would have happened to my mom?
What could be done to help her slow down the progression of the disease and intend with that?
What could be done to prevent cognitive decline from being something that I ever have to contend with or something that others you know, others that I care about have to have to deal with. And so that became really my life's mission to understand all the various diet and lifestyle
factors that come into play when it when discussing how to optimize the way that our brains work and
to shield our brains against decay in the long term. Yeah, I'm very sorry, by the way, about your mom.
And I, uh, I wanted you to start with that because you guys, Max
always obviously been a very bright guy, but he was a guy before this happened, right?
A guy. And now he's literally changed millions of people's lives, millions, and including
mine. And just so you know, sometimes the greatest tragedies in your life are going to spur
the calling of your life and be open
to that, be open to the possibility that maybe you haven't fallen up.
Maybe these times you think that are so difficult for you right now, maybe the seeds are being
planted of the rest of your life and the work you're going to do.
So let's get into it.
Let's get into some, I want to tell you, I haven't told you this off here.
I have some vascular issues, cardiovascular disease that I discovered early.
And so I am interested in vascular health just in general.
So I have maybe a little bit more knowledge than the layman just because of
I've been trying to do research for myself.
I've got a wonderful doctor named Amy Donine that treats me.
But I want to talk a little bit about insulin just to begin with.
And it's impact insulin.
It's impact overall.
I know about inflammation in the body, but also on dementia and Alzheimer's specifically.
And speak a little bit if you can about insulin and then like finding metabolic dysfunction
in the brain when it's impeding the brain's ability to produce energy early on.
Those two things if you could start with that.
Yeah, I mean, just as you're talking, you know, when discussing cardiovascular disease,
when you have chronically elevated insulin, so that's a condition called hyper-insulinemia,
it causes your body to hold on to sodium, which can actually raise blood pressure. And blood
pressure, you know, having chronically elevated blood pressure, hyper tension, which is something
that many, many adults have, I don't quote me on the statistic. It's very high.
It's also starting to emerge in people at ages way younger
than we would expect to see hypertension.
But that's one of the most common modifiable risk
factors for dementia.
And I use the term modifiable because we
know how to basically counteract high blood pressure
in our bodies.
But when we are eating diets that cause that hormone insulin
to stay chronically elevated,
it causes your kidneys to hold on to sodium, essentially.
And on just one day, 24 hours of a low carbohydrate diet,
you cut the amount of insulin secreted
by your pancreas in half.
So for anybody experiencing chronically elevated levels of insulin secreted by your pancreas in half. So for anybody experiencing
chronically elevated levels of insulin, this is worthwhile to know. And so just to do a little
primer, insulin is a hormone secreted by your pancreas that causes your muscle cells and your
liver to basically suck up glucose that's in the blood. So whenever you eat, you know, and this
is totally physiologically normal. So whenever you eat brown rice, you know, or a
a bagel or anything with carbohydrates in it, even, you know, just regular old table sugar.
Your pancreas responds sort of like a blunt instrument. It secretes, you know, some of this, some of this hormone.
And it causes glucose to be taken up by your muscle cells
and your liver. And that's totally okay when used acutely.
The problem is today your average American is sedentary and consumes about 300 grams of carbohydrates
every single day.
So we live in a state of chronically elevated levels of insulin.
And insulin is not inherently bad, but the problem is that insulin is a very powerful growth
hormone.
And it's also used in metabolites. It's
crucially important in terms of dictating the energy substrate that your body is using as a fuel
source. And so when you have chronically elevated levels of insulin, it not only prevents you from
using fat as a fuel source, which is not a trivial point because your brain loves to use fat for fuel.
In fact, 60% of the energy that your brain can make has the ability to come from fat.
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah.
And we basically prevent our brains from being able to use fat as a fuel source
because we're just in this state of chronically elevated insulin levels.
Okay. because we're just, we're in this state of chronically elevated insulin levels.
Okay.
And so, you know, the sodium point, I think, is really important.
But, you know, when it comes to the vascular health, your brain is foot fed blood and nutrients, oxygen included by a network of microvessels.
So, any sort of outage along that pathway is going to lead to cognitive dysfunction.
And in fact, the second most common form of dementia is called vascular dementia.
So for anybody with cardiovascular issues,
you really want to make sure that you're staying up on that.
And we can talk about the sort of dietary and lifestyle
practices that I think can be helpful in that context.
Let's stay on there really quick.
Just a very simple thing first,
then we're going to go kind of deep there.
I've heard you say that carbs are not great, but the idea, if you're going to eat your carbs, not having
six meals a day and spreading these carbs out all day, but potentially that it's more
healthy. And maybe if I'm wrong here, to eat your carbs in a concentrated time period
and not spread out throughout the whole day.
Yeah. So basically, the thinking there is is that and it depends person to person
So I don't really advocate for a one-size-fits-all dietary you know dietary paradigm
I think it's different you know athletes are gonna have a much higher carbohydrate tolerance than non-athletes for example
But generally yes the research that I've seen and that I cite in my book genius foods
Suggests that when you if you take a hundred grams of carbohydrates and you consume those over the course of the day,
you're gonna secrete a certain amount of insulin
to basically clean up those carbohydrates,
to get that glucose that those carbohydrates yield
out of circulation and into your muscle
or into your liver, right?
But if you then take that 100 carbohydrates,
spread out over six meals, for example,
and then you concentrate it into one meal, the area under the curve, like the total amount of insulin secreted, I believe is less.
So in terms of just, you know, secreting less insulin, you know, over a given window of time, it makes, I think the most sense.
And this is, I think, especially relevant if you are pre-diabetic or if you have type 2 diabetes,
or if you're for whatever reason, you're carefully watching your blood sugar,
to be mindful of the amount of when you're basically consuming those carbohydrates.
Also, we tend to be more insulin-sensitive earlier in the day.
So this is where circadian biology comes in. So I would say, you know, probably makes more sense to eat those carbohydrates earlier in the day. So, but it's also, go ahead, go ahead.
Yeah, it's also, I mean, I think to some degree, it's, you know, the functional and practical
implications of this, you know, if your diet is built predominantly around ultra processed,
you know, lab-made foods, and it's kind of splitting hairs.
But if your diet is generally optimized
and you're eating predominantly whole minimally processed foods,
and I think that these are really interesting tools
that you can play with to just optimize your diet even further.
OK, that's huge.
I'd never heard anybody say that before.
Like I'm always this six-meal day,
kind of the traditional bodybuilding fitness type deal
where I thought I was causing less spikes by doing that and sounds like that I'm really
sustaining the levels of it to be better just to get it out of the way faster. I want to talk about
some biomarkers for Alzheimer's and dementia. For example, do you recommend I do a quarterly,
Do you recommend I do a quarterly,
I do a quarterly fasting blood sugar and fasting glucose test
because this pre-diabetic thing is such a concern.
Insulin resistance is such a concern.
Do you recommend that?
And are there any other biomarkers?
I just can't get over max how few people
ever get their blood drawn.
They don't know what's going on in their body.
And I think maybe you recommend it as well. At least once a year at some age, get your labs drawn and see what's going on in their body. And I think, you know, maybe you recommend it as well,
at least once a year, it's some age,
get your labs drawn and see what's going on.
What are some of the biomarkers
and do you like those fasting tests?
Yeah, you should always be looking under the hood,
I would say at least once a year.
Yeah, so I think you're talking about
a fasting blood glucose and a fasting insulin,
which can both be actually very useful.
So with those two numbers,
those two numbers independently are very good at,
because for all things being equal,
you wanna make sure that your blood sugar
is within the lower end of the normal spectrum,
because having high fasting blood sugar is just not good.
Blood sugar literally can become top.
Blood sugar is actually toxic in the blood.
You need a certain amount of it,
but it damages the proteins of which you are
constructed. And so all things being equal, I think you want to make sure that your blood sugars
within a normal healthy range, and then your insulin also, you want to make sure that you're not
using a lot, you're not having to use a lot of insulin, your pancreas isn't having to secrete
very much insulin to keep that blood, blood sugar at that normal healthy level.
And so when you actually take both of those numbers, you can do a very simple calculation off the top of my head, I can't recall quite how to do it, but it's very easy.
I talk about it in my book, but the number that this calculation yields is called the Homa IR, which is a useful measure of your insulin sensitivity or insulin resistance.
So we're talking about insulin insulin is this hormone. Many people today struggle with insulin
resistance, which is sort of the consequence of chronically elevated insulin levels. And the reason
why this Homa IR, which is a measure of insulin sensitivity or resistance is useful, is because we
can see that having a higher degree of insulin resistance in the body
is correlated to a worse ability to generate energy in the brain.
So what happens in the brain in dementia is you have something called glucose hypometabolism.
So hypo means under.
So you're actually, you have a less than ideal ability to create energy using glucose, which is the
primary energy substrate for your brain that's always in circulation to some degree. And
we see that if you're insulin resistant in the body, your brain is basically likely struggling
to create energy with sugar. So that's a very good, that's a very good test to get.
Your home IR.
You want to make a clean life with somebody be susceptible to their brain producing less energy.
How would you, what age would that begin to show itself?
Well, unfortunately, they have shown that people with certain genetic risk factors for Alzheimer's disease show very small
decrements in their ability to generate energy as early as the age of 20.
to generate energy as early as the age of 20. Yeah, so whether or not that correlates
to impaired cognitive function,
I don't think that that's necessarily the case.
The brain is a very resilient organ,
and it's able to use different fuel sources,
it's sort of like a hybrid car.
But that same hypometabolism we see in the brains of people with Alzheimer's
disease and it's reduced by about 50%. So that sort of biomarker that's associated with Alzheimer's
disease, you can kind of see signs of it very early on in people who are genetically
at risk for Alzheimer's disease. And that's not a, you know, the genetic risk factor that I'm talking about, it's called the APOE4 allele,
which about one in four people carry.
It's not a death sentence to develop dementia
by any means, but it is interesting that, you know,
that those people that carry that gene
have this reduction in glucose metabolism in their brains.
And we know that impaired glucose metabolism is also associated with insulin resistance.
So if I happen to be one of those for, you know, one in four people that carry that allele,
I would be even more diligent about my dietary and lifestyle choices
to make sure that I'm staying as insulin sensitive as possible.
And guys, we're going to get into what Max recommends at some of those diet and lifestyle choices
that he knows benefit you.
We're going there in a minute,
but I just wanna stay Max with measurables just for a minute
because I just, I cannot get over how many people
I'm eating their 30s, 40s and 50s
and have not had a lab drawn in 10 years, 15 years.
And so I wanna talk a little bit about like plaques,
amyloid plaques.
I've been doing some research about that. I want you to talk about talk a little bit about like plaques, amyloid plaques. I've been doing some research about that.
I want you to talk about those a little bit, just what they are for most people's edification.
And then for me, when I get my labs drawn, I used to get your normal HDL LDL, it tells
you very little.
I now get the particle size measured on HDLs and on LDL and lipoprotein little a and all these other markers
That I'm tested for that I'm convinced not only affect the heart, but also the brain and here I am acting like I know
But I'm curious as to your recommendations about
These plaque build-ups what's amoloid plaque? Why is it matter and does particle size matter when you're getting your labs drawn?
alloy plaque, why is it matter? And does particle size matter when you're getting your labs drawn?
Most people are like, ah, my HDL's 62, my LDL is, you know, 125 and I'm done. But that really, that's kind of old school, almost not very useful information.
Is it not? No, you're right. In fact, the high HDL thing has really been called into question over
the past couple of years. You know, we used to think that anything that you can do that's
going to raise your HDL is is gonna be protective against cardiovascular disease.
But they've tested a number of drugs that raise HDL
and they've shown really to be disappointing
from the standpoint of cardioprotection.
Really?
Yeah, so I mean, high HDL might just be something
that occurs in somebody who is otherwise
metabolically healthy and trying to raise it with diet and lifestyle, I don't think is the sort of
holy grail of cardio protection that we, you know, we're hoping that it would
have been. Really? Yeah, I mean, I think the key is you want your HDL to be
healthy, you want your HDL to be functional. HDL, as you mentioned, it's a lipoprotein, and lipoproteins are vulnerable to oxidative
modification.
So in the presence of sugar in your blood, they can become damaged, these particles.
And so you want your HDL and your LDL to be healthy.
That really, I think, is the most important thing.
I mean, they still look at low HDLs being one of the signs of metabolic syndrome. But really, you know, I think getting a lipoprotein analysis
is important, making sure that your LDL particles are large and buoyant and fluffy, I think
is important.
Yes.
No one talks about this. So yes, right. I wanted you to say that. Yeah.
Yeah.
So I mean, that's what that's what's referred to as pattern A sort of a pattern
an A pattern of your LDL phenotype, you know, making sure that those particles are basically what
happens is when your your liver creates the the majority of cholesterol, you know, in circulation,
your brain creates its own cholesterol, cholesterol is created locally too, but by and large,
your liver creates most of the cholesterol that's in circulation in your blood.
And when your liver creates this cholesterol, it gets shipped out on these lipoprotein
packages, these LDL particles.
And they start out very big and buoyant because they're basically, they enter circulation
carrying a payload of cholesterol and triglycerides and they get sent around your body.
And this is very, I mean, this is physiologically totally healthy and totally normal.
The problem is that some people, you know, whether it's with genes or because of the way
that they're eating, they encounter essentially plumbing problems where, you know, before
long, normally you want these LDL particles to they get smaller and smaller over time
while they're in circulation
because they're dropping off,
they're, you know,
what these little packages basically,
it's like a UPS truck.
Although UPS trucks don't get smaller,
but in this analogy, it works.
And yeah, and so before long what you want to happen,
the liver basically pops up what's called these LDL
receptors to basically suck the particles back in, They get disassembled, broken down, used to create bile acids and things like that.
And then that whole process starts again. The problem is some people, whether it's through genes like people who have, you know, any of the many genes that are associated with familial hypercholesterolemia, so it's like genetically elevated problems with their LDL plumbing, or diets
that are excessively high in saturated fat.
You have a reduction in the receptors, and the LDL receptors on the liver, which can
then cause these particles to stay in circulation for too long, in close proximity to, for example,
sugar, like chronically elevated, you know, blood sugar can do this.
And so they become damaged and it increases the likelihood that they're going to get stuck in the vessel wall.
And that's really where you start to see, I think, the beginning of atherosclerosis.
But when that comes back, can that affect the brain, too, right?
I mean, people that are prone to, my family's prone to both.
So there's dementia in my family and there's heart disease in my family.
And so these things matter to me,
but when it comes to, I cut you off there,
I apologize, I didn't know you're gonna keep going,
but is that also true in the brain,
where the plaques accumulate in the brain as well
in the vascular areas of the brain,
or is that the neck, or how does it impact the brain?
Well, so the same kinds of vascular problems
that you can have anywhere in the body,
you can have in the microvascular chair
that feeds blood and nutrients to the brain.
So that's where you can start to have a problem
from a vascular standpoint.
The amyloid plaques and tau tangles
that you're referring to, it's sort of a different machinery there,
different mechanism. But nonetheless, the same problems that are going to cause this backup of LDL
particles in the blood that's going to cause inflammation in your blood vessels, chronically elevated
blood sugar, all incredibly damaging to the brain. There's no question about it. It can create
inflammation in the brain, can damage the blood vessels going up to the brain. And inflammation in the brain is really what is responsible, I think, for this
increase in amyloid beta and the tau tangles that we see. So when we talk about amyloid beta and
tau, these are the sort of hallmark proteins that are associated with Alzheimer's disease.
Okay. There are other forms of dementia. You have vascular dementia, as I mentioned, you have
Parkinson's disease dementia, you have a Lewy body dementia. So dementia is an umbrella category, and Alzheimer's
disease is simply the most common form of dementia. And so because it's the most common form of
dementia, that's why there's all this research money that goes into it. And so amyloid is most
closely associated with Alzheimer's disease. But we all generate amyloid in our brains. It tends to increase as we get older.
And for a long time, amyloid was thought of as sort of the analogy that what cholesterol is to heart disease, amyloid was to Alzheimer's disease. So that analogy works really well. But the
same way that we now know that cholesterol is not necessarily the villain in cardiovascular
disease. It's sort of like, you know, it's this molecule that's there at the scene of the
crime certainly, but it's not necessarily the causal player, at least in the early stages.
The same thing we're now seeing with amyloid. So amyloid for the longest time because
you could easily open up the brain of a deceased person
who had died from Alzheimer's disease and you see these plaques and tangles in the brain.
It was thought that amyloid beta was the cause of Alzheimer's disease.
So what do we have to do to get this amyloid out of the brain?
But many, many drug trials later, what we've seen is that drugs that are actually effective
at reducing amyloid burden in the brain don't cure the disease.
So the question has then become, what are the earliest things that, what are the earliest
problems, you know, or the earliest biomarkers that are associated with Alzheimer's disease
that we can intervene on earlier to prevent this amyloid build up in the first place.
And we know that, you know that inflammation in the brain,
because the brain doesn't really have an immune system
the way that the body does.
Amaloid seems to be responding to neuroinflammation.
We also see that sleep is incredibly important when it comes
to keeping the brain clean of these plaques.
We know over this, just as I have a couple of years ago,
there's a newly discovered system in the brain
called the glumphatic system,
which I think many people are starting to become familiar with
that when you sleep, your brain actually flushes
cerebrospinal fluid throughout your brain
and cleanses it of these proteins that build up
over the course of the day.
And the thinking is the more of the protein
that there is lingering in your brain,
the higher the odds that it can basically clump and form the plaques and tangles that we associated
with, that we associate with Alzheimer's disease.
So that's why the sort of sleep really comes into play as well.
Okay, I'm glad you went there.
So now we're going to shift into some, thank you, by the way.
I'm glad we're going to shift into some practical stuff.
So practical thing number one, you need to sleep a bunch.
It's healthy for your brain.
You don't even understand why it just is.
That's number one. Number two, I want to talk, I want to talk at length. Well, in some detail about you went there earlier, and I'm glad we're going to go there.
We're going to talk about what we put in our mouths now.
And you said process foods versus, you know, really healthy raw real foods, real meats, real greens, what have you.
I eat like a lot of people I bet that listen to the show. If I started to add up how much process food that I eat in a given day or week, it's pretty scary.
I'm talking about protein bars, protein chips, things that I, at least in my mind, I think are healthy because processed food. Why is that bad compared to eating what you would call it,
real food, every single day?
Yeah, so I mean, I think it's important
to make the distinction, right?
Processed food sort of has this really negative connotation
associated with it, especially these days,
but when you cook your food, you're processing it.
So it's not necessarily that processing is like this evil thing.
It's when food has just become so pulverized and removed from its natural form that it's
hardly recognizable from its original form.
You know, when you take a steak or something or a piece of raw meat and you cook it and
you're pan your processing it, when you put whole foods in a blender,
you're processing that food.
The problem with ultra processing,
which is what the food industry does,
is it creates foods that are what are called
what food scientists refer to as hyper-palatable.
It becomes really difficult to moderate
your consumption of those foods.
These foods are designed to be over-consumed.
And by the time you've reached satiety
when eating these foods, you've already over- them. You've already, yeah, they've
shown this actually. Recently, there was a national Institutes of Health study led by obesity
researcher, Kevin Hall, you can look up the study, that found that when people were given
an ultra-process diet to consume ad-libotum, meaning like you were able to eat whatever you wanted until you reached a point of
satiety. They ended up eating a 500 calorie surplus every single day.
Wow.
When, you know, when just eating to feel full, which is something that every human being wants to feel, right, when eating food,
I mean, it's like it's a privilege and great thing to be able to feel full and it's something that we all want
when we're eating.
They, in the crossover trial, what they then did
was that they gave the same subjects access
to a minimally processed diet.
And to the same degree of satiety,
so eating also until they were full and satiated,
they ended up eating at a calorie deficit of 300,
you know, 300 something calories.
Yeah.
So I mean, that ultra processed food diet,
which by the way, today is how most people are eating most of the time, 60% of the calories
that we consume today come from ultra processed foods. That right there explains the obesity epidemic.
You know, because we're just constantly in proximity to these ultra processed foods,
where it's really difficult to pump the brakes on them. We end up over consuming them.
of these ultra processed foods, where it's really difficult to pump the brakes on them. We end up over-consuming them.
Yeah.
And, and the other problem with these foods is that they're minimally nutritious.
So not only are we walking around, you know, with ever-expanding waste lines, one in two
people by the year 2030 are going to be not just overweight, but obese.
And half of us are either type 2 diabetic or pre-diabetic.
90% of us are deficient in at least one essential nutrient.
So we're overfed and we're undernourished. And when you put those two features together,
that's why you're seeing accelerated aging. You're seeing, I think, just unprecedented rates
of cardiovascular disease of certain cancers and of dementia. I mean, because the
brain partakes in, you know, whatever is going awry in the body, the brain suffers the
consequences of that as well.
And these ultra-processed foods, is there an ingredient or two that must be avoided? Like,
hey, this is really toxic and bad for your body when we're looking at the list of ingredients
and something chemicals in there. Is there a one or two that are just no-nose?
Well, I love that you ask that question really,
really getting practical.
I think that the kinds of ingredients you really want to watch out for
are refined grains.
So that's one and refined grain and seed oils.
So refined grains, the wheat flour, the rice flour,
the corn flour.
I mean, I'm not dogmatic in my approach.
Eating a piece of whole corn on the cob is one of my favorite things to eat in the
summer.
I eat white rice on my sushi.
Like, I'm not dogmatic about grains or the devil or anything like that.
But in these ultra processed foods, I think refined grains really are problematic.
I'll give you another reason why actually, just because it's interesting. When you eat,
say you eat a handful of whole nuts, right? And you look at the calories in, you know, on the back of the nut package or whatever, and you see whatever, we'll just say it's 500 calories of
worth of whole nuts. You're actually only absorbing about 70% of those calories
because when you chew whole nuts,
the particles are too big to be fully digested.
It's a whole food.
You actually end up pooping out a significant amount
of those calories.
When you eat, yeah, when you eat pulverized wheat,
corn, rice flour in these ultra processed foods,
you're absorbing 100% of those calories.
Not only that, not only that, so I mean, a calorie is not really calorie when it comes to nutrition
facts labels.
Not only that, but those calories get absorbed really rapidly and really high up in the
small intestine.
So it basically sends your blood sugar through the roof before your body really even has
an ability to, you know, you're still eating while your body is like, you
know, what do we do with this sudden, you know, influx of sugar essentially. So I think
it's important to avoid foods that are based predominantly on those on those kinds of
grains. Very, very interesting. So a couple of things on going in our mouths again. I've heard you talk
about baby broccoli or broccoli sprouts. And this is like, some people think this is splitting
hairs, but it's not. I don't understand like, is it like sulfatine or the NRIF2 pathways,
whatever the heck it is. But I know a little bit, right? Why is baby broccoli or broccoli
sprouts way better than like broccoli in particular?
Why eat that?
That's a good question.
So when you chew broccoli sprouts or any cruciferous vegetable, you basically break apart the cell walls where two chemicals that are kept in isolation in the plants,
unite in your mouth to create a new compound.
And that compound in the case of crucifers vegetables
is called sulforaphane.
And sulforaphane.
So forphane.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's considered an insect, like an insecticide,
a natural insecticide that plants create, right?
Because plants can't, you know, tooth and nail their way
out of, you know, out of being eaten,
right? So what they do is they practice chemical warfare. And so they create these compounds that if you
were a smaller critter, maybe an insect, a mouse, a mold, the compound would make you sick. And so,
you know, when a mouse naws on these plants, it creates these compounds.
So forphane is just one of them.
But the plant kingdom is just full of these natural defense
chemicals.
What we see is that so forphane in somebody like you or me,
a big robust organism actually has a number
of beneficial and protective effects via a mechanism
called Hormesis.
So Hormesis is when you consume a plant compound
and if you were to consume a lot of it, it would be toxic.
But in small doses, it actually has a beneficial effect.
Sort of like a counterintuitive beneficial effect
because here we have this toxic chemical,
but in small doses, it's actually good for you.
The same thing actually applies to exercise.
You could exercise enough where it would kill you. It's a stressor on the body, but in small doses, exercise actually
makes you more robust, more resilient. We can, you know, sing the praises about exercise,
you know, for hours. But cell four thing is great because it's been shown to increase levels
of a compound in the body called glutathione, which is the, yeah, it's the body's master detoxifier, master antioxidant. It's being studied now as a means of, you
know, it's cancer protective effects. It's also been suggested in a small
clinical trial, I believe, to produce symptoms of autism. So for anybody that has
that in the family, I think it's worth looking into, you know, I believe, to produce symptoms of autism. So for anybody that has that in the family,
I think it's worth looking into.
I mean, it's just one of the many benefits
of eating a very diet that includes crucifers vegetables.
Okay, glutathione.
I love glutathione.
So I can't explain this.
I'd like you to explain it to me.
So I do some, I haven't done it in a while,
just because of COVID, but with all my traveling
and I get depleted, I do IV therapy, even just some time to get hydrated.
I'll take IV hydration.
One, I'd like your opinion on that.
Actually, two, what's your opinion on that?
Am I just peeing it all out or does it help?
But here's what I know.
When they put glutathione in my IV,
something amazing happens to my body.
There's a calming effect.
I can feel that, I feel B12 when they put it
in, you know, you get all wired. The other stuff I don't really feel for some reason, glutathione,
I can feel better actually when it's in my body. So do you recommend someone supplements with it?
Why is that happening? Or am I crazy? And what do you feel about IV therapy?
Yeah, I don't really recommend, I don't make the recommendation that people supplement with
glutathione. I mean, I have glutathione, I take sometimes liposomal glutathione supplements,
but I, you know, I'm not, I really, I'm pretty convinced that, you know, supplements should be
used very diligently and deliberately based on your diet and your specific deficiencies
and even in some cases of genes.
But no, I generally don't recommend
that people supplement with it.
I just don't think that you need to,
if you're eating a diet that is supplying the raw materials
for your own, your body's own glutathione synthesis.
So sulfur containing amino acids is very important.
Grass fed beef, eggs, things like that.
Anything with sulfur in it is actually
going to be really good for you.
Sulfur is a rate limiting element in the synthesis
of glutathione.
And so when you consume, for example,
cystine rich foods, you're going to basically
be supplying that.
Also glycine, glycine is really important, so it's one of the reasons why I think collagen
is worth consuming.
And collagen is actually a supplement that I think is worth looking into because we don't
tend to eat a lot of collagenous tissues at this point.
Can you stay on that?
You don't think that you break down those supplements in your stomach and you're never getting
any benefit to taking something like, I've had other people tell me, hey, you're
taking a collagen supplement, you're not getting any of it, it's destroyed before it gets
to you.
Yeah, you do break it down.
So it's not a one to one.
You know, it's not like you consume collagen and it becomes collagen in your joints.
Yeah.
But you are increasing your supply of glycine, which we don't consume enough of.
Your average person consumes about two grams of glycine
every single day, and you create in your body another two
grams of glycine.
And that is why glycine is actually not
considered an essential amino acid, because we create it
to some degree.
But I don't think that we create enough for optimal health,
especially today when we consume lots
of muscle meat.
And the reason for that is, so there have been research calculations that speculate that
we need about 15 grams of, it depends on, you know, your weight and what you're eating
but about 15 grams of glycine a day.
And that our needs for glycine increase with higher consumption of another
amino acid, methionine, which is more present in muscle meat. And we use glycine to create
collagen. So by not consuming adequate glycine, again, we only ingest about two grams of every
single day, you might be actually limiting your body's ability to create collagen. relic, and it's a very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, your arteries. So yeah, it's one of those things that I think,
if you're not eating collisionous tissue
in animal products, I think it's worth supplementing with.
By the way, thank you.
I told everybody that being
in being feverishly writing notes,
the cool thing about this show is
they're listening to it in their car like,
all right, well, I'm gonna listen to it.
I got to go all the way back and get a notepad out
and start writing all this stuff down.
So I really appreciate it. And for me, I'm a borderline obsessed with my own health just because there is dimension,
my family. I don't know that frankly, it's so long back. I don't know if it was
dimension, you know, a particular form of dementia, Alzheimer's specifically, but it's there
and certainly heart disease as well. And I like that you're telling us some of these markers
that we can test for.
How do you feel about eating less or less frequently?
So intermittent fasting has been a very popular thing.
I had Dr. Ian Smith on, who's written a book on it,
or just gaps in between consumption of food.
Is there a benefit to the brain to doing that,
to the body to doing that, or you don't subscribe to that?
No, I first became interested in intermittent fasting
when I discovered the work of Mark Matsin over at NIH,
who was one of the early pioneers in this field
looking at what happens in the brains of fasted mice.
And what we see is that when fasted,
there is an increase in levels of BDNF
or brain derived neurotrophic factor,
which is a protein that helps ensure
the survival of your existing neurons
while also promoting the growth of new ones, which is pretty important. That basically right there underlies the
characteristic that we call neuroplasticity. So the ability your brain to change and stay youthful
over time as you get older, right, which is something that we all want. I know a lot of clinicians
now who are using fasting as a tool for neuro protection.
At the very least, fasting is gonna allow you
to spend more time in a low insulin state.
So we already talked about insulin.
And so it's ability to help sensitize you to insulin.
I think is potentially very useful.
It's also a tool for calorie control, certainly for people. And I also think that in light of circadian biology,
which we touched on a little bit earlier in the chat,
I think it makes sense to have a somewhat constrained eating window today,
where you're not eating too close to bedtime.
And research has shown us that independent of weight loss
because ultimately, calories and calories is out.
We'll dictate whether or not you gain or lose weight.
But independent of that, it seems to be the case
that earlier dinners, like what's
called early time restricted feeding,
and a longer fasting window, actually can have benefits to your blood sugar control
and your blood pressure.
And these are both all, as I mentioned,
really important when it comes to preserving
the health of the brain.
It also helps sleep, doesn't it, Max?
I mean, if you're digesting food,
or prior to you're digesting heavy when you're asleep,
your body is really not at rest, right?
It's not a rest, yeah, well said.
You have a master clock in your brain,
and I talk about this in depth
in my most recent book, The Genius Life,
because circadian biology is such a fascinating topic,
and it's so exciting because we're just at the sort of
tip of the iceberg in terms of understanding
the full breadth of its implications,
but yeah, I mean, in terms of understanding the full breadth of its implications.
But yeah, I mean, so this master clock in our brain,
it's called the superchismatic nucleus
and it's housed in the hypothalamus.
So these are big words, but basically,
the hypothalamus is like,
the hypothalamus is where you,
it's the sort of hub of some of our most primordial drives
in the brain.
And so it makes sense that this master clock would be there
because it's part of, we've had,
since well before we were human beings,
we've had a relationship with light and darkness,
the sun that diurnal rhythm, that every single organism
from the dawn of time on Earth has had to forge a relationship with.
And so that clock is set primarily through the light
that is allowed or not or unable to enter our eyes.
But we also have what are called peripheral clocks
throughout our body.
And those organs are primarily the organs of digestion.
And they're flipped on or off depending on whether or not
they're actively digesting food. And so if you're digesting food late at night, you're basically confusing those
peripheral clocks in your body. And they just don't, you know, I mean, you'll always be able to
digest food no matter what time of day you eat it. But it just, I don't, I don't think the system works
as well. For example, like the passage of contents through your GI tract slows down the later on.
It gets already mentioned that we're less insulin-sensitive at night.
So the machinery responsible for metabolism isn't working as efficiently at night.
So I think there are many good arguments to be made as to why you should not eat too late
at night.
But of course, it's like if it's your favorite thing
on earth to eat that cookie before you go to sleep,
or whatever it happens to be,
then it's probably not the end of the world.
I love that that's how you approach all of this stuff.
Okay, some rapid fire stuff on that.
So we talked about intermittent fasting,
which is like a long window of 12 to 16 hours
or you're not eating.
I think you've made obviously very good points
about not eating prior to going to
bed. I've been reading a little bit more about even though it may not be that's 12 to 16 hour window,
not eating right away upon rising. Even if you can go an hour or two. I mean, I could be honest
with you, I get up, boom, I'm eating. And I've been reading about this and that there may be some
benefits to not doing that. Is that something you subscribe
to as well, waiting an hour or two, or you think that's not relevant if you didn't eat
before you went to sleep?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's worth waiting an hour, too. I don't think that there's really
any biological need for breakfast, at least to eat first thing in the morning. The first
meal of the day is always going to be breakfast because it's the meal at which you break
your fast.
But no, generally I like to not eat immediately upon waking
because first thing in the morning,
a lot of people are actually already in,
they're already burning fat.
Like fat oxidation is higher in the morning
because your insulin is gonna be the lowest.
Typically when you first wake up,
that's why you do that fasting insulin draw.
And so that allows for a perfect opportunity to burn fat, you know, first thing in the morning.
And, and, you know, that, I think, is an important thing, you know, to, to get your body,
sort of primed to, to be a good fat burner, you know, not eating immediately upon waking,
I think, is a, is a, you know, a beneficial strategy.
And then you're able to, what? I just have to laugh,
I've laughing at myself,
as you say that, brother,
I'm 49 years old.
My whole audience is now going to unsubscribe
to me when I admit this to you.
Please,
we're having this pretty very detailed conversation
on nutrition, food,
the brain,
lipoprotein A,
you know,
particle size.
Do you know that I never knew
breakfast meant break your fast?
I never knew that. I'm wondering how many people in in the car am I the only grown adult in the world?
They did not know breakfast meant break your fast how the hell did I not know that so if everyone's gonna do every day
This is if everyone's sitting there going so my let does a whole show on all these fats and stuff
But his breakthrough is breakfast means break your fast. So for those of you that thought, some of this is over your head.
Some of the bigger things aren't over my head
is some of the basic things definitely are.
I'm gonna ask you a question.
You're on Instagram the other day.
You showed like two salads.
One was like just greens, right?
And one looked to me like greens
with some fats in there also.
And the gent, the gist was,
the green one's bad and doesn't do you any good. And this one that has both is better. Why?
Yeah, so to some of the most valuable compounds in in, right? That's not gonna be satiating. It's like, you know, I feel like that's kind of like
what diet culture likes to promote.
I think salads are amazing.
In fact, I advocate for the consumption
of a big fatty salad every single day.
That's one of my sort of hallmark,
you know, pieces of advice to people.
Research out of Rush University actually tells us
that people who eat a large bowl of dark,
leafy greens every day have brains that perform
up to 11 years younger. So right there, that's a good rule to set for yourself. Just eat a big
salad every day. It's satiating. You're going to check off many of your nutritional boxes
in doing that great source of fiber, great source of micronutrients and always add a protein,
right? Like always add, you know, whether it's grass, food, beef, wild salmon, chicken, eggs,
whatever. But another really important thing that I talked about in that Instagram post
is that some of the most important compounds that are in plants are what are called
carotenoids.
Carotenoids are just some of the many pigments that you'll see when you look around in the
produce section of your local supermarket, the yellows, the oranges, the greens.
Many people are familiar with beta-carotene, which is a carotenoid, but
too in particular that I think that in my work, I've tried to bring to light are lutein and ziazenthan.
So these are carotenoids that have long been known for their ability to protect the eyes,
as your eyes age. If you look on the back of any, you know, sort of eye-focused nutritional supplement,
you'll always see lutein and z-azenthan because lutein and z-azenthan, we know accumulate in
the eyes, which your eyes are an extension of your brain. Your eyes actually contain neural tissue.
And those two compounds can help prevent age-related macular degeneration. But what we now also know
about these two compounds is that they accumulate in the brain.
They help your brain work more efficiently. They help your brain work faster. And they're abundant
in dark leafy greens like kale, spinach, arugula. The problem is that you need fat to absorb them.
So if you're eating a salad with a fat-free dressing on it, which many people, you know,
I think continue to do to this day, those
compounds are just going right through you. Whereas with the addition of some fat like extra
virgin olive oil or grass-fed beef, you're absorbing all of those very important carotenoid compounds.
Wow.
Yeah, so it's just very interesting. You know, you also have those carotenoids in the fat
of grass-fed beef and egg yolks, but grass-fed beef and egg
yolks are obviously also rich in fat. So they're like perfect foods when it comes to the brain.
But kale, dark leafy greens, they need a little extra boost. They need that additional fat source.
Otherwise, some of the most beneficial compounds in those plants, basically just pass right through you.
Man, so good.
That's why Max is Max right there.
Couple more things, then we'll talk about
the genius life really quick.
I wanna ask you about Saunas.
I've been using them lately,
didn't know why I was doing them,
then I'm researching you,
and it's like he talks about Saunas.
What's the benefit to,
if any, to a regular sauna on a weekly basis?
Sonna's are incredible. I actually, you know, one of the gifts that I gave to myself,
one of the more extravagant purchases I've made, I bought myself a sauna, because the research
on it really is very compelling. It comes out of, it predominantly comes from University of
Eastern Finland. Finland is the sauna capital of the world.
So I don't know if you know this ed, but on average, they have about one sauna per household in Finland.
It's like, it's like a shower.
It's just super common.
Yeah, sauna is actually a finish word.
I think in a past life, I was probably finished because I just love it that much.
But so the research that they're doing in that part of the world is really compelling.
What they're showing us is that regular sauna use with like a dose response effect, meaning
the more you do it, the stronger the benefit seems to be.
There you get a dramatic risk reduction for cardiovascular disease, for stroke, for Alzheimer's
disease and dementia.
And I think one of the, I think there are many reasons for this,
but I think most,
it's most easy to see that when you sit in a sauna,
your pulse increases.
When you're sitting in a sauna,
sitting in a sauna is actually the best workout
you can get while sitting absolutely still.
It's a mild sort of aerobic exercise mimetic,
as is what it's called.
Your heart rate increases,
you get this full body
expression in nitric oxide release, which opens up your blood vessels. It increases blood flow
all throughout your body. It activates what are called heat shock proteins, which have been shown
to sort of help proteins like tau in the brain from protecting them against misfolding, which can
happen, you know Alzheimer's's disease, Parkinson's disease,
they're called protein apathes because they involve proteins that misfold and they become tangled up
and heat shock proteins which are activated in sonas and also with exercise can actually prevent
that sort of misfolding in that pathology. So I'm a huge fan of of sonas and I think that they're
you know any opportunity you have these days to sweat, sweating is another benefit.
I mean, you sweat, you release all kinds of toxins that you accumulate, you know, just partaking
in the modern world.
And, um, and so it's one of the just one of the many, I think, benefits of them.
That's huge.
I almost wish I stuck that in the very beginning because I think that's something most
people want to tell us. Iron ironic that tomorrow I'm going to this
place that they put you in a sauna and then you do like an infrared stretching thing under
heat as well after you do the sauna. And I'm super curious as to what that's going to
be like. They were just referred to me. All right, we've covered a bazillion things here
today. If you had to say, Hey, here's one more thing somebody could change. Like it
start making right now that would improve their overall health, reduce their chance of getting dementia,
Alzheimer's, heart disease, just overall wellness.
Is there some other thing, a big or small that people could be doing?
We've talked about intermittent fast, we've talked about sleep, we've talked about all these
different things, we've talked about baby broccoli even.
What's one other change somebody could implement right now that would just improve everything for them?
Well, I would say, one thing we haven't touched on that I think is really important,
especially today, is to find ways of healthily managing your stress.
And I like to talk about two ways of doing this.
So the first way is to remove the stress, right?
That's the most obvious way to deal with stress, but sometimes you can't do that, right? So when
it comes to being in a bad relationship or working in a job that you don't like, and that's
stressful, obviously, you can, you can end both of those situations and you'll be better
off, right? But for some things that are just simply not avoidable, like having a sick
loved one in the family, which I know all too well.
I know what that's like all too well.
You can't end that situation on demand, right?
So the other way that I like to talk to people about,
at least to have in the back of their heads
is to boost your resilience to that stress.
So you could either remove the stress
or you could boost your resilience to that stress. So for example either remove the stress or you could boost your resilience to that stress.
So for example, when my mom was at her sickest and my mom passed away two years ago,
if I didn't carve out time in the day to get to the gym and practice self-care for myself, I don't know how I would have survived that experience.
So I think for anybody listening who's in a stressful situation,
make sure to prioritize self-care, to continue going to
the gym, having those workouts, sitting in the saunas, taking cold showers, cold water
immersion, even practicing intermittent fasting.
What happens when we do any of these things?
It's called cross adaptation.
There's a spillover effect where the adaptation that we basically cause our bodies
to basically undergo when we sit in these acute,
when we endure these acute stressors,
that spillover effect makes us more robust
and more resilient in other areas of our lives.
So psychological stress,
we're actually better able to deal with psychological stress
when we become more physically robust.
And so I think, you know think today we live in stressful times and there's this,
in the wellness world, sometimes we like to or not me, but there's a lot of like,
just get rid of the stress. There's a very, sometimes the approach is very privileged.
there's a very, you know, sometimes the approach is very privileged, you know, and like, yeah. And, and not realizing, not sort of being mindful of the fact that some people have, like,
life situations that they can't just opt out of, you know. Yeah, right. Exactly. And so,
and I'm very, one thing you do say that I like too is that the different types of stress that
there's this benefit to this cold idea that you talked about, right? Putting yourself in a cold shower or cold plunge is like that, that sort of acute stress.
Actually, there's a health benefit in your body to doing so. It's not all stress is bad,
but this idea of self-care, especially for me, brother, during COVID and during these times,
not just COVID, but the political unrest and the social change that's taking places. It's just a lot
on people. And so I'm really glad that you added that to the table.
I wanna ask you a question though,
because we're running out of time.
And again, I told you we could go three hours.
But so the genius life, why should I get that book
if I'm listening to this or watching this right now?
What am I gonna learn about in that book
that we've not talked about today?
Yeah, I mean, if you were able to derive any value
from this conversation, the genius life is just packed
with the little things that you can do every day
that are gonna add up to big health wins.
So from the standpoint of circadian biology,
of your relationship to nature, your relationship to temperature,
your relationship to light, your relationship to food,
it's just packed with little ways that you could tweak almost every area
of your life for noticeable health and well-being improvements. Every chapter is broken apart at the
end, I offer what I call field notes so that it becomes really easy and accessible and achievable
for people. But it really is a full 360 degree sort of lifestyle plan. That is,
you know, that that really is going to, you know, I say in the subtitle, heal your mind,
strengthen your body and become extraordinary. And that's really what I offer. And I think mental
health is crucially important. I, you know, know this firsthand as a civilian, you know, dealing with,
you know, a sick loved one, strengthen your body, you know, I've seen what frailty can do to a civilian, you know, dealing with, you know, a sick loved one, strengthen your body.
You know, I've seen what frailty can do to a person.
I've seen what, you know, I've seen true illness,
which, you know, is a, you know, tragedy,
but also a privilege that, you know,
I don't think many in the health community have seen
and so it's given me a unique take on life
and what I think we ought to prioritize
and become extraordinary. You know, like the kinds of values that you instill on life and what I think we ought to prioritize
and become extraordinary. Like the kinds of values that you instill
in your audience to your listeners,
I try to do the same thing with my readers.
And a lot of them, I've been able to glean for my mom,
who I think did, I'm biased,
but I think she did a pretty good job in raising me,
and making sure that I, you know, dedicated my life to helping others and, and, you
know, and, you know, projecting empathy into the world and, and the life. So the
book really kind of has all of that wrapped in under one sort of heading, if you
will. Yeah, it's, I gotta tell you what's been going on in the back of my mind. I
meant, I don't know why it's getting emotional saying this to you. But one of the
things that's been in the back of my mind
is you've been talking the whole time,
as man is this man honoring his mother with his life.
And I just want to acknowledge you for that brother.
You're really honoring your mother so beautifully
through the way that you speak about her,
but the difference you've taken her difficult situation
and turned it into millions of other lives that you serve.
What a way to honor your mother.
Most of you, there's an example,
there's all kinds of lessons today,
but the bigger one I'd love you to be looking at
is that there's people in your life
you could be honoring with the work you do,
and that's what Max is doing.
The other thing Max, I love about you is I wanna say,
when I was preparing for the interview
and I was telling some people about you
that didn't know you,
obviously we have lots of mutual friends
that even connected us,
but the interesting thing was,
what I love about you brother is I can't say, well, he's a lot like so and so.
If you, he's a lot, you're your own unique man,
your own unique content, the people do not get anywhere else.
This is this kind of information, this delivery,
the way you do it with genius to to phrase you,
but with humility and I and it's easy to understand as well. There's one of you
And that's why I want everybody to follow you. I want them to get the book both books
And I want them to take a look at your podcasts
I think there's some value there for them as well on going in their lives
So I just wanted to say thank you brother today was extraordinary
unbelievably detailed and the hour flew by we've already done an hour so
Thank you so much for being here.
Yeah, thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Everybody remember this, share the show.
We're the fastest growing show in the world for reason because you guys share it with people
that you care about every week.
I bring you somebody who has maxed out their life.
Max has maxed out these areas of his life and his honoring his mother with doing this work.
And I hope that you're ready to honor somebody in your life.
Remember, every day on Instagram, I run the max out two minute drill, right?
I make a post at 730 Pacific time every day, five days a week, turning notifications
on.
You make a comment during that.
You're in a drawing every day to win something.
If you missed the first two minutes, just make a comment on every post I make every day
at any time.
If you replied other people's comments, it increases your odds.
I have not missed a week in years where we pick winners that get an autograph copy
of my book, go on my jet, go to speaking events, meet my guests, get one on one,
coaching by me, max out gear.
And I'd love to connect with you as well.
So share the show and engage with me on Instagram as well.
God bless you all, max out.
This is the Edmmerlich Show.