The Mindset Mentor - The Dirty Secrets of The Food Industry| Dr. Steven Gundry | The Expert Series!
Episode Date: May 18, 2021Dr. Steven R. Gundry, an American doctor, author, and former cardiac surgeon, drops by the studio with Rob to discuss "The Plant Paradox", and the impact of diet on health in this week's episode of Th...e Expert Series! -- Thank you to our sponsors: NetGear: Visit NetGear.com/bestWiFi and use promo code: DIAL for 10% OFF! GreatCourses: Go now to TheGreatCoursesPlus.com/dial to get your Free Month when you sign up for the quarterly plan! AthleticGreens: Visit AthleticGreens.com/DIAL and get your FREE year supply of Vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs today. Indeed: Go to Indeed.com/ROB to claim your $75-Credit now! -- Rob Dial @robdialjr Dr. Steven Gundry @drstevengundry Want to learn more about Mindset Mentor+? For nearly nine years, the Mindset Mentor Podcast has guided you through life's ups and downs. Now, you can dive even deeper with Mindset Mentor Plus. Turn every podcast lesson into real-world results with detailed worksheets, journaling prompts, and a supportive community of like-minded people. Enjoy monthly live Q&A sessions with me, and all this for less than a dollar a day. If you’re committed to real, lasting change, this is for you.Join here 👉 www.mindsetmentor.com My first book that I’ve ever written is now available. It’s called LEVEL UP and It’s a step-by-step guide to go from where you are now, to where you want to be as fast as possible.📚If you want to order yours today, you can just head over to robdial.com/bookHere are some useful links for you… If you want access to a multitude of life advice, self development tips, and exclusive content daily that will help you improve your life, then you can follow me around the web at these links here:Instagram TikTokFacebookYoutube
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dial at checkout. Welcome to today's episode of the Mindset Mentor podcast. I'm your host,
Rob Dial. If you have not yet done so, hit that subscribe button so that you never miss another
podcast episode. Today, I'm excited. First off, this is my earliest interview that I've ever done, 7 a.m. in the morning.
Oh, wow.
But I'm here with Dr. Stephen Gundry, who is a cardiologist, heart surgeon,
medical researcher who's done over 10,000 heart surgeries, and former president of the American
Heart Association, but also now New York Times bestselling author of The Plant Paradox, The Longevity Paradox,
and the newest book, The Energy Paradox. Dr. Stephen Gundry, thank you for being here.
Hey, thanks for having me, Rob.
I'm excited to dive in and talk about all the research I've been doing on you.
But it's good though, because I think that a lot of people... I was talking yesterday with
somebody about people don't research their food enough. And my nephews say that I ruin food for them because every time I come over the house,
I'm like, oh, do you know this? Do you know this? I ruined ketchup for them because I talked about
how much sugar was in it. So I'm excited to sit down with you and actually hear it directly from
you. But if you could kind of talk about why you are writing these books now, why are you putting
this out there coming from a heart surgeon and what you noticed
and what made you decide to leave that to actually become an author?
Well, real briefly, I was a professor and chairman of cardiothoracic surgery and pediatrics
at Loma Linda University, not far down the road from here.
And very famous for operating on people who were too dangerous to
operate on children's heart transplants.
And over 20 years ago now,
I met a guy who changed my life who I call big Ed and all my books.
And he was a big overweight guy from Miami who was 48 years old and he had
inoperable coronary artery disease.
That means he had so many blockages in his coronary arteries,
you couldn't put stents in them to open them up,
you couldn't do a bypass because there wasn't any place to land a bypass.
And people like this would go around the country looking for idiots like me
to operate on them.
Were you kind of like the last resort?
Yeah, exactly.
There are a handful of surgeons who will just say,
oh, what the heck, if you want to try, I'm willing to try.
And he had spent six months going around the country
carrying his angiogram, his catheterization,
the movie of his coronary arteries around,
and everybody turned him down, all the centers.
And I was kind of
six months into this the last resort and i'm looking at his movie and i go you know i really
don't like to turn people down but i agree with everybody else there's nothing you know i can do
for you he says well you know wait a minute you know this this film was taken six months ago i've
been on a diet i I lost 45 pounds.
This guy's 265 pounds when I'm talking to him, big Ed.
And he says, and I went to a health food store and I bought all these supplements
and I've been taking these supplements religiously.
Maybe I did something in here.
I'm scratching my professor beard and going,
well, good for you for losing weight,
but that's not gonna do anything in here.
And I know what you did with all those supplements.
You made expensive urine, which I firmly believe.
And he said, well, look, I've come all this way.
Why don't we just get another angiogram, another cardiac catheterization?
I go, all right.
So we did.
And in six months time, this guy had cleaned out 50% of the blockages in his coronary arteries.
Well.
Gone.
And that's not supposed to happen.
That's impossible.
At least that's what I was taught.
And so I'm going, wait a minute, you know, how'd you do that?
And he starts describing this diet he was on.
on and with i mean it's serendipity is amazing because i had this crazy special major as an undergrad at yale university back in the dark ages where you could actually design your own major
in human evolutionary biology basically i had thesis you could take a great ape manipulate
its food supply manipulate its environment and prove you'd wind up with a human being.
And I actually defended my thesis and got an honors and gave it to my parents and went off to become a famous art surgeon.
So he starts describing this diet, and I go, holy cow,
that's my research project.
It's the same diet.
Yeah, it's the same diet.
And why this was so poignant was that at that time, I was 70 pounds overweight.
Despite running 30 miles a week, going to the gym one hour a day, eating what I thought was an incredibly healthy, pretty much vegetarian diet because Loma Linda is an Adventist institution.
And I had high blood pressure.
I had prediabetes.
I had arthritis. i had migraine
headaches doing baby heart transplants don't recommend it um and i was told it was genetic
because my father had much of the same stuff yeah so i'm i'm going wow so i called my parents
actually who lived in san diego san die I said, do you still have my thesis?
And they said, yeah, you know,
it's here in the shrine by the eternal flame.
And I said, send it up to me.
So I actually started my thesis on myself.
But the other thing that happened is,
let me look at those supplements.
And I said, how'd you choose these supplements?
He said, well, you know, I just, that one looked interesting and this one looked interesting and the health food store I said, how'd you choose these supplements? He said, well, you know, I just,
that one looked interesting and this one looked interesting and the health food store person said, you know, I'd try that one. And when I started looking at these supplements,
I was famous for keeping hearts alive for 48 hours in a bucket of ice water for heart transplant. And
I used a bunch of these particular compounds to protect them to preserve them
and i was putting them through the arteries and veins of the hearts and never occurred to me to
swallow the dumb things so i started swallowing a bunch of supplements and i lost 50 pounds my
first year and i lost another 20 and kept it off over 20 years now.
But the important thing is, I started patients
that I operated on on my program.
And lo and behold, their high blood pressure went away,
their diabetes went away, their arthritis went away.
And after about a year of doing this,
I was actually going into work one Friday,
looked in the mirror, and said you know i've got
this all wrong i shouldn't operate on people and then teach them how to eat i should teach them how
to eat and i probably will never have to operate on them right now that's a really dumb career
making yourself obsolete it's like yeah all my colleagues said what you're trying to put yourself out of business
which i did unfortunately um and you know it's a really dumb career move but that's what i did so
i resigned my position literally the height of my career and set up a clinic in palm springs where
i just started a research project saying look um if you'll start eating certain foods and avoiding
certain foods and go to Costco or Trader Joe's and buy some of these supplements, I want
to draw your blood every three months and insurance will pay for it, Medicare will pay
for it, and let's just see what happens.
And lo and behold, you could document how it it worked that it did work yeah who'd have
thought yeah just just switch the food that you're eating yeah just just switch the dumb food around
so this is what i want to dive into is is what foods are the ones first off that we shouldn't
eat because i've there's there's some some big surprises that i've found um and then obviously
in the book it tells the ones that we should eat but what are some of the surprises that you came
across the foods that we definitely shouldn't eat as humans?
Yeah, and that actually harks back to my research on human evolution.
Human beings are basically great apes.
And we never encountered, never ate a bean or a grain until about 10,000 years ago.
And 10,000 years ago.
And 10,000 years ago is a blink in human evolution.
And it's interesting when you actually look at skeletons from humans back then,
humans were actually very tall creatures.
The average human was about six feet tall.
And our brain size was 15% bigger than it actually is right now.
And then you can actually watch humans shrink about a foot when beans and grains were introduced.
And our brain size shrunk. And you can actually first document arthritis occurring in bones.
And so on and so forth.
And you go, gosh, that's not very good.
So I was intrigued as, well, why are these things so mischievous?
And that opened up this Pandora's box of learning about plant defense systems against being
eaten.
Right.
And believe it or not, plants do not want to be eaten.
They were not put here on earth for us to eat them.
They were here first.
And their defense system is biologic,
biochemical warfare against their predators.
And one of the things that really got me interested
were these proteins that are called lectins.
And they're sometimes called sticky proteins.
And just to capture the audience, gluten happens to be a lectin.
And it's just one of multiple lectins.
In fact, if I was going to choose an evil foe as a lectin, gluten is actually not as evil as a lot of people think.
Okay.
I'm gluten free, so I want to hear about that when we dive into it too.
Okay.
So, yeah, in all my books, it's really what I tell you not to eat that really makes the difference.
It's not what I tell you to eat.
So almost all grains have lectins.
They're primarily in the outer hall.
And so one of the things that's fascinating is we have gotten sicker and sicker the more we've introduced whole grain goodness.
For instance, 4 billion people use rice as their staple.
Rice was introduced, cultivated 8,000 years ago. Four billion people
go to the trouble of taking the hull off of brown rice to make it white before they eat it. And four
billion people can't be that stupid because everybody knows how much better brown rice is
for you than white rice. But it's not. They've taken the hall off the rice.
For years and years and years,
bread was judged by the whiteness
and only the poor people got the brown bread
and the upper class got the white bread
because the hall was being removed.
And the Italians, I mean,
the idea of really a whole a whole wheat
pasta or whole wheat pizza would just kill an italian it's like really or a whole wheat croissant
in france there's no way why would i do that why would i ruin something. So people have all, and part of my job is to study cultures and figure out, well, why did they do this?
What prompted them?
I'll give you another example.
The nightshade family.
Nightshades are primarily American plants.
Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, potatoes are all from North or South or Central America.
And they were only introduced to the rest of the world, both Asia and Europe by Columbus and what's
called Colombian trade 500 years ago. So all of these foods are modern to almost all human beings.
And even the Italians refused to eat tomatoes for 200 years
after columbus brought them back uh because they knew how deadly they were right and most you know
most italian cuisine tomatoes and peppers are peeled and de-seeded before they're used and
made into sauces because we don't do here at all. Which we don't here. Yeah, my mother, my grandmother on my mother's side was French.
And she taught my mother, you always have to peel and de-seed tomatoes.
So growing up, I actually had sliced tomatoes with no seeds or peel on them.
And when I went away to Yale, I actually had a sliced tomato with a peel and a seed.
And I thought, this is the weirdest thing I've ever seen.
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slash dial. So grains, we've got grains in there we've got beans um but we've there's some
ways around certain things so uh first off with the beans you say we can do it in a only in a
pressure cooker you can have it but they are lethal if they're taken in the wrong doses i
heard you tell stories about this so yeah there's actually very good documentations uh particularly the most
famous one happened in boston on a healthy eating day school day where uh faculty and kids in a
school were were served undercooked beans and um i think 23 of them were admitted to the hospital
with uh severe quote food poisoning and it was actually the lectins and undercooked
beans yeah they were they were kidney beans I think you said yeah kidney beans
kidney beans are by far the worst they have the highest lectin content but even
the humble lentil 7% of all the proteins in a lentil is our lectins so it's
they're they're armed and dangerous yeah but when you look at traditional cultures
that use beans uh for instance much of india and much of brazil uh which both use a lot of
legumes uh pressure cooking is standard in in how you prepare these things what's the reason why
pressure cooking is the is it works and none of the other ones do? So you have to have high pressure and high heat to break lectins.
The only lectin that's resistant to that is actually gluten.
And gluten is such a tough protein that even high pressure and high heat can't do it.
can't do it well i learned subsequently that um the adventists live uh on a mystery meat that's made out of texturized vegetable protein tvp everything's made out of tvp and it turns out
tvp is made from defatted ground-up soybean that is extruded under high pressure and high heat.
So the clever Adventists had figured out a way to detoxify soy.
It's like they knew all of this stuff and we just lost this knowledge.
We lost the knowledge of the beans.
We lost the knowledge of the tomatoes.
Is it just because we got lazy or we just wanted to get it done quicker?
Yeah, I think all of the above.
I mean, the Incas clearly ate quinoa, you know, that healthy pseudo grain.
But the Incas wouldn't eat quinoa raw.
They wouldn't cook it.
They actually fermented it first.
And they let it rot.
And then they cooked it and ate it.
And they let it rot.
And then they cooked it and ate it. And fermentation is actually a very good way of eating lectins.
In fact, many bean eating cultures soak their beans for multiple hours, multiple days.
They change the water.
And it turns out that you can actually ferment the surface of beans by doing that and
break down the lectins. So yeah, so it was really fun watching how cultures have figured this out.
Yeah. And how we just lost it. One thing I'm really curious about is the gluten because
I'll tell you the journey my girlfriend and I have been on. So my girlfriend was having eczema,
like real bad eczema. And I definitely want to hear you talk about skin. And that's super interesting to me.
She's having a real bad eczema though. And, um, she, she, you know, did a whole bunch of research,
didn't want to take any pills, any of that type of stuff. So then she, she started researching the,
the no FOD diet. She went on that for a while and noticed it started going away.
I was like, if you'll go glue, I'll go gluten-free with you. Cause I've noticed some, you know,
soreness in my back, that type of stuff. And I was like, maybe it'll help with inflammation.
Her eczema went away. She hasn't had in probably three years, I would say. Her eczema went away.
And, and so we've just been gluten-free since, and the more that we do research on it and the
way that it, you know, breaks through the, the the the lining of your gut and goes into your blood so for people that are out there that
think gluten-free is crazy um because people are always like oh but it tastes so much better if you
can have you know just bread um what is what is the the the reason why gluten does that and then
why is the skin so important to notice when there's problems inside of your gut? So we'll almost start backwards.
So the lining of your gut is literally your skin turned inside out from your mouth down
to your rear end.
And the surface of the lining of your gut is actually the same surface as a tennis court
inside of you.
And everybody looks down and go, wait a minute, come on,
there's no tennis court in there.
And it's only one cell thick.
It's, if you will, a design flaw.
I mean, I can tell you why it's one cell thick, but it's one cell thick.
And those cells are all held together.
You're probably old enough to remember Red Rover, Red Rover.
It's not allowed in
schools anymore it's really it's too dangerous of course yeah of course uh so we all locked arms and
you know two rows of kids so all the straight at them yeah you run right at them and all there was
always the big guy with his knee up and the girls would scream and you know it's great fun um so
these these cells are all locked literally arm and arm and they're called tight
junctions and hippocrates 2500 years ago you know the father of medicine said all disease begins in
the gut crazy yeah yeah and he knew he didn't have any of our tests you know the guy just knew
and he's actually right so thanks to work work by a professor who's now at Harvard, Dr. Fasano,
Dr. Fasano tried to figure out how gluten was his interest,
caused celiac disease, the extreme form of gluten intolerance,
and caused leaky gut.
And he discovered that gluten, being a lectinin if it could get to the surface of our
intestines could attach and make a compound um that would um it's called zonulin and it would
attach to another receptor and it would actually break the tight junction. It would make the arms go apart.
And there would be a gap between these cells.
And if there was a gap, then foreign proteins like lectins could leak through this gap.
Pieces of bacteria or living bacteria could get through this gap.
And on the other side of our intestines,
80% of all of our white blood cells,
all of our immune system line the lining of our gut
because that's where a potential attack
could come across the wall of our border, if you will.
And so these guys attacking these foreign proteins
created inflammation.
And everybody's, you know,
inflammation's the cause of everything.
Well, inflammation is caused by a leaky gut.
And so one of the things in my research
is that what happens is that these foreign proteins, plants are so clever, it's
mind-boggling.
Plants, we identify foreign proteins by literally reading a barcode of that protein.
And all of our immune cells literally have barcode scanners that read a protein and say,
do I know this protein
is it a good guy or is it on the no-fly zone right um and plants make these proteins lectins
resemble human proteins oh my god and so our immune system gets all revved up and they're
sent out almost like with wanted posters at the post office if you see this protein
you know kill it and shoot it down and plants have figured out that it's close enough to a
human protein that because our immune system is so wildly turned on that it will shoot to kill a protein that almost looks like what it's looking at.
And so your girlfriend's eczema was your immune system shooting at proteins in her skin that
looked like lectins, and in her case, gluten. And let me use the best example.
when 95% of us are born with an antibody to the peanut lectin.
Peanuts are beans.
They're not nuts at all.
So 95% of us carry an antibody,
and everybody now knows antibodies because of COVID.
So that's how our immune system recognizes a foreign protein.
And yet when I was growing up, nobody had a peanut allergy.
Kids were bringing peanuts to school, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and nobody was carrying EpiPens to school.
Now, of course, we have massive amounts of peanut allergies.
My nephew has peanut allergy.
Yeah.
And you go, well, wait a minute.
50 years ago, nobody had a peanut allergy. What happened? Well, back in the good old days, our gut microbiome, the bugs in our gut, literally taught our immune system, hey, you know, yeah, I know you guys are looking for this guy, but just cool it.
nobody had leaky gut for the most part.
So our immune system wasn't hyperactivated. But now, thanks to tons of antibiotics,
thanks to whole grain goodness,
we all have leaky gut.
And so our immune system is hyper on alert.
And now they see this kind of innocent peanut lectin
and they go, oh my gosh, you know,
I've got an antibody to that.
I'm going to shoot it down.
Wow.
Yeah.
And so is glyphosate a part of that as well?
Oh yeah. That's the other thing. I was on a podcast with a millennial recently
and millennials are often described as the first lazy generation. And it's interesting that millennials are actually the first generation
that has been totally exposed from day one to glyphosate in our food uh never been without it
and glyphosate's in roundup and the interesting thing about glyphosate is it's really good at
destroying our gut microbiome it's um it was patented by
monsanto yeah not as a weed killer but as an antibiotic yeah you want to hear something
crazy around that my grandfather uh worked for monsanto in it would have been i guess the 60s
and uh developed a not to go too deep into, but developed stomach cancer from working at Monsanto.
Long story short, was in so much pain,
became an alcoholic, ended up killing himself.
But interestingly enough, in killing yourself,
you're not supposed to get any insurance money.
Monsanto paid the insurance money to keep him quiet.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So that tells you a
little bit about what was going on being in the in the 60s in those uh you know in the inside the uh
but yeah it's interesting you know there's there's numerous books written about what they knew
and when they knew it right and um it's they knew that it killed bacteria because bacteria use what's called the shikimate pathway.
I love that word, shikimate.
It sounds like a great swear word.
But the shikimate pathway is how plants live, produce energy, if you will.
And bacteria use the shikimate pathway as well.
Humans don't use the shikimate pathway as well. Humans don't use the shikimate pathway.
And so Monsanto said, don't worry.
You can eat glyphosate by the bucket full and it won't kill you because you don't use the shikimate pathway.
What they didn't say is, oh, by the way, it's going to kill all your bacteria and your gut microbiome.
by the way, is going to kill all your bacteria and your gut microbiome. And now there's recent evidence that glyphosate in and of itself causes leaky gut without having any effect on the gut
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30th. Terms and conditions do apply. And so we're talking a lot about the gut and you always say
that all disease starts in the gut. And before we started doing research, my girlfriend, I never
heard anything about the gut except for like, go with your gut feeling. That was it, right?
But you have some extremely interesting
stuff about why it's so important how it actually changes the way that you feel the way that you
think and everything about you so yeah tell us tell us about the gut and all of all of the
goodness that you have for that well so we used to women uh understand gut feeling much better than men or trust your gut and now we've known for a number of years
that there are nerves that go between the gut and the brain and likewise recent research shows that
for every fiber nerve fiber coming down from the brain to the gut there are actually nine nerve
nerve fibers going from the gut up to the brain there are actually nine nerve fibers going from the
gut up to the brain.
So far more information is actually going up rather than down.
Then there were a bunch of neurohormones that were discovered that seemed to be coming from
the gut, and we presume that there were tissues, neurons that were making this in the gut. And then the most recent advance is,
no, no, no, all these compounds like serotonin,
for instance, that makes you feel good,
were actually being manufactured
by the gut microbiome themselves.
Isn't the majority of your serotonin
actually manufactured in your gut?
Yeah, yeah, it's all coming from the gut
and it's all mostly coming from your gut microbiome. And then as I talk about in the energy paradox,
the new exciting research is that there's a whole class of compounds
that are called postbiotics,
which is a literal language between the gut microbiome
and our energy-producing organelles,
the mitochondria, and our brain that literally tells you,
if you will, how to feel, how much energy to make.
I'll give you an example.
Just yesterday I saw a woman who had some pretty awful autoimmune disease
called Crohn's disease, is um leaky gut at its
finest and she had been to multiple physicians had been placed on multiple medications was
miserable and she was profoundly depressed um and we got her off of all of her medications and she came to see me she's 50 now and we were
talking yesterday literally and she says you know the biggest thing that has happened to me
that just blows my mind and blows my psychiatrist mind is i am no longer depressed she said i am so happy and she said i fired my psychiatrist i you know i
don't need him i don't need the pills and it was all because of you know you and teaching me how to
get my gut working again and so she doesn't have crohn's and she's not depressed and it's like
wow you know you don't need any of these medications.
You just have to avoid a few foods.
Yeah.
So tell me about,
because the thing that's really interesting about it,
and people don't realize how important it is,
is I've heard you talk about the fecal transplants
to go from one person to another that might be,
I've heard you talk about rats doing it,
or you take a depressed fecal matter and put it into a normal rat. I've heard you talk about rats doing it, you take a depressed fecal matter
and put it into a normal rat.
I've heard you talk about someone who's extremely healthy
and getting fecal transplant from someone who's not healthy.
So, and how it actually changes their body physically
by having a fecal transplant.
Yeah, the most famous human story
was a female marathon runner in England
who because of some antibiotic overdose,
if you will, developed really a life-threatening infection called C. difficile. And a lot of people
have heard about it. And C. difficile, primarily, we now treat it, if it's severe, with a fecal transplant from a healthy donor.
And as I talk about in other books, we share a lot of our microbiome with family members.
The closer you are to a family member or that you're living in a house, you share a lot of your microbiome.
And friends share microbiomes.
Really? We've talked about that in in other books so anyhow they took they found a niece of this woman who was a was a
good match and except she was 30 pounds overweight and so got the fecal transplant from the overweight
niece and went back she was cured went, went back to life, went back
to running. But over the course of the next year, she gained 30 pounds. She didn't change the way
she ate. She didn't change her activity. It was just that she had been given a new set of bacteria
that changed how, excuse me, she harvested food and actually made her actually eat more for that bunch of
bacteria. There's a new paper out this morning on the same sort of subject. You can breed mice
to develop high blood pressure. And you can feed mice with a high blood pressure inducing diet
that makes bacteria that make you have high blood pressure but they found that intermittent fasting
time restricted eating which is actually a big part of this new book the energy paradox
if they put high blood pressure mice on time-restricted eating,
intermittent fasting, then they would become normal intensive.
Their blood pressure would go back to normal.
And they go, gee, I mean, just, they didn't change the amount of food,
just the timing of food.
And they went, wow, how come that's happening?
Lo and behold, changing the timing of the food in these mice
changed their microbiome from a microbiome that induced high blood pressure
to a microbiome that cured high blood pressure.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
Yeah, it's crazy.
And I see this again.
I started seeing this years ago.
It's like, wait a minute, these people had high blood pressure
and they don't have high blood pressure anymore.
What happened?
It was really funny.
Early on, people would call and say, you know, I'm pretty dizzy.
You know, what supplement are you giving me that's making me dizzy?
And my nurse and I would look at each other and, no, this isn't,
there's nothing in there, so I'm making you dizzy.
And we'd have them come into the clinic, and sure enough,
their blood pressure was pretty low.
So we'd cut their blood pressure pill in half and say, okay, you know,
that'll take care of it.
And then they'd call a few weeks later and say, boy, I'm really dizzy again.
You know, well, come on in here, and their blood pressure's low.
Well, shoot, let's just, you know, throw these blood pressure pills away.
And that's kind of like how all this starts.
Like,
wow,
food has that much power.
Yeah,
for sure.
And so what does it have to do with,
with,
cause I'm super interested how you can take fecal matter from somebody and put
into someone else and change.
But you've also,
there's also been studies on rats that were considered,
I guess,
depressed rats in the way that they act in the way that they were and taking their
fecal matter and putting into a normal rat and it changes correct the normal rat that had normal
energy and everything as well yeah the rat becomes anxious won't you know go looking for food
we now know that these as much as we hate to admit it these little single cell organisms have profound
effect on really our entire functioning they're in charge they are literally in charge um
i always like to say this and my my staff hates me to say it. Jack LaLanne, who I think is really the godfather of fitness, who lived to 96.
Jack LaLanne, most people know him from the Jack LaLanne juicer.
But Jack LaLanne always had an expression that if it tastes good, spit it out.
And my staff said, no, don't say that.
You have good tasting food. But he, don't say that. You know, you have good tasting food,
but he wasn't really saying that.
What he was saying is you really should be eating
for your microbiome,
and he didn't even know about the microbiome back then,
but you should be eating for them,
and if you eat for them, they'll take care of you,
and that's my research in longevity shows that.
Other people research in longevity shows that.
The more we take care of our microbiome, the more we give what I call the gut buddies what they need to eat, what they want to eat.
They make these compounds called postbiotics that control everything that's going to happen to us,
even control our lifespan,
which is, I mean, really fun and exciting.
Yeah.
And what's interesting about it,
are you familiar with,
have you ever heard of,
I'm trying to remember his name.
Anyways, I can't remember what it is.
He wrote The Biology of Belief.
Oh, yeah.
I want to say Greg Braden, but Greg Braden's his friend.
But anyways, Bruce Lipton.
Yeah, Bruce Lipton.
Bruce Lipton says, when you look at yourself in the mirror,
you're not like when I see myself in the mirror,
I'm not seeing Rob, I'm seeing a collection of 70 trillion cells.
And I've heard you talk about that literally majority of us
and our genes are not actually human genes at all.
Correct.
Or human cells.
Yeah, about 90% of all the cells that make us up are non-human.
But the fascinating thing is that 99% of all the genomic material in us, genes non-human genes so we yeah we're yeah we're
nothing we have one percent say in all of this and you know that's in a way scary but the really
exciting thing is with with every year we learn you know what these guys want why we want to give them what they want and if we do
that then you know all these all these things that we assume are part of getting older go away
there was a nature study that i published or i cited in the longevity paradox uh in 2018 so a fairly recent
study that looked at the influence of genes and uh our microbiome on our fate and it turns out that
human genes have only a eight percent maximum influence on what's going to happen to us.
And so, you know, 92% of what's going to happen to us is actually non-genetic.
And you can, you know, you can literally pretty much wipe out any of that genetic
determinant by choosing what to eat yeah and
choosing how to buy it it's the environment that's created that's another thing that
that bruce lipton talks about is that you know he was he was seen as crazy in the 70s because
he was saying it's not the genes that matter when everyone's saying the genes matter he's
saying it's the environment because you can take a human cell and make an ear you can take a human
cell make a nose or something completely different and what he says it's the environment because you can take a human cell and make an ear you can take a human cell make a nose or something completely different and when he says it's
the environment that that actually matters more than the genes that matter right yeah yeah
epigenetics is really what happens i mean for instance i mean we we have fewer genes than a
corn plant and there's fewer genes and we hopefully are a little more complex than a corn plant. Really? Yeah, there's fewer genes. And we hopefully are a little more complex than a corn plant.
We have actually, and so everybody says, well, then we have the most genes of any animal.
And it turns out that's not even true.
The sand flea has more genes than we do.
So next time you're walking on the beach and one of those little guys.
Yeah.
Yeah, so far
more genes than we have well so i think we're like the most advanced and the biggest but we're
not even close yeah not even close yeah um so so talk to me about about meat because one thing i
really actually i was when i was researching yesterday i was watching you talk about organic
free-range chicken and um i text my girlfriend literally took a video of it, sent a video to my girlfriend,
texted to her because she's got a soy allergy.
And we don't eat a whole lot of meat.
We eat a little bit of meat.
But when we get it, we try to get what we thought was the healthiest.
And people listening to the podcast can't see my fingers do the quotations, right?
But when you talk about organic free range chicken, you're talking about they're given
soybeans.
That was the first thing that popped in my head. I'm like, oh my gosh,
she's ingesting organic free-range chicken. They're having soybeans. She has pretty bad
allergies. Eczema is gone, but the allergies are still there. I was like, it actually might be from
that. But talk to me about that, the meat industry, but also the organic free-range chicken.
Because for me, that was super eye-opening. And I got to go back to Austin and research who has you know the better meat in the area well you got to look at my podcast on the dr gunnery
podcast where we had farmer dan from texas yeah who is nowured chickens um lectin free food and he's uh it's fabulous i
can tell you so you live right around the corner from farmer dan do you know where in texas he is
i've forgotten the name but it's a big state yeah yeah it's a big state but yeah but and now
his whole business is lectin free chickens well um anyhow so you are what you eat but you are what the thing you're eating ate and what
really surprised me and maybe and it shouldn't have is years ago um well in 2007, the Congress passed a law determining what an organic free-range chicken is.
And you can label a chicken organic free-range as you can keep it in a warehouse for its entire life with 100,000 other chickens.
As long as you open a door to the outside that has a three-yard three yard patch of grass one yard by three yard
one door nine feet by nine feet and it literally is a hundred thousand chickens a hundred thousand
chickens you can have a hundred thousand chickens wow and as long as you open that door for five
minutes every 24 hours and the chickens have the potential they go outside they don't have to leave wow then you can
legally label them organic free range crazy now it gets even better if the and most of these
chickens are fed organic corn and organic soybeans double in price, you can legally feed them conventional corn and soybeans and still label it organic because you meant well.
Because you meant well.
Correct.
Oh, that's nice yes and it's technically illegal to
give antibiotics to chickens anymore but there's a loophole of course there is if the veterinarian
who is employed by the major food corporation on site believes that there is a sick chicken in that a hundred thousand
flock of chickens then you can dose the entire flock rather than wading through the hundred
thousand chickens to find the sick chicken and it's perfectly legal to give them antibiotics
and so so getting back to your question so you are what you eat, but you are what the thing you're eating ain't.
I had a woman here from LA who's actually a psychiatrist who had horrible lupus, skin rashes, the whole bit.
And on double drug therapy, she was miserable.
Long story short, we got her off of all
her drugs her her skin rashes cleared up and she was in the office one day and she said you know
i'm really happy i'm off on all my drugs the rashes are gone but i've got this little bit of
eczema on the top of my eyelids right where my eyelashes are. She said, that's, that's all I've got. And she said, what do you think that's from?
So we're going through, you know,
what she's eating and she got to organic free range chicken.
And I said, so not pastured chicken. And she said, no organic free range.
And I said, well, they're being fed corn and soybeans. I said, tell you what?
And she said, well, I eat a lot corn and soybeans. I said, tell you what. And she said, well, I eat a lot of it.
And I said, tell you what, let's just eliminate that.
Just stop eating that.
Call me back.
Change nothing else but that.
Nothing else but that.
Let's just look at one thing.
A month later, she called.
She said, yeah, that was it.
Eczema's gone.
It was the organic free-range chicken.
Wow.
And I went, wow.
And I said, well, of course, it makes so much sense because these proteins, which are foreign people who are sensitive to gluten react to corn in the exact same way.
70%.
Really?
And that's one of the reasons why gluten-free diets, as they're construed now, in general don't work for celiac disease.
for celiac disease, 70% of people with celiac, which is the extreme form of gluten intolerance,
still have celiac by biopsy a year and a half later
of being on a gluten-free diet,
because most of the foods that are gluten-free
are full of lectins, for instance, corn,
or quinoa, or buckwheat, and that's what they're eating.
Wow.
So just to go back, because I want to talk about, I just want to, for anyone who happened
to miss it, and if you were to put all that together, an organic free range chicken can
be inside of a warehouse with 100,000 other ones.
They have a opportunity to leave for five minutes.
They don't even actually ever have to leave.
They're given corn, which we can talk about as well. I've heard you say it was outlawed in france uh at one point in time soybeans which
uh you know many people are there to soy as well they're not supposed to have oh and if the price
of organic soybeans and corn happens to be priced twice the price of conventional which i hate the
word conventional i think they should call it gmo like and then they should switch the name of it so it should be corn plus all that
conventional uh corn and soybeans has been sprayed with roundup oh perfect which is glad for saying
they have all that so so if the price is is double they can give them non-organic non-organic
which they call conventional uh because they meant well And if they think that there happens to be one sick chicken in 100,000, they can give all of them antibiotics, which we all know antibiotics make them fat and huge and grow faster.
Correct.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
And that was actually passed into law in 2007.
It was introduced by a congressman from georgia from a chicken farming
of course what a surprise wow so um i'm trying to process all that the fact that that's possible
so when you say pasture raising you mentioned that with the lady so is pasture raise okay
so you gotta know your farmer is there other loopholes there you gotta know your farmer. Or is there other loopholes? Yeah, you've got to know your farmer. And I'll tell you an interesting story about that.
We have a big fan of our program who really changed her life around, got rid of some really
awful arthritis issues, a young woman.
And then she, unbeknownst to any of us, she's not a patient, but she's a big fan, and I talked to her.
Unbeknownst to us, she went on a, well, I'll just say it, a carnivore diet.
And the more carnivore diet she did, the more sick she got.
Her arthritis came back. Her migraines came back, and she
was getting grass-fed beef and pasture poultry from this farmer.
And so she said, you know, I'm doing everything right, it's grass-fed, it's pasture poultry,
and we did a bunch, she finally, she was posting that, you know, my diet had failed her, blah, blah, blah.
And so we reached out to her and learned that she actually wasn't following my program and said, well, this is interesting.
So let us, you know, let us do a lot of, you know, blood tests on you.
Look at leaky gut, look at what you're sensitive to.
And come to find out she's got wide open leaky gut again and
she's sensitive to corn and um so i said you need to talk to your farmer and i said farmers
even if they're pastured will supplement their food with you you know, a feed. And you need to find out what's in this feed.
And so she did.
And she actually called me back.
She says, oh my gosh, my farmer was killing me.
He was feeding his chickens corn and soybeans and other grains.
He was feeding his cows corn and soybeans, even though they were on pasture.
And I said, okay, well, you know, that's good news.
Stop eating this stuff.
Call me back.
And she called me back in three days.
She said, you're not going to believe this, but my pain is 70% less than it was three
days ago.
Wow.
Just, she said, my farmer was killing me and I trusted him.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
So how do, do allergies have a big part of this as well?
How people's allergies react to that?
So allergies, so we used to do food allergy testing in our office and I was never impressed
because allergies work on an immunoglobulin system called IgE.
And when we finally switched over to looking at food sensitivities by using IgG and IgA,
and we won't go into the technicalities, and started believing those results, it made
all the difference in the world.
And I recently had a stanford standard professor
on the dr gunry podcast talking about her book the end of allergies and she and i both agree
that allergies and food sensitivities can be completely eliminated by knowing what you're sensitive to finding out how leaky your gut is
and then stopping that leaky gut and your immune system literally relearns a year ago i gave a
paper pre right as covet hit at the american Heart Association Lifestyle and Epidemiology meeting,
where we took 10 people with severe leaky gut.
They actually all had celiac disease,
put them on our program for a year
and looked at all their food sensitivities,
including to gluten.
And at the end of the year, nine out of 10 of them,
all of them sealed their leaky gut.
Nine out of 10 of them had actually lost all memory,
all immunoglobulin memory that they didn't like gluten and completely gone.
Now, does that mean we can reintroduce gluten um i don't know uh i don't
want to make that leap of faith but when we look at food sensitivities and once the leaky gut is
sealed then we can reintroduce things i have a gentleman here in la who developed a severe autoimmune disease, severe pain from his leaky
gut. We pretty much got his leaky gut sealed now, got him off of all of his mischievous compounds.
And initially he was sensitive to both egg white and egg yolk. And we took those away.
both egg white and egg yolk.
And we took those away.
We retested him about nine months into it because he loves omelets.
And he was still sensitive to egg yolk,
but he was no longer sensitive to egg white.
So we introduced egg white omelets,
which made him a happy guy.
And I just talked to him on the phone a couple of weeks ago.
And he says, I gotta be honest with you.
I've reintroduced duck eggs, including the yolk, and I'm not reacting.
So he says, I'm a happy guy.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
So I used to have horrible allergies as a kid and in college.
And I got allergy shots.
And I had hay fever and the whole bit.
I don't have any allergies anymore.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
So I've retrained
i've told my immune system to stand down i've told my my gut microbiome has educated my immune
system said hey we got your back you know go go have a donut and a cigarette and you know just
relax i'm sure that's what you're doing on your days off donuts and
cigarettes um tell me about your your new book i know we're short on time but tell me about your
new book the energy paradox because uh that just came out uh last month yeah yeah last month um so
i i really had no intention of writing the energy paradox but i was i was driving into la actually orange county to do a pbs uh fundraising uh
segment and uh i got a call on the phone saying that the person who was going to do the segment
with me wasn't going to come in today um because she just didn't have it in her um and and this
is was a millennial yeah and i'm going well are we going to do? They said well that's alright
somebody else will take her place
and blah blah blah and we got
through it but that kept
resonating with me for several days
how can a millennial
not have it in them
come into the studio
and so I realized
that when I first started my new
practice in restorative medicine
that well over 50 of the diagnoses codes that we use the icd-9 code was fatigue and malaise
and looking back i realized oh my gosh you know all these people presented with being tired, with being exhausted.
And part and parcel, that all went away.
So I said, geez, you know, I've been an energy doctor for the last 20 years and I should
find out why this program has been so effective in restoring people's energy.
So the book holds people by the hand and it takes shows them some nerdy stuff
about how energy is made but then shows people how to get their energy back the the other thing
that's striking is brain fog in this country is just rampant for sure and you know it was it's
one thing to say well you're 80 years old and you don't remember things you used to.
But again, when a millennial can't remember, can't, you know, leaves their keys someplace, you go, what the, you know, that can't be good.
And it can't be good. We're seeing this huge amount of what I call neuroinflammation, which if you have a leaky gut, I can pretty much guarantee you,
you have a leaky brain.
And we can actually measure that.
We can measure neuroinflammation.
And it's no wonder that our brains don't work well.
There's a war going on inside of our brain as well.
Wow.
And we have an entire set of immune cells in our brain that basically are our neurons
bodyguards, if you will.
And these guys actually, if they suspect that mischief is afoot down in the gut, they literally
form circles around neurons and cut off their communication to each other to literally protect
them wow yeah and so we can actually measure this now and we go whoa no wonder you you know
your brain doesn't work right and the really exciting thing is you can measure that coming
back you can watch the neural inflammation going away wow that's incredible man i feel like we
could go for another few hours i have so many so many questions i could ask i'll have to have you back at some point yeah so um before i ask
the last question how can people find you um books and also on the internet as well in podcast world
yeah so the dr gundry podcast wherever you get your podcasts um the dr gundry.com, you can find me. Gundrymd.com is my supplemented food company.
And got two YouTube channels, Instagram.
If you can't find me, I'm doing something wrong.
They're everywhere.
How's that?
The books, everywhere books are sold.
Amazon, Barnes & Noble.
Please, please, please go to your local bookseller.
It's a bestselling book.
They'll have it.
The booksellers, your local stores have been devastated by COVID and we need to give them
all the help we can get.
For sure.
So last question I have for you, a little bit of a shift, but you went from, you know,
heart surgeon, you know, working in the
actual surgeries themselves to now educating people, making yourself obsolete, but obviously
building a career doing it. You know, they say that, that there's two times when you die. The
first one is when you stop breathing. The second time is the last time someone says your name.
So in between that time, what do you think people, what do you hope that people think
and say about you between the the first death and the the last death um well i i guess i think the most important thing
i can tell people is and i tell them this in their own health it is never too late it's never too late
to make a difference uh it's never too late to make a change in a mission or career choice.
I mean, never.
And the other thing I would tell anyone is never retire.
Retirement is, unless you use your retirement for a new interest and pour yourself into that.
In my patient population, retirement, uh, is a death spiral. It literally starts a death spiral and, uh, never ever retire. I'm now in my seventies.
I work seven days a week and literally six days a week, seeing patients one day a week at Gundry MD
and never ever retire but
you seem like you love it and I got more energy than I ever have Dr. Stephen Gundry I appreciate
you for being here hey thanks for having me I appreciate it thanks