Live Like a Girl with Dr. Mindy Pelz - The New Rules of Exercise for Menopause with Dr. Stacy Sims (Re-Release)
Episode Date: December 8, 2025Women in midlife are being told everywhere to "lift heavy," "stop doing cardio," and "hack your hormones" for better metabolic health. But what is actually TRUE for the menopausal body? In this timely... re-release, I'm bringing back one of the most important and misunderstood conversations I've ever had — with exercise physiologist and researcher Dr. Stacy Sims. If you've been confused about how to work out in your 40s, 50s, 60s and beyond, this episode will give you clarity, confidence, and a science-backed plan to finally feel strong in your body again. Stacy and I walk through strength training, sprint intervals, "soul food" cardio, injury prevention, brain health, protein and carb timing, plant-based vs omnivore nutrition, creatine, and how to combine fasting with training in a safe and supportive way. And if you've ever wondered whether Stacy and I actually disagree about fasting — this episode will give you the nuance that short-form content never allows. To view full show notes, resources mentioned, discount codes, transcripts, and more, visit https://drmindypelz.com/ep317/ Check out our community membership at https://resetacademy.drmindypelz.com Please note our medical disclaimer.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
On this episode of The Resetter podcast, I am actually reissuing an old interview that I did a few years back with Dr. Stacey Sims.
Now, let me tell you why I'm reissuing this, because it keeps coming up.
And what is the messaging that you all are receiving from Stacey Sims?
If you are a menopausal or postmenopausal woman is you should not fast.
And there's a lot of nuance for you to know.
and I want you to hear it directly from a conversation that Stacey and I had.
And before I bring you that conversation, I want to bring up a couple of key points.
And I like Stacey.
We had a great conversation.
It's funny how everybody wants to pit us against each other,
but we actually had more in common than we had separate.
So the first thing that I want to say is the most important blood marker for any woman's hormonal health
is hemoglobin A1C.
However you get your hemoglobin A1C down is incredibly important.
I find that it's through fasting and eating good quality food
and learning how to metabolically switch from your sugar burner to fat burner system.
That will get that hemoglobin A1C down the quickest.
Okay, second thing is you're going to hear a lot about timing of food.
You control your fasting and eating window.
If you listen to this and you're like, wait, I do better before I work out if I eat, then eat before you work out.
I think that's phenomenal.
But if you want to benefit from ketones and autophagy and resetting your gut and resetting your dopamine system and if you want accelerated weight loss, fasting is the most proficient tool at doing that free tool.
So understand that Dr. Stacey Sims is an expert in not just female physiology, but for endurance athletes.
That is her slant.
Is how do we prepare the woman who's going to work out and maybe do an intense weightlifting
session in the gym or is training for a century bike ride, which is her passion, that there
may be different rules for that woman.
than the rules that I'm teaching you because the lens in which I'm looking at this is through
the lay person, the woman who really wants to lose weight, menopause just totally stuck her
in a poor weight gain moment and she's trying to get out of that. That's the lens I'm looking at
whereas Stacy's looking at the lens of the endurance athlete. So you get to choose when you're listening
to this interview how you see that. Okay, third thing is that you're, you're, you're
You'll notice in this interview that Stacey has a protein rich coffee.
It even became a thing on socials.
I saw that a bunch of people were showing her coffee.
You could do a protein rich coffee before a workout and stay in ketosis going into that workout,
but you may have kicked yourself out of autophagy.
There are lots of different ways to do your fasting window.
I've talked about them at nauseam on my podcast and on my live.
But pay attention when we talk about the coffee because some of you are going to like that option.
And the last thing I'll tell you is ultimately you decide the course of your health.
I am very clear that fasting is amazing for menopausal women.
I have a lot of nuance on that.
I've written a whole book on it for the post menopausal woman that's coming out on December 16th.
It's called Age Like a Girl.
So if you want to know how to use fasting and ketones to improve mental clarity, to build confidence, to get more energy, please dive into that book.
And also know that there may be some things that will be helpful for you that Stacey says about building muscle and being an endurance athlete.
All these things could be true at the same time.
It's not an and or or and ultimately the person that chooses your health is you.
So as you're listening to this, sit with it and decide what feels right for you.
I'm not teaching you to believe everything I'm saying.
I don't think Stacey's teaching you to believe everything.
You're saying we're both bringing an opinion and now you get to decide and you get to try it out for you.
And I think that is the most important thing that either of us could say.
So here you go.
Here was my interview with Dr. Stacey.
about fasting, menopause, and exercise.
Welcome to my online home.
I'm so happy to have you here.
And I'm so excited for this conversation.
So thank you, Stacey.
I'm so happy you're here.
I'm excited.
Yeah.
Great conversations.
I mean, think about it.
How many great conversations have women had in the bathroom,
waiting in the bathroom,
or when everybody's in the stall together?
So great conversations can be had, you know, pretty much.
anywhere. So no worries on that. Here's where there's a lot to unpack. And I want to start with
this idea. And it's such, it's so in the zeitgeist right now that women are supposed to be,
going through menopause are supposed to be leaning into more strength training. So what I would
love to do is start off with like, if you were talking to a 50 year old woman who's maybe at the
tail end of perimenopause, starting to go into those post-menopausal years. She's been through it all,
the whole transitional experience. What would you tell her about working out? What are some of like
the tried and true principles that she needs to know about her 50-year-old body?
That it is not what her 48-year-old body was. Ooh, that's good. And I mean, we go through all,
I feel like perimenopods every six months is different.
Like your body changes rapidly, right?
So when you get to that tail end of it and you're starting to come out the other side,
it's completely different than what you've just experienced,
which is completely different from what your body was when you're like in your 30s.
So when looking at someone who's 50 in the tail end of perimenopies,
I always pull out the big rocks.
I'm like, okay.
So the three big rocks I always look at is sleep.
sleep quality because that's super important. We don't get any kind of metabolic or psychological
or any kind of health control unless we have really good sound sleep. Then we look at physical
and mental movement and that's where strength training comes in. And then the third one is the big
rock of nutrition. So if we're looking at those and we're looking at sleep, part of sleep is
circadian rhythm, right? So we need to look at if we're exercising, if we're eating and how
we're working our circadian rhythm. If the big rock of exercise for postmenopause and late
paramedipause is strength training, we have to really look at that. Like, okay, what time of day
we're going to do that? We want to have it work with how you feel, right? Some people feel
fantastic when they first wake up. Yeah, that's great. But if you're someone who gets more energy and
motivation as the day goes on, well, maybe you want to try to fit in your 20 to 30 minutes later in the
day. So we have to really look at how does your life work. And then, of course, you have
all your other commitments over it. So if you're a night person and the only time you have to
work out is in the morning, then we have to work with that too. But it's really trying to find that.
And understanding that strength training isn't something that you're just going to do a six-week
block of and then be great at it. Right. So I have to get people to understand that.
If you don't have a history of strength training, I'm not going to throw you in the gym and tell you to
do deadlifts right away.
Like, I'm not going to put you in a three, five, five. We want to phase you in. And that phase in could be up to six months of doing higher rep, lower weight, body weight movement, that kind of stuff. So you understand where your limitations are. If one side's weaker or the other, what your range of mobility is, what your confidence is. And we slowly build load over time. Because I get women saying, well, I don't know how to lift. It's too much. And I'm going to get injured. No, that's not worried about. We're looking at, are you going to be lifting when you're 80?
because that's my goal. I want everyone, every woman to have some strength training when they're 80, 90 onwards.
So we have to look right now. If you have a long training history, sweet. Let's go in the gym.
We're going to do some cluster sets. We're going to set it all up. So we're going to lift heavier loads and really get into that central nervous system response.
But if you've never done any of that, then maybe we start with three times a week body weight stuff.
And then we add load with backpack. And then we look at using some kettlebells. And we slowly build.
as people get more and more confident.
But I think the critical point here is we've all grown up with the strength training is bad
because it gets you bulky.
And, you know, you want to do calories in calories out.
How much cardio can you do?
And I really want to try to get women to change that narrative and understand this strength
training isn't just an exercise.
It's a way of life.
Because if we're thinking about lifting loads, growth, being independent as we get older,
we have to challenge our muscles, specifically our central nervous system for that motor pattern.
Because when we're getting into that perimenopause, postmenopause, we're not looking at doing
the higher reps to build muscle for muscle, quote, hypertrophy. Because we don't have the impetus really
for that. What we want is central nervous system. Because if we're looking earlier days when we had lots
of estrogen, then we had an impetus for really strong muscle contractions, really fast muscle
contractions for speed and power. And we also had an impetus for building lean mass because estrogen
is tied to all of those factors. When we lose it, we need to find that external stress that's
going to create that same invitation. And that's through the central nervous system. So if we're looking
at lifting heavy loads that we're failing by the fifth rep or we're failing by the sixth
threat, then we're really instigating central nervous system to say, hey, wait, I need to have
more nerve patterns and nerve conduction to be able to stimulate these muscle fibers and to actually
create more muscle fibers to lift this load. So we're taking estrogen out of the equation,
and we're creating a new response to get that strength and build that mass. So that's how we look at it.
we're building to be able to be independent when we're 80, 90, 100.
I love that.
I love that thought.
I always tell people that literally every day I think about my 90-year-old self.
And I'm like, okay, what do I need to do today to make sure that my 90-year-old self is who I want, you know, is the woman I want her to be?
So I love that.
Look at it.
Look at it through the lens of functionality.
So, okay.
So I have two questions.
on what you said. One is, if we look at the patterns of testosterone, from what I can tell,
is that, and it may be more nuanced for the menopausal woman, so this is why I want to bring
this up, is that the biggest increase in testosterone happens in the morning. So is that,
is that accurate? And if you would, if a postmenopausal woman gets more testosterone in the
morning, wouldn't that be a better time to actually do strength training? Well, testosterone,
like all the other sex hormones is it has its own pulse. So we'll have a boost in the morning
kind of try to counter cortisol. But if you are doing strength training, you get a boost after
strength training. If you do true sprint interval training and we hear this rhetoric about how
menopausal and perimenopausal women shouldn't do high intensity work, it's because a carry-through
isn't there. If you're doing it properly, then you have a boost of testosterone and growth hormone
after that exercise.
Because we have to look at exercise in itself as a stress
and your body responds to that stress
in particular ways to overcome it
so that it gets stronger and fitter
and can do it again.
When we get into pari and postmenopause
and we don't have all the pulse signaling from estrogen
and at some points, progesterone,
lutenizing hormone,
it tends to look at what are my available sex hormones
and what are my available steroids?
hormone. So it's like, okay, yeah, we need testosterone because it helps counter that exercise
stress. It helps drop cortisol. We need growth hormone because we've just broken down all of this
tissue. So we need to stimulate that tissue to repair. And testosterone and growth hormone kind of go
hand in hand. So we're looking at the pulse of these hormones. It's not just we see that it peaks in the
morning and then kind of wanes off and then peaks again. There's ways of increasing the pulse
of those hormones depending on what you're doing.
So that's why, like, when we started this conversation,
it's like understanding the woman and where she has the most energy,
so we can maximize those different pulses.
A lot of women think that when they go to the gym,
they have to come out feeling smashed.
A lot of times if you are doing the strength training properly,
and you're not doing a metabolic stress of 10 to 12 reps,
but you're actually staying on the lower power end.
Because it's a central nervous system response,
you come out feeling really good and relaxed
because you get that growth hormone, that testosterone,
and a subsequent parisendic response.
So you don't come out feeling smashed.
You come out feeling like, yeah, I feel worked,
but I feel really good.
And that's where we find, like, low energy.
This is a way of increasing that energy
and feeling like, yeah, it's more,
because it's the brain effect.
right? So you're like waking up the brain from that system. So you do a heavy load. And then you're like,
I have clarity. I can do something else. So, okay, so did I just hear then I'm 54? There would be no need for me to
ever do a 10 to 12 rep set with my weights. I should always do the heaviest I can possibly lift in five or
six reps. Yeah, but we have to periodize that too. So when we're looking at what's the best like optimal range
for you know, so you're 54.
You want to have the base of it in that lower rep range, right?
So you don't ever want to go over eight.
What I try to get people to understand now,
because looking at something like one repetition maximum is too hard to figure out.
And your one rep max changes depending on how strong you feel.
So I say, okay, you want to go in and you want to look at doing your weights with two reps
in reserve. So that means you do enough of a load so that you could possibly eke out two more
reps at the end with good form. That's it. So, you know, that could be six reps. It could be eight
reps, but don't go over the eight. And this is how we can really load it and keep it in that
power-based range based on how you're feeling in the day and what you can do. So we look at starting
that way and then we can go into different like macro cycles micro cycles what are you doing in
the week what are you doing over four weeks how much loading are you where's your delode are we doing
five reps are we doing three by twos are we doing cluster sets there's so much you can do within the
programming there to stay in that bottom part without ever having to get into that 10 to 12 rep range
So then where does cardio fit in at all?
So I will tell you, again, through my 54-year-old post-metapausal lens, I definitely
notice the calm when I do really heavy weightlifting.
Like there is this sense of like, who somebody just gave me like a whole bunch of
pedestrian.
Is that what it feels like?
It's like a chill pill.
It feels incredible.
But then when my brain is racing, if I go.
go for a walk. I love to run. I was a competitive tennis player, so I love to go run. And it just is my mood.
It enhances my mood and brightens my brain. And I think that in the cultural conversation around
strength training, we've sort of lost, well, what does cardio look like to benefit the menopausal
woman? And for me, I've gone from running long distance to walking long distance, to hiking, to
rucking to, but there's still a different feel I get in my body when I do cardio.
So what do you recommend for cardio for menopausal women?
Yeah, so we look at polarizing your training.
So we hear all that rhetoric about the zone two stuff.
And to me, I'm like, no, when we look at the basic physiology between men and women,
women don't need to do a whole bunch of zone two to get the benefits that is purported
for zone two of increasing free fatty acid use, mitochondrial use, all that kind of stuff.
I tell women, zone two is your soul food. Like I come from an endurance background.
I'm a fireman, Xtera, bikes, everything, right? So I get a bike, I go out, I go out for hours.
I love it. That's my soul food. I get lost. I come back and feel fantastic. But that's not
optimal for this 50-year-old body, right? And it's not optimal for women who are trying to lose
abdominal adiposity, who are trying to get better insulin control, who are trying to change
body composition, we need to look at that high intensity work. The stuff that we've been pushed
away from doing, just from a cultural nuance, the way we've grown up. So when we're looking at
true sprint interval training, this is 30 seconds or less, as hard as you can possibly go,
like full on, full out. The best way I can teach someone to do that is on an assault bike.
where you're looking at arms and legs against resistance.
Like everyone hates the assault bike, but 30 seconds, you're laughing.
I was just going to say my trainer, my trainer pops me on that.
And I'm like, oh, fuck, we're doing the assault bike again.
I know.
So I make people chase meters.
I'm like, how hard can you go for 30 seconds?
And you have a couple of friends around.
Go, go, go, go, go.
And you see, and then the next one, which is three or four minutes later,
because you want three to four minutes recoveries.
You're chasing the meters.
Try to push a little bit harder.
most people are like, oh, I can do three to five or eight of those. It's like, well, we'll see.
Because usually it's like two. And they're like, I'm done. Because it's hard. That's what's
right. Right. It's hard. Yeah. So when you're doing that, you're creating an epigenetic change
within the muscle to open up more of what we call the glute four protein gates, which are
the way that carbohydrate and glucose get into the muscle cell without insulin. And it creates a
over the course of, you know, three to four weeks of doing this kind of work.
Now all of a sudden you have better insulin control because your body has said,
hey, skeletal muscle is more sensitive to carbohydrate.
We have more of these proteins that translocate to bring carbohydrate in.
We don't have to rely much on insulin.
When we look at high intensity interval training, which is just a step down from the intensity,
where the intervals are one to four minutes at 80 to 90 percent,
with variable recovery, this is more of a mitochondrial response where we're looking at increasing
the capacity of the mitochondria to use carbohydrate and use free fatty acids to reduce those
free fatty acids that are circulating that get wrapped up by the liver and stored as vicerial
fat. So this is how we're reducing the conversation of the vicerial fat in the body.
So the combination of the two is really, really important for metabolic health and body coordination.
If we're doing that long, slow stuff all of the time, it's not a hard enough exercise stress to create these adaptations that we need to have that estrogen, progesterone, and to some extent, testosterone used to do for us.
So this is why I keep to people.
We're looking for that external stress that is.
above and beyond what the body can usually, you know, understand so that it creates all these
new feedback pathways to benefit our metabolic and our psychological and all of these responses
that go to shit when we hit pari and postmenopause. Yes, they do. Yes, they do. Yeah, you know,
when you go out on your long rock or like me going for a long ride, that's our soul food, right?
because that's how we just get rid of the stress and we get that elated feeling of calmness.
And that's endemic because of our backgrounds.
But if someone hasn't been doing that, I'm not going to say, okay, now on the weekend,
let's go for a four-hour ride or three-hour ruck because that's contra indicative to what we want for the body.
Okay.
So let me sum the up then.
What I heard is there's three categories of exercise that we've talked about right now.
when you're doing strength training you want to do heavy less reps when you're doing cardio
you really want to do sprints that push you in short intervals and when you just want to
calm your mind and feed your soul i love the way you said that um that's where you're hiking
and you're walking and your riding come in and they they all are we all call them exercise
but for the post-met or the menopausal woman, they all serve a different purpose.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So where does something like yoga fit in or Pilates, you know, or anything like that?
Yeah, I put that as like you're part of the soul food because there's some people who love yoga
and love the power yoga and the feeling from it.
From Pilates, it's not pure strength training, but it's more the proper reception and the balance.
doing plios on the jump board is not true ply metrics.
So because it's not loading the bone in different metrics, but it is good.
It's a complementary aspect for core strength, functionality.
So there's definitely a time and a place for it to fit in.
But again, it shouldn't be the bread and butter of it all.
Because the other thing is brain health.
Like we talk and listen to a lot of stuff that Lisa said, we have to look at exercise
and the way that affects our brain and brain function.
So if we're looking at neural pathways,
this is where that heavy lifting comes into play
because if you're using central nervous system response,
you're creating new neural pathways.
So it's like doing Sudoku except through exercise.
If we're doing that high-intensity work,
that actually produces more BD and F
or brain neurotrophic factor than moderate intensity or low intensity.
And we're trying to increase the volume
and the tissue health of our brain.
doing both of those, then we are really benefiting our brain health, attenuating dementia,
attenuating Alzheimer's, kind of countering that amygdala change that happens with menopause
because you're creating that stress and the brain is responding to it as well.
You know, she brought, in our conversation, she and I talked about this grandmother hypothesis.
And you've heard her talk about that?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
It's really interesting.
So I'm really fast.
It's really interesting.
So I actually have, I have a team of researchers that I will ask to go like scour pub med and find me research.
So I was like, go find me stuff on this grandmother hypothesis after I talked to her.
And, you know, the way I think about things is everything in the body makes sense once you understand it.
And so in the grandmother hypothesis, there were two things that really were brought to my attention.
and one is that the postmenopausal woman was meant to go out and forage.
This is what Lisa, and Lisa explained this when I brought her on,
is actually meant to go out and forage for food to bring back to the cave
while the hunter and gatherers were out trying to get a kill.
So in that, there has to be a fitness benefit that we see in those postmenopausal years
that our body is moving towards a different type of fitness
because our brain changes so we can take care of the culture.
That's what Lisa brought to us.
But this fact that we were meant to go out and forage
and pull tubers out of the ground,
that's the part of the grandmother hypothesis,
means there must be something that our body
was meant to do differently from a fitness level.
Do you see where I'm going with this?
Yeah. Yeah. And we also look at it.
It's like when we look at the human
body itself. It was designed to move, right? It's designed to have bursts of activity and to also
go long and slow. But our society has globalized this whole sedentary aspect. And when we look
over the course of generations, it's an epigenetic change where now we're seeing things like
obesity is just a given in certain family streams because of these genetic changes. So when we're
looking at history and we're looking at how the metabolism, everything has changed, yes,
right? So we see that metabolism and everything has created this. Let's go slow and long and have
lots of endurance. Part of the grand mother hypothesis. And we look at biomechanics and we look at
when you take those hormones away. Yes, we're really good at fat burning, going along and slow.
But we don't have to be that way because we're looking at the highest and fastest growing
population in like ultra endurance are women who are 40 plus because they're naturally falling
into this go long and slow. But we lose fast twitch fibers quickly as we age both men and women.
But for women, we end up losing more because we start with less. And this is where if we
using exercise as a creation of a different type of response, lactate metabolism is really,
really important. So if we look historically, we would get lactate from sprints we'd have to do to get
away from animals or, you know, even regardless of what age. Right. Lactate. And that's really important
for brain and heart health because that's a metabolite that the brain and the heart really use.
So we look at some of the sex differences that are coming up in things like Alzheimer's. It has to do
with the plaque development and lactate metabolism. So if we're looking at doing sprint,
stuff for neuropathways and attenuating Alzheimer's. We have to also look at the fact that we
want to produce lactate to keep glial cells, the neurons working to keep the brain conversation
going. So this is where we're looking historically, yes, the grandmother hypothesis makes
sense. But as we go through what's happened from a global standpoint of sedentaryism and the more
we know about aging, we don't have to age in this sedentary fashion to create all of these health
issues that keep coming up that are such a burden on the public health system and burden on
insurance, right?
And we see it all the time.
I come back to the States.
I feel like I have everything if I sit down to watch the evening news.
I have diabetes.
I have all this stuff, right?
Because that's what's being thrown at us.
But if we step back and say, you know what?
if we understand physiology and we understand the body is very plastic. We have neuroplasticity. We have
skeletal and muscle plasticity. Let's create this adaptive changes that allow us to have better
metabolism to keep moving forward to maintain our power or speed, maintain our balance,
maintain our bone strength because we look at history to learn from it. But I don't think people
do. A lot of people are looking at history and saying, hey, this is what we have to do. This
is what's coming up. It's like, well, actually, now look at history and learn from it. And now we have
all this other evidence and information that we can apply to have better longevity and, like,
not be the burden on the public health care system. Yeah, yeah. I am so with you on that one because
this idea that as we age, we slow down and diseases kick in, A, that's a horrible life to live,
but then B, it is a burden on our health care system.
So what's interesting about this flip on the conversation that you and I are having and
many other people around menopause is that the old thought was, oh, you went through
menopause and then you just rested.
And you sat in your rocking chair, right?
And you just kick back.
That's right.
I'm like, no.
I mean, that's my mother.
My mother is 84.
That's her.
Like she doesn't have an athletic bone in her body.
And yet what I'm hearing is now we're saying the 180 degree opposite, which is you're losing
these hormones, but you can use exercise to actually make this transition smoother, bring them
back a little bit like testosterone and growth hormone.
And that is ultimately going to have a brain effect.
And so if maybe in my 30s, I was exercising to look good, in my 50s, I'm exercising to make sure
that I'm thinking properly. Right. Exactly. Because what's the thing that's been going around? You want to be
the oldest person in the weight room, not the youngest person in the assisted care. I was like, yeah,
that's right. Oh, I love that. Oh, my God. That's so good. That's good. So, okay, so then,
you know, before we go into the fasting conversation, I would say the other challenge that we're
seeing a lot in our community, I'm sure you're seeing it in yours, is that as college and goes,
down injuries become more prolific. And we're now living in a time where we're getting a lot of
new information coming out about some of the musculoscal scalital injuries, frozen shoulder being the
biggest. So is there anything a woman can do if she's listening to this? And she's like, okay,
I'm going to go to the gym. I'm going to start lifting heavy weights. And I'm going to start
sprinting up a hill. How does she make sure she doesn't injure herself? Yeah, soft tissue injuries,
big huge thing. Planner fasciitis and frozen shoulder are the two biggest issues, right? Because
they're all soft tissue tendon stuff. And we know how estrogen affects that. So one of my good friends
is Kelly Starrett and he started mobility wad stuff and now has the ready state. And he's looked a lot
into tissue health. So I've turned to him and his wife, Juliet, to understand a little bit more
about tissue health. So we're looking at a little bit of blood flow restriction through what they call
voodoo flossing. So it's a, it's kind of like a theraband, but you have the ability to wrap around
the joints of interest and do range of motion stuff with that wrapped and then remove it and do
range of motion again. And it's, it's a blood flow response that then increases the actual blood flow
to the joint. So you have better range of motion so that it reduces the friction and that cartilage
issue as well as enhances the, I guess, the responses within the tendon because now you have more blood
blood flow there. So I have women really like if you have arthritic onset of arthritis in your knees,
then we do voodoo flossing before squats or maybe we actually keep the band on as proprioception
for squats. If we're going to do sprints, we have to do a really, really good sound warm up through
mobility. So mobility becomes a key functionality. So this is your foam roller. This is you're looking at
at range of motion. It's not your static stretching. It's actually getting into the full joint and
joint capsule. So there are different techniques to really like hold the joint capsule, get more
blood flow around it to enhance the tissue health in and around the joints. And this is how we look at
avoiding soft tissue injuries. And then if you do have a tissue injury like planar fascia,
then there are specific things you can do with voodoo floss and with different types of massage
to really enhance the blood flow to those tissues. Is that like BFR bands or Katsu bands? I've
seen both of those or is Voodoo floss something different? Yeah, that's a brand name. It looks very
similar. Oh, okay. Yeah, it looks really similar. I'll go look it up. Yeah. You know, and I love that idea
because I do think if we're going to start to have a whole culture going through menopause and
strength training, we don't want to end up with a whole culture of injured women. And if it gets too many
injuries, then all of a sudden now women are like, forget it. I'm going back to the couch.
Yeah. So we, you know, that's really, it's interesting to know that there are some other
ways we can look at it. And what I also heard and what you said was,
foam rolling, stretching, warming up becomes more important in these menopausal years than perhaps
it did in our 20s and 30s. Yeah, it used to be get up off the couch, we're not the front door and go,
but now it's like, oh, 15 minutes of mobility, and then I go do my sprints, and then I come back
and do some more mobility. Yeah. So, okay, now going back to the grandmother effect, and this is
really, you and I talked about this before we started recording, I've been really, one of the things Lisa
said that has my brain really fascinated is that as women go through menopause, our brains become
less sensitive to glucose and it becomes more preferential for more receptive, I should say.
I want to be really careful with the words I use to ketones.
So, of course, my fasting brain was like, well, that's interesting.
So then there is a place for fasting in the menopausal experience because ketones can help supercharge
our brains.
And that's honestly what we see in our community.
So many women start fasting and they're like they drop weight and their brain comes back
online.
And then on the flip side of that, I've heard you talk about how it's hard on the menopausal
body because of the cortisol stimulation of fasting.
So what I'd love to chat about is, is there a middle ground here between getting our brain
some ketones and not tanking, letting cortisol get so high that it tanks all the other hormones?
Yeah.
So I come from it from like, my lane is the active woman, right?
So I know that most women are underfueled anyway.
And the way that I come from it is looking at chronological.
biology like we started the conversation. And if we look, you know, cortisol peaks a half an hour
if you wake up and then it dips and you have these pulses throughout the day. So we need to have
fuel available to kind of stimulate the hypothalamus to say, hey, you know what? There's nutrition
coming in and we can have better appetite hormone control and we can drop cortisol. What I do tell
women is that we have to go back to, quote, normal eating where you have breakfast within a
have a flower to drop that cortisol, stimulate the hypothalamus, go through the day,
eating really good quality foods, making sure you put a precedence on protein, and then you don't
eat after dinner. So you have that overnight, quote, fast, which is just normal eating.
So we're looking at that overnight fast, your body has an opportunity to repair, you're developing
some ketones. And then when we get into that whole brain health conversation, where I'm looking
at it at the new research and stuff that's coming out about Alzheimer's and dementia,
primarily, you know, lots of my friends' parents are experiencing it.
My grandparents had dementia.
So really interested.
And we're seeing this cultural right first, right?
So if we're looking at the population that's being studied right now with dementia and brain fog,
it's the women that were not challenged because they weren't allowed or they weren't
really proficient to go out and become doctors and lawyers and neurodural.
neuroscientists and all the kind of brain stem jobs that are available now.
And they were not encouraged to exercise.
So now we're looking at the research that's coming out about fasting and stuff in
postmenopausal women is a cultural nuance because they haven't had the same brain exposure
challenges that we've had because of our availability.
So we start looking specifically at brain metabolism.
and trying to get rid of or stop the plaque development in Alzheimer's,
this is where they start looking specifically at lactate metabolism
to improve glial cell conversations.
And lactate is the byproduct of a lot of glucose metabolism.
And this is where looking at the high-intensity work comes into play.
When we look at key things as well,
for women who are not exercising and not producing lactate,
and because we have this glucose misstep,
then that's where the ketones come into play.
So we're looking at a non-active population, then yes, we can look at using fasting strategically
for resetting our circadian rhythm and improving some of the brain metabolism.
But in my pop of active women, we need to change up the activity and make sure that we are
working with our hormone pulses.
We're producing lactate on a regular basis to affect the.
brain metabolism in a way that a non-exercising population would use with ketones. So this is where
you and I have very similar ideas around what we want to do with metabolism, but our populations
are different because I'm working within that population and looking at brain metabolism and
longevity and body comp through that exercise stress as well as the fueling. And then you're looking at it
from your practice and the general pop who doesn't really exercise, right? And so we're looking at
two different relations that we want to have the same outcome, but our methods of getting people
there are a little bit different. Yeah, really brilliant, really brilliantly said. And you and, you know,
again, to let the, you know, the listeners in on what you and I talked about ahead of time is, you know,
part of the reason we're having this conversation is because we have so many women that both follow us
and what they're hearing is you're saying, don't fast. And I'm saying, do.
fast. And what I hate about social media is you need a conversation like this to understand that
there's more nuance to this. And what you and I are both in alignment on is when you put yourself
in states of hard and you push yourself, you will see your aging brain perform differently.
And that is a beautiful thing over time. And correct me if I'm wrong. But what I also hear from
you is, so if I have a woman who's completely sedentary, she's never worked out before.
And this is one that I've been really thinking about as this exercise conversation has come
back online.
Then short, I'm a fan of cycling fasting.
That was the whole purpose of fast like a girl was like, don't fast the same way all the
time.
Look at it as tools.
There are six different levels of fasts that I saw in the research and I saw my clinic and online
that worked. But just like you have a dumbbell and you have a sprint and you have the voodoo
bands and all this, they're all just tools that we get to pull out when we need them to push
ourselves out of, out of apathy, really. So that we we age better than we've been aging before.
Yeah. And like you said, the problem with social media is they put everything into one bowl and
mix it. And so they're like, oh, you're a woman of a certain age. You need to fast. You need to
exercise. You need to do this and that. And they don't mix because that's like taking the whole table,
dumping it in and saying, all my tools are together. Why am I not fixed? It's like, no,
we look at what's on the table. Right. We have some menopause hormone therapy over here.
We have exercise over here. We have different metabolic control here. And we want to strategically use
them when we need to. I'm so happy we're having this conversation because that's exactly what I've been
saying to my people is like, we got it, we can't take the tools. Like this is the way I look at it.
If I had a toolbox and I was repairing my room and I took the toolbox into the room, I wouldn't
pull the hammer out and the screwdriver and be like, well, the hammer's better than the screwdriver.
I wouldn't put those two next to each other. I would say, okay, there's a time to use the hammer and
there's a time to use the screwdriver, I should probably figure out what those times look like.
But just the sheer aspect of reels and shorts and the attention span of the public, we have all
these tools that we are putting, we're saying this is good and this is bad. And yet they're all just
tools. Yeah. Which is beautiful. I'll get questions from breast cancer patients. And they're like,
my oncologist told me I should fast, but I exercise. And I hear from you that I shouldn't fast.
but wait a second. That's another population that's different. We want to use exercise during chemotherapy
and radiotherapy as maintenance and keeping things going. But fasting can be really powerful when we're
looking at attenuating some of the cellular mechanisms that happen with cancer. But that's a conversation
to have with your oncologists, not through social media with me. So again, we have those different
populations, right? And so it's like, let's stick to the.
this late, I'm generalizing for the healthy woman who exercises, and there are nuances here,
and there are nuances there. But I can't explain all of that in a 20-second reel.
Yeah. Oh, my God. I love you. This is, I actually, you can watch my Instagram and Facebook
over the next couple of days. I just put out a video, or I'm putting out a video where I'm like,
I think we need a user's guide on how to navigate health information on social media. And the very
first thing I said is you need to understand there's short form content and there's long form content.
And if you're going to build your health strategies around short form content, you're really
in for suffering because it's just little snippets of information. Head on over to somebody's
podcast, their YouTube, their book, like listen to the longer conversation so you actually get
more context to this information. So that, right? It's crazy. Now I have this image of like the short reel
and a woman who's just off the catch
goes to the gym, tries to deadlift,
200 pounds with a voodoo flask band not eating.
And then that's,
those are all short reels right there.
That's what's going to come out of the reels from this podcast.
We're going to,
that's exactly what's going to happen.
That was so good.
That was so good.
So, okay, so then this leads me to the thought,
which is do you eat before you work out?
And now I will tell you, you actually have changed my mind on that, watching the, you know, the reels on you.
Because I came from the era in my younger self where do you remember that book called Body for Life?
Yes, I do.
And the guy gave away, he gave away like a million dollars for the people who could lose the most weight.
And his number one strategy is work out on an empty stomach because it forces your body to go fine.
and it worked in my 30s.
And then when I started to try to lift heavier weights, I was like, oh, this is not working
to go in in a fasted state.
So can you talk about proper nutrition going into a workout and then what's our recovery
meal look like as well?
Yeah.
So as, you know, when we have our hormones working for us, we can get away with a lot.
That's why we look at all these trends and people like, I don't really have an issue.
What are you talking about?
But as we get older, our bodies become more sensitive to things.
So eating beforehand is really important.
I'm not saying a full meal.
We look at the research and we see that 30 grams of carbohydrate with 15 to 20 grams of protein
before a session that has cardio and strength is optimal.
Because what we're doing is we are now telling the hypothalamus, which is really where
our energy systems are, that there's some nutrition coming in so that we can raise our blood sugar
we have enough nutrition coming in so that we can hit intensities.
And the hypothalamus doesn't go, oh, shit, we got to start conserving because here's this
big stress coming in.
We don't have any fuel.
So let's start turning the thyroid and everything down.
So we need that.
And as we get older becomes really important because, again, the first thing that goes as
we get older, exercising facet is lean mass.
And we know that it's so incredibly hard to build and maintain lean mass.
Not only that, since we are losing our hormone pulses, our estrogen progesterine pulses,
because we're flatlining, the hypothalamus is in a little bit of a dysfunctional state because
it's like, hey, wait, I don't have to create this pulse every day, but I still have that
stimulus for it.
So you bring food in to also let the hypothalamus read and work a bit better.
So if we are having that little bit of nutrition before we go,
to the gym, brain is on fire, central nervous system is working. We can get more out of that workout.
And then within 30 to 40 minutes afterwards, we want to have a good hit of protein with a bit of
carbohydrate. Protein more important. So after strength training, we need about 40 grams as women
who are peripose because we're more what we call anabolic resistant to exercise and food.
So we don't get same signaling with that 20 to 25.
grams. We need more protein, and the protein is important because not only does it come
allow the muscle to be flooded with leucine, which increases the triggering for building lean
mass, but we also have an increased amount of amino acids circulating, which helps with metabolism,
helps with the brain to recover, and to really help with that testosterone and growth hormone
response because it needs amino acids to actually function. So,
when we're looking at it from that whole recovery standpoint, okay, we need some fuel.
We want to go in to hypothalamus is cooking so we can fuel our workouts properly.
And then we need to refuel afterwards to get adaptation going to help with brain function to keep
those signaling going.
And then we can move on with the rest of our day.
Okay.
So how long before?
So just so I can recap, like, you said 40 grams of carbohydrates and 15 to 20 grams of protein
beforehand. Was that right? 30 grams before 15-ish. Yeah. And I mean, within the hour, but if you're
someone who gets up and goes to the gym at 5.30 in the morning, I don't want you getting up to have food
at 4.30. You could have it on your drive to the gym, right? Just as long as you have something in.
Yeah. And then afterwards, the key really is bumping up to this 40 grams of protein. And what did,
you said, 30 grams of carbohydrates?
which...
After work is not...
It's not that...
It depends on what you did.
If you're just doing strength training,
then you could have your 40 grams within that 30 to 40 minutes,
and then your real meal up to two hours later,
and that takes care of the carbohydrate aspect.
If you've done, like, a high-intensity session,
and you've done a lot of fuel depleting type work,
then you do need to look at getting it 40 grams
and probably around 40 to 50 grams of carbohydrate.
So it's almost...
almost a one-to-one ratio post-exercise.
And, I mean, some people split their breakfast as well.
So they'll have some before and then the rest of it after.
So it's not increasing total calorie content, which people get worried about.
It's just really manipulating your food intake.
Okay.
Yeah, I go to the gym, and if I have to run errands afterwards, I have like a pack of beef sticks that I keep in my car that, like the pale.
And I'm like, okay, I'll just eat a bunch of beef sticks to try to get to that protein.
level, which actually brings me to the next question, which is what do we do with our plant-based
friends? Like, where does plant-based? Is there a room for your plant-based? Amazing.
Okay, tell us because I am like a believer that there's a win in all of this. We have to pull
these pieces out and have deeper conversations about them. And I've seen a lot of post-menopausal
women that are plant-based that are really healthy. So you're plant-based. Talk about this.
Yeah, so, I mean, I've been plant-based since I was 15, way before the trends.
Oh, wow.
My high school biology teacher took us on a field trip to a pig slaughterhouse, and that kind of did it for me.
You were done.
I was done.
And growing up in San Francisco in all the kind of, like, I went to high school outside of the hate, so there's lots of hippie influences.
Oh, yeah.
That's my.
Oh, yeah.
Love it.
And environmental stuff.
So, yeah, all the stuff that's trendy now is kind of why I went when I was 15 with the pig slaughterhouse trip.
But throughout my academic and athletic career, you know, looking at protein protein intake hasn't really come up until about the past 10 to 15 years.
And we're starting to see more and more of plant-based stuff out.
And it's not about mixing amino acids.
it's about maximizing your protein intake.
So when we're talking about plant-based post-exercise,
it's a leucine content that's really important.
So we need to get around three grams of leucine.
And we see that's around 30 to 40 grams of way protein.
And you can get that equivalent if you're looking at pea protein isolate
with maybe some hemp.
Or if you're not someone who's going down the powdered route,
then we can look at things like chia seeds and nuts and oats soaked together with goat milk or almond milk.
And so there's ways of building that protein intake with plant-based foods that are high in protein.
But a lot of times we don't think about things like you can have a whole plate mixed of grains and nuts and seeds and green peas and Nani and you can get 40 to 60 grams of protein right there.
So there's ways of doing it when you are plant-based, but you kind of have to think outside of the box.
But it's becoming much, much easier now with the awareness of all the environmental factors and health factors.
So easier now than it was when I was 15, that's for sure.
Yeah.
So I love this conversation because it's funny, we have a fasting group on Facebook called The Resetter Collaborative.
And it is of like over 100,000 people that, and they're very, very.
active. And the thing that shocks me is the carnivores and the plant-based people, they fight with
each other all the time. And when I look at food through a hormonal lens, I'm like, okay, fiber is so
important. Like, it helps us, right? Yeah. We cannot lose sight of, yeah. And nuts and seeds,
like, so important. So if I'm over here focused on all this meat, where am I?
making room for enough fiber from a hormonal lens super important. But then when you come over and you
look at the omnivores, you know, they're like, well, how are you getting all your amino acids? And so
you end up, you know, in this conflict of interest. And so I actually am putting on another book.
It's a, I call it a food book in the fall. And it's called Eat Like a Girl. And I hired two chefs.
I heard a plant-based chef. And I hired an omnivore chef. And they're both have their
expertise and I was like, okay, make me some recipes. And they're incredible recipes and there's
room for both. So I think that fact that you're out there talking about muscle and fitness and
your plant-based is really important to highlight. It's just what I heard from you is you need to be
very aware of the combination you're putting together. Is that what I heard in your statement?
Like get a good variety of these proteins.
Absolutely. And it falls into the whole gut microbiome thing, the fiber thing that we see as one of the biggest changing factors in about three to four years before that one point in time menopause.
Like there's a lot of research coming out because as you're losing hormones, you're losing a lot of the diversity of the gut microbiome.
And the way you counter that is with fiber. So I see the carnivorous diet, I'm like, oh my gosh, what like the first thing to go is you've got microbiome. Come on, people. Let's be real.
And you don't want to like into the full nuance of just full plant base and then nothing either, right?
Because then you can get into being too full before you get everything.
So that's why when I talk about plant base, you have to be very conscious of what you're eating and how it fits together so that you're giving everything that you need.
But you don't end up being too full before you get what you need.
So I've written like in some of our groups like with Haley.
Babcock and our Haley Happens Fitness, we get these conversations all the time.
So I'm like, okay, here's a day in the life of a vegan.
Here's the day in the life of someone who eats meat.
Here's a day in life with someone who eats dairy and eggs.
And they all end up being between 150 and 160 grams of protein sitting right in that
2200 to 2,500 calorie.
And people are like, oh my gosh, really?
We can do this.
Make yes, we can do this.
It's just being aware.
I love that.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
I love that.
Okay, so just so the plant-based people know, what are some of the lucene-rich plants that if you want to trigger that lucene, get that loosening amount?
So interesting, we look at Ednamian green peas. So those two are really high. And people are like, what? It's like, yeah. And we look at spirulina. So blue and green spirulina, like ounce to ounce is the highest plant-based protein, almost complete protein that you can get.
plus it has iron. So if you're looking at making a smoothie, okay, well, you know what? If you put in
frozen green peas and you put in some chia seeds and you put in some blue spirulina plus some berries,
you don't even taste the green peas. And all of a sudden, here's your 40 grams of lucine-rich
protein. Yeah. I mean, well, the smoothie is great because you can hide anything in it. Like,
you know, just put enough flavor in it and you can get all the good things and not even taste it.
do you think we got the conversation on soy wrong?
I do because it's been taken out of context.
Because if we look at like phyto-Westerns and all the good things that happen and the
Japanese culture of longevity, it's not just the soy.
It's how they live.
It's the other things they eat.
And then when you bring it over to the Western diet and you start adding soy, it's so
ultra-process that there's lots of side effects.
If you're not sensitive to some of the.
side effects, then, yeah, implement it. But for me, like, I can't do tofu, but I can do
tempe because of the fermentation problem aspect of it. Yeah, I wouldn't use soy milk because it's,
it gives me too many of the negative side effects, but other people don't. So the Western
idea of soy is very nuanced as well, because unless you are really following the ethos of, of the
Japanese lifestyle and all the benefits it has, then you could potentially have issues with soy.
When I look at soy as a protein source, I was like, it takes 50 grams of soy protein powder to match
20 grams of way, but it only takes 30 grams of pea protein isolate to match that 20 grams of way.
And the thing with pea is just on the cusp of having enough leucine.
So all you have to do is add maybe another half.
a tablespoon and then boom, you've hit that loosing context. But with it's so much more.
So again, it's, I feel like you need to write a book about all of this, but I think it would
take too much time. Yeah, that's right. We'll just have conversation. Yeah, I was just going to say,
what would the book could be called like the nuance of menopausal nutrition? And like, here's all the
things that you really, you really need to know. So, okay, I want to go, I want to go back to the
timing for a minute because I brought Sotchen Panda onto my podcast and we talked specifically
about when you should eat like that first part of your meal.
And so the question, he said you wait an hour.
And what you said is within the first half hour.
So just so, because this shows up all the time because we talk about fasting windows and
eating windows within my community.
and I'm like, you get to choose where your eating window goes.
Like, fasting doesn't mean you skip breakfast.
In my opinion, the best thing to do is eat in the light and when it gets dark out,
don't eat.
And make that middle, and you sort of said this earlier on, make that middle part of your day
you're eating window.
So how do you feel about that theory of like matching your eating with light?
And I'm sure you're aware that, you know,
it's not that far off from eat within the first half hour, but he basically says don't eat within
the first hour. So do we have any way of rectifying those two statements? Yeah. So I look at,
like I said, physiologists look at cortisol and when they peak. And if you're looking at
that cortisol peak, that's half an hour after you wake up. And for women who are already
sympathetically driven and we're looking at lowering cortisol, you want to counter it. And the way
you do that is with some protein carbohydrate.
So that's why I'm like, you want to eat within that first half an hour to really bring that
down.
And if you're a coffee drinker, then you definitely want to have some food with it, right?
Because if you're drinking coffee within that half an hour, then you're just going to
perpetuate the breakdown effects of cortisol.
So when we talk about cortisol and the way that it nuances, especially in peri and postmenopausal
women, and that increase in that baseline amount of cortisol, we want to do what we can,
with our circadian rhythm, and we can do that with food.
So if we're looking at food and looking at dropping that cortisol to get less of a response
over time, then we want to use food to do that.
So that's how I look at it.
When we're looking at what Satcha is saying, he's looking at, you know, primarily male
data and the difference in the sensitivity of cortisol.
And when we look at population research, when we see in both men and women, those who
have their eating window by 8 a.m. and then they stop by like four. So 8 to 4 end up with all
the health benefits that we see with the fasting research. But for those who delay their fast
till noon and then they're eating windows from like noon to 8, they end up with more
obesogenic outcomes because they're fighting their circadian rhythm and all the nuances because
circadian rhythm isn't just a whole body thing. All your cells have its own circadian
rhythm. So if you're not working with that, then you end up with a whole misstep. So when we're
looking at how you're saying eat during the light, we see in that population research that, yes,
those who are eating in the day, who are working with their circadian rhythm and able to fuel
for the stressors of the day, end up with better health outcomes than those who delay and eat,
you know, well into the evening that interrupts sleep and they have no benefit of withholding food.
So again, I come back to physiology, circadian rhythm.
What are we looking, cellular circadium versus total body circadian?
And I say that as I'm completely jet lagged from flying across the world, right?
You're doing it.
You're doing amazing being jet lagged.
Yeah, there you go.
So could it be as simple as putting some protein powder in your,
coffee if you don't love breakfast?
Yeah.
If you don't gravitate towards food.
Yeah, I don't.
I don't really get hungry until 11 or 12, but I get up at 6.
So I'm like, okay, well, I have a cold brew coffee with a scoop of protein powder
and some almond milk in there.
So I'm getting some carbohydrate.
I'm getting some protein.
Brain's like, yeah, there's some fuel coming in.
And then I have something to wake me up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It doesn't have to be a lot.
But it is enough to.
Right.
get the signaling going that there's stuff coming in. I've done all kinds of weird things in my coffee
and people always ask me, are you still fasted? And I always say, yes, it depends on how you look at
the fasted state. So, and it depends what you're trying to do in the fasted state. So you can put
protein in and maybe you turn off autophagy. And that's okay because today's your strengths training day
and you want to lean more into mTOR and more into protein.
So you put a ton of protein, put tons of collagen in, put some MCT oil in your coffee.
You have a little meal there.
And you may actually still be in a mild ketogenic state.
And that might actually work for you to go lift in the gem.
So I think, again, it's like I love the idea of N of 1.
Like, be your own N of 1.
Like, take these principles and find out, play with them.
and find out what works for you, and then you'll get into a rhythm.
And then, you know, the other concept is the best health habit is the one you can stick to.
Exactly.
So it's like once you find your rhythm, now all of a sudden it works.
Right.
Right.
One last thought was creatine.
Everybody's talking about creatine.
What do you think of that?
It's great.
It's great.
It's one of the most studied supplements.
And it's so important for women.
I mean, we have 70% of the stores that men have anyway.
And we do produce some in the liver, but when we look at a lot of the clinical research that comes out from a health standpoint,
it's so important for muscle function, gut function, hard function, and brain function.
There is a new website, Creatine for Health, that posts all the most recent studies on it.
And it's everything from pregnant women all the way through old age and creatine.
like so important to improve all the fast energetics.
And in particular, again, it comes back like I'm interested in brain health.
And it's so important for brain health.
And you can put it in your coffee.
You can.
You definitely can.
That's why I brought it up.
I mean, there's a lot that can go in your coffee that really works and brings all these
principles together.
So, well, this is great.
It's been fun.
It's been awesome.
And I just, yeah.
I love geeking out with you.
And I think people who have been following both you and I hopefully will now have some answers as to where we agree.
Yeah.
Because, again, I've been watching your stuff.
I'm like, we're not saying different things.
You're just taking them out of context.
We're actually saying very similar things.
We just need to put them into a greater conversation.
And hopefully this did that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Thanks for having me.
It's been fun.
Yeah.
Awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah, thank you. So, okay, my last question that I've been asking everybody this season is what is your definition of health and how do you know, like how do you feel, know that you are actually healthy? Do you have a measurement of that?
Oh, I, like full disclosure, I am not in a healthy state this year because I've been so super busy. So I feel very flat and tired all the time.
for me,
the definition of health is waking up and having that,
that energy to take on a new challenge every day, right?
And loving that feeling.
And that can come through so many different avenues.
It can come through the physicality,
it come through conversations,
you can come through good sleep,
a good adventure,
turning your brain down,
all of those things.
And when you have that ultimate feeling of peace and energy,
when you wake up,
that to me is what health.
is. But I've been so disjointed with so many different things going on that I'm like,
I miss that feeling. So that's my priority over the hemisphere summer, southern hemisphere winter,
is to get everything back in line so I can wake up feeling that way again.
Oh my gosh. I am so with you. I hit a real wall about a couple, well, it's been hitting for a while,
but like a month ago, I had this insight for my own self that I've actually
given up my health to teach the world how to be healthy, which I hear is a little bit of what you
have done as well. And there's a moment where you have to just say no to everything so that you
can take your health back. And I'm on that same journey right now for July and August. And a good
portion of September, I'm just powering down and making myself a priority. So I hear you,
sister, like I'm, yeah, really in that same place. Yeah. So. So.
So we need to check in.
Yes, we need a check-in.
We can hold each other accountable.
Sounds good.
But yeah, it's hard when all the people are asking questions and you're so passionate about
what you do and you want to help people.
But then all of a sudden you like, wait, my whole battery is drained.
I don't even have the energy to go, like, have a conversation with my loved ones because
I don't want to talk.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yes.
God, it's like I feel like you know, you know what I've been going through that same thing.
And finally, I just said there's no amount of anything you could throw at me that would want to
take me away from rebuilding my health at this moment because, you know, if you and I aren't healthy,
we can't deliver a message. So I love that. Yep. So check in. I'll be pinging you,
you ping me. How's it going? Yeah, okay. Perfect. I love it. I love it. We'll do.
Well, thank you. And how do people find you? So if people, you know, don't know who you are and what you're up
too. How can my audience find you?
Social handles, Dr. Stacey Sims on Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok, which, you know.
And then our website, this is Dr. Stacke.
There's luck on there.
I know.
Not a fan of TikTok, but I've been told we need to be on it.
Me neither.
Yeah.
And then our website, just the Dr. Stacey Sims website, updates for everything that I'm
involved in and doing and all the things.
all the things in one spot.
Well, Stacey, thank you.
Thank you so much.
And I really enjoyed this conversation.
I feel like now when we get comments of people saying, like, well, Stacey says don't fast,
I'm going to send them this episode so that we can have get off the 90-second reel and get into a deeper conversation.
So thank you.
Appreciate you.
You too.
Thanks so much.
Good luck.
Good luck.
Yeah, good luck on your recovery.
I will hold you recount.
Okay, sounds good.
Thank you so much for joining me in today's episode.
I love bringing thoughtful discussions about all things health to you.
If you enjoyed it, we'd love to know about it, so please leave us a review, share it with your friends, and let me know what your biggest takeaway is.
