The School of Greatness - 634 Reverse Disease and Reclaim Your Health with Dr. Rangan Chatterjee
Episode Date: April 30, 2018“WE’RE APPLYING 20TH CENTURY THINKING TO 21ST CENTURY PROBLEMS.” If you wake up in the morning and find that your tire is low, what do you do? You go with the quick fix and fill it up with air. ...What if you go to your car the next day and find it’s low. Do you fill it up again, and again, and again for days, weeks, months? Of course not. You find the root of the problem. You find the nail, or whatever is causing the problem, to have it removed and have it fixed permanently. So why aren’t you doing it with your health? Most of us go to the doctor and get a prescription for pills to fix our chronic problems. We just keep going for the quick fix instead of addressing the root of it. I can’t say every medical condition is this way, but in many cases ongoing problems like depression and diabetes needs to have the root problem examined. Chances are you just need to shift your lifestyle. And that doesn’t mean a drastic change to your life. You can start small. To explain much more than I can, I sat down with the UK's leading doctor, Dr. Rangan Chatterjee. Dr. Chatterjee is a medical doctor who decided to rethink the way we do medicine. He’s decided that physicians need to be more holistic in their approach to treating patients and help their lifestyle as opposed to just giving them a quick fix. He has become the star of the hit BBC series Doctor in the House where he analyzes every aspect of people’s lives to help with their illness. Dr. Chatterjee has made it his goal to simplify the way the average person thinks about healthcare. He’s divided health into four easy pillars that allow anyone with a chronic disease to retake control of their lives. Learn the root cause of most chronic diseases, how to let technology empower us, and the key indicator of how well you will age, on Episode 634. Some Questions I Ask: Why are people not the best they can be? (5:38) You said a disease is an illusion, why is that? (10:16) What’s usually the root cause of people’s chronic disease? (21:17) It’s important to build muscle mass? (33:48) How come medical school isn’t teaching the two most important things to change someone’s health? (39:24) Is there anything in your health that’s lacking? (50:00) When’s the last time you meditated? (52:03) Are you doing a digital detox at night? (54:11) What’s your biggest fear as a human? (1:01:32) In This Episode You Will Learn: Why people eat so much fast food (9:02) The boy that made Rangan reevaluate the medical industry (14:03) Rangan’s first pillar of health (23:54) What the world was like before technology (28:54) Rangan’s new medical course (42:31) What Med schools should be looking for (48:26) The next thing Rangan needs to work on (53:17) Plus much, much more
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This is episode number 634 with Dr. Rangan Chatterjee.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin.
Jim Rohn said, take care of your body. It's the only place you have to live.
We only get one body, one life and one body. And if we aren't taking care of it holistically on every aspect of the body in terms of how
we can optimize our physical health, mental, emotional health, our stress levels, getting
enough sleep, eating the right foods, if we're not constantly being mindful of these things,
then we are going to be destructive in our body.
And it's going to affect our performance and our relationships, our life, our finance.
All these areas of our life are going to be affected if we don't have our health.
And Dr. Rangan Chatterjee is regarded as one of the most influential doctors in the UK
and wants to change how medicine will be practiced in years to come.
He is known for finding the root cause of people's problems.
And he highlighted his methods in the groundbreaking BBC television show,
Doctor in the House, which has been shown in over 70 countries around the world.
He is the author of the international bestseller, The Four Pillar Plan,
which already became one of the top 10 selling health titles in the past five years.
And he hosts the podcast, Feel Better, Live More.
And it's also featured on BBC News channels.
He's done TED Talks.
This guy's all over the place.
And what we talk about today are how chronic disease is actually an illusion.
So if you think you have chronic disease, it's actually an illusion.
And what the root cause of most chronic disease actually is.
Why relaxing is the first cause of most chronic disease actually is, why relaxing
is the first pillar of good health, and why so many of us are never relaxed.
And you'll see what I'm talking about here in a second.
Also, how to use technology in a way that empowers us instead of enslaves us and what
the key indicator is of how well you will age.
My friends, you will love this one.
Make sure to share it with your friends, lewishouse.com slash 634.
Take a screenshot on your phone right now and tag me on Instagram and let me know what
you're thinking along the way.
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This is from Luke Bloomquist, who said, School of Greatness has quickly become a regular
must-listen podcast for me.
The guest topics and content is absolutely high quality,
and I love that the podcast not only entertains,
but enlightens.
Absolute top-notch stuff.
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All right, let's get into this one.
I'm super excited.
It's all about how do we reverse disease and reclaim your health with the one, the only, Dr. Rangan Chatterjee.
Welcome, everyone, to the School of Greatness podcast. We've got Dr. Rangan Chatterjee in the house. Good to see you, my friend. That's happy to be with you. Nice to
meet you today. You've had a big success in the UK and all over the world with a show that you
have called Doctor in the House, which I've never seen, but I hear is incredible. And you actually
move in with people for four to six weeks to help them transform their lifestyle. Is that right?
Well, transform their health. Whatever their health problem is, I'm there to help them.
But as you say, Lewis, the majority of the time, it is a lifestyle issue.
Yeah. It's mostly changing their emotions, their habits, their routines. Is that what I'm hearing?
Yeah, absolutely. But I'm not putting blame on people. I just want to make that really clear.
I'm not saying that people are doing it to themselves.
I think everyone genuinely,
I think everyone's trying to be as healthy as they can
within the context of their own life,
within their job patterns and their beliefs and things.
And I always start out with that,
that who wants to be overweight?
Who wants to feel tired?
I don't think anyone does.
No one.
Right?
So I start with that premise that everyone wants to be the best they can and then I kind of try and figure out what is the
obstacle there? Why are people not the best they can be?
Yeah, absolutely. Why is that? Why do you think
we allow ourselves to go down and gain 100 pounds or attract disease or feel low energy, why do we allow ourselves to do that?
I don't think we're necessarily consciously allowing ourselves to do that. I think there's
two factors to me. The first factor is knowledge is important, right? I think we have overcomplicated
health in a huge way. And I think when we can simplify the messages to people, I think we've
got a shot. But I don't think that's everything. I think there's a lot of emotional baggage that many
of us carry, which we use, you know, sugar or food or our lifestyle choices, whether it's we
stay up late and we binge on Netflix and we don't go to sleep, right? To compensate for
other things in our life. And I don't think I've really,
you know, I've been practicing now for 17 years, I've been seeing patients for,
I don't think I really got this maybe six, seven years ago. I really don't. I think as I get more
experience in my own life as a father, as a husband, you know, as a more experienced doctor,
you kind of learn more things. You kind of go, it's not that simple,
actually. You know, it's not quite as straightforward as giving people the information.
You've got to inspire them. You've got to connect in a way that it means something to them.
And, you know, a lot of doctors say that actually patients don't do what we tell them to do,
right? I don't buy it. And the reason I don't buy it is everybody wants to feel
as good as they can, right? My job is, and the job of any healthcare professional, and you can
expand it out beyond healthcare, right? Is can you communicate effectively with the person in
front of you? Can you do it in a way that it resonates, like deeply resonates? Because when
you do that, right, people want to make the change. I genuinely believe that.
When you just tell people, you need to do this. You just need to do these things and you'll get
better. It's not as important as, you know what, your son who's six right now is really depending
on you to be healthy. And this is going to help you live a longer life so you can see him go to
school and marry someone and see your grandkids having more meaning behind it. Is that right?
Absolutely. And something's just come into my head that the very first day ever that I filmed
the show Doctor in the House, right? I was probably a bit nervous. There's a camera on me
and I'm like, I know this is going to go out on prime time. And there was a family there,
a few weight issues in the
family. And I diagnosed the lady with type two diabetes on the first day. She didn't know she
had it. And on the very first day I said to them, hey guys, look, what would you usually eat?
Okay. I remember the guy said to me, he's, well, he turned around and he said to the family,
hey guys, what are you having? Just the usual? They said, yeah, just the usual, please dad.
He goes, come on doc, come with me. So I went in his car with him. We drive 15 minutes
out of town to a drive-thru McDonald's. He spends about 60, $65 there on, you know, just for four
people. That's not the interesting part. The interesting part is that on the way there,
he turned around to me and said, hey, Doc, this is really embarrassing, actually.
I know this stuff isn't good for us, but we do this five nights a week.
Why? Because it feels good? The idea of it feels good, or it's comfort food, or it tastes good?
If I want to say this, at the time, I don't think I knew. At the time, I just thought,
okay, that's interesting. And that would just mull over in my head.
And I kind of would try and figure out, they know that this is not good for them.
They've got weight problems. They're not feeling very good. You know, thinking about maybe moving jobs because they can't really perform the way they want to perform. This chap had lost his job
as a fireman. And he used to be really proud to be a fireman. He wanted to get back into active service, yet he was still doing this. And it's emotional. It wasn't just information.
Information was important, right? And yes, I did educate them.
Right. But they knew that it wasn't good for them.
Exactly. Right. And then you look around, certainly particularly in this country,
right? You see it all around the world, but the amount of people who are struggling with their health, right? It's not just as simple as saying you've
got to do better. I honestly don't think it is because I used to think it is, but you've got
to tap into it. Once people have got that respect for themselves and that understanding of what
their meaning is, what their purpose is, I find that they do start making those changes. You can call me an eternal optimist if you want,
but I really do believe that. Yeah. You say that disease is an illusion. Why is that?
The reason I think disease is an illusion is basically the way we think about disease,
right? Whether we're talking about type 2 diabetes, whether we're talking about type 2 diabetes whether we're talking about depression or whatever
chronic disease you want to talk about i think there's a there's a perception in society that
it's a thing once you cross that threshold once you've met the criteria for the diagnosis
you've now got this thing you've got this label right and i didn't realize until a few years ago, actually, that, you know, let's take
depression, for example, right? Depression is the name that we give to a collection of symptoms,
right? There's no blood test that says, oh, you now have depression, you don't, right?
I'm not trivializing this. This is a serious problem, right? In the UK, right? One in four
people are going to get a mental health problem in any given year.
Think about that for a minute.
25% of the population.
Why?
Why is it so? Why?
This is the point of all my work, right?
Is that collectively, the way that we are living our modern lifestyles
is having a negative impact on the way that many of us are feeling.
For me, it's that simple.
It's not about blame.
It's not about saying you are doing this to yourself.
It's about this whole mismatch between the way that modern Western society is set up now
compared to our genetic and our evolutionary heritage.
Being in nature.
Being in nature.
Yeah.
It's healing and therapeutic. I just went to Hawaii for four and a half days and left. Being in nature. Being in nature. Yeah. It's healing and therapeutic.
And I just went to Hawaii for four and a half days
and left my phone in LA and my computer here
and had zero connection to a device.
And it's amazing how the body heals so quickly
from any stress or tightness or tension or overwhelm
or depression feeling or whatever it may be.
You start to heal naturally.
Yeah, absolutely.
And if we literally just said, you know, one day a week, we're not going to be on our phone
or one night a week, we're not going to be on our phone. We're going to be in nature.
I think our health would drastically improve.
Lewis, one of the chapters in my book is literally called that the screen-free Sabbath.
Embrace one day a week, you know, one day a week, try and go off your screens completely. But then I'm also a
realist and I say, hey, look, if one day sounds too scary, do an evening. Start with one hour.
Don't have it on during lunch or dinner. Don't take your phone out when you're eating.
Yeah. That's a rule in my family. In in my house there's no phones or electronics around the table when we're eating yeah it winds me up you know you say that in
February this year I had just been traveling around the country doing a lot of speaking gigs
I've been so promoting my book in the UK right and I was feeling burnt out and I remember phoning
my wife and I said babe I need a holiday right I don't care where we go. I just want to, I want heat. I want relaxation.
And we booked a last minute holiday to Dubai.
And I went with my two young kids and my wife and I got to the hotel, right?
I know where to fly.
My laptop and my phone went in the hotel safe
and it stayed there all week.
That's great.
And it's a different experience.
You know, I was connecting.
I don't think we realized the noise that this creates in our mind every single day.
Just how many times we look at them.
The study's now showing that if we were communicating now and we had our smartphones on the table there,
we would have a less meaningful conversation.
Right.
Just from having it there.
Even if it wasn't.
Being aware of it. Just being aware, you know, what's going on there? You know,
how am I missing an email? Is something coming in? A buzz or a like at a flash.
Yeah. A patient story that I talk about in my book, but I think, can I share it with you? It's
this is a few years back, right? And this is before I'd had the kind of personal experiences
with my own family and my son that forced me to confront
some realities about my medical training. And I was in a busy Monday afternoon, what we call a
surgery, right? I had three or four patients waiting outside. You were doing surgeries?
I used to be trained as a specialist. I was doing kidney medicine. But I was getting very frustrated
about how specialized we're becoming in medicine. And I kind of feel sometimes we miss the big
picture. Yeah. So I changed. The holistic approach, as opposed to just treating the symptom,
you got to treat the whole, right? You got to treat the whole. And we are missing that in
medicine. You just treat one area. It's not going to, it's still going to come back. It's still
going to come back. Yeah. Yeah. And that's kind of what my whole approach is about is looking at this 360 degree approach
to health, right?
But some of this is intuitive, right?
So it was in this clinic.
Let's call it a clinic, right?
It was a busy Monday afternoon clinic.
I'm already running behind.
And this 16-year-old boy called Devin walks in through the door with his mother.
And I see the letter that's there on the file.
And basically on the Saturday,
this guy had tried to harm himself,
tried to cut his wrists.
He ended up in the ER.
Right.
And he was evaluated there,
and basically they had discharged him.
They thought he was safe to discharge,
but there was a letter to say,
you know, come and see Dr. Chastity,
and can I please start an antidepressant for him?
So he was there to pick up his prescription.
And you were supposed to give him to him? I was supposed to give it to him, right?
That would have been the easiest thing in the world to do, right? It would have taken a few
minutes. I would be running on time. I'd get back to my next patient and I could keep going on the
treadmill of my day, right? But I thought, wait a minute. I know this family. They seem pretty
well-balanced. I've never picked anything up before
that there's an issue here. Why would a 16-year-old boy from a seemingly well-rounded,
well-balanced family end up in ER? I've got to know more, right? So I spent a bit of time. I
tried to figure out what was going on. I couldn't quite get to the bottom of it. And I said, hey,
guys, look, would you mind coming back tomorrow at the end of my morning clinic? And I'll spend
a bit longer with you. I said, okay. So they came back the next day,
right? It was a Tuesday morning, end of the clinic. And we spent about 15, 20 minutes chatting. And I
thought, I think your use of social media in my head might be negatively impacting your mental
health, right? Did I have a study to prove it? No. But I thought, I said to him, I said, Devin,
look, I think the way you're using
social media, right, might be contributing. I didn't say it was the cause, right? I said,
it might be a factor. Are you interested in reducing that? He goes, well, don't, do you
want to think it's going to help? I said, Devin, look, I can commit to you that I'm going to try
and help you, right? But shall we give it a try? So I said to him, you know, we come up with this deal and for one hour
in the morning, he gets up and he doesn't go on his phone, right? He comes about seven days later.
I say, hey, Devin, how are you doing? Now he said, hey, don't, you know, I don't know. I'm,
you know, I'm still not great, but I feel less up and down in the day. I'm sleeping better.
Don't get me wrong, right? He wasn't suddenly cured, right? I'm not
saying that, but he was starting to show a sign of improvement. I said, Devin, can we extend that
out a little bit? He goes, all right. So we move it up over the next few weeks to two hours in the
morning and two hours in the evening before bed where he doesn't go on his smartphone, right?
And he keeps coming back and he's consistently starting to improve bit by bit. I
think, okay, this is interesting. Again, I didn't have any training for this, right? I was just
trying to figure it out, how to kind of help this guy. I was also then doing a bit of reading,
right? And I was reading about how our diets can impact our mental health. So he comes in and I
say, hey, Devin, what are you eating? Typical- Candy, McDonald's.
Typical teenager, right? 16-year-old, processed junk food. And I drew him a little picture. I
said, hey, Devin, did you know that actually when your blood sugar is going up and down
throughout the day because of what you're eating, that's not just a blood sugar problem. That's not
just an energy problem. When your blood sugar is falling rapidly, right? Two hours after you've
eaten, let's say a bagel,
right? That's an alarm sign or it can be an alarm sign to your body and your stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline can also go up and that can impact your mood.
It's like, really? Like, yeah. So I drew it out for him. So he got it. He said, well, what can I
do? I said, hey, well, Demo, look, why don't I help you understand how you can stabilize your
blood sugar throughout the day with a bit more sort of protein and healthy fats that he would take with him, things like nuts
with him to snack on, right? And bit by bit, he's, you know, came back and said, this is,
I'm starting to feel better. And then I didn't see him for ages. And I come into my surgery one day
in my clinic, right? And there's a letter waiting for me. And it's his mother. And he said, Dear Dr. Chastity, I just want to thank you. Devin is like a different boy. He is happy at school. He's
engaging with his friends. He's joining clubs at the weekends. I just want to thank you.
And in that moment, then I just thought, you know, I know the science now of what went on there,
but I didn't need to know it back then.
I just thought this is a 16 year old boy, right? Who could have been labeled with depression,
right? At 16. Right. Who could have been medication, put on an antidepressant. And,
you know, that was five years ago, at least, right? He would have still, he could easily have
been on that medication still today, five years later. I know he's still doing well,
right? And I'm not saying that works in every single case. But what I am trying to say is that,
back to the original question, is why do I say disease is an illusion? We could have said,
you have depression, right? That is just something you have got. And here's your treatment for it.
something you have got and here's your treatment for it. And I'm saying for him, right, his lifestyle choices that he often didn't realize he was making, he didn't realize the impact, he's made
some quick changes in his lifestyle, right? And he's transformed his health. So he, you know,
arguably no longer has depression, right? Doesn't mean he can't slip back again in the future.
This is what I mean by disease as an illusion. I feel that's my job as a doctor. I'm privileged
to be able to tap into what's going on. That boy, if there's a fork in the road, he could have gone
down one path. What does that do to your psyche if you know, oh, hey, I've got depression. That's
why I'm like this. There's nothing I can do. Just being a victim of this. Yeah. I'd like to be a respectful and compassionate
guy. I'm not saying there aren't people out there who don't benefit from this stuff or from
medication. I'm not saying that. I'm just saying it's too easy to say you've got something and give
a pill. And I think 80% of the time, we don't need to do that. And on my show, I managed to make something like a condition like type 2 diabetes, in inverted commas, disappear after 30 days.
Right?
I helped a lady with fibromyalgia pains who'd been under doctors for 10 years be pain-free after six weeks.
Right?
A 30-year history of back pain.
Yeah.
Gone.
And an opiate and a sleeping pill addiction,
or certainly a dependency, gone. When we actually identify what's the root cause of this.
What's usually the root cause for most people? Is it an emotional attachment that they're holding
on to? Is it what they're eating and their lifestyle choices? Is it trauma that they face
that they're holding on to? What is it usually?
Or do you see a pattern? It's a combination of things, right? I certainly would say that I think
there is an emotional pattern in pretty much every case. Again, yeah, I really do. And again, this is-
Any case of disease, essentially. No, sorry. I'm not saying in any case of disease. I'm saying
in this sort of, look, I think I need to really be clear. I'm talking about chronic disease as opposed to acute disease,
right? So an acute problem like a pneumonia, right? You've got a pneumonia, right? You've got...
You've got to clear it up.
Very simply, you've got the overgrowth of a bug in your lung, right? We identify that bug,
or we give you a treatment, an antibiotic, that kills that bug, and then you
don't have that disease anymore, right? Okay, I get that, right? That's an acute problem.
So you still prescribe medication to things like that?
Absolutely, right? But a chronic disease, so let's take, top two diabetes is so common and widespread.
Let's just think about that for a minute. That happens when you pass an
arbitrary point on a scale, right? So here in the US, your HbA1c, which your average marker of,
it's a blood test, which says your average blood sugar for the last three months, right? If you're
6.5 or above, we say you've got type 2 diabetes. If you're 6 to 6.5, you have something called prediabetes. Wow. No, sorry, here it's 5.7, right?
But the point is, if it's just below that at 5.6, we say you don't have anything.
You're fine.
You're fine.
But you're not fine.
This is a continuum.
Very close.
Very close, right?
And so what I'm just trying to get the point across is that something doesn't magically
change when you go up 0.1 and you're now in, you know...
Prediabetes right here.
Yeah. This has been building up for 10 years. And I want us to be picking this up
one year in saying, hey, look, you don't have prediabetes yet, but you're going to get it
within a few years. And my approach really, Lewis, is about four key areas of health,
right?
I find that what I do with most people comes down to what I call the four pillars of health.
That's what I did on the show.
That's what I outlined in my book.
Because I think when we can simplify health down, people get it.
Right.
Right? And I cover connection, and I cover emotional health, but I do it under the umbrella of relax, right?
Relax?
Yeah, okay. So just to back up, my four pillars of health the umbrella of relax. Right. Relax. Yeah.
Okay.
So just to back up, my four pillars of health.
That's the first pillar.
Relax.
Yeah.
And there's a reason I started with relax because-
When we are tight and stressed, that's when we cause dis-ease, right?
Absolutely.
The more tight we are for the longer amount of years,
we build something up in the body that has symptoms, negative symptoms, right?
Yeah.
And can dictate our choices.
You're feeling stressed.
You're not having any time to yourself, right?
You will find it harder to make healthy food choices.
Yeah.
You will find it harder to have the motivation to work out and get your body moving.
You...
And when the brain is a roller coaster, you're causing disease, dysfunction in your body,
right?
Absolutely.
And, you know, it's interesting. The publisher first said, you know, disease, dysfunction in your body, right? Absolutely. And, you know,
it's interesting. The publisher first said, you know, we should start with food. And I said,
no, no, no. I want to, look, everyone will expect me to start with food, right? We undervalue
relaxation. Peace of mind. Yeah. We undervalue relaxation in society. We prioritize, you know,
when we talk about health, everyone's talking about food and movement, right? Don't get me wrong, they're important, but I give equal priority to food,
movement, sleep, and relaxation. And I think that's what makes my approach a little bit different is
that I say, look, you don't need the perfect diet. You don't need the perfect workout regime,
right? You need to do enough in each pillar.
And I think that's what leads to the changes that not only work in two weeks, they're still going
to be working in two months, in six months, in 12 months, in two years. You know, we can all go
on a crash 10-day diet. I feel better. All of us can do that. I could do that. But will that
change my behavior? I'm not
so sure. Yeah. And as an athlete, we always talk about being in the zone, being in the flow.
And the only way to get in the flow is to be relaxed. Because if you're playing basketball
or football and you're running tight like this intense, you're not going to be able to
flow at any moment and move and be agile. So you must be able to be relaxed in order to achieve peak
results in your sport. Yeah. So how I totally agree. It actually reminds me of a story that
I talk about in the fourth chapter in Relax. I say we all need a daily practice of stillness,
and I define what that is, right? And in that chapter, I talk about flow state and I talk about
athletes. And I talk about Tiger Woods, actually. And I always remember as a kid growing up, I would just idolize that guy and think,
God, he's just amazing what he's doing.
And he's getting all kinds of people interested in the sport just for his brilliance at the time.
And I remember a lot of people used to criticize him.
And I remember an interview he said once, you know, on a Sunday
on the back nine, I can't hear the crowds. I don't know all that emotional commotion that's
going on. I'm in the zone. He's in flow state, right? He is literally just in the moment and
zoned in. But you know who else is in flow state? My five-year-old daughter or my seven-year-old son, when they're coloring
a book or playing building Lego blocks, they're in flow state. I could talk to them. They're not
being rude and ignoring me. They're just completely immersed in the moment. We can
learn from those kids. That's the thing about about technology, right? It takes us out.
We start to get distracted.
I love tech, right?
The whole relaxed pillar, you know, a big feature of that is how do we use technology in a way that it empowers us and it helps us rather than enslaves us.
And I think for many of us, unfortunately, technology is like a…
We're slaves.
We're slaves to it. And it was a year and a half ago when I realized,
I thought to myself,
has there ever been a day in the last 15 years
since I had my cell phone?
I got my cell phone when I was 17.
And I was like, have I ever had a day
where I didn't have my cell phone on me?
And I couldn't think of a moment,
one day where I didn't have it on me.
And I was like, that's kind of a crime.
I feel like that's a really bad sign that I'm addicted to something if I do it every single day for 15 years.
Yeah.
And, you know, I started sleeping with it right next to my head, you know, next to my desk or whatever, to my bed.
And I was just like, and I was always checking it.
And I was like, something's got to change.
And that's when I took my first trip without it and I left it here.
it and I was like something's got to change and that's when I took my first trip without it and I left it here and it was so relaxing and relieving to to not be chained to a technology and then I
did it again recently and it was again another reminder like I want to do this at least once a
year for a week yeah and do these sabbaths like you talk about one day a week even just going out
to dinner without it leaving it home know, like going to the movie
and not taking it with you.
Like whenever you go out one night a week,
two nights a week, just leave it at home.
And I feel like it's so freeing to just fully connect.
It's like a holiday.
It's like you feel like you've had a holiday,
just three hours without your phone.
It all comes down.
And I think what's crazy for me, Lewis,
is that in 2018, you know, we have to talk to people.
I feel as a medical doctor, I need to write 25% of my entire book on relaxation. Because I think
if you go back 20 years, right? And again, maybe it's a romantic viewpoint of the world before,
but let's say your standard family, right? People come home from work.
You have dinner together.
You have dinner together, right? And then after dinner, if you've got kids,
you might put them to bed, right? If you don't, I think people would maybe go sit on the sofa and put the TV on, right? There wouldn't be the option of, can I keep working on my business?
Can I catch up on my work emails so my day is easier tomorrow. You didn't even have that opportunity.
So I think relaxation almost, it would be there. It would naturally be there in the evenings.
I think because we've got this amazing technology where we can literally talk to someone with a
video 5,000 miles away, which is incredible, right? But it also means that if we're not careful,
it's going to take over us. And I actually think we're the generation now we're gonna technology social media is pretty new i don't
know how old is facebook 12 years 12 years right i think okay think about something which what over
1 billion people on the planet have or i can't remember the latest figure 2 billion 2 billion
people right it's just incredible crazy Did not exist 12 years ago.
Yeah.
And so I think we actually need almost like, you know, we talk about something, you know,
good sleep hygiene rules to help you sleep.
I think we need good technology rules.
What are some good practices around technology that are going to help us?
No one's getting rid of tech.
Nor should we get rid of tech.
You know, it's here to stay. Great boundaries for yourself. Yeah.
Yeah. In the sleep portion of the book, one of my recommendations is what I call a no tech 90
before bed. You know, the whole idea, can you switch off all modern tech 90 minutes before bed?
Even TV or you mean? No, I don't include TV in that. And I explain why.
Relax. Yeah. And also I think, you know,
there's two factors with the technology. One is the blue light that we get from it. So one of our sleep
hormones is called melatonin. We get that when it gets dark, right? Blue light, we only see in
nature in the morning or maybe in the early afternoon. We don't see it in the evenings.
But when you've got that phone next to your face, that is blue light. That is telling your body it's daytime. That's the sun. Time to wake up, right? But the TV is typically a lot further
away from you than your phone. Our phones are like here, right? Aren't they? And so I think
TV is okay. But again, if you're going to watch a violent thriller before you go to bed,
watch out. Watch out.
Have some bad dreams and some bad sleep.
Yeah. So one factor
is the blue light, but the other factor is that emotional commotion. Zooming. Yeah, exactly.
I had a patient recently. He's like a 42-year-old busy executive, right? He has had three and a half
years sleep a night for about 25 years, right? He's tried everything, like literally everything.
He's been to the sleep clinic. He's been investigated. He doesn't have a, what we call a primary sleep disorder. And here's the thing
about sleep that I think a lot of the public and maybe a lot of my profession don't realize is that
in my, you know, 17 years of experience of seeing patients, people who struggle with their sleep,
the majority of them are doing something in their daily
lifestyle that they don't realize is affecting their ability to sleep at night. So it's not
about giving them something to take. It's about identifying what's going on in their lifestyle.
And this guy, three and a half hours sleep a night, I'm not kidding you, within five weeks,
he was sleeping seven hours a night because Wow. Because food impacts your sleep. Absolutely.
Sugar. Sugar impacts your sleep. But he was like a complete workaholic. He would literally,
after dinner, he'd be back on the computer. He felt he had to be on call till 10.30, 11 o'clock.
It's hard to slow down in that way. It's hard to slow down. And he couldn't do a no-tech 90. So
you know what? We started off with a no-tech 20. Yeah. Right? And he started to feel
the benefits and then he wanted to make the changes. Right? So this is the whole point about
my approach with like Devin, that 16-year-old boy. I want to set the bar so low with people
that they feel that they can do it. Then when you do that, you feel good. You feel
motivated. You feel, yeah, yeah, I can do that. A prime example would be, I've got this thing
called a five-minute kitchen workout. In my movement pillar, probably one of my favorite
suggestions is the five-minute kitchen workout. And where did this come from, right? This comes
from this whole idea that a few years ago, I kind of realized that strength training,
now I know you're an athlete, but
strength training is very much undervalued again in society.
You know, once we hit 30, you know, we start losing muscle mass each year.
And our muscle mass is one of the biggest predictors of how well we're going to be as
we age.
Really?
Yeah, absolutely.
And some people call it the number one predictor of how well you're going to be is your muscle
mass.
So it's important to build muscle mass.
Yeah, particularly after the age of 30. So arguably, we associate working out with teenagers and 20s, something's trying to look buff and good in the gym, right? And look good when they go out.
Arguably, it's more important as you get older is to train your strength.
What does it help with? It helps predict the longevity of your life.
Longevity and how well you're going to age. It helps predict the longevity of your life. Longevity and
how well you're going to age. It's one of the strongest determinants. Because why? Because
what's the reason why? Well, okay. So we think of muscle as dumb muscle, right? It's just that
if we were going to shift this table, right, and push it or lift it, we need our muscle.
It just serves a mechanical function. In the last few years, we've realized muscle is probably the forgotten organ. It's an active organ. It regulates hormones in your body.
It burns fat. It burns fat. It sends out immune system messages called cytokines to
other parts of the body, right? It's not just dumb muscle. It helps with all kinds of things.
muscle. It helps with all kinds of things. And, you know, we neglect it. And as a doctor, and I think I used to give this advice to people, I was like, you know, strength training is really
important. You know, you've got to join a gym. They come back a few weeks later. I said, how
are you getting on with that? Doc, you know, I've not had time, you know, I can't afford the gym
and work's too busy. And again, I never thought, Lewis, I never thought, you know,
these guys aren't doing what I told them. I thought, okay, the advice I'm giving them
is not resonating. It's not connecting with them in a way that they feel that they can do it. I've
got to do a better job, right? So in that moment, it was with a patient, I came up with this five
minute kitchen workout. Now look, there's plenty of other great workouts out there. I'm not claiming to have, if you've got another one you like doing, do it, right?
This is not saying I've come up with some unique approach, right? But all my tools are to do with
what I've seen work with people, with real people, with busy lives, busy jobs, busy families.
So I would say, okay, look, these five exercises, I'd get my jacket off, right? I'd hit the deck and I
would teach them how to do it. So like a press-up, for example, a press-up on the floor, it's actually
a pretty tricky exercise, right? It's a bit easy to do it on the desk, but I've got 70-year-old
patients who can do it against the wall, right? You can do it against the wall. So I would teach
these people how to do these like five minute kitchen workouts. And you know,
when people, if you said to someone, have you got 45 minutes, three times a week to work out?
They may say no, but then they don't go and do it. If I say, hey, have you got five minutes twice a
week? Is that what you want, doc? I'm like, yeah, five minutes twice a week. So I start there. And
I recently, and I talk about this in the book, I got this couple in their 60s who
came to see me recently. I thought they would benefit and they were skeptical. I'm telling you,
they were really skeptical, but I didn't take no for an answer. I still had the jacket on,
I was still against the wall teaching them how to do it. And they said, all right, Doc, we'll give
you a go. So they went home and I gave them a follow-up in four weeks and they came back and
said, how are you guys getting on? Oh my God, we love it. We're doing it. We started off in the kitchen and now they do it six times a week.
Wow. Upstairs, right? As their evening bath is running on their upstairs landing,
they're knocking out this five minute kitchen workout. And actually often it's 10 minutes.
Right. So from then doing zero strength training, they're now doing six times a week,
10 minutes upstairs. Right. But I only said they had to doing six times a week, 10 minutes upstairs, right? But I only said
they had to do 10 minutes a week, right? Because they feel good. They start to get the benefits.
And I've got countless stories like that, but anybody can do it, any ability level.
The people like the gym. I love the gym, right? Great. But there's a lot of people out there
that if we say you've got to go to a gym to stay fit, that's an obstacle.
Yeah.
Well, I'm just never going to get fit then.
Never going to do it.
So I'm all about…
Simple ways to do it.
Simple ways to do it.
That's my whole approach, man.
It sounds like to me that there are two things that medical school does not do.
That if they did, the world would be mostly healed or way better off. One is teaching
doctors about nutrition and lifestyle and understanding about not treating the actual
symptom, but actually treating the root cause of the actions that people are taking, the thoughts,
the beliefs behind all this. And number two, teaching doctors how to effectively understand and relate from their point of view and communicate, like you said, in a way so they can
start taking these actions. How come medical school, they're not teaching what arguably
sounds like to me the two most important things to
change people's health. Yeah. Very, very good point. Obviously, there's two factors there. I
think the first thing we've got to recognize is that these modern healthcare systems, obviously,
look, I'm born and brought up in the UK, right? So that's my bias, but I've come out to America
a lot and I don't think it's dissimilar here. These healthcare systems
were set up in a different era, right? They were set up in an era where what people went to see
their doctor with was an acute problem. You'd go with a pneumonia, with a chest infection.
Fix it. Fix it, right? So the whole system of these 10, 15-minute appointments,
right, was set up in that era because modern medicine worked in that era.
It responded well to that. You go in with your problem, you get your diagnosis, you get your
pill for that ill, and you take it for seven days or whatever, and the problem goes, right?
The problem is, is that the health landscape of the entire Western world, but arguably the whole
world now, has changed dramatically. Whereas the bulk of what we are seeing, right, is in some way related to our modern lifestyles. I don't think healthcare
systems have kept up. I don't think medical school has kept up. And I think it's almost like we're
trying to hold on to the way it's always been without recognizing, look outside that window.
It is different out there, right? The world has changed. Even technology, we spoke a lot about
technology. That's only, what, 15, 16 years old, or social media at 12 years old, let's say Facebook
at least. Surely we need to understand these tools of how social media might impact our health.
We don't need to wait for the big 10-year study. We've lost a bit of common sense. You know, I feel I can make a
statement like how to make disease disappear, right? It's a pretty bold statement, right?
What I mean by that is, it's just to really try and challenge people's perception of what disease
is. I get it. Some diseases do need proper medical treatment. I don't dispute that, right?
Modern medicine has given me 15 years with my father that I would not have got without life-saving modern medical treatment. So I'm all for modern medicine, but we
shouldn't apply, you know, that works for acute disease. We shouldn't apply that same sledgehammer
approach to these chronic diseases that actually have got lifestyle as a root cause. Last year,
I was thinking, okay, I'm showing these great results with these families on television.
You know, so in the UK, about 5 million people watch each show. And I kind of thought, well,
if 1% of people who watch this make a change in their life, well, I've just affected 50,000 people.
If 10% do, that's half a million people. And now that show's gone to 70 different countries around
the world. I think, okay, this is great. But how do I really
create change? I can keep talking about the lifestyle and nutrition thing about doctors,
or I can do something about it. So I spent six months creating a new course, the very first
course in the UK called Prescribing Lifestyle Medicine that has been accredited by the Royal
College of GPs. And I just ran that in January. That's cool.
by the Royal College of GPs. And I just ran that in January. That's cool. Yeah. We had nearly 200 docs attend. 95% of people said they would highly recommend it to their colleagues. So we're really,
really pleased that we're actually now, because those 200 healthcare professionals and docs,
they can go back into their world and they can help all their patients, right? And we weren't
teaching them. And here's the point that people miss, Lewis, right?
It's not even about teaching in-depth nutrition, although I think that would be a good idea.
We still have a position in society, whether warranted or not, people often come to check with their doctor, what's the real deal here? I think for many years, people would have been
better off going to see a really good personal trainer or a really good nutritionist, but come to see a medical doctor for something like type
two diabetes. And I don't say that with any pride, right? I say that I've met some fantastic
other healthcare professionals who've got really great knowledge who can help their patients.
But if we don't know at least the broad base of this stuff, we're going to say, oh no,
that's not right. You know, you've got to take this medication, right? So I think what we taught is a new framework. How do you plot, how do you
see that patient with all their symptoms and then very quickly, within a few minutes, because
ultimately that's where the healthcare system is at the moment, right? Yeah, I'd love if all doctors
had an hour with their patient, but I also recognize that that's not going to happen for a while. So we've come up with this framework where within 10 minutes,
right, people can come up with an understanding of what's going on and give them a lifestyle
prescription. And it's based around these four pillars actually that I talk about in the book.
It's that simple that the idea is taking off. I could have made it six pillars, seven pillars,
eight pillars. But I try to, as I said,
the whole social connection piece, the whole emotional health piece, I bring up under the
whole relaxation piece, such as eat a meal, round a table, one meal a day, in company if you can,
round a table. With no devices. With no devices. Yeah. This sounds like soft medicine. Hey,
I'm telling you. Soft medicine works. I'm telling you, I didn't know until I did
doctor in the house and I go with these families, that is not common. What was happening in probably
every dining room in the UK, and I'm guessing around in the US, 30, 40 years ago, now we have
knocked out our dining rooms, right? We don't have tables. We've got widescreen TVs, right?
And one family, I have many families, but one family, right, I was't have tables. We've got widescreen TVs, right? And one family, I have
many families, but one family, right, I was with, they never sat down and ate together. I watched
them eat their meals. Everyone's on their devices, you know, people around the living room, some
people watching TV, some people on Facebook while eating. Just by saying, hey guys, once a day,
do you think when you guys are together, you can maybe have no device and
sit around together? They're like, yeah, sure. What's the big deal? I tell you, they told me
on screen, this is transformative. They start to connect with the people around them.
Talk about the things that are upsetting them, talk about the things that they're
proud of and have communication. Yeah, absolutely. And just to go back to your second point
about medical schools, right?
So I think, yeah, our training needs to update
to reflect the 21st century.
I think we're stuck in the 20th century.
I think we're applying 20th century thinking
to 21st century problems.
But communication, we finish off that day
with a role play.
And I say, look, let's take Brian, for example,
right? Brian's coming in. He's got a new diagnosis of type 2 diabetes. This can roll two ways.
What tends to happen is now, you know, come in. Oh, hi Brian, how you doing? Look, your
blood results have come back. You've got a condition called type 2 diabetes now. This
can increase your risk of a heart attack, of a stroke. Sometimes it could cause blindness as well.
Some people end up on kidney dialysis. Don't worry, we've got some great medications that
can help you, right? And we go through that. Then as Brian's walking out, hey, if you can
lose a bit of weight as well, you know, that'd be really helpful, right? That's what's happening
at the moment. Contrast that with, hey, Brian, come in. Hey, Brian, look, I've got some
news for you, okay? You know, this blood test you did last week? Well, things have come up.
Okay, what's happened, doc? Well, you've got a condition called type 2 diabetes. Do you know
what that is? Is it something to do with blood sugar? So yeah, you're absolutely right. It's
something to do with blood sugar. But let me explain to you what that is, right? This has
been building up in your body for about 10 years, right? This has been building up in your body
for about 10 years, right? This has not just happened overnight. Because yeah, yeah, my own
dad's got it. Yeah, your dad's got it. It doesn't mean you're going to get it. Would you like me
to explain to you what you might be able to do to certainly stop the progression and maybe start
reversing this? Is there anything I can do, doc? Yeah, yeah, there's plenty. Are you interested? Yeah, yeah, tell me. And so then I take these four
pillars I outline in the book and we go through them and we go, okay, let's choose one place to
start. Let's say the five-minute kitchen workout, for example, right? Look, I won't go to the whole
thing, right, Lewis, but can you see the difference? Sure, yeah. Right? That person's going to go out
on consultation one thinking, oh my God, I've got this problem. It's serious. Right. That person's going to go out on consultation one thinking,
oh my God, I've got this problem. It's serious. I've got the medication. And then yeah, also an
afterthought is I can do a bit with my own lifestyle. But the medication is going to help.
But the medication, but the doc was talking about the medication first. So really that's the,
in their head, it's like, yeah, I've got the medication now. That's going to sort me out.
I'll keep doing what I'm doing. Right. Right? But the second guy, Brian's going to go at it a different way this time. He's going to
go, wow, there's stuff that I can do about this. And he's going to help me. He's going to help
show me what I can do about this. I know this sounds trivial, right? But this is genuinely
what is happening out there. And the next question, Luna says, can you teach communication skills? I think you can to a certain degree. But I think instead of looking for straight A students
in med school, I think we should be assessing is, has this person got empathy? Has this person got
an ability to communicate? I think, honestly, the number one skill of any healthcare professional
is not how much science and knowledge they know. It's can they communicate.
Yeah.
If you can't communicate what you know, then it's kind of worthless.
It's worthless.
It doesn't matter how much you know up here.
You can't make it relevant for the person in front of you.
You can't get results.
You can't get results.
And you've got to use different language with different people.
You've got to use different language with different people.
If they're living on a council estate or a high rise and they're on social service benefits or social security benefits, right?
You may need to communicate these ideas in a different way with them
than somebody who is the CEO of a big company
and can afford a personal trainer three times a week, right?
Because they both deserve the right to good
quality, healthy information. They both deserve the right to be healthy. I feel really strongly
about that. We know if you live in a poor area, you have worse health outcomes. It's the same here
as it is in the UK. And I want to try and change that. And I'm really proud that the recommendations I make on my show
and the recommendations I make in this book, Lewis,
that you've got in front of you, right, the majority of them are free.
Yeah.
And health can be that simple.
Yeah.
Is there anything in your health that's lacking?
Yeah.
I think there's a certain irony of trying to go around the UK, trying to travel around the
world to spread your message, to empower as many people as possible to be the architects of their
own health. But in the process, you often sacrifice your own health. Now, if we take this
four-pillar approach, because I would love this four-pillar
approach to take off. I'd love every person listening to this right now, Lewis, to think
about their own health and go, which of these four pillars do I need the most work in?
Yeah. Relaxing, eating, moving, and sleeping.
Yeah. Because most of us intuitively know. I say start there. Pick one small thing and start there.
If your diet is already good enough, you know what?
Are you getting enough sleep then? Yeah. Don't stress about that little bit of sugar you have
each week when you meet your friends, right? Your diet is probably good enough. You're going to get
more bang for your buck by switching off your phone an hour before bed and getting more sleep,
right? If I apply that to myself on that four-petal approach, I'm struggling with relax.
Really? At the moment, I'm really, I'm struggling to switch off. I'm in the middle of, I've created this brand new course for doctors.
I'm trying to run, see my patients. I love my wife and my two young children. I want to spend
time with them. I'm traveling around the world to promote this book that I genuinely believe.
I know from the feedback in the UK that it is transforming the health of tens of thousands
of people. I'm getting that feedback,
which is the most incredible thing.
You know, these guys aren't having to go on my waiting list and come and see me in clinic.
These guys can just read these tools,
apply them and change their health.
They're feeling better, yeah.
They're feeling better, right?
I've got people coming off medication and stuff.
But if I apply it to myself,
in fact, Lewis, I'll tell you what I'll do.
I'm going to commit to you.
Yes.
Right?
What are you going to do with relax?
I am going to commit to the daily
practice of stillness. Okay? I'm going to make sure every small. I'm going to commit to five
minutes of meditation a day for the next seven days. I'm going to shake your hand and say,
I'm going to do that. For the next seven days. When was the last time you meditated?
and say, I'm going to do that.
For like seven days.
When was the last time you meditated?
The last time I meditated was six weeks ago, maybe.
And it was just a one-off.
Five minutes a day.
Five minutes a day.
Seven days.
Yeah.
Feel free to meet me back, man.
Yeah, you check in with me.
But yeah, I think the reason I'm choosing that one is because that's one I struggle with.
It'd be easy for me to talk about gratitude and use that one. But when I'm at home, I think the reason I'm choosing that one is because that's one I struggle with. It'd be easy for me to talk about gratitude and use that one.
But when I'm at home, I do that.
I've got this little game that I play with my kids every night at the dinner table.
Do you know Charles Poliquin, the strength coach?
Have you heard of him?
I've heard of him, yes.
I learned it from him, actually.
He told me he does this with his daughter.
And during our dinner, we go around the table and we have to say,
what have I done today to make somebody else happy? What has somebody else done today to make
me happy? And what have I learned today? And if I'm honest, I thought, oh, this is going to be
really, really good for the kids. You know, it's really going to help them. This is pretty good
for mom and dad as well, actually. So it would be a cop out for me to say, I'm going to do that one
because I already do it. So yeah, I'm going to try and do this and I'll let you know if I get on.
Try? I am going to do this.
Five minutes a day. Five minutes a day.
Seven days. Seven days.
See how that feels. Yeah.
What's the next thing for you? Are you moving enough? Are you doing strength training?
Yeah. So I'm here in LA. Okay. I'm staying with a mutual friend of ours. Well, I went for a workout
with him this morning, actually. I don't want to sound as though I am perfect. I'm not, you know, I've
got a busy life like a lot of people, but my dad passed away just over for almost five years ago to
the day. That was along with my son's illness, one of the most significant shifts in the way I
think about things. And I do prioritize my health.
So I'm pretty dialed in with my food most of the time, my movement.
I kind of prioritize sleep.
But it was a long process.
Five years ago, we were having this interview.
I was struggling.
So I think if I can commit to that,
that will actually give me so many health benefits.
I bet it would.
Yeah.
And you're doing digital detox at night or 20 minutes before bed?
Yeah, I'm pretty good at that.
When I'm at home, it's always harder when you're traveling because of jet lag and this kind of thing.
But I do switch off in the evenings.
You know, I've got a slot, you know, come 8.30 or 9 o'clock, I'm out.
You won't get me on my phone.
You won't be able to, I won't be looking at emails.
I'm winding down. I'm creating my bedtime routine because I know that when I then sleep well,
I perform much better. I'm a calmer person. There's some people that talk about sleep
and say, don't sleep. Sleep is for those who are weak and just stay up and work harder and to get
results. But really, if you want
to perform at a high level, you've got to be able to allow your body to recover, your mind,
your muscles. And if you don't, you're going to be very deprived of energy. If you don't have
energy every single day, you're not going to be able to perform. So that's why sleep is going to
become more important for me. And I've been getting up at 5.30 a.m. I am not a morning person at all,
but I started three weeks ago getting up at 5.30 to see what it'd be like to start conditioning
myself to hopefully go to bed earlier because I was getting up earlier. And I'm lifting and
working out at 6 a.m. And it was hard the first week to break the habit of going to bed before
midnight. I'm usually like a 12.30, 1 o'clock, 1.30, fall asleep type of guy. I've always been that way. It's just hard for me to fall asleep.
But when you train really hard at 5.30, 6 a.m., you're tired at night. And you move your body,
and you sweat, and you're lifting, and you're pushing your muscles. You are tired. And 10
o'clock rolls around, and I'm like ready to pass out. And it feels so good to go to bed at 10.30
and wake up at 5.30 ready to go. This is how I shifted my pattern a few years ago. I would have
told you back in my college days, right? I would tell you I'm a night owl. Yeah. Yeah. I'm no longer.
I feel sleepy at 9.30, but I get up at 5.30. Yeah. And that's my new pattern. And I tell you,
in September last year, I was in Iceland lecturing at this medical conference with a guy from
California called Dr. Sachinandapanda. And he's done some incredible research. I think he's one
of Time Magazine's top 50 scientists. And we went out for dinner. And I said to him,
people talk about night owls and larks, but what happens really, you know, when we remove modern
living and we get out into nature, how did this work on an evolutionary level? He goes,
it's interesting you say that, Rangan. He's like, when we take people out of the lab, we take them
camping, right? Away from their devices. You just back out in nature. Actually, this big thing of
night owls and larks, it all gets compressed. Everyone's got roughly the same bedtime.
Maybe it's half an hour, 40 minutes different, but it's not this,
maybe you can stay up or you could have stayed up till 1230 because you're growing your business,
you're on your screen, the blue lights. Drinking coffee or whatever. Drinking coffee, yeah. But once you take out the lifestyle choices, actually, what is your
natural bedtime? As you say, it's hard at first, but you got to give these things a chance to bed
in and see.
Yeah, it's funny.
Whenever I used to go camping as a kid, I remember feeling that same way.
But you're making the fire, you're putting the logs together, you're hiking, and then it's dark at 6.30 or 7 or whatever.
And then around 10 o'clock, these stars are beautiful, and everyone's starting to slow down.
You're like, let me get my
sleeping bag and fall asleep. You're not thinking of like, oh, I'm going to be up till 3am. No,
you're tired. Yeah, exactly. You're in nature. You're not connected to your device, like you
said. Exactly. And I think, what does that mean? Because people might listen to this and go,
yeah, that's great, but I don't live in nature, right? I don't camp, you know, I'm busy. I think what it means is, look, use nature,
use that evolutionary idea as your template and try and figure out what is it that you can do
to mimic that as much as possible. And you don't have to be perfect. You won't be perfect. It's
too damn hard. Just do your best, yeah. Do your best. And, you know, the approach I take,
you've got these four pillars, right? There's five suggestions in each one. Not prescriptions.
I never, as a doctor, I never told anyone what to do, right? I think as a human being,
you just got to empower them with information and give them a helping hand. But like, for example, I've never told a patient that they need to give up smoking. And that might surprise you. And the
reason is, is because if I have explained and I'm confident that they've understood me, that what smoking is doing to their
body, but they turn around and say, hey, doc, you know, I get it, but I get so much enjoyment out
of it. I think who am I as a human being? Well, what right do I have in that moment to say,
no, you must give it up. That's the approach I've always
taken. And I think that's one of the reasons I get good compliance with my patients is in this book,
right? There's 20 chapters, right? Each chapter is a possible solution. It's a suggestion I make.
Nobody's going to do all 20, right? I say, do a little bit in each one. Some people will do well
if they just do two things in each one of those pillars.
I'm not expecting perfection.
It's not about the perfect diet, the perfect gym routine.
That's exhausting too.
It's exhausting.
Perfect diet for years.
It's really hard to do.
And you're going to stress yourself out by going out.
You'll never be able to go out with your friends.
It's always going to, you know.
You'll create your own disease by doing that.
Yeah.
It's about balance across all four.
The other thing is if you don't like one of the suggestions I make, don't do it. I don't want
you to do them all. If that doesn't resonate with you, if you don't think, yeah, I can do that in my
life, in my family setting, in the context of my shift patterns at work, I actually don't want to
say don't do it. Move on to another chapter. Find one that you want. Find one that jumps off the
page to you. Right. And I think, I don't know, Lewis, you to another chapter. Find one that jumps off the page to you.
And I think, I don't know, Lewis, you've had a lot of authors on this, right? I think that's
what makes this approach a little bit different. It's like, I'm not telling you what to do.
I'm just trying to offer you real achievable solutions that I have seen work over the last
17 years. You talk about medicine being an art and a science. And this is part of that,
I'm assuming, is like figuring out what works for you and taking on a few things and
adding something else at a different stage of your life. It's an art.
I'm not a scientist. People say, no, you're a doctor. You are a scientist. Hold on a minute.
I'm a doctor. My job is to try my best to help the person in front of me in as harmless a way as possible.
No study in the published research tells me exactly what I do with that patient. It guides me,
but it doesn't tell me. I'm not a slave to research. And what I mean by that is,
in my profession, we talk about evidence-based medicine. People misunderstand evidence-based
medicine. Evidence-based medicine is the combination of three things. The research
evidence, patient preference, and clinical expertise. It's where those three things meet
in the middle. That's evidence-based medicine. If it was just research evidence, right? You could
teach a monkey to be a doctor. Just follow this protocol and everyone will get better. You know what? We're more complex than that. There is an art
in knowing how to apply the science that you know with that person in front of you, right? And that's
why I'm passionate that medicine is art and science. Some people say that's controversial,
right? I'm happy to stand head to head with anyone and go through that because I'm there in the trenches
seeing patients and you know what research is great but it's not everything yeah what's your
biggest fear as a human not as a doctor but as a human my biggest fear is not being as good a dad as I want to be.
The best.
Honestly, the thing I think about is,
am I being the best dad that I can to my children?
Why do you think that?
Because I think I've got,
I'm on this mission to try and help as many people as possible.
I travel a lot.
I go around a lot, the country or travel internationally and lecture to get this message out there.
And I think, am I spending enough time, like quality time with the children?
Can I justify this because it's for the greater good?
Does that negate me not spending enough time with my children?
I'm probably really harsh on myself, in fact, Lewis,
because I think I'm a good dad.
I certainly prioritize time with my kids.
I'm very hands-on when I'm there.
I'm here in LA doing this with you.
My kids are on vacation at the moment,
so they're at home without daddy.
Right.
And it's probably my issue.
It's my own personal baggage, I guess. I guess you
probably might be expecting a different answer. I don't know where that came from, but you put
me on the spot. That's what comes out, man. What do you think would make you the best dad
you could possibly be? I think the first thing is, like when I'm here now with you, is to be
present and be focused and actually not think about what's going on at home. Just go, no, I'm here. I'm spreading an important message. Be present with
this. Don't feel guilty because it doesn't serve me being here. It doesn't serve them.
But I think the thing which I'm really trying to do at the moment, Lewis, is when I am home
is spending quality time with them. And what I mean by that is time without
my device. I'm making a conscious effort now to either switch my phone off or put it upstairs
and actually be with the kids and do something with them and be present with them. Because I
tell you, if you can do that for one hour a day, that is worth 10 hours being there with them when you're constantly distracted and you're not with them.
It is amazing.
It's incredible.
And I remember reading in, I think it was in the Tim Ferriss book, Tools of Titans.
I think there's a chapter with Seth Godin.
And he talks about this idea of spending two hours a day without a screen with your child.
And he was pretty harsh.
And I think he says something like, you haven't got time for that.
You know, you've got to really seriously question things.
And I thought that was a bit of a harsh truth, actually.
And again, I'm being harsh on myself, Lewis, right?
Because I think I am a hands-on dad.
I think I do spend quality time with them.
But I've really shifted to keeping my devices away. Because I think I do spend quality time with them, but I've really shifted to me keeping
my devices away because I think I get distracted like all of us when the device is there. And hey,
I tell you what, man, kids call you out on it. They know, you know, my daughter.
Get off your phone, dad. Yeah.
Yeah. No, actually sometimes I'm quite good at not going on it. I don't want them to see me
going on it, but my daughter will say, Daddy, you're not listening to me.
And hey, I tell you what,
when you're being called out,
and this is when she was four,
when you're being called out by your four-year-old daughter,
that hits you hard and you go,
okay, all right, she's right.
So yeah, I think phone-free time every day with your children,
I think it's golden, man.
Yeah, it's powerful.
This is called the three truths question I ask everyone at the end.
So imagine this is your last day many years from now,
and you choose the day you want to leave this earth.
It's your final day.
You've done everything you want to do,
but you have to take everything with you that you've created,
all your books, all your work, all your messages. You have to take it with you as you go.
But you get to write down on a piece of paper your final thoughts, your three truths, the biggest lessons that you want to leave
behind to the world, to humanity, to your friends. These three truths that only thing people would
have to remember you by is this. What would you say are your three truths? This is the sort of
thing that would constantly change depending on your age. And if I come back in five years, I'd probably say something different. But right here, right now,
I say, number one, treat every single person you meet with compassion and respect. I think number
two, don't take yourself too seriously. I think the final one probably reflects of our conversation is don't mistake electronic
transactional communication for real life meaningful human connection.
The electronic world is not the real world.
And so prioritize real human connection.
Those are great, yeah.
I want to acknowledge you for a moment for your evolution as a doctor
because you went into this profession with a certain type of teaching and training
that got you only so far,
and then you decided that you wanted to learn more
to help actually heal people from the inside out
as opposed to just prescribing something for a temporary benefit. And your ability to be with
people for weeks at a time and sacrifice to learn about lifestyle and different approach to humanity
and the health of all of us is really inspiring. So I want to acknowledge you for constantly showing up and putting out things that everyone can take on these simple ideas and start practicing.
It doesn't matter how rich or poor you are or where you live in the world.
We can all do certain things to help make disease disappear.
So I want to acknowledge you for all that.
Thanks, man.
I really appreciate that, Lewis.
I just want to, you know, from me back to you, just I live five and a half thousand miles away from you,
but, you know, I'm on the train to London often listening to your podcast,
the stuff that the magic you're creating here is traveling around the world
and is having an impact on, you know, people all over.
So I just want to thank you for that.
It's incredible.
Appreciate it, man.
Appreciate you.
If you guys haven't got the book yet,
make sure to get the book.
It's called How to Make Disease Disappear.
Go check it out.
You can get it right now online,
bookstores, all the places that you can go.
Where can they follow you online specifically
or your website or social media?
My website's drchatterjee.com,
but I spend a lot of time on Facebook and Instagram,
which is at drchatterjee,
D-R-C-H-A-T-T-E-R-J-E-E.
Okay. And Twitter is at DrChatterjeeUK. But I think Instagram and Facebook is probably where
I'm at. Yeah. Okay, cool. At DrChatterjee. Awesome. Let us know what you guys thought of this. Let us
know the idea you liked the most from this episode and tweet DrChatterjee and myself and let us know
what you think. Final question for you is,
what's your definition of greatness?
I think my definition of greatness is,
it's probably a little bit to do with the three truths
that I gave you, really.
It's over 7 billion people on this planet, right?
And everyone genuinely is equal or should be.
So for me, someone who is truly great is somebody who treats every single person that they communicate with, that they connect with, with deep compassion and respect.
That for me is what it truly means to be great.
Dr. Charity, thank you so much.
There you have it, my friends. If you gained some valuable wisdom today about how to reverse
disease and reclaim your health with Dr. Chatterjee, make sure to share it with your
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Every Monday, Wednesday, Friday, we release new powerful insights and episodes to help
you unlock the greatness that's always been inside of you because it's always been there.
Don't you ever forget it.
That's always been inside of you because it's always been there.
Don't you ever forget it.
And to reflect on this for a moment, guys, if you're not setting up the habits and routines to optimize your life, I mean, gamify your health.
Really just create a lifestyle eating plan.
Don't go on different diets where you're constantly up and down.
Just create a lifestyle change where this becomes the
go-to that you have throughout your life. It's going to take some time. It might take a month
or two or three months to figure it all out and figure out what works for you. And you may have
to adjust things over time as you evolve in your body and in your lifestyle, but really set yourself
up to win. You know, I'm getting up at 5.30 a.m., which I don't want to do.
I want to sleep until noon if I could.
Really, I love sleep,
but going to bed earlier and getting up earlier
has been a game changer for me,
and it gets me started.
It gets me knowing I completed something positive
for my body and for my health in the morning early.
That way, when 7 a.m. comes around,
I've already completed something
really challenging for my health.
It makes me want to eat better throughout the day.
It makes me want to go to bed earlier
so I can sleep more.
All these things add up
and will help you in your life.
So make sure to start doing these things
to set yourself up to win.
If you enjoyed this,
again, share with your friends.
As Jim Rohn said,
take care of your body. It's the only place you have to win. If you enjoyed this, again, share with your friends. As Jim Rohn said, take care of your body. It's the only place you have to live. I love you so very much,
and you know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. Thank you.