The School of Greatness - Doctor Explains: Healing Your Gut Won't Work Until You Heal This
Episode Date: January 19, 2026Dr. Will Bulsiewicz reveals a profound connection between your gut and your total well-being: 70% of your immune system resides in your gut lining.The quiet enemy? Chronic inflammation, which is silen...tly eroding your energy, focus, and long-term health. You aren't just drained from a busy life; you're inflamed because your gut microbiome is compromised. This inflammation triggers a cascade of symptoms that many have come to view as "normal."What sets this conversation apart is Dr. Will's deeply personal journey. He shares how unresolved trauma, including a decade-long estrangement from his father, sabotaged his health even with a perfect diet.You will discover the specific foods that fortify your gut barrier and calm the immune system. Crucially, you'll also learn why spiritual healing and processing past wounds might be the critical missing link in your health equation.This is much more than a guide to better digestion—it's a path to finally feeling truly alive again.Dr. Will’s books:Fiber FueledThe Fiber Fueled CookbookPlant Powered PlusIn this episode you will:Uncover the surprising connection between your gut microbiome and emotional resilience, and why healing past wounds is as important as changing your dietDiscover why 70% of your immune system lives in your gut and how a weak gut barrier creates chronic inflammation that affects everything from brain fog to joint painTransform your energy and focus by eating the four "workhorse" nutrients that repair your gut lining and calm your immune system naturallyBreak through the cycle of fatigue by understanding how unhealed trauma keeps your body in perpetual fight-or-flight mode, weakening your gutMaster simple breath techniques that activate your parasympathetic nervous system and immediately shift your body from stress mode to healing modeFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1878For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Andrew Weil, M.D.Dr. Jessica KnurickDr. William Li Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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70% of your immune system is in your gut mining.
That gut barrier, that single layer of cells, it protects the immune system.
But if it's weak, things can sneak across that are not supposed to be there.
Your immune system gets activated, and that's chronic low-grade inflammation.
You can't have a war without total destruction.
Right.
You're destroying everything around when you're activating your immune system to fight an enemy.
Like, if you just repaired the gut barrier, the enemy would have never got in in the first place.
Board certified gastroenterologist, internationally recognized gut health expert, and best-selling author of many books.
Dr. Will Bolshewitz.
There's absolutely 100% clear physiology that explains how our stress and our traumas ultimately will impact our gut.
And when they impact our gut, they will impact our immune system and create inflammation.
You could be eating all the right things and doing everything you can in your control to eat healthier.
But if you haven't healed the trauma of the past, you still might have a weaker gut microbiome, a weaker immune system because of that.
You could sleep.
You could meditate.
You could try to do things.
But if you don't heal the trauma, then you're not actually going to be well.
A lot of people are sick.
A lot of people are sick.
And I think they're sick and tired of feeling sick.
And the gut health is usually one of the main reasons why people are sick.
And they're not even aware of it.
You might think there's some other symptoms.
that's causing them to be sick.
But based on my conversation with you the last time,
some of the stuff that you talk about in your book as well,
that a lot of the root causes of inflammation
come from the gut from my understanding.
Is that correct?
100%.
Really?
Yeah.
We can fully unpack that, but suffice it to say that in the three years
that I spent preparing this book, and a big part of that was me diving into thousands of studies.
The book has over 1,400 citations that I will happily give to you.
you just all you got to do is click and take a look and you'll see that I'm backing up my words so but
i reviewed thousands of papers to basically try to understand what i see as the biggest health-related
issue of our time which is in one word inflammation right because the problem is Lewis you could go
to five different doctors for five different medical problems that you don't necessarily think
they're connected you see them as separate issues right and they give you a symptoms-based approach
which is basically like, here's five different medicines.
And what they don't do is they don't take a moment to step, step back and tell you, like, hey, there's a story here.
There's a story because all of these issues are originating actually from the same place, which is chronic low-grade inflammation.
So inflammation by itself, I mean, we can dig into this.
Inflammation by itself, I don't want to make it sound like inflammation is inherently bad.
Inflammation is life-saving when you actually need it.
But what we don't need is a forever war inside of our body, which is what's happening with chronic low-grade inflammation, which is what's happening in America right now.
So what is the difference between good inflammation and bad inflammation?
Okay. So let me install some specific terms. So acute versus chronic. So acute inflammation, you get sick, right? You get exposed to some sort of bacteria or some virus.
Guess what? Your immune system is going to step up to defend your body that is the entire.
purpose of having an immune system, which is basically that's your little military, and they're
going to take care of you. And they're going to clear out that infection. It might take them a couple
of days, but they'll get the job done and you move on with your life and you're nice and safe.
That's acute inflammation. That's acute inflammation. So you get your fever, right? You get your
fever. You have extreme fatigue. You might have other symptoms. Sometimes people like you get the flu.
You get joint issues, right? You get muscle aches. Right. You're experiencing acute inflammation.
Or alternatively, another example is like you injure yourself, you're playing handball, right?
You injure yourself.
Well, guess what?
The repair process to restore function to your body is inflammation.
You sprain your ankle, it swells up or something, right?
And that's acute inflammation to protect that area, correct?
Red, swollen, tender, right?
These are classic symptoms of inflammation, but it's acute inflammation.
It's time limited.
The immune system will get the job done.
and then it will go back to basically being at rest, being at ease, not fighting.
Okay.
Now, that is a totally different thing than basically an immune system that is being triggered 24 hours a day,
and it's not actually fighting anything real.
Like, it's not fighting a virus.
It's not helping you to repair your body.
Instead, it's just feeling threatened.
It's a little bit like a dude who's so hammered and he's just swinging.
And he doesn't even know who he's swinging at, right?
Like this is basically, this is basically, and then how does that manifest?
So you manifest with these symptoms that you go to your doctor and you say these things
and you don't necessarily get a clear answer or a clear response.
So you're experiencing like number one is fatigue.
Fatigue is clearly the number one symptom associated with inflammation.
It always is there.
And just to be clear, I'm not saying that the only cause of fatigue is inflammation.
I'm saying that when you ever inflamed, you will feel fatigue.
right so but going top you know from like from your head to your toes could be a headache could be
migraines when your nose gets congested whether it's during a sickness or that's seasonal allergies
or you go to bed at night and your nose gets clogged up that's inflammation it's pretty clear right now
that's good but we could talk about why that would be because there's actually a circadian rhythm
element to why we get congested at night and why it clears up in the morning really why is that
Well, I don't want to fully divert the conversation into that, but basically it has to do, it has to do with, here's a quick little teaser.
Your immune system is nocturnal.
Your immune system is nocturnal.
And then when you wake up in the morning and you get that glorious morning sunlight, right?
You actually are triggering the release of cortisol.
Cortisol is your body's prednisone.
It's an anti-inflammatory.
So you wake up in the morning.
This is why also you go and you get a good workout and you go to bed and you're not,
sore and you wake up and you are sore right you feel that why is that because
your immune system is active at night so our body was actually very beautifully
designed because if your immune system was like doing its doing its maintenance work
during the day it would cripple you like you wouldn't you it would affect your energy
levels your focus your ability to think by the way now I'm starting to like describe some
of the symptoms that I was going to get at right it would affect those things and you
wouldn't be able to really be optimal
functioning as a human. So the way that our biology was designed, which is like, you know, to me,
like awe-inspiring, beautiful, is that when we're asleep during that time where we're not really
moving around, that's when the immune system steps up to basically like take care of its maintenance
work, which includes like if you exercise, it's helping to basically build the muscle mass and
restore those muscles because exercise is actually like a form of micro-injury, right? To build it and
make it stronger. And so when you're working out, you're causing acute inflammation as well?
So like not necessarily acute, you're not going to get a fever from your workout, right?
So you're not necessarily causing that, but in a way, there is an inflammatory element to a lot of
the aspects of our life that we totally sit here and we say they're healthy, right? So exercise is
clearly healthy. But it's creating inflammation. It's creating a healthy inflammation. And that's
like, that's like hormesis, right? So hormesis is when you sort of like take the step of pain
for the purpose of future strength.
Gain.
Yeah.
No pain,
no gain.
Exactly.
But the acute inflammation or the other, what's the other information?
So the chronic, the chronic low-grade inflammation?
Yes.
Yeah, yeah.
So you could have a headache.
You could have a stuffy nose.
You could have a sore throat.
You get that cough at night, right?
That's inflammation.
It could, you could have skin issues.
So like you're breaking out acne.
Exema.
Exema.
Syriasis, rosacea, right?
All inflammatory.
It for women, so hormones are important, right? So for women, female fertility, perimenopause,
menopause, 100% there is inflammation there.
Really?
Yes. For men, hormonal issues. So like some of the statistics around men are wildly disturbing.
The drop in testosterone levels over the last 40 years, the drop in sperm counts over the last 40 years.
I mean, Viagoras, Yales, like all these things wouldn't exist if there wasn't a market because of erectile dysfunction.
Right.
Right.
So not to mention energy drinks.
Right.
So I'm not bashing them.
Sometimes I take them myself.
But like I'm just saying that, you know, these things or like muscle soreness, joint issues, joint discomfort, difficulty recovering from exercise.
Difficulty performing exercise.
Right.
Like when you're more inflamed, go and eat a fast food meal and they go try to work out and tell me that you're,
you can have a good workout.
Yeah.
You can't.
Wow.
Okay.
So there's acute and low grade chronic inflammation, correct?
Yeah.
And the low grade chronic information mostly comes from the foods we eat or is it also our
environment or sleep patterns, you know, and other things that we do.
Okay.
So one of the one of the core ideas that I present in this book and I will defend this
position is that your gut and your immune system are completely.
completely intertwined and inseparable.
So just to frame this, our first episode, if you, if you haven't listened to it, go back and take a listen, but just to quickly frame, we have a gut microbiome, mostly in our large intestine or colon, with 38 trillion microorganisms.
Okay.
Microscopic, we can't see them, but they actually outnumber us.
That's more than we have human cells.
Wow.
Yeah.
So there's more gut microbiome than we have human cells.
100%. You are definitely less than 50% human. And if we were to line you up as your genetic code,
like if we were to like basically have a football field, okay, and every single yard represented,
like where does your genetic code come from? All right. One yard would be the genetic code that you
inherited from your parents. And 99 yards, actually 99 and a half yards would be the genetic code
that you have from your microbiome. Really? Yes. 99.5% of your genetic.
code comes from these microbes and where do these microbes come from our environment so our environment and
and they're manipulated by our choices so there's an entire story inside of you we're getting to the point
we're getting to the point where we could take a snapshot of these microbes and start to basically say hey i
know how lewis has been living his life here's the food choices here's the sleep here's the circadian
rhythm here's the exercise right here is his connection to his partner here is his
trauma or history of things from the past that we discussed during the first episode um that like
basically your life is a story and that story is actually reflected it's told through your gut
microbiome so it's entirely unique to you so how do we if we're feeling exhausted if we're
feeling inflamed if we're feeling in fire
flight due to what's happening within our gut, how do we start to heal our gut to get rid of inflammation?
Okay. So these two pieces, they're so interconnected. And I just want to add real quick that
between the 38 trillion microbes and the fact that 70% of your immune system is in your gut lining.
Wow. Okay. So like the bone marrow is like basic training.
they get trained up there.
Uh-huh.
And then they get deployed and they go and take up and do their service in the lining of your intestines.
Interesting.
70% of our immune system is in our gut lining?
Is in our gut mining.
Wow.
Yes.
So if our gut is unhealthy, we are unhealthy.
Because basically what happens is that there's a cascade where these microbes and that and those immune cells, they're right next to each other.
And the only thing that's separating them is a single layer of cells, which we call the gut barrier, right?
And if that starts to break down, which happens when the gut microbes are weak and not able to do their job.
So they're the stewards.
The gut microbes are the stewards of the gut barrier.
They build it for us.
They repair it for us.
That gut barrier, that single layer of cells, it protects the immune system.
So when it's fortified, the immune cells are at ease because there's no one to fight.
But if it's weak, but if it's weak, which I call increase intestinal permeability,
but you will hear it referred to as leaky gut.
And I have no problem with that terminology because it's actually correct.
When that happens, it's a weak gut barrier, things can sneak across that are not supposed to be there.
And so then your immune system is like, yo, the bloodstream is right behind me.
And I got my like literally age old, like this villain that I have been fighting since before humans existed.
Right?
The immune cells recognize their enemy that they have been fighting for literally a billion years.
That's my estimate.
And they go, okay, cool.
You want to come over here?
We're going to fight you.
Really?
Yeah, so then they get activated.
The immune system gets activated in response to something that got across the gut barrier
that's not supposed to be there.
And there's a term for this, by the way, for the people who are nerdy like me, it's called
a lipopolysaccharide.
Lipopolysaccharide is the armor that surrounds like E. coli or salmonella or shegella,
these nasty bacteria.
This armor, they developed to protect themselves.
And the armor became the way that your immune system identifies the enemy.
Like, oh, you're wearing the armor?
Cool.
I got to take you out.
Interesting.
You're not about to be here.
Wow.
So, but that process of I got to take you out is the activation, not in a strong, powerful,
you're having a fever way, right?
Like, that's not acute.
This is the 24 hours a day battle on the inside where your immune system gets activated,
and that's chronic low-grade inflammation.
and the problem is that, you know, I mean, like, to be totally honest with you, I don't love the war analogy,
but I feel like I have to do it because it's like it's the only thing that really makes so much sense, right?
But like when we look at images of war in the modern world, you can't have a war without total destruction.
Right.
Right. You're destroying everything around.
Right.
So when you are activating your, when you're activating your immune system to fight an enemy that just, like if you just repaired the gut barrier,
the enemy would have never got in in the first place.
Right.
If you were to address that, then we wouldn't need to like have these bodily,
basically the immune system is causing bodily injury.
Right.
And so then this inflammation in the writing of my book, there's a specific table that I tell
the reader, you know, go to this page.
You got to check this out because I asked this a basic question.
How many health conditions are there that are associated with inflammation where I could
come on your show and tell you this, but I could also talk to a colleague who's a medical doctor
and pulled the paper. And I found over 130. Wow. And then I turned to the secondary question,
Lewis, which is, okay, so if I believe that the gut and the immune system are rising and falling
together, right, then there should be 130 studies that also show that the gut is unwell
within the context of these diseases. And the answer is yes, categorically.
categorically. So if someone is inflamed in their gut and they have a weakened immune system,
what are the main symptoms that they will have or they'll feel or their experience on their
body with this weakened immune system and leaky gut? Yeah. Well, so it goes back to, and,
you know, again, like what I'm describing are common symptoms. And sometimes we take those common
symptoms and we turn them into a diagnosis and that's completely appropriate. That's the way I
practice medicine, right? But, but what I'm saying is like that the place that's coming from
is inflammation. Yes. And so it goes back to what we had discussed a moment ago where it's like
it could be headaches, it could be brain fog, difficulty focusing, lack of cognitive endurance.
Like you can't get a lot done. Yeah. Right. Easily distracted, like sort of ADD. Right. It can affect
your mood. Right. So like with clarity, depression, major depression is inflammation.
in the brain.
Wow.
Total clarity, right?
By the way, so is Alzheimer's.
So is Parkinson's disease.
So these are ways in which the inflammation can affect your brain.
But like we discussed, you could have a congested nose.
You could have sore throat.
You could have a cough.
You could have skin outbreaks.
You could have joint issues.
You could have muscle issues.
You could have difficulty recovering.
But of course in the gut.
Of course in the gut, there's symptoms, right?
So bloating was the number one gut symptom that you could experience.
It could be abdominal discomfort.
Could be a change in your bowels, diarrhea, constipation, both, right?
The manifestation of your bowel syndrome.
This is inflammation.
Wow.
Now, I'm curious about, like, someone getting eczema or breakouts in their skin.
Yeah.
Is there a way, if you have a extremely healthy gut and a healthy immune system, can you get outbreaks?
Like, can you get eczema or these other kind of rashy outbreaks?
Or is that all linked to a weakened immune system and a leaky gut?
So I don't want to go so far as to make it sound like the root, the only cause of all of these health issues is exclusively your gut being like basically impaired, right?
What I'm saying is with clarity for all 130 health conditions, this is a contributory factor.
Right.
And I'm saying that we have an opportunity because what we're seeing is the gut is unwell.
and what I'm offering is that we can make it well.
And if we make the gut well, then the immune system falls in mind with it.
And then other symptoms start to fade away, hopefully.
So these skin issues, whether it's eczema or acne or psoriasis, they're all inflammatory.
There's inflammation on the surface of the skin.
Okay.
And the skin has a microbiome too.
So it's not just the gut microbiome that's contributing.
But there is this element where like basically in that specific,
area, right? It's not necessarily your whole body. In that specific area, something is off
and it's created inflammation that results in the manifestation of that specific skin issue.
Eliminate inflammation and it seems like you eliminate a lot of your issues.
I mean, we can't totally eliminate inflammation, but what we can do is we can, it's like
having your sound system on and it's pounding so hard that it's giving you a splitting headache.
Uh-huh.
Right? And you're not really enjoying yourself in that moment.
And taking the dial and being like, yeah, we can turn this down to the point where even the same song.
Yeah.
Actually, you can start to enjoy it.
Enjoy it.
What would you say then are the five foods that people should be eating on a daily basis to optimize their gut microbiome and their immune system?
Okay.
So I'm going to give you the five foods and then I want to break down for you the specific levers that I'm seeing behind the curtain.
Okay.
Like what are the things behind the curtain that make me choose these five foods?
Okay.
Okay, so let me, let me go with, okay, I have to start with my classic.
It may be controversial, by the way.
So my apologies, but I'm going straight to beans.
Beans, any type of beans?
Basically, any type of beans.
I will accept any of them, okay?
Because to me, beans, these are microbiome foods.
They are microbiome foods.
The reason that people feel like they don't tolerate beans is not because there's something
crazy that's happening inside of their body. What's happening is that their gut microbiome can't
handle the beans. Really? Yeah. Why can't they handle it? Why can't they handle it? Yeah. Because-
If it's good for you, why can't your gut handle it? Okay, so this brings us to like a basic concept
within gut health. And it's like very slightly nuanced, not crazy, but there's a little nuanced.
It's like exercise, right? So think of your gut as being a muscle, right? That muscle can be
trained it can be made stronger but it also has a quite specific capacity for work so you can't take a
muscle go to the gym and just like of course i want to go and bench press 450 pounds and be literally the
strongest person in the gym but i'm sorry can't handle it i can't handle that you haven't trained to get
there yeah no i'm working on it yeah i'm actually quite i'm quite happy with where i am at 45 years old
like i'm lifting the heaviest weight of my life that's great right but to get to that level it's gonna take
some time right so the same is true with your gut if your gut is impaired because it's
not doing so hot right if your gut is impaired that's conceptually similar to go
into the gym with some sort of injury right like you hurt your shoulder okay you're
not going to go to the gym and lift the heaviest weight you're gonna go to the gym and
honestly it might be the 2.5 pounds dumbbell sure or it might be just body weight
yeah and you're just trying to like basically restore function yep
to that shoulder and then once you restore function you're back on track and now you're growing
and building right so this is this this is what's happening in the gut is like you take basically
microbiome food right so let me break that down real quick so beans they have fiber they have polyphenols
they have resistant starches these three things none of them are digested by the human body
they are the most clear evidence of a shared life
long symbiotic relationship that we have with our microbiome.
We have third party sourced it.
We have basically said, look, we as humans were not able to evolve fast enough to keep up with
like the food supply across the globe.
Interesting.
Right?
You move from one place to the other.
Your evolution is not able to keep up with that.
So we basically said, well, if we could get the microbes from the environment that know how
to break down the foods that are here.
locally, then we would actually be able to process and digest those foods.
Okay.
So what happens is the microbiome breaks down the fiber, the resistant starches, and the
polyphenols for us.
Interesting.
So our body and our stomach can't break down the nutrients in beans.
Is that our, so beans are not just these three things.
But what I'm saying is I'm calling them, I'm calling beans microbiome foods because they're
the most densely packed of these things.
Like go look at the fiber content of beans, right?
And you're going to be like, yo, there's a lot of fiber in there.
Right.
Right.
Well, so what I'm saying is that you are 100% dependent on your microbiome to digest that fiber.
Interesting.
So if the microbiome is not ready for that, that's conceptually similar to go into the gym and just like grabbing way more weight than your body.
Sure, sure.
And you hurt yourself.
So have a few beans, not a whole plate of beans, maybe to start.
Work your way towards it.
Like, I'm in a place now today where I can smash beans as hard as I want to with no issues.
No gas.
No, like crazy.
Oh, you're right?
Yeah.
But not in a bad.
way because basically in a way there are some benefits to farting really you know 100% what's the
besides releasing gas and feeling better what is the benefit to farting the gas that is being produced
when you like for that kind of fart a bean fart yes okay the gas that is being produced is the product
of fermentation from these microbes so you have to understand that the reason why you get that gas is
because they are simultaneously fermenting your fiber to produce short chain fatty acids
which are so we're here to talk about inflammation and short chain fatty acids which are acetate
propionate and buterate are the hands down with total clarity the most anti-inflammatory nutrients
that I've ever come across Lewis like those are in beans well you get that from fiber okay
you get that from fiber so fibers and beans and fibers and fibers and beans yeah yeah so so beans are like
so jam-packed wow yeah if you could only choose one bean what would you choose what type of
the chickpea chickpe chickpe chickpe chickpe chickpe here's why the best bean you're like the best
for you is the one you're actually gonna eat oh right right right right so like I
love chickpeas okay do you have a favorite bean Pinto I don't know if this is good
there or not right Pinto you live in LA yeah yeah yeah yeah so I'm like if you
do a chickpea pinto or black bean all are fine oh a hundred percent go give me
all three okay gotcha what my wife does for what it's worth is because you're
gonna I'm gonna have to teach you some of these tricks now you're growing your
family yeah we get an instapot uh-huh and we will
basically like create a batch, batch of chickpeas and then separately batch of black beans
and to create a big pot to start the week.
Bean soup or just, well, no, like throw in garlic and onions, right?
Tastes good.
Like actually the flavors are great.
Yes.
Salted, spice it.
Um, and then you put it into the fridge.
And here's the cool part.
When you take these starchy foods like beans and you put them into the fridge and you cool
them down, you create what's called retrograde starch.
Okay.
which is basically you have enhanced the quality of the food.
Oh.
So you have created more microbiome food.
Interesting.
And that's incredibly healthy.
So you get the same thing if you cool off your mashed potatoes.
But then you can reheat it?
You could reheat it.
Okay.
But there will be new resistant starches that were formed, right?
Or if you take your bread and you throw it into the fridge or throw it into the freezer also is a trick.
Interesting.
you can increase the value and the glycemic index drops.
So if you were to take the exact same loaf of bread from room temperature,
throw it in your fridge and then eat it,
the glycemic index has improved.
Why?
Because some of the stuff that was like basically a simple carbohydrate,
you turned into a resistant starch that's going to feed the microbiome.
Interesting.
Yeah.
On this topic of like great fiber sources and also a great source of polyphenols,
which are the colors in our food.
I love berries.
Okay.
And so you choose, do you like blueberries?
Do you like raspberries?
I'm a raspberry guy.
So if you could give me unlimited supply of organic raspberries for the rest of my life,
I would take that over like many other opportunities for, you know, just give me that.
I'll be very happy.
Okay.
So, all right.
Number three, I'm going with avocados.
All right.
So avocados.
I've met like, I think one person, maybe two in my whole life that don't.
actually like avocados.
I didn't like them until two years ago.
You were the guy.
I was the guy.
I was the guy.
I literally didn't eat them until two years ago.
Are you scared of it or what was the deal?
It's more of a texture thing for me.
I don't know why.
Yeah, I'm a weird, I'm a weird.
You don't like guac.
I don't eat guac.
No, it's the texture.
I'll have an avocado now.
If I put salt on it, it's like,
I can manage it.
Yeah.
And I'm actually enjoying it now.
But guac, I don't know what it is.
It's like, I don't know, too slimy or something.
You know, I have a rule that you don't go into someone's house
and insult them and I just did.
So I apologize.
Yeah, okay.
I'm a weird eater.
I hope you accept by apology.
I'm a very picky eater.
But someone once told me that if you're a picky eater, the pickier you are, the
more of a genius you are.
So I try to just take that for what it is.
That's interesting.
I don't know.
We kind of hear what we want to hear sometimes.
I'm like, I'll take that.
Yeah, exactly.
All right.
So but avocado is the key here.
Actually, the fiber content of avocados is wildly high.
Okay.
More than anyone would expect.
Okay.
So like a nice medium sized avocado might have eight to ten
grams of fiber that's a lot that's a lot yeah but it also has healthy fats so fat is good for us we
just want it to be good fat yeah right so we can get that from an avocado okay all right number four
i would go with let's go with chia seeds um so chia c's super high in fiber but they also have healthy fats
because they have omega-3s right and most of us omega-3 fats are what we call essential which means
you have to get them from your diet and most of us are not getting enough okay so
with this why everyone's taking fish oil supplements which is fine I don't have a problem
with that but like you could also eat the food that is the native source of these
of these fats and chia seeds are one of the ways one among among many okay right
right to accomplish that goal all right and last but not least I'm gonna go with
kimchi all right so here's the deal um fermented food is uniquely beneficial gosh it's a
another thing I don't like but okay all of them you don't like yogurt or kaffir I like yogurt but
what's the kem what do you say it was kimchi kimchi no it's not for you that's fun so
yogurt I do you got to find what you like yeah yeah yeah you got find me like but like yogurt
kefir Greek yogurt is it's good it's super good okay that's good to know so it's a fermented food
and the fermentation process it of course involves live bacteria mm-hmm so like I want the
listeners to see this the way that I see it they just hear probiotic I get that
But I see like a living ecosystem.
Right?
There's like this community that's there a part of the food.
They've transformed the food.
And then you have your ecosystem inside of you.
And you're going to introduce them.
Interesting.
And actually there's not several studies to suggest that by regular consuming fermented food,
they can actually like integrate themselves into your gut microbiome.
Interesting.
So that like actually last night I was at a lot of,
an event and someone's very nice woman came up to me and she says to me how can I add more
micros back my my microbound count is low my diversity is low and I told her that one of the
ways that you can do this is by adding increasing your fermented food intake okay and we have clear
research to show that okay that's good yeah so if I do a a little thing of yogurt every
day if I have an avocado and I have I had I have cheese
seeds in some almond milk for breakfast.
Is that a good thing if I do three of the five?
But I don't do berries and I don't do...
Why you're rejecting the berries?
I'm a bit insulted.
Again, I'm like a pallet of a seven-year-old.
So I'm like...
Okay.
The texture, the taste.
I don't know what it is about it.
Dude, because the thing is...
Mulberries I like.
Which ones?
Mulberries.
Very specific.
I used to have a mulberry tree in Ohio growing up.
So I would like...
I could find the right ones that weren't too juicy.
that were like okay for me.
Oh, that's interesting.
And what about dried berries?
Dried mulberries, dried things?
So those is good or no?
Yeah, like dried fruit in general.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So there is still some retained nutritional value there for sure.
Uh-huh.
But also they can, there's some things that also are enhanced.
So for example, the very high in histamine.
Uh-huh.
So if you start eating like dried out fruit, you might notice your nose gets congested.
And that can actually be the histamine content of your food.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Okay.
So, I mean, it's not like a horribly bad thing, but there are some people out there who have histamine issues that are not just a once in a while thing.
It's more of a chronic problem for them.
Okay.
And so for them, they have to be careful.
Okay.
So, yeah, I mean, look, if I had my way, I would, I would figure out a way to get you to love adding berries to your yogurt, right?
I have to get over it.
So.
Mine somehow.
It's a mental thing for me.
Yeah.
What would be an additional one then?
We got beans, berries.
We got avocados.
We got yogurts.
And what was the last one?
Fermented foods.
Yeah.
And so for me, what would be one other if someone didn't like one of those things and there
was an additional one?
I'm gonna try to throw you a while up here, make it easy for you.
Chia seeds was one of them.
Yeah, I think you're kind of digging the chia seeds.
I do.
I'll play off of that.
I'm gonna go with walnuts.
All right.
Okay, we can do that.
It's actually got interesting.
Like a walnut looks like a brain.
Yes.
And then it's like it's high, it'll be able to make.
Omega-3s. God has played a joke.
You know? It's like, come on.
It's great, right?
It's kind of cool.
I'm down for all those. I could do all those every day.
So in the book, I basically discuss that, because here's an important point.
And I want everyone to hear this.
That you can call diets different things, right?
Mediterranean, pescatarian, flexitarian, vegetarian, vegetarian, vegan.
And what I actually wrote in the book is, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter, which what you call it.
What matters is the quality of your diet.
So there's a lot of flexibility here.
So the diet that you're going to eat is not the same as the one that I'm going to eat.
But what I'm saying to you, Lewis, is that if you focus on four main nutrients,
you will have an anti-inflammatory diet that will support your gut microbiome
and make your immune system strong and healthy.
And so, and the four nutrients, and we found those in the six foods that we just discussed.
Okay.
What are those?
Are fiber, polyphenols, healthy fats.
and fermented food.
And so if you focus on those four things, fiber, polyphenols, polyphenols are the colors.
So, like, eat different colors.
They say, eat the rainbow.
Right?
Eat the rainbow is the same thing as saying what I'm saying right now.
We're not talking about skittles.
Don't eat the rainbow of skittles.
Taste the rainbow.
No, not that.
That was a taste.
Just the taste.
So, yeah, but like the healthy fats, you know, like you can throw extra virgin olive oil into the mix, right?
If you're going to do oil, let it be that.
Let it be extra virgin olive oil.
Okay.
So if you do those four things.
I mean, if you eat those four things on a daily basis,
or you add more of those to your intake,
you're doing a lot of good for your gut.
100%.
And the key from my perspective is that you should feel the difference.
So this is not just like, hey, I trust that guy,
and so I'm gonna do it.
What I'm saying to you is take a chance.
Yeah, do it for a week.
Take a chance, try something different,
and then see how you feel.
Interesting.
And if your energy levels pick up
and your focus is better,
and you notice that your exercise is improving.
And like, there's different things for different people, right?
But like, you're going to experience the benefits.
And when you experience them, then it reinforces.
Oh, my gosh.
I'm onto something here.
Yes.
Then you want more.
So those are the four pillars.
Yeah, I call them the four workhorses because I have this mental image of, like, imagine that you are,
imagine that it's 1870, right?
You and I are heading west.
We're coming here.
There's bold here.
Yeah.
We're going to get rich.
And so we got this wagon, right?
But in order for us to get across the plains, you don't want just one horse, you don't
want just two horses.
At some point, you're going to have to climb a mountain.
Climbing a mountain is like fighting a disease, right?
Fighting that battle against this chronic illness, right?
So you're going to climb that mountain.
You want to have three or four workhorses powering you to your goal, right?
Because one or two would not be enough.
So I call them the four workhorses because in my mind, I've,
this image of that wagon that you're trying to power up the hill for the person who's sick.
Whereas when you're healthy and you're feeling really well, I mean, you could say,
hey, I only want one or two horses, but that would be kind of stupid because why wouldn't
you have all four Clydesdale's rocking?
Mm-hmm.
And be a total beast.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Go for eight.
Give me eight of them.
You know, let's go.
I'll have to come up with four more of work horses.
Yeah, double it up.
I have to go back to the drawing board there.
Stress seems to be like one of the biggest things, one of the biggest killers for a lot of people.
it just holds them back from accomplishing what they truly want.
And I'm curious, does bad gut health make us more reactive and cause more stress for high performers or high achievers?
If so, what's a science-backed way that we can start to calm our nervous system with food that you like?
Okay, so first of all, stress 100% is connected to our gut microbiome, like without a shadow of a doubt.
And basically what you've led us into is a conversation around the gut brain connection.
Right.
So they are basically best friends.
This is, by the way, chapter eight of my new book.
And I have to tell you, Lewis, this is the chapter that would resonate with a person like you.
But I think it's going to resonate with the readers the most too.
Like this is literally the best chapter that I've ever written.
So out of all my three books.
Wow.
Yeah.
And because there's a lot for us to unpack here.
It's about the brain gut connection.
The brain gut connection, which is the nerdy way of actually getting into the concept of mind-body, right?
Because like the mind-body concepts, allopathic medicine has rejected that as being woo-woo.
But there's absolutely 100% clear physiology that explains how our stress, our emotions, our connections to other people, our life of spiritual purpose and our traumas.
ultimately will impact our gut and when they impact our gut they will impact our immune system
and create inflammation really a hundred percent so to lay this out because it kind of is a two-way
street i mean you asked me about the role of the gut in stress and i'm kind of starting with the
role of stress in gut how okay you know imagine that you are uh in traffic and you have a near miss
you almost got into an accident you barely missed it and like zing like your eyeballs bug out your heart
rates pumping, your blood pressure's up, right? There's a certain feeling that you get. Imagine that you
are about to go on stage and while you are very comfortable with this because you've done it many times,
for many people, that's like extremely anxiety-inducing. Yes. Right. And so they get this feeling
of butterflies in the stomach, right? They might feel a little nausea. They might actually start to feel
like bloated and then cramps and then waves of cramps and then it's intense and it's crippling and folding them
over, right? These are all manifestations of very clear physiology connecting the brain to our gut.
So what's happening is that our environmental experience, basically our brain was hardwired
to react quickly to things that are happening around us, right? That way we don't have to even
process. We can just react. This is why you have a near miss in the car, instantly, boom, you get
that feeling, right? You don't think about it. Before you even process that you almost got on the
accident right so that's your sympathetic nervous system you know it's interesting when you say that
i used to when i was in high school before basketball games or football games it's like i had to go
to the bathroom you know almost like 10 20 minutes before right before i was like even though i was
doing well and i was a good athlete and things like that and i was you know succeeding it's almost
like every time there was a game i had to use and i was like almost running late it's like warmups are
happening and I got to go run to the bathroom. Yep. And how is that connected to the brain and the gut
when you feel like, oh, I got to go to the bathroom? Well, so this is your sympathetic nervous system.
Okay. So this is what was happening with you and it's parallel. It's the same as when I was in medical
school and you take, you know, basically 200 people that were at the top of their class in college.
You put them all in the one class and half of them are are less than average. Wow. Right. At Georgetown,
right? So there was a lot of stress. Sure. So there was a line out the bathroom.
door.
Really?
A hundred percent.
A hundred percent.
You're the way in line to get a stall, man.
So what is the connection between stress and needing to go to the bathroom?
Yeah.
Okay.
So let's play this out.
So within the context of stress, which is basically leading to the activation of your sympathetic
nervous system.
This is one of two like yin and yang parts of your autonomic nervous system, which means that
your body just reacts.
You don't necessarily get to choose.
It just happens.
right so when you're sympathetic gets activated your brain will release a hormone called corticotropin
releasing hormone or CRH CREH comes from the brain and basically enters the pituitary gland and then
sets off an entire storm throughout the body now this was designed if we go back to 99.99% of human
history which predates modern times right this was designed where if there was something that was
going to attack you if there was some sort of serious threat right you you instantly had
the force that you need between your heart pumping, circulating blood, you're breathing heavy,
circulating oxygen, your blood pressure is clamped down, so you're getting the blood to your tissues,
right, and you're ready to go, right? And whether it's fighting another tribe or some animal
that's attacking you or whatever it might be, that adrenaline saves your life, potentially, right?
So it's an evolved mechanism. But the problem is everything comes with a price. So you are accepting
this all these benefits but you're sacrificing your gut that's what happens you sacrifice your gut and
so so that that like a surge of adrenaline that surge of cortisol that's out of synchrony out of
context of you know i said that cortisol is good in the morning all right but what i'm saying is
like cortisol is not good when it's some random time a day and you don't need it right it sacrifices
is your gut health. And then ultimately what that results in is when you sacrifice the gut health,
the gut microbiome, number one, you feel it here. So you might have to go to the bathroom or you
might get the cramps or the bloating or whatever it might be. Right. So you feel that. That's your gut
microbes. That's also your gut motility that has been adjusted by the surge of stress. But then it
ultimately parlayes into, okay, so if the gut microbes are weak, then that affects the gut barrier.
When the gut barrier gets weak, then that affects the immune system. Now you've just created
inflammation. Interesting. Okay. So that's that's the way that it works.
with the sympathetic nervous system.
All right.
So, and then the gut gets weak.
And then that the gut actually sends signals back up to the brain, right, through
a number of different ways.
But when the gut is unwell, our brain can't be fully well.
Huh.
Right.
So if you want to be sharp, if you're a high performer and you want to be sharp, focus,
have intense cognitive endurance.
You have to nurture your gut.
Right?
That's a required step in order to get there.
Now, you can try to power yourself through using modern,
tools like energy drinks, right? Or like riddling or something like this. But you're not actually,
you're treating the symptoms. You're not treating the source of your problem. Interesting.
So it sounds like your brain also influences your gut in these times when you're feeling anxious
or stressed or there's a pressure-filled moment, whether it be a test or a sports game. It's almost like
how you think about what's about to happen is influencing the gut or releasing these hormones or
whatever to make you either want to go to the bathroom or have bloating or gas or whatever it is,
right? So these people that have chronic gut issues. And it's important, like, so what we just
described was the impact of stress, which could be once in a while, right? We all have that.
Uh-huh. Right? That's not necessarily a bad thing. Your body will adapt and adjust. You're okay.
Right. But there's also the people that are having it 24 hours a day. That's a lot. Right. And,
and in many cases, these are the people who have dealt with something that's trauma.
So where the trauma basically like creates a wound in the non-conscious mind.
So you are not thinking about these things, right?
Because you're trying to push it to the side.
Yes.
Because it hurts.
Yeah.
Right.
So that's the thing I don't want to deal with.
Don't think about it.
Yeah.
So, but it still exists.
You don't get to escape that, unfortunately.
So that trauma exists in the non-conscious mind.
And what we have found is that basically this least, this.
to number one your brain activity is different so people that have been exposed to trauma
they have hyperactivation of their amygdala which is the fear center of their brain so this
it's like this life of perpetual fear yes right and then this leads to you know if the sympathetic
nervous system and what i just described as stress right is putting your foot on the gas
then what I'm saying is within the context of trauma,
the foot never comes off the gas.
You've got a lead foot.
It's like, you know, Keanu in speed.
And, you know, just like blasts in speed, blasting down the highway.
And you're trying to figure out, like, how are we going to stop this runaway bus?
Right.
So the way that you stop it is by ultimately healing the trauma.
This is fascinating.
Now, this is something I'm curious about.
If someone has experienced trauma in their life, in their past, or they've interpreted an event
as traumatic, whether it actually was or wasn't, but they've interpreted meaning that it was
for them.
And it happened 10, 20, 30 years ago.
And in their subconscious mind, they either try to stuff it or put it away or they
haven't addressed that trauma, that wound.
The mind is.
mind is not in the body, right? The mind is like an energy around the brain, but it's not in the brain.
Is that correct? I don't even know. But the brain is different than the mind. And if you're thinking
something, then it's connecting to the brain signals and it's driving down into the gut. I'm trying
to see where I'm going with this. But how much of trauma of the past that is interpreted as trauma that
you have not healed. How much of that will impact your gut and really kind of consume your body?
We know with total clarity that people that have been exposed to trauma are more likely to have
specific gut related issues. Right. So actually it's my mentor, Dr. Douglas Dr. Douglas Strassman
at the University of North Carolina, who's the one who discovered this. He was a professor of both
medicine and psychiatry. It's unique intersection for being 1980s, if you think about it, right? That's
very progressive yeah and he studied like know where are these people with these gut issues
what is like basically there from before and he found a disproportionate association with prior
trauma including abuse but not exclusively abuse sure so the one one one one point that I kind
of see as being a little bit important I hope you don't mind is that um so you use the word
interpret I actually don't think that you get to interpret
It either is or it isn't.
So to me, trauma is something that has occurred in your life that overwhelms your ability to cope.
Yes.
Right.
So whether you think it's trauma or it's not trauma, if there is something that has occurred
in your life that overwhelms your ability to cope.
You don't have the tools to cope with it.
Right.
So like in children, this is why children are much more vulnerable to these kinds of things
because they just aren't yet developed in a sophisticated way in terms of their cognitive
capacity, right? Their cognitive abilities, their abilities to cope with stress, things like this, right?
Yes. So there's a, there's a higher vulnerability there. So if you overwhelm the ability to cope,
then you've created a trauma. And that trauma may be something that you know what happened,
but you don't necessarily want to acknowledge it. In fact, the mind is quite powerful at
repressing those ideas and thoughts. The other thing that I would argue, Lewis, is that there's
some fascinating research. I would love to share a quick study with you to prove that,
the book I had don't mean to plug this book but I like I can't help the fact that the title of
this book is perfect the body keeps the score right yeah yeah I love the perfect title for
love it I don't know if it's I even read it I don't even know if it's a good yeah yeah yeah it's good
yeah it's more academic but it's yeah it's like New York Times like crushing yeah for like 10 years
but it's the perfect title the body keeps the score is so true so there was a study that they
did with children where they looked at kids who
who were adopted before age two, okay?
They have no recollection of these events.
None of us can remember before age two.
Right.
Right.
So I used to believe that if you can't remember it, it doesn't count.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But you suppressed it.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, and I've now learned both in my own life
and in this particular study to prove it, I was wrong.
Really?
I was definitely wrong.
The body keeps the score.
So they looked at children who were adopted
before age two and they looked at kids that came from like a normal family and
and not not adopted not adopted right and they and they tracked out you know years
later and they took a look and the kids who were adopted before age two and again they're
like in a comfortable home like there's not like families yeah yeah good families like there's
not some other explanation for this they look at the gut microbiome clear changes in the
microbiome.
Really?
Yeah.
More inflammatory bacteria, less protective bacteria, and a loss of gut diversity.
Really?
Yeah.
So these kids, again, this is years later, they have lost diversity in their gut.
That's basically moving towards a unwell, what we call dysbiosis, is what is occurring there.
And they were more likely to suffer with digestive symptoms.
They were more likely to feel anxious.
they actually did a functional MRI to look at brain activity.
And they found that brain activity in these, you know, these people who were adopted at
B4 H2 was different.
And their emotional processing and emotional regulation was out of whack.
So they'd have, like these are people, they've done nothing wrong.
They don't deserve what they've received.
They don't remember it.
They don't even remember it, right?
But here are these things that continue to sort of echo into adult
that they can't even remember.
So it sounds to me like, correct me if I'm wrong, you could be eating all the right things
and doing everything you can in your control to eat healthier.
But if you haven't healed the trauma of the past, whether it was in your control or out of
your control, you still might have a weaker gut microbiome, a weaker immune system because
of that.
Is that correct?
This is 100% correct.
I would even extend it beyond the food, beyond the plate, because there's a lot of the
because there's other elements of our life
that are really important to our health,
to the health of our gut microbiome, exercise, right?
You and I both love exercise.
I could break down for you
why exercise is good for the gut microbiome,
but the point is you could do that,
you could sleep, you could meditate,
you could try to do things.
But if you don't heal the trauma.
But if you don't heal the trauma,
then you're not actually gonna be well.
And I've seen this, yeah, so this is,
and you know, if you look too, trauma is disproportionately
also associated with autoimmune disease.
Right?
So because basically that chronic activation of the immune system gets that immune system to the point that is just like totally confused.
Because I guess in the in your mind, if you've experienced trauma, you know, and for me, I experienced different parts of trauma growing up, if you experience some type of psychological, sexual, emotional trauma, physical trauma, and you don't learn how to heal that psychologically or emotionally or spiritually, there's some type of underlying like guilt, like resentment.
anger, sadness, loss that you are just living with,
that you haven't figured out how to process,
specifically if you're 5, 7, 12,
and you don't have the tools on out of process,
whether it be some type of therapy
or something else that allows you to grieve,
to rediscover your identity,
to mend that emotional wound.
And so when you live with this feeling
that you are not enough for decades of your life,
or that you're unworthy,
or that you're unlovable or that you're bad or that you're wrong or something's off with you.
If that is your unconscious mind ruminating 24-7, that is building this, I guess, inflammation
in your mind and your body.
It's weakening you in some ways, which, again, is a weakening your gut is what I'm hearing
you say.
Yeah.
And so a few things.
Number one, I have seen this in many patients, right?
that the like the greatest moments of my career as a medical doctor and I was trying to figure out like how many patients have I taken care of and I landed on it's somewhere in the range of 75 to 100,000 wow right and in all of that the greatest moments were the moments where I took a person and discovered that there was this thing right like a trauma that they were trying to ignore because it hurts of course so you don't want to deal with it you'd rather not talk about it yeah right and so you have
to get to a trusting place where you open up and you have that conversation.
Wow.
But the other thing too, Lewis, is part of what to me makes chapter 8, my greatest chapter
that I've ever written is that actually the chapter plays out and shares my personal journey
of self-discovery where, you know, I have shared in the past that I changed my diet
and therefore I got my health back.
And the truth is I wasn't fully telling you everything that was going on in my life.
Really?
I wasn't ready.
Wow.
There was too much shame.
I had a complex relationship with my dad that unfolded from the time that I was seven years old
when my parents got divorced.
And unfortunately, the divorce of my parents was, it was not amicable.
It's traumatic.
Well, I was the oldest of three boys.
I have two younger brothers.
And basically I was in second grade and one day didn't know this was going to happen.
My mom shows up and the car is packed fully.
And there's like a little spot basically earmarked for me.
Wow.
That I slide into.
And we drive seven hours away.
With your younger brothers too?
With my younger brothers.
And the only person that wasn't there was my dad.
Wow.
You're seven?
Oh, seven.
Oh, wow.
And so we move seven hours away, but eventually the court system says you got to come back to Syracuse, New York.
So we go back and the way, this is the 1980s, the way that the court system back then, I don't know what they do now, I've no clue.
But the way that they dealt with it back then was to basically say, well, the oldest son, you know, he's old enough to be able to kind of like give us answers.
Oh, my gosh.
Seven?
Oh, seven.
And so then that what basically unfolded from there was like a series of like psychologists and court appointed counselors.
And I would like do these sessions where you're sitting there with a psychologist and they're like, draw me a picture of this.
And so and this was like an ongoing like this is not like a short term thing.
This is like an ongoing.
Yeah.
Like maybe a year and a half of this kind of stuff.
And during this period of time, I know obviously that my parents.
are not together, right?
And I know that, like, they're not getting along.
And I also know that this is court-related.
So basically, like, the words that I provide are ultimately going to dictate what happens
with these parents.
So within that context for me, I, like, I think, I mean, I may be wrong, but I think that
there's, like, this natural psychology that takes over, at least it did for me.
There's this natural psychology that took over me of basically being like,
you got to pick the winner.
Wow.
Right.
Who's the good one and who's the bad one?
Because one of them is good and the other is bad.
It's the way it has to be.
So I chose my mom.
And my dad, I turned to, and I was the oldest boy, right?
So I think, like, you can appreciate this, I think, on some level that, like, you're
the defender.
You're the one who stands up for the younger brothers.
You're the one who protects.
And so I basically.
psychologically turned towards my dad. I never actually said this to him. But this is the conversation
that was in my mind as like seven, eight years old is how did you allow this to happen, dad?
How could you allow this to happen? You were supposed to be the man of this house. You were
supposed to be the one that takes care of us that makes sure that everything is okay.
Look at our family now. We were poor, right? We were poor. All the money was going to the
attorneys.
Look at what we're going through.
Look at how horrible this is for us.
You allowed this to happen.
Why didn't you fix it?
Why didn't you take care of us?
Right?
I held him accountable for the whole thing.
So this led to a rift between me and my dad.
I'm sure.
Your whole life probably.
Well, yeah, basically.
So I was a good athlete.
So I played three sports in high school.
I was the captain of two teams.
And for those of you who,
can't tell on camera Lewis has me by one inch and he's very tall he's six foot five all right so
anyway I was a good athlete and so the issue though is that because my parents were divorced and we
lived two and a half hours away like on the weekend I had to go to see my dad but like that was
tearing me away from my sports teams that was tearing me away from my friends so like the level
of resentment just escalates frustration yeah and you get to a point where um I just cut it all
cut him off like i was basically like i don't want to talk to that guy wow and uh and we didn't talk
from the time that i was in college until uh if it's okay i'll share the story okay okay that we didn't
talk until i was in my early 30s wow so like 10 years maybe a little more than 10 years wow i mean
that'll cause some gut issues so like what you described a moment ago of like shame sadness that's how
I felt. Yeah. And so then the way that I dealt with it, I think other people handled these things
in different ways. So for me, it was like, I'm going to show you. Achieve. I'm going to show you
with such ridiculous achievements that you won't be able to deny. Wow. Right. So I mean,
anger fueled. Yeah, kind of. Yeah. So I accomplished
everything and more that I could have possibly accomplished. I went to the number one, my number one
choice for residency for internal medicine, Northwestern. Out of 60 brilliant doctors that I would
beg to be my own doctor if I needed someone, I actually won the highest award out of all of them.
And then I went on a grant with the NIH at arguably the number one school of public health in the
country at the University of North Carolina. So I was like working at the school of public health
on this grant from the NIH, right?
So all these things are happening.
Well, you know what?
While you're not talking to your dad.
Yeah.
Well, I'm not talking about dad.
But you know what?
None of it made me happy.
I was sad.
I had extremely low self-esteem.
And then simultaneously, the work of the hospital, it caught up to me.
You know, I was working 80 to 100 hours a week, sometimes 30 hours in a row.
And when I did have free time, I ate junk food.
because it tasted good.
It's quick.
Yeah, yeah.
And it was quick and it was cheap and I liked it.
And and when I had a day off, I got drunk.
And and it was just and I look back on it and I didn't even understand.
It's like so obvious how sad I was.
So anyway, what changed?
So I wasn't comfortable with sharing the story and fiber fueled my first book, which came
out in 2020.
It was super easy for me to be like, yeah, I changed my diet.
Everything's good.
Everything's good, right?
Like this change, okay, don't get me wrong.
Changing my diet was helped a lot.
Helped a lot. Yeah, yeah.
Right.
But there's still something that's underlying that you know that you haven't addressed.
I had a lot that needed to be dealt with.
Wow.
And so.
When did you start dealing with it?
Not by my own choice.
And if I didn't, if I wasn't blessed with a person that truly loved me, I don't know
if it ever would have been dealt with.
Wow. So my wife, now here we are, you know, 12 years later. And you got to get that right.
My wife, she comes into my life and she is an angel. And she's exactly the person that I needed to come into my life at that moment. And she says to me, you got to call your dad. When was that?
This was like probably like early fall of 2013.
Okay.
Yeah.
So it had been more than 10 years.
Wow.
Graduated college in 2002.
She says to me, you got to call your dad.
You got to, you got to reconnect with him.
So I pick up the phone and I call my dad.
And Lewis, he accepted me back instantly.
Wow.
He was so happy to hear from me.
I'm sure.
Totally caught off guard.
Yeah.
I hadn't heard his voice in more than 10 years.
Holy cow.
That's a nice.
And so the first time that I saw him was actually at my wedding.
Wow.
The first time I saw him in 10 years.
Holy.
All right.
So we reconnect.
I need to mention this.
My dad was always a great dad.
Yeah.
There are things that I didn't understand.
Of course.
Until I had children of my own.
Of course.
Yeah.
That like he would take, two younger brothers, as I mentioned, he would take the three of us.
Like every time there's a vacation from school, you get some sort of break, we're hopping in the car.
We're either driving into Canada because I was in Syracuse, New York, or driving down the eastern seaboard, and we're going out, exploring the world.
We're doing stuff together, right?
Three boys, just him.
That's cool.
Right.
Weekends.
We lived 45 minutes from the Adirondack Mountains.
Okay.
Friday, Friday evening, cars packed, hop in the car, into the mountains, enjoy the weekend
camping together, doing all kinds of fun stuff with him, right?
But by himself, right?
No one to support him, no one to help him, right?
And the other thing that I never really picked up on until I started to go back and,
and revisit experiences from my childhood.
But the other thing I never picked up on is he never actually said anything bad about my mom.
Wow.
Not even once.
Not everything's so black and white, you know.
And I remember one time that my grandmother and my dad's mom, she started to say something and he squashed it.
Wow.
He said, you don't talk like that.
Oh, wow.
And so anyway.
So you reconnect.
I reconnect.
And we had a couple of great years together.
So you have to understand.
Part of our connection is through sports.
So I grew up in Syracuse, New York.
Sports Town, Syracuse Orange. So like we reconnected on that and like different things.
And in the summer of 2019, I don't know if you've ever had this feeling. All I can say is
is what I experienced, which is that I felt compelled to go and see my dad.
I had the same thing in 2019. Yeah. So in the summer of 2019, I can't understand why,
why this came over me, but it did. It came over me in a very powerful way where it's like,
your dad's getting old.
You just don't know how much longer he's going to be here.
Why don't you go see him?
And so in September of 2019, I hop on a plane, go up to Syracuse.
And we had this really amazing weekend together.
So we first went to a Syracuse football game.
They played the number one team in the country, and they almost beat him.
And then we hopped in the car and we drove up into the mountains.
And we went to all of our favorite places.
That's cool.
Favorite places that we had been.
to. And then it's Sunday and we're coming back down from the mountains and he's supposed to take me to
the airport. He diverts the car. And we go to Rome, New York, which is about an hour outside of Syracuse.
And this is where my grandparents lived. And he takes me to this road and he shows me this
600 square foot house. Right. He takes me around a couple blocks away. And he takes me around a couple blocks away.
He shows me another 600 square foot house.
And he tells me, this is this is where your great-grandparents lived.
This is where your grandparents were kids playing in the yard.
This is where our family, Polish immigrants.
This is where we started.
Wow.
He takes me to the airport.
That's the last time I saw my dad.
In January of 2020, I got a phone call from the police.
department he didn't show up to work and he had passed away over the weekend and so the thing
about it is and I share this partially for the people who are at home because I think
that like coming out and discussing these things is important for other people to hear
because I think for some of them it may impact them but I also share
this for you on a personal level because you're a new dad and I've been through the time that
you and I have gotten to know each other I've been pretty vocal about my love for being a dad
and my children and there was a moment in my life when everything changed and it was the birth
of my oldest daughter who is 11 though and there were a few things that happened in that moment
for me so part of it was to feel the love that I had instantly that was unlike any love that
had ever experienced in my life it was so natural it was so authentic and it I don't know that
there's anything that she could do that would make me not love her wow and you feel that
instantly it's a very special feeling and that allowed me to realize that that was the way that
my dad felt about me right and the other side to this is I think that there are aspects of our
life that mature at a different pace so like for nutrition there's like a super quick and easy
for me you know in 2012 to like 2015 I was like a new man
Yeah, right? Had like really drilled down and figured out what works for for me at least, right?
But like being willing to realize my own mistakes as part of the personal development that was necessary to accept that maybe part of this issue here was actually me.
Right? But also, I'm holding this child and
like I don't know where she came from but she came from somewhere there's a breath of life
that came into this child that is completely undeniable and science will never actually
be able to explain that that's true that's true and so that sort of experience
leads you into some bigger questions of like understanding who I am within this broader story
of everything that's unfolding and what is my purpose why am I here and what does it all mean and
what will happen after I'm gone and so this led me on what was a very slow spiritual journey
where I was like against it and closed off for a very long time.
You're in your head, not in your heart.
Yeah.
And also, yes, that's actually a beautiful way to describe it, but also I wasn't open to the possibility.
No, no way.
You're based on science and facts and show me a paper on this and this is what you knew.
Well, and I was raised Catholic.
And we went to church and it was just sort of the obligatory hour.
Of course.
And it was completely uninspired.
Sure.
And also if your parents who took you there, they weren't able to figure things out and they
kind of ruined your family dynamic.
You're like, well, this didn't work for them.
So why am I going to do this?
Yeah.
And I had a thing happen where because my parents were divorced.
So we would drive, you know, this is upstate New York where like snow can drop hard
and fast all at once.
Yeah.
And because you can get Lake ofx snow and things like this.
Yeah.
And get like one foot and a couple hours.
Exactly.
It's like it can be next level.
So, um, so my parents were two and a half hours apart.
So on Sunday evening, I would come back.
But if there was a bad snowstorm, instead of taking two and a half hours, it might take
four hours, right, to get home.
And so I was going to be confirmed.
And there was a rehearsal for the confirmation for the ceremony.
And I showed up late because.
no one did anything wrong but like because my parents are divorced yeah right so I
show up late and apparently the the priest I'm not gonna name his name but he had
given instructions of like this is what I need you to say when you come to the
altar and it was very explicitly said like you better know this and you didn't
know it because you got I didn't know I wasn't there yeah so I go up to the
altar and he says what do you have to say and you're like oh I have no clue whack no
way. Oh, man. I mean, honestly, that's rough. I've never had an adult hit me. Oh, my gosh.
Just hard. How old were you? Probably 16, 15. Oh, man, that's unfortunate. That's sad. Boom.
That is unfortunate. So, so for me, it was trauma there for sure, a huge drama there.
Well, I mean, I don't, I don't know if, if like. Or is an embarrassment. There's a,
there definitely was embarrassment. I'm going to wrong with me. There's a shame, yell at stuff.
I mean, but at a minimum, at a minimum, it set me so far back spiritually because it was basically like, yo, I'm not like, I'm good.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm good.
Right.
So where are you at now?
So, yeah.
So for me, I think like between the birth of my child, between building this family and then these bigger questions and then having to process and resolve the death of my father.
Right.
So where did my daughter's soul come from?
But where did my dad's soul go?
Right.
Where is he?
And why am I here?
Right.
Yeah.
So that actually has led me to actually a wonderful place and yes and I
I share this because in the chapter I do talk about trauma I do talk about human connection and our need for human connection which was really exemplified in the story of me and my dad
right like there was it was a broken connection that I in order to be healthy and happy and and my best version myself I needed to reestablish that
but the other but the other the other factor here
is that I actually think that for me, I'm just speaking for myself,
that I haven't really felt fully like myself
until I started to lean in and open up my heart.
And as I've done that, and I'm not telling people what to believe,
because the truth is that like outward organized religion
is not actually what I'm talking about right now.
Right, right.
What I'm talking about is an intimate conversation between you,
and something bigger
that occurs during the quiet times by yourself.
Yeah.
Right?
Wow.
Because that's what really matters.
That's what really matters.
And then all of the other stuff
you can use to support that relationship.
Of course.
Right.
So for me,
it has just been this beautiful healing season.
And so for me,
so like Lewis,
as a medical doctor,
I mean, I acknowledge that there's
absolute barriers
to some of these conversations,
right?
where it's like people see it as a big risk.
Rich roles like, whoa, like I did not expect that.
Yeah, yeah.
Right?
You're taking a risk there.
And but what I said to him and what I'm saying to you and the listeners is, I'm a medical doctor.
I am here to heal.
That is my mission.
That is my purpose.
I'm completely aligned on my purpose.
It's a beautiful thing for me.
Right.
But if I, if I'm going to fulfill that purpose, then I have to follow through on these things,
even when it's hard to say.
100%.
And so this honest conversation
is really about helping people to heal
and the acknowledgement that healing comes in many places
and it can be the four workhorses.
Sure.
Right? Or it could be circadian rhythm
or it could be supplement stacks.
These are all chapters in the book.
But what I'm saying is there's also healing
that comes for your soul from your connections
to other people, the ones you love, right?
And to lean into that.
What is the chapter in the book called?
So it's chapter eight and basically it's called mind-body healing.
Mind-body healing.
Mind-body healing.
Now, where's your relationship with the Catholic faith or your faith now?
It's in an amazing place.
It's like you've healed that moment, that trauma from that priest that did that, and you feel
like you've reconnected to that faith?
Or is it involved?
I've connected to it.
I don't consider myself Catholic, but I actually don't have any problem whatsoever with the Catholic
church. Where I have come to is that organized religion, we have to be willing to see that on both
a micro level like this, getting slapped by a priest, right? Or on a macro level, like cover
ups and things like this, right? Or there's history, right? There's tons of history. In every
religion. Yes. We have to be willing to see that these are the flaws of humans. Yes. Right.
that humans that are trying,
they may think that they're right or whatever,
but they can make mistakes, right?
But that has nothing to do,
nor should you allow that,
to stand in the way of something that's so beautiful, special,
that you absolutely need in your life,
and I'm of the belief that people are starving for this,
which is a relationship with a higher power.
You should not allow those outward things.
So then once you cultivate that inside of you,
there's going to be a natural desire to express it outwardly and that comes through these forms of like
you know spiritual practice yes right so for me i don't i don't i don't consider myself catholic but i do
consider myself christian yes i do there's a whole different conversation that like is not really
what i came to talk about sure of like my belief in the bible right my belief in jesus right so i have my
I have my feelings there.
Do you feel like your immune system and your gut microbiome are healthier because you have a strong belief in Jesus and God?
I know.
It's not my thing.
I know.
And it's completely backed by science.
Wow.
So let me be clear.
I am not proposing a health hack where you find God for health.
No, no, no.
Right?
This is not a transactional thing.
Of course.
Right?
This is so much more beautiful.
special and powerful. But if you look at people who are more faithful, they are less depressed,
they are more optimistic for the future, they have better emotional processing, they're able to deal,
they're more resilient, they live longer, and there's many different forms of disease that are
associated with lower risk. And to bring it full circle and not to like turn this into a science lesson
because I actually love where we went with us.
But there still is like the faith in the science,
they're both there.
And that's okay.
Because they can both exist.
Yes.
And the science says that what's happening,
whether it's through our spiritual practices,
reading the Bible,
attending a service,
singing in synchrony with other people, right?
Spiritual music, dancing.
Chanting, things like that.
these things they're activations of the parasympathetic nervous system which is the rest
digest and i feel safe yes part that is the counterpoint to the sympathetic so we talked about the
sympathetic being activation now i'm saying safety exists safety and healing exists in your parasympathetic
so those are examples but then in our human connection holding hands hugging right feeling bonded
to your partner intimacy with a partner that you actually
love, not just, you're not just, it's not sport, right?
These things actually are also activations of our parasympathetic nervous system.
So, and then like, uh, the question that you asked me that is taking me an hour.
This is the most divergent answer of all time.
You asked me like, what is the thing that you can do?
And you asked me about food, but I'm actually going to divert away from food.
And what I'm to say is like in the moment of stress where your sympathetic nervous system is
firing, you can breathe.
So all of these different forms of breath work that you hear people talk about, whether it's
whether it's Wim Hof or you hear Andrew Huberman talk about techniques or it's in my space as a
gastroenterologist, we use techniques called diaphragmatic breathing, right, which are basically meant to
really force your diaphragm to pull air into your lungs with deep breaths in through the nose,
out through the lips. These breath by itself has the ability to pull air into your lungs with deep breaths in through the nose,
to activate our vagus nerve, which can take the foot off of the gas and put it on the
break and allow you to get into rest and digest and safety mode. To recap and acknowledge what
I'm hearing you say is that we can apply all the strategies in your book, Plant Power Plus,
to activate the power of your gut to tame inflammation and reclaim your health. There's lots of
supplements, foods, and strategies that we can't implement. But it sounds like that,
like if you're looking for ultimate health, ultimate freedom and healing, then revisiting and
healing the traumas of the past and integrating them in a healthy way in your life so that you feel
you've resolved them and they don't hurt you anymore, along with connecting to God or a higher
power and having a beautiful relationship and faith in God or a higher power, those two things,
are just as powerful, if not more powerful, than any type of food, hack, sleep,
sunlight that you can get in your life.
For a lot of people, that's the healing that they so desperately need.
100%.
I know what your next book is about.
It's about that whole chapter and going deeper on science and faith.
I feel like that is what you said people are starving for.
Obviously, they're starving to eat healthier foods because people are sick.
but there is an underlying root cause of that sickness, that disease that I feel like,
which is a lack of faith, a lack of spiritual connection, and a lack of healing the emotional,
psychological, sexual traumas that people have faced in their past.
And when we can heal the past and when we can find meaning of our faith and find a relationship
with a faith, I feel like that's when true freedom comes and people,
mind-body connection. That's when the immune system relaxes, like you said. That's when you aren't
on fire or flight mode constantly. It doesn't mean everything's going to be perfect, but you can
have more tools to address life's challenges. And so I hope that is the next book you talked about
and research, because that is the thing that people need the most. So I'm going to, I'm going to count
on you in three years to have that. Don't be mad at me if I don't. It's funny because I had Andrew
Huberman on my show a couple months ago and
most of the conversation was around his spiritual practice and how it's actually helped him heal
and feel better.
I think it's a game changer.
I didn't expect it.
I did not expect it, but it has changed my life.
And it allows me to be actually a far more resilient person.
Yes.
And the best version of myself show up every day.
I hope more medical practitioners listen to this and start applying this to their practice
for themselves so that they can also.
just communicate better and see people differently and connect with people on a spiritual level,
even and also bring the science and medicine to it as well. Hopefully,
hopefully people listen to this and watch it and start doing that.
Your book, Plant Powered Plus is a powerful reminder on how to activate the power of your gut
to tame inflammation and reclaim your health. I hope everyone gets a copy of this book because
a lot of people in the world are sick and we need people to get healthier.
And there's tools that they can do here that'll support them.
All of the tools are laid out.
Yeah.
They are evidence-based.
And they are available so that you get to choose, right?
It's on the table.
You pick and choose what are the things that you're going to pick up off that table and introduce it to your life.
Yes.
And if you do that, if you have the audacity to try something different and you do that, you will feel, I promise you.
You will feel the difference.
And when you do, you will know you're on to something.
you're going to want more and there's there will be even more for you you can keep doing it yes they
can get the book everywhere books are sold your youtube channel the gut health md also the gut health
md on social media and the guthealthmd.com you've got a great newsletter you have recommendations
for you've got a great supplement company that supports people that can help them with their gut as
well and so much great content that you have online what else can we uh where else can we follow or support
you with this journey.
Well, you've quite thoroughly laid it out, so I do appreciate that.
Look, to me, this is about an opportunity to continue the conversation beyond this show.
Right.
So I would encourage people completely free tools.
Come to my website, sign up for my newsletter.
Grab the book.
If you borrow it from the library.
Yeah.
And you read it, trust me, I'm not upset at all.
Because what I want is I want your time.
I want your time, I want your attention.
I want the opportunity.
I just want that chance that I could change your life.
Right?
Because that's what I'm trying to do here.
So and then once you do that, then just know, like, I'm here for you and I want to keep
working and I got, there's many years in front of me.
I'm 45 years old.
There you go.
So let's keep rolling.
I'm telling you that next book, before you're 50, that's got to be on somewhere and your
journey.
I'm telling you it's got to be.
If you're saying that's what people are starving the most for, then you're perfectly
position to serve people with that journey with your own personal experiences.
Maybe it's a, maybe it's a couple articles to start or something like that.
But what happens.
You know, what's interesting is that all of the conversations that as I've been
leading into this are leading into this, right?
Because this is what ultimately like.
And what are you waiting for?
It's what people want to talk about.
That's what they need, man.
That's what they need.
Well, I asked you this the last time.
I'm curious whether it is now after this book is out and after this conversation.
But what would you say if you get to live as long as you want, but at the end of the day, you only get to share three lessons with the world.
And we don't have access to your books or your work or your newsletters anymore.
But it's many years in the future, last day on earth for you and you get to leap behind three truths.
What would those truths be for you?
To me, number one, you need to figure out who you are and what your purpose is.
And once you identify that, you should never stop.
Never stop in the pursuit of that purpose.
That's who you are.
That's what you were meant to do.
So that's number one.
Number two, don't forget where you came from, right?
The people who have supported you, right?
The people who made you who you are today.
There's an entire story there.
It's not just this moment.
There's a built generations of people before you who led up to who you are.
Never forget those connections.
Never forget the importance of the other people in your life.
Because honestly, all of the other bullshit,
sorry for the profanity.
Hello?
Yeah, that's fine.
All of that, the money, the fame, the power,
you will never bring you the joy that you get from those people.
Yes.
That brought you to where you are today.
And last but not least, no, no,
with absolute clarity that you are a part of something bigger, better.
and it is gorgeous. It is beautiful. So even the idea, Lewis, I mean, I don't want, we're at the end,
so I don't want to like introduce a new topic for debate or discussion, but even the idea of
living forever, look, I get it. But at the same time where my dad is right now, one day, I'll be with
him. I'll be able to say the things that I need to say to him. And you know what else? He'll meet his
grandchildren. Wow. That's beautiful. That's beautiful, man. Well, I want to acknowledge you,
Will, for opening up the way you have been. And I think, again, I hope you keep sharing like this
because I think this is what people are starving for, to hear these types of conversations and stories
specifically from a medical professional like yourself at the highest level who is used to research
and, you know, studies and data and science to hear spirituality come from you and how this is the
ultimate level of healing, based on what I'm hearing is say for you, and the ultimate level of
joy and fulfillment and love, that's what we want. Sure, we want to be healthy and happy,
but it's like the ultimate levels of joy come from what you just talked about, because I think
it's where we get ultimate peace, freedom, and healing from is that connection. So I appreciate you.
I'm grateful for you. And my final question will is, what is your definition of greatness?
I think I go back to this idea of living your life of purpose.
Right.
If you are aligned with your purpose, anything that you do, anything is greatness.
There you go.
Well, thank you, man.
Appreciate it.
Powerful.
That's great.
It's awesome.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
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And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
