The School of Greatness - Fix Your Brain Health By Starting These Habits [MASTERCLASS] EP 1308
Episode Date: August 19, 2022Today’s episode is a masterclass around how to fix and improve your health. Three experts on health & nutrition share their perspectives and advice to anyone wanting to improve the quality of their ...physical and mental health. In this episode, Dr. Daniel Amen, psychiatrist and brain disorder specialist, explains the significance of what we eat and how to put yourself in an anti-aging environment.Dr. Mark Hyman, physician and author, elaborates on the connection between food and mood and the basic principles of healthy eating.Dr. Uma Naidoo, nutritional psychiatrist and author, tells us the foods we should be eating to increase the function of our brains and why you aren’t getting enough antioxidants.For more, go to lewishowes.com/1308Full Episodes:Daniel Amen: https://link.chtbl.com/1120-podMark Hyman: https://link.chtbl.com/1075-podUma Naidoo: https://link.chtbl.com/1214-pod
Transcript
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Omega-3 fatty acids decrease inflammation, fruits and vegetables decrease inflammation,
flossing, and probiotics. Getting your gut healthy, there's this huge connection between the brain
and the gut. 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. Welcome to this special masterclass.
We've brought some of the top experts in the world
to help you unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today. It's going
to be powerful, so let's go ahead and dive in.
What I'm hearing you say, obesity is a big factor to mental health stresses and brain
stresses.
And Alzheimer's disease and
Alzheimer's yeah I mean they're all it all sort of goes right together from
depression to problems in school to memory problems later in life what's
your thought I mean I'm all for people loving themselves where they're at where
they're at in their life and loving their bodies for where they're at and not shaming themselves
and the self-love movement of accepting yourself for where you are.
But that's only going to hurt our brains
if we're not actually saying,
okay, I accept and love myself for where I'm at
and the decisions I've made to be here,
but I've got to start working on these things.
Otherwise, there's going to be some challenges
emotionally, mentally, anxiety,
depression, if I don't work on it, right? My health. The don't worry, be happy people die the earliest from accidents and preventable illnesses. And I want people to love themselves. But doing the right thing is an act of love.
Like if you're really unhealthy, walking is an act of love.
And so it sort of catches me in this funny place.
I remember I was on a plane once and I'd figure out this connection between as your weight goes up,
the size and function of your brain goes down.
And I was sitting next to someone who was very overweight,
and we were on a tiny plane going to Des Moines, Iowa for public television.
And in my head, I'm like, oh, you want to talk to her about that? And then I talk to myself all the time.
It's like, no, you don't want to say anything.
Don't need to upset her a day.
But then I went to Pittsburgh and I went to GNC, the supplement company.
And one of my core values is being authentic.
So I live the message of my life.
And the message of GNC is health.
Yes.
And their number three guy, their marketing director, took me to dinner, was morbidly obese.
Really?
And that thought in my head is, you should talk to him about this.
And he made the comment, he opened the conversation.
He's like, you know, I don't know why I'm overweight,
but my numbers are okay.
And I'm like, Tom.
What numbers?
And I'm like, Tom, you don't wanna be a dinosaur.
Cause I had figured out, big body, little brain,
you're gonna become extinct.
And we had this great conversation because my
favorite verse in the New Testament is John 8 32 know the truth and the truth
will set you free I'm like do you not want to be like the number two guy or
the number one guy you're not gonna going to do that if your brain's not healthy.
And that conversation the next year, he lost 80 pounds. Wow.
Most people don't know that this is a serious health, mental health, brain health risk.
And I just want to tell people the truth.
And I want them to get healthy.
And people go, but I don't like any of,
one of my NFL players, but I don't like any of the foods
that are healthy for me.
And I'm like, none, not one?
And we did this great exercise,
and it turned out he liked like 70 of the foods.
You only want to love food that loves you back. What are the five
foods that we should have to help our brain the most? Salmon, wild salmon, blueberries, walnuts,
olive or avocado oil. Yeah. Healthy protein.
Chocolate. I make
this great brain healthy
hot chocolate every night for my
family. I just look at the six of
them that live at home. I'm like, okay, who's up
for it tonight? So
Costco of all places, organic
vanilla, unsweetened almond
milk, raw cacao.
It's a super food.
So organic raw cacao and a little bit of Sweet Leaf
is a company that makes flavored stevia.
They make chocolate flavored stevia
and put it in the blender, heat it up.
It's phenomenal.
Good for me.
I love it. And it loves me back.
It loves you back. So salmon, blueberries, walnuts, avocado,
or avocado oil, raw chocolate,
are some of the top favorite foods for the brain. For the brain.
Why are these foods, is it high in antioxidants?
Is it proteins that they have?
So blueberry, it's the phytonutrients.
They've actually done studies showing cognitive enhancement with blueberry
juice, salmon,
it's the omega-3 fatty acids and the complete protein.
Avocados, it's the healthy fat,
especially omega-3 fatty acids. Same with walnuts. Your brain is fat. Low-fat diets
are bad for your brain. People who go on low-fat diets actually have an increased incidence
of depression.
Really?
Yeah. Now, you don't want bad fats, fried fats particularly. You want healthy fats,
avocados, nuts and seeds, green leafy vegetables.
Olive oil, is that in there?
Olive oil, avocado oil, damien nut oil.
Yeah.
So how much food should the brain have?
Is it, you know, your buddy, our buddy Dave Asprey talks about fasting a lot.
A lot of people are in this fasting craze.
If we're not giving the brain food or nutrients for a day, three days, five days, does that help the brain?
Does it reset the brain?
Does it hurt the brain?
So intermittent fasting, where you go 12 to 16 hours from dinner to breakfast or lunch, is good.
dinner to breakfast or lunch is good. They've actually found your, there's a term called autophagy, where your brain begins to clean up some of the trash. So it works in the brain too,
not just in the body. It works on the brain as well. Now, I grew up Roman Catholic and long
suffering was one of the gifts. And I never got that one.
I'm not a fan of long suffering.
I'm not doing a marathon.
It's like way too much stress for my brain.
And I'm not fasting for three days,
but I can go 12 hours.
I mean, like that's not a big deal.
And it helps people lose weight.
It helps them be healthy.
And I come from a family of fat people.
My dad used to hate when I would say that.
But I have a brother who's 150 pounds overweight,
despite me loving him, nudging him.
And you just have to be thoughtful. Know your vulnerability in bright minds.
The G is genetics.
So know what you're genetically vulnerable to.
And I have to work on it. Right, right. How you mentioned you don't do marathons. If
you're not traumatizing the brain through contact sports but you're an
endurance junkie, you love to run marathons, you run them every year, you do
triathlons, you do ultra marathons, you're doing
mountain climbing. Are these activities good for the brain to put some extreme stress on it,
even if it's not physical contact to the brain? Or does it long-term hurt the brain?
The scans I have of extreme athletes are not good.
Really?
Yeah. I think it's too much stress for the brain. I love hip training, high intensity
training. That's been shown to increase mitochondria and cells. I'm not a fan of
putting your body under a lot of stress. It's just not good for it. Some is is good we call it you stress a little bit so your fibers grow
that's why weight training is important the stronger you are as you age less likely you
have alzheimer's disease really but you want to love your brain you want to make sure you're
sleeping for your brain that's the s in bright mind. So if someone's like, you know what? Okay, I hear what you're saying,
but I really love to do
a marathon or two a year.
And a few times in my life
I want to do,
you know,
I want to climb Everest
or something like that.
I want to do something
to challenge myself.
And I go,
like, awesome.
Is that going to hurt
the brain long time?
It's not going to.
If you're doing
everything else right.
So one of my NFL players
just signed an $80 million deal.
Wow.
So he's going to play.
He's going to play.
But if you're going to do something that is potentially damaging to the brain,
make sure you're doing everything else right.
So, for example, being a firefighter is a brain damaging profession. We need to own
that just like we need to own playing football as a brain damaging profession. It's like own it.
Everybody knows it. Now, when I started my work in 2007, very few people know it. Now,
everybody knows it. But they don't know that being a firefighter, because there are heroes.
Those are the people we need when we need them,
and we need them healthy.
But because of the toxins they breathe,
because of the emotional trauma they see day in and day out,
because of the head traumas they experience,
they have a higher incidence of depression,
a higher incidence of suicide, and a higher incidence of depression, a higher incidence
of suicide, and a higher incidence of early death.
We should not be okay with this.
But it doesn't mean we're not going to have firefighters.
What it means is we should put their brain in a rehabilitative environment all the time.
We should be teaching them about brain health like with NFL players currently we should be teaching them look if you're gonna do this own it
it's a brain damaging sport so let's just do everything else right what are
the other things right that you talk about are there are a few main keys is
it nutrition is it sleep well we think about bright minds. It's such a good model. So blood flow, B is blood flow. So
exercise and foods like beets that increase blood flow or supplements like ginkgo that increase
blood flow. The R is retirement and aging. New learning is absolutely critical. You know,
your work and studying greatness, you're always learning something new, which is great for
the brain. So retirement plus aging, is that what you said? Retirement and aging. So continuing to
learn in those stages. And always putting yourself in an anti-aging environment. So the food you eat,
the exercise, new learning, being passionate, never retiring, right?
I mean, maybe you go and do something else you like better because you have enough money,
but never retirement because when you start not doing things,
your brain actually starts to disconnect itself.
So when we, say someone retires at 60, 70, 75,
and they say, you know, I'm just going to sit on the beach for the next however long, enjoy my family time,
enjoy the money I've had, and relax.
What happens to those people if they don't have
a purposeful mission in their life beyond relaxation?
What happens?
Their brain disconnects itself.
They have a higher incidence of dementia.
And my dad worked until he died when he was almost 91.
And he's like, when my friends retire, they die.
Really?
Now, if you retire, because you really didn't love what you were doing anyways,
and you go off and do something you love, maybe not golf,
because you're around all those toxins on the green, maybe not golf,
but if you're doing things you love and you're always learning, well, that's awesome. That's
a really good thing. So you can retire from your job. Don't retire from your life. Don't retire
from your life. Stay connected in some meaningful pursuit. Absolutely critical stay keeping young and then the I is
inflammation this is the big bad actor because inflammation in your body which
comes from eating processed foods one of the surprising things comes from gum
disease if you're not a flosser really you need to floss I'm a flossing fool I
did twice a day I wasn't that way until I started reading the studies that people
who have gum disease have a higher incidence of heart disease, but also a higher incidence
of brain disease. They actually found gum bacteria higher in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease.
And so omega-3 fatty acids decrease inflammation,
fruits and vegetables decrease inflammation,
flossing and probiotics, getting your gut healthy.
There's this huge connection between the brain and the gut because inflammation often comes from having an unhealthy gut,
either from infections or the lousy food that you're eating. And the G is genetics. You need
to know your vulnerability, but genes aren't a death sentence. What they should be is a wake-up
call to know what you're vulnerable to. I have heart disease and obesity in my family.
I don't have heart disease and I'm not obese.
Why?
Because I'm always on a prevention program.
You just want to be serious as soon as you know what your risks are.
H is head trauma, which we talked about.
Brain is soft.
Skull is hard.
There are 3 million new head injuries every year in the United States. This is a big deal. Wait, 3 million new head injuries? Every year. Is that
from car accidents or sports? Falls. Everything. Wow. You know, being hit. Domestic violence,
whatever it might be. Anything. Gunshot, whatever. Whatever. Three million. Which means most people live, over the last 30 years,
that's 90 million people in the United States
who struggle with the effects of traumatic brain injury.
Very high in prison populations,
very high in people who struggle with psychiatric diseases.
And then T is toxins.
And so you go, what can I do to support my brain?
Well, one, avoid them.
Alcohol is not a health food.
My biggest blog last year was titled I Told You So.
And when I dated my wife, Tana,
and I think you met my wife, she's awesome.
And when we were dating, she said... Your current wife.
My current wife. Not the 20-year-old. Not the 20-year-old. She said, I'll never tell you I told you so.
She lied. She just flat out lied to me. It's like her favorite thing to say.
But I've been telling people ever since I started imaging, alcohol's not a health food.
And our first clinic was right next to the Napa Valley,
so it was not a popular thing to say.
But it's just what I saw.
And then there's a study from Johns Hopkins
that say people who drink every day have smaller brains.
And then last year, the American Cancer Society came out
and said any alcohol is associated with an increased risk
in cancer. Seven different cancers. Oh, any alcohol. Any alcohol. And so my wine drinker
is saying, no, you're wrong. No, I'm not listening to this right now. What about a glass once or
twice a week? What about the nutrients from the grapes? All these things. Well again, if you're gonna do something
that's bad for your brain,
you should be doing other things
that are good for your brain, right?
It doesn't mean you can never have a drink,
but just know it's not a healthy, helpful thing to do.
So you wanna do the other things.
Yeah, like when I eat a bowl of ice cream and pizza, I know it's not helping my brain.
Right.
And if you do it once a month, it's like not the biggest deal in the world.
But then, because here we're talking about tea for toxins, you want to support the four
organs of detoxification.
So your kidneys drink more water, your gut eat more fiber. In my shake every morning,
I put fiber in it. For your liver, kill the alcohol and eat detoxifying vegetables. They're
called brassicas, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, and take infrared saunas. People who take the most saunas have the
lowest incidence of Alzheimer's disease because it detoxifies you. And it's also, there's actually a
study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, people with major depression took
one infrared sauna, their mood was better.
Well, how cool is that?
I mean, that's like simple.
There's no side effects, mostly,
to taking a 25-minute sauna.
So is it infrared or any type of sauna?
Well, it's probably any type of sauna,
but the study was on infrared.
But anything that's releasing the toxins,
any heat exposure, not too much. Sweat. Sweating with exercise or saunas is detoxifying for
you. This isn't hard. Not one thing I've said so far is hard. The M in Bright Minds is mental
health. This is where you learn to kill the ants and tame the dragons.
So ant stands for automatic negative thoughts, the thoughts that come into your mind automatically
and ruin your day. And the exercise is super simple. Whenever you feel sad or mad or nervous
or out of control, write down what you're thinking and then just ask yourself if it's true.
You don't have to believe every stupid thing.
I was working with a therapist recently that said
just because someone tells you something about yourself
doesn't mean, and they're trying to give you this thing,
doesn't mean you need to receive that gift.
It's not a gift you need to receive.
They're offering you a gift that's a bad gift.
Doesn't mean you need to take it.
You can just say, okay, I don't need that gift right now.
I don't need to let that thought sink in and believe this.
And I think, I'll speak for myself, growing up,
anytime I heard someone say, you suck, you're dumb,
you're an idiot, you're not enough,
you'll never amount to whatever,
I learned to believe those things.
And I think a lot of us probably learned to believe
whatever we hear from anyone,
whether it was a side comment or a direct comment. And how have you learned
over the years to really defend against those ants? Like besides, someone might say, okay,
I tried writing it down that this is not true and analyzing this, but how can we really show
up for ourselves so our thoughts don't consume us in a negative way?
So you know that if you're overweight on Monday and you have a salad, you are not going to be trim on Friday.
Right.
You need to develop practices.
Right?
That getting well physically is a discipline that occurs over and over, over time.
To be mentally well, you need to develop practices that you do, like eating well, over and over and over.
So, for example, I start every day with today is going to be a great day. As soon as my feet hit the floor in the morning, and today was easier because I spent last night in Santa Monica and walked on the beach this morning, and I get to hang out with you, today is going to be a great day.
That way, my unconscious mind finds why it's going to be a great day.
And then your brain is always listening.
defines why it's going to be a great day. And then your brain is always listening. I talk about taming the hopeless and helpless dragon, the dragon from the past that feeds depression.
And it's something I do called positivity bias training. I want to get my brain looking for
what's right because it automatically goes for what's wrong. And so I start every day with today
is going to be a great
day. And then if I have a hard time, if I feel sad or mad or nervous or out of control, I write down
what I'm thinking. And then I just go, is it true? And there's a whole bigger method in the book.
And often I'll go to, what's the opposite of that thought? No one loves me or no one respects me or you're a failure.
And so quickly my brain, if I go, my wife never listens to me, I've had that thought.
I'll go, well, I never listened to my wife.
And I'll be like, oh, that can be true.
Or she does listen to me and then I find the time.
It's just I don't believe what goes on in my head and then when I go to bed at night and this is so
powerful I say a prayer and then I go what went well today and I put myself to sleep by reviewing
the positive things that happened that day and I find the little micro moments whether it's that
sip of hot chocolate that I made that I'm proud of myself for,
or some cool text or interaction.
How does food affect our brain? I wrote a book about 13 years ago called The Ultra Mind Solution
about how the body affects the mind. We often know about the mind-body effect, which is real, but there's also the other direction going on. And it turns out that food is probably the biggest driver of
dysfunction in the brain when it comes to mood, behavior, attention, memory. And this is not just
sort of hypothetical, but there's a whole department, for example, at Harvard of nutritional
psychiatry. There's a whole, at Harvard of nutritional psychiatry.
There's a whole department at Stanford of metabolic psychiatry. I've had both of them on my
podcast, The Doctor's Pharmacy. The doctors from those institutions are talking about the role of
food and the brain and the mood. And we see depression, anxiety, irritability, stress.
It turns out that when you eat the American diet, or otherwise known as a sad diet, the standard American diet, that people are damaging their brains in ways that create inflammation in the
brain. And we now know that mental illness often is an inflamed brain. You know, when you cut
yourself and you get an infection, it's red and hot and sore and inflamed. If you sprain your ankle,
it's sore. If you get a sore throat, it's sore and red.
When your brain is inflamed, it doesn't hurt.
The only way your brain knows how to say ouch is by getting depressed or anxious or angry
or irritable or having even more serious consequences.
And so the food that we're eating, predominantly the sugar and starch and processed ingredients,
additives, the lack of good fats, the predominance
of bad fats and refined oils, the nutrient depletion of our diet.
I mean, 95% of us are deficient probably in omega-3 fats.
You know, 90 plus percent of Americans are deficient in one or more nutrients at the
minimum level to prevent deficiency, which all play a role in the mood, like folate,
magnesium is incredible for anxiety, iron, zinc, all these, vitamin D, all these play a role
in the brain function. I mean, you hear about winter blues, you know, that's because of lack
of vitamin D. So we know about this intimate connection between food and mood and nutritional
status and mood. And the clinical trials have been really staggering, showing that people who
eat a whole foods diet and get rid of the junk actually can get rid of
depression. I see panic attacks, anxiety disorders often caused by the food we're eating. Just as an
example, when you eat sugar or starch, your cortisol level goes up, which is the stress
hormone. Your adrenaline goes up. So if you eat a bagel or a cookie, your body literally has the
same reaction as if you're running from a saber tooth tiger.
Wow.
And,
and that,
and that can create anxiety internally with the insulin.
Internally.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean,
you could be totally fine and calm and take five deep breaths before your
meal.
But if you eat all that crap,
your brain is going to feel it.
Your,
your body's going to feel it.
So what happened?
What happens to the brain when the,
when you're eating a bagel or an ice cream cone or whatever it is, and it goes into your gut?
Does it send signals to your brain?
And then it starts to, you know, what does that do?
Is it inflamed in that moment?
Does it take time to inflame something?
So there's a whole cascade of things that happens when you eat mostly the starch and sugar that's 60% of our diet, right?
It's ultra-processed food.
It's the main ingredients of corn and flour and sugar that are in everything. And what happens is you get
this spike in blood sugar, which then creates a spike in insulin. At the same time, you get an
immediate spike in cortisol and adrenaline. That's the first phase of response. Of course,
it affects your liver and screws up your cholesterol and all that. But what happens next is even more concerning. It drives all the available fuel in your bloodstream
from all the food you've eaten, sugar and starch and whatever bad fats, drives it into your fat
cells. And it's a one-way street into your fat cells called your adipocytes around your belly,
those belly fat cells. Those fat cells, in turn turn create a whole series of chemicals, hundreds of chemicals,
hormones, inflammatory markers and messengers, neurotransmitters. It's quite striking when you
look at, they're not just like holding up your pants, it's fat there. It's like, it's actually
doing stuff. And when you eat in that way, it drives hunger, it stores fat, it shuts down your
metabolism, and it slows, literally slows your metabolism. And even worse, it drives hunger, it stores fat, it shuts down your metabolism,
and it literally slows your metabolism.
And even worse, it locks the fat cells so that fat can't get out.
It's like a one-way turnstile.
Oh, I can get in.
And then on top of that, it releases all these inflammatory messenger molecules.
We call them adipocytokines.
They go to your brain and they create inflammation in the brain.
So it's kind of a downstream effect of her chronic eating this way.
And if you have one cookie or one bagel, it's not going to kill you.
Right.
But if you're constantly eating this stuff and we're talking about the
average American eats a pound, almost a flour and sugar a day.
Wow.
A pound,
like 152 pounds of sugar and 103 pounds of flour.
You add that up and it's,
and I know I'm not that eating that much and you
aren't so a lot of people are making up for the difference right right so food affects your mood
for sure yeah and then none of that it's not even just uh you know what it was striking and i don't
know if you had david plumatter on the show but he wrote a book called brainwash and it's it really
speaks to what happens to the brain when you don't eat real whole foods and you eat too much of this American diet that we're all eating.
It disconnects the frontal lobe from the amygdala.
Now, what does that mean in English?
The frontal lobe is the grown-up.
It's the adult in the room.
It's like you think you're going to punch that guy, but you go, I better not punch that guy.
It's that adult in the room that sort of is your higher self. And amygdala is your reptile brain it's your lizard brain it's going
to just run or fight or flee uh-huh and it's and and what happens is literally physiologically
these parts of the brain are connected but when you eat crap they get disconnected and so you're
constantly reacting from your amygdala with no grown-up in the room which is why we see this level of divisiveness and hatred and I mean just all the upheaval we're
seeing in society now I think a large part of that has to do with our brains being constantly
triggered by this reptilian insult that is driving behavior change and when we look at
and we look at the fact of other data to support,
it's not just a theory.
In prisons, if you give prisoners healthy food,
swapping out all the crap they eat in prisons,
which is pretty darn bad,
there's a 56% reduction in violent crime in the prisons.
If you add a multivitamin, it's an 80% reduction.
Come on.
If you look at kids,
and this is in juvenile detention centers,
they've done clinical trials,
because he's got these people locked up. So it got it's a really great kind of study now these
kind of studies are hard to do because mostly we're free we call them free living humans who
don't really behave and they'll do whatever they want they don't follow the study protocol when
you're locked up you get what you get right and so they took these kids the environment's the same
for everyone yeah all that stuff that's right and they took these kids and they, and they, uh, these were kids were disruptive, violent, aggressive, oppositional, suicidal.
It was by cleaning up their diet and giving them whole foods. It was a 91% reduction in all violent
behavior, you know, oppositional behavior and these need for restraints went down. Suicide went
down a hundred percent. I mean, it's the third leading cause of death in that age group. It went down 100%. No suicides.
And so you see this incredible data that comes from understanding nutritional psychiatry.
And you go, wait a minute.
Maybe some of our messed up society has to do with not only the problems with obesity
and the problems with chronic disease and the fact that COVID has landed on a perfect
laboratory for spreading in America
because we're all so unhealthy and our immune systems are so sick because of our diet.
But it's also led to this incredible disruption of our brain and our mood and our behavior,
which we're seeing rampant in society today.
What would you say are the three foods we should all stay away from
in order to increase
the happiness of our mental health oh that's not hard so uh i mean you know in my book the
pegan diet it's called 21 practical principles for reclaiming your health in a nutritionally
confusing world and and it's really practical and there's a bunch of steps at the end but but i think you
know the the real dangers are one um high fructose corn syrup because anything with high fructose
corn syrup almost by definition is a highly processed food that comes with all kinds of
other brad crap so if you're reading labels like if you just can eliminate that that would be like
number one number two would be trans fats hydrogenated fats which what
is that what's really what's that in what foods is that in is that processed packaged foods what
hydrogenated fats is that fried is that french fries yeah so hydrodinamide fats have literally
been have been banned by the fda essentially ruled not safe to eat but they're still out there okay
there's you can still find them it's less but it's and they used to be really that's makes crisco shortening so anything that comes with a baked good or any any processed food uh
and the third thing would be you know you should only eat foods with ingredients that you would
have in your cupboard can pronounce and recognize in other words would you have butylated hydroxy
toluene in your cupboard that you sprinkle on your salad you know no which
is also known as bht it's a preservative that's been linked to cancer it's banned in europe we
have it in everything here you know so if you wouldn't have you know azodicarbonamide in your
cupboard that you would use in your stir fries you probably shouldn't eat it and yet this is in
so much of our foods in fact in america it's legal this is an ingredient used in
breads to make them fluffier subway used it in their subway sandwich didn't they have to take
it out didn't barry get it yeah yeah so our friend our friend ashamed them into taking out but it's
still legal here it's not illegal they just she just shamed them publicly by trying to eat her
yoga mat in front of the subway and got them but in in singapore for example if you're a food
manufacturer and you use this ingredient in your food you get a 15-year jail sentence and a $450,000 fine.
No, you do not.
Yes, you do.
That's crazy.
I swear to God.
In Europe, a lot of these chemicals are banned.
So basically, just eat real food.
So get rid of all those three things that would make you likely to end up in trouble.
And then, you know, there's another hierarchy of how do you even upgrade the quality, but the whole principle of the Pagan diet, food is medicine and quality
matters. And then it's not just calories, it's information. And it literally can upgrade or
downgrade your biology with every bite. And so when you're putting something in your mouth,
you're literally speaking to your genes. You're speaking to your hormones, your brain chemistry, your immune system, your microbiome, your mitochondria, everything is controlled by
what we're eating. So the book is really focused on two key principles. One is food is medicine.
And the other is personalized nutrition and medicine. Cause you know, I call it the pecan
diet as a joke between paleo and keto, right? You know, and I, and I had a, I was sitting on a panel
with a friend of mine who was a vegan cardiologist
and another one was a paleo doc
and they were just fighting.
And I was in the middle
and I felt like a ping pong ball going back and forth.
And I was sort of, I was like trying to break the,
break the tension a little bit.
And I said, hey, if you're a paleo and you're vegan,
I must be pegan.
And it was kind of a joke and everybody laughed.
And I was like, oh, wow, that was good.
And then I thought about it on the way home.
And basically, they're identical except for where you get your protein, animals or grains and beans.
They both agree that we should eat whole foods.
They both agree we should eat lots of vegetables and nuts and seeds and good fats and get rid of processed foods and low sugar.
And even agree that we should not be eating dairy, which is a whole controversial subject.
But they're pretty identical.
Sure.
eating dairy, which is a whole controversial subject, but they're pretty identical. And so the goal of this book is not to create a dogma, but to create a big 10 inclusive framework for
people to think about food in a different way. So what are the principles of healthy eating that
are adaptable to different cultures, different preferences, different belief systems? And I
think, you know, I always encourage people to listen to their body, not to dogma. You know,
a lot of our nutrition advice is based on, oh, be keto or be paleo or be vegan or be this
or be that be raw and the truth is it's it depends on you if you are if i do keto my body doesn't
respond great i mean i i do higher fat but but it might but another person who's a diabetic they
might do great on it right you know one person on a, like Rich Roll, may be able to run triathlons. I mean,
just incredible Ironman stunts of heroic effort. But he may be a unicorn, or maybe he's figured
out how to do it. And other patients of mine, see, are extremely ill after years of being a vegan
because of their nutrition depleted, or they don't have protein, or their body doesn't like it. I
just had a patient, for example, this week, who was a young woman, 26 years old,
who's been a vegetarian vegan.
She was basically a vegetable and sugar vegan.
And she didn't even like to...
So she would eat sugar as well?
Yeah, oh yeah.
Well, a lot of people who are vegan eat sugar
because the body starts to crave the carbohydrates and sugar.
So it's not uncommon.
And so she wasn't overweight at all.
But metabolically, she was super unhealthy.
She had, you know, acne and she had, her gut was a mess and she had very low protein, like very,
very low amino acids. She had very low vitamin D, extremely low B12, very low iodine, very low zinc.
I mean, and, and, um, you know, she was extremely unwell and, and her diet was just so, uh, not fit
for her. So we've had, we had to sort of upregulate it
and change it a little bit. I had to get her on some different protein shakes, which she needed.
I had to upregulate her vitamins. I had to sort of get her off the sugar. I mean, but I think,
you know, it takes a lot of work. So the key is how do you personalize the diet and get away from
the basically religious nutrition that we all have, which is either all vegan, vegetarian,
keto, carnivore. There's all these extreme diets, right? Exactly. Yeah. And, and, and again,
I only encourage people to listen to the smartest doctor in the room, which is their own body
right? Like, how do you feel? Uh, do you feel great? Do you feel bad? How's your stomach? How's
your head? How you're clear? Are you have energy? Are you, I mean, what, what is happening to you?
So I think it's important to understand that, that, that, um, you know, we are all different
and that the future of medicine is personalized medicine.
There's a whole section here on personalized nutrition and how do you identify your particular
needs by various kinds of testing, whether it's genetic testing, whether it's metabolic
testing, food sensitivity testing, and how do you actually figure out how to dial in your perfect diet?
Everyone's kind of swearing by their way is the way,
but it seems so extreme in my mind.
And I empathize with vegans, and I'm like, yeah,
I don't want to hurt animals either.
But then I've tried it for a while, and I'm also like, gosh, but I miss meat.
And it's like, what is the way?
And what I'm hearing you say is that there is not one size fits all.
You have to really figure out what works for you.
You talk about brain foods,
specific foods that we should be stocking our kitchen with.
Can you share what some of these brain foods are?
You have an acronym for them.
I'm not sure if you have them all memorized.
So I'll give you a few to get you started.
So I use the brain foods acronym to really almost be a checklist for people.
I like people to take a photograph of it or read it or list it on their phone so that when they're at the supermarket, they're picking out those nutrients.
So, you know, B is my favorite berries.
And my favorite berry
is blueberry now they're rich in anthocyanins they're rich in fiber they
are colorful and that brings me to the R one of the R's is for eat the color of
the rainbow and this these are sort of things Lewis said many people overlook
their doctors have said it or they've heard it or read it. But what we're uncovering in the science is that the color of the rainbow,
the colors of vegetables, the phytonutrients in those interact with the gut microbes. These are
powerful antioxidants, powerful anti-inflammatory substances, which impact things like depression,
anxiety, and more. So it's no longer just eat a colorful salad.
There's actual good evidence as to why we should be eating it.
And is it a matter of if it's cooked or uncooked?
You know, the science on that varies, but my feeling about it is the following.
When you have raw veggies, they have their microbiome intact.
They're providing those bacteria. they're giving you good nutrients so I like to I like to play I
like like people to do the following have some say when they're preparing
their vegetables for roasted veggie dish you know keep some chopped veggies that
you munch on and then roast the rest or you know whatever you would have baking
the rest whatever and so you're having a little bit of combination of both. Some raw, some cooked.
Some cooked.
But things like, say, spinach, you know,
steaming the spinach can actually help lower the oxalate levels.
So some of it is more specific.
Okay, gotcha.
Now, I've heard a topic about fruits that some people say have as much as you want.
Others say the less fruit the better or
do it in seasonal times or things like that yeah have you seen anything where
if people are only eating fruit that it helps or hurts them psychologically or
can you never have too much fruit in moderation I guess so I think when it
comes to psychological health one of the biggest things is how mental health
and metabolic health are not connected.
What I mean by that is I talk about berries because they have a low glycemic index.
So they have a powerful positive impact, even in moderation.
So I don't mean four cups of blueberries a day, but I do mean about a half a cup at least
is one of your servings of fruit in a day.
The issue with fruit is that the higher glycemic fruits,
say the more tropical fruits, you know,
mangoes and pineapples, those are actually less healthy
for those with mental health,
because many individuals with mental health
might have a struggle with weight
and sometimes with metabolic health.
Interesting, and so if you have a lot of these
high glycemic fruits they store more
fat. They could increase your weight. They could potentially increase your weight. Which could make
you psychologically say I'm overweight or not confident in yourself. That as well as your
metabolic health because it could impact your insulin resistance, your insulin sensitivity,
your glucose load. So because in my clinical practice I often see people who are struggling with their weight.
And I don't mean low weight, I mean struggling with a little bit of extra weight.
Right.
Or they're taking medications like selective serotonin, reuptake inhibitors, Zoloft, Prozac,
to name a few.
One of the side effects is weight gain.
Not everyone develops it, but many people do.
Psychotropic medications, others, antipsychotics,
also have a problem.
They impact metabolic health and glycemic control,
and they impact weight.
So as a psychiatrist, you really have
to be tuned into that to realize if you're going to save fruit,
qualify better fruit for that individual to eat.
Because a person could eat two bananas a day,
and that could totally increase their weight.
Are bananas on their own unhealthy? No. To an average person of normal weight who's exercising and leading a healthy
lifestyle, perfectly fine to eat a banana. But to that individual, it may not be the best solution.
So it's that caveat with mental health that's important. So what's the best fruit to eat
if you're trying to lose weight? So the best answer to that is stick with
a couple of servings of different berries.
Okay.
Stick with a lifestyle that is supporting your weight loss,
which goes from mindfulness all the way to hydration
to outdoor time to good sleep and all of that, right?
Because we know it's not just one thing.
Eliminating stresses in your life.
Exactly.
Stress is a huge driver of weight gain, right?
Because of the impact on cortisol.
So I would say stick with a couple of different types of berries
and smaller servings and have those regularly.
Because the fiber and the phytonutrients from them are still going to help you.
So I would never say exclude fruit completely.
Right.
Unless your diabetologist has said, or nutrients from them are still going to help you. So I would never say exclude fruit completely unless your
diabetologist has said, look, you
need to do this in order to bring down
your hemoglobin A1c. Then it's a
different conversation. So when is fruit
good for you then? Because if you're trying
to lose weight, I'm hearing it's not as
good to have a lot of it. Not a lot
of it. In moderation.
Actually, to be honest, everything in moderation.
Right, right. Because every healthy food, you be honest, everything in moderation. Right, right.
Because every healthy food, you want to eat it in a portion-controlled sort of way.
Fruit is actually always good for you.
It provides nutrients, macro and micro nutrients, which are healthy for your body, healthy for your brain.
So whether it's the vitamin C from kiwi or, you know, whichever, you know, if you're having leafy greens, not a fruit, but but if you're having folate from leafy greens that's affecting you in a positive way so food always
a good option but that also comes from my food philosophy which is i am diagnostic and i don't
demonize a food group so if you come into me and say i'm vegan or carnivore my role as a nutritional
psychiatrist is to improve your mental well-being you You know, I will advise you how you can tweak your diet in a positive way.
You may not agree with me, but I'm going to offer you that guidance.
Because what I find is that people fall into these eat this, not that mentality.
Then they exclude entire food groups.
Then they crave that food group.
Then there's a rebound effect.
And then they end up either gaining the weight or they end up being unhappy because they've
Started to consume a food that they previously gave up
Like said they want to eat something then they go even for a month
Yeah depression, you know feeling more anxious interesting and then almost unable to get back on that saddle of just eating a healthier
Diet which I want people to eat healthier
foods as part of their lifestyle.
So it's a natural, whether they're traveling, whether they're walking through an airport,
or whether they're at home, they're just reaching for those healthier options or carrying it
with them.
And what about antioxidants?
Why are these so powerful for mental health?
So antioxidants have an extremely important impact through the gut microbiome, but also on the brain.
You know, in the natural process of life,
we encounter different things that form
these unhealthy substances in our body
called radical oxygen species.
If left on their own, they can actually lead to cancer,
heart disease, lots of bad things,
as well as, you know as worsening our mental health.
So what antioxidants do is they interact with these radical oxygen species to almost neutralize
them.
And that's why they're so powerful.
So that's why we should eat our antioxidants.
Okay.
And what foods are rich in antioxidants?
Starting with berries.
Yeah.
But, you know, there are also spices.
That's something people don't realize.'re also spices that's that's something
people don't realize there are spices that are rich in antioxidants like turmeric with a pinch
of black pepper my my nutritional psychiatry no-brainers add a black add a pinch of black pepper
because that makes the turmeric more bioavailable and bioactive for your body body so spices many of them have rich
antioxidants so those are the spice cabinet is probably one of the ones
you're not tapping into to add antioxidants as well as veggies all
these different colors of vegetables are you know different bell peppers
different different lettuces all of of these, you know, whether they're purple, carotenoids from carrots
have rich antioxidants because of the nutrients in them.
What about the research that's been out about lectins and nightshades? Is this something that
you would avoid or limit, or is the science from your research
Not really saying there's an issue with nightshades and lectins
So you know part of it depends on the person if they are working with the physician who's asked them to and their condition if They've been asked to stay away from nightshades before because of a certain condition and it's been working for them
I'm not there to say stop doing that and eat everything
No, if it's working for them, absolutely.
But many people come to me a little confused about where, you know, what foods include lectins and what they should avoid.
But there are also some culinary techniques where you can get around by food preparation, for example.
If you like nuts, you know, there's a way to get raw natural nuts, soak them in water overnight, rinse them out and slow.
It's not even roasting because it's such a low temperature.
Almost dry them out in the oven at a very low temperature could improve either the nutrient value or get around things like that.
So I'd rather have that conversation than ask people to exclude things.
Not about other people's research, but more about my approach to how I feel I can help individuals in their mental well-being.
Because this is not just for someone
with depression or anxiety.
A lot of people in the last few years
have just been feeling a little off.
And I use that term loosely.
It's a little bit anxious, not sleeping well,
feeling blue, just not just feeling,
there's a great article, quality of languishing,
just not feeling good, just not feeling quite themselves.
And so eating in a good way can help a lot of that without a prescription.
Right.
What would you say is the best cooking technique that you've learned to get the maximum result for optimal nutrition?
Is it from the nuts?
Is it from soaking something is it from
some other type of food where you've seen okay here's the original raw form and by applying this
technique it actually enhances it to really help your mental health your brain that much more is
there a technique like that i don't think there's one technique okay um you know i think that uh i
mentioned the i mentioned things like spinach and steaming it or applying gentle temperature.
The nuts, that's specific to a better way to enjoy the nuts.
Some people don't have a problem with nuts.
They eat them and they feel okay.
Now, the lectin research may refute that.
But again, you pay attention to how you're feeling emotionally, how you're feeling physically, what your doctor is telling you.
And you either continue or you change direction a little.
One thing I will say is that many people hear their doctor say,
eat your vegetables, eat your greens.
And they roll their eyes and they move on.
They don't do it.
Often it's that action step.
One of the things I can say is just gently roasting vegetables in the oven
with delicious flavors,
putting in colorful veggies, adding spices. Even your kids will want to eat it, you know,
because it's interesting. It's different. That I think is one of the things where you can really
expand. And, you know, just little simple tricks like you can do your colorful roasted vegetables
with different spices for the flavor. plus you can do your protein on.
Whether you plant-based tofu, whether you eat chicken, you can do it on the same sheet
pan and that makes it super easy for someone to prepare dinner.
Right.
The next thing you say is include lean proteins and plant-based proteins.
From the science, you say you don't eliminate any diet or any food groups.
I try my best not to, yeah.
There are so many people that try to say, like, eat only meat and this is the way to go.
And other people say, be vegan, this is the way to go.
Is there science proving which foods are better?
Like, lean proteins that are plant-based versus animal proteins?
So I will say that, you know, in nutrition science,
they're usually things I can quote,
and they're probably in the same day or same week or same year,
at least three other articles which will refute that.
Really?
Because that tends to be the spirit of nutrition science.
You know, omega-3s I've seen clinically help my patients time and time and time again.
Usually I like them to use food sources first, but some people prefer supplement or they do.
And I've seen the improvements.
Yet there is research to say they're terrible, that you shouldn't use them, that kind of stuff.
So I say this with an open mind, understanding that.
and use them, that kind of stuff.
So I say this with an open mind, understanding that.
So I feel, you know, that the camps who, and they are sort of camps, right, because they tend to be very polarized.
Either only eat this and the individuals, say, who are plant-based will say,
well, there's this study to, this study to name a substance that is negative
for your health because it is from meat. And then there are people, individuals who eat meat
who will say, but you don't get enough from just the plant. So there's always this polarization.
And here's what I feel about it.
I think that the more we continue to have these camps, the more confused we are going to continue
to be as a country and the worse our nutrition is going to get. Because most people, that's not
most people, a lot of people know the sad diet and are consuming that. So anything we can move from that to a healthier version of that food,
understanding what healthy whole foods are, is better for us.
I think it's much more about that for more people than camps,
or be this or not that.
And I have difficulty with those because I feel that science can support
both sides of the argument.
I know.
You can always find evidence for each side. You could always find evidence for each side.
You could always find evidence for both sides.
And something against the other side probably, right?
Exactly.
And say, well, gee, you're missing this nutrient because you're plant-based, or you're missing
that nutrient because you're eating or consuming more meat.
And I think that's where most people in the public get confused. And they come in and say to me, should I exclude this entire food group?
Should I give up whole grain?
Should I never eat a slice of this or that?
And I think that perpetuating that is not good for us as a country.
But if we can find a sensible way forward for the most, so not the people in different camps,
but those who just want to eat healthier,
want to feel emotionally better.
And most of us need to right now with all that's going on.
I think it's a healthier way forward and more sustainable.
Yeah.
I'm curious about nuts.
You mentioned nuts for a second.
This is actually the next thing on the brain foods and nuts. You mentioned nuts for a second. This is actually the next thing on the brain foods,
the nuts. I'm a big fan of nuts, but can you overdo it? I don't drink milk anymore,
but I have the milk substitutions like almond milk and things like that. So if you're having
the physical nuts and then you're having almond milk and then almond butter, is there too much
of that? So there's always even a healthy food, we can overdo even a healthy food. So practicing,
I'm not so much of a calorie counter as much as I am the source of food and the quality of food,
and then paying attention to portions. So I mentioned blueberries, and I said, you know,
that doesn't mean three cups of blueberries a day, because unfortunately then the load of the
amount of sugar from that is not good for you even though berries are healthy and they have
lots of nutrients in them so same similarly with nuts you want smaller servings and you want
different types of nuts my favorites are macadamia and hazelnuts I eat them in smaller portions I you
know for someone who is likes nuts and they're going to consume that portion of nuts in a day,
you may want to switch to something like hemp milk, which, by the way, you can literally make in two easy steps.
And hemp milk has the advantage of having short-chain omega-3s in it because it's rich in ALA.
So there's a good solution for…
So if you're going to have nuts, don't also have almond milk.
And nut butters and everything in the same day, that same 24-hour period. Have hemp milk instead if you're going to have nuts, don't also have almond milk. And nut butters and everything in the same day, that same 24-hour period.
Have hemp milk instead if you're going to use them. Have hemp milk instead.
You know, have your nut butter, but you know, nut and seed butter
because you're getting other seeds and the value of that.
And just don't have a ton of it. So everything in moderation. If you
do eat more of it, then maybe have that the next day you know
balance it up that way it's similar to avocados um you'll have you know delicious avocados in
california the truth is you know a good serving on a day is about a quarter of a medium avocado
to get the benefit of the healthy fats really a quarter of a medium about a medium medium to large
avocado so not a whole avocado no it becomes what happens is it gets calorie dense at that point.
And so, you know, it's balancing that up.
Now, if you ate that for breakfast, that's okay.
My policy around that is, you know,
just cross-correct at the next meal or the next day
because you understand something a little bit better.
Thank you so much for listening.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode
and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown
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