The School of Greatness - How To Prevent & REVERSE Disease With THESE FOODS To Live Longer | Dr. William Li
Episode Date: March 10, 2025I'm going on tour! Come see The School of Greatness LIVE in person!Get my new book Make Money Easy here!What if the secret to living well past 100 lies within your gut? In this eye-opening conversatio...n, renowned physician and researcher Dr. William Li reveals groundbreaking discoveries about the connection between gut bacteria and exceptional longevity. I was fascinated to learn that scientists have identified four specific bacteria that flourish in the digestive systems of "super-agers" - people who live healthily beyond 110 years old. Dr. Li shares his unique approach to understanding disease through common denominators like blood vessels and gut health, explaining how our microbiome communicates directly with our immune system, brain, and virtually every bodily function. Beyond the technical research, he offers incredibly practical, accessible steps anyone can take to restore gut health, reset their metabolism, and potentially extend both lifespan and healthspan - no expensive supplements or complicated regimens required.Dr. William Li on YouTubeEat to Beat Disease by Dr. William LiEat to Beat Your Diet by Dr. William LiIn this episode you will learn:How four specific bacteria present in super-agers' gut microbiomes may hold keys to exceptional longevity and healthWhy 70% of your immune system actually resides in your gut, and how it communicates with your bacteria through the intestinal wallThe surprising connection between gum disease, gut bacteria, and neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer's and Parkinson'sWhy simply skipping breakfast 2-3 times weekly might be one of the easiest and most effective longevity practicesHow resistant starches from refrigerated potatoes and green bananas can help cultivate the specific bacteria found in centenariansFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1743For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Mark Hyman – greatness.lnk.to/1695SCDr. Will Bulsiewicz – greatness.lnk.to/1621SCGlucose Goddess – greatness.lnk.to/1575SC Get more from Lewis! Pre-order my new book Make Money EasyGet The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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Welcome back my friend to the School of Greatness. It is a beautiful day. It's a blessed day.
And I'm grateful for another opportunity to live on purpose. I hope you're doing well today. I've
gotten so many messages lately from so many of you who have just been so grateful for the content
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Just let me know your favorite part of the show.
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That's what this show is all about.
It's to help you improve the quality of your life.
And I hope this episode does that for you.
We have got a big one.
His name is Dr. William Lee. He's a physician,
a scientist, and a researcher. And we had him on the show before. It got millions of views over on
YouTube and the audio, but he is back. And Dr. Lee reveals how our gut bacteria communicates with
our brain, our immune system, and overall health in ways that we are just beginning to understand.
He's going to share some simple changes to our diet and lifestyle that you haven't heard
before on any other show on how it can nurture beneficial gut bacteria and potentially adding
healthy years to our lives. We all want to live longer and we all want to live healthier
with the current days and years that we have.
His practical approach proves that optimizing your longevity isn't about expensive biohacking,
but about working with your body's natural healing systems.
And he's going to share the four specific gut bacteria that stand out in people who
live beyond 100 years and which foods help them flourish.
This is going to be so powerful.
Please share this with one friend
and really send this out to a friend
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or maybe their mind's been a little bit foggy
or they've been feeling stressed or anxious.
There is so much that's connected to the gut,
what we eat and our mood
and our brain health and our brain function.
So it's not always about losing weight or something like that, but it's about optimizing
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Without further ado, let's dive into this episode with Dr. William Lee.
Welcome back everyone to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guests.
We have the inspiring Dr. William Lee in the house.
So good to see you.
Thank you for being here.
Good to see you, Lewis. Thanks for having me.
Very excited about this because you've been on the show a couple of times and you've been a
researcher or scientist, a physician for many years, mostly helping people figure out about how
to cure cancer. That's kind of where your background is around the cancer world, but you've
also gone in different places around medicine and science and research.
And currently you're diving in deep
into the longevity topic, which is really interesting.
We were just talking off camera about a new approach
to what you're seeing that the, you know,
super centenarians, I guess, are experiencing.
And a lot of people wanna know right now how to live longer, but also how to live healthy
longer, how to have a good health span as well.
Because it's not fun if you live to 100, but for 25 years, you're on machines, you can't
walk, you can't move, and you're not healthy.
And so I think that's what a lot of people want.
So the first question I want to ask you is, why do you think people care so much about being immortal
or living for as long as they can?
And what are some of the new things that you're seeing
in the longevity world?
Great questions.
Okay, so first of all, I am a cancer researcher,
but I will tell you how I got into cancer research
and then ultimately into longevity research. I'm interested in common denominators of health or of disease.
So in other words, in academic research, you see people taking an inch of a territory and diving
a mile deep, and they're super experts in this stuff. I took a different approach.
I wanted to figure out like, you know,
how everything was interconnected
and what are the common denominators
between cancer, heart disease, blindness,
arthritis, Alzheimer's, like,
if you could drain the Pacific Ocean,
how do all those islands connect?
And my feeling is that if you could,
you could get an economy of scale of knowledge,
if you could figure out those connections, you could pull the bow back and send a single arrow through
multiple conditions at the same time.
Really?
That was my approach, which is why I started the Andrew Genesis Foundation.
It's a not-for-profit organization.
It's focused on the common denominator of blood vessels.
Wow.
Forty million... of blood vessels. We've got 400 miles worth of blood vessels in our brain.
And that's a fraction of the 60,000 miles of blood vessels in our body.
And it connects every organ, every cell.
And so these are the highways and byways of health.
And when they're messed up, compromised, diseased, that becomes the common denominator of disease.
So that's really kind of like my unique angle to look at diseases, anything from cancer
to blindness to wound healing.
And now I'm looking at aging, you know, in a slightly different way, which is I've had a whole career of building brick by brick looking at what
are the hallmarks of all marks of cancer hallmarks of diabetes hallmarks of aging
now all right and that is actually how we advance the science that's how we
advance our understanding of our of ourselves and the quest for longevity
immortality okay I like how you said the quest
for immortality being an ages old enterprise, okay. Pursuit is I think is part of our humanity.
Like we always want to know how we can actually go beyond our own limitations.
I think that's probably ultimately
what has led this interest.
And of course, it's a huge interest now.
I mean, if you look at the success of books
like Outlived by Pritertia and David Sinclair's books,
people, you know, they go gonzo over these,
like, incredible books written by really amazing people.
like incredible books written by really amazing people. But I'll tell you, the first emperor of China, okay, set off to try to find that little elixir, the vial. Remember that Indiana
Jones movie where they're looking for some like vial of immortality? Hey, you know, this has been
going on for a long time. And the first emperor of China didn't find it.
Uh, he wound up dying.
And before he died, he built, like, the 10,000
terracotta warriors to look over his tomb.
That was his ultimate solution to immortality.
That was before science, before Google's Calico
to try to conquer blindness, before all the amazing work
that's going on right now to build up those brick by brick by brick, you know,
and putting in the grout in between to be able to build off that wall of
understanding. So we are still looking. We're beginning to have a better
understanding. But my approach to it is to say like, all right, so what are the
common denominators of people who live a really long time?
What are we finding?
And, you know, my friend, and I think yours is Dan Buettner,
you know, from the Blue Zones, the guy is amazing
because he found, like, oh, it's place.
It's where you live and what you do in terms of where you live
that actually can contribute.
So I'm a researcher, so I take a, I ask that
same question from a slightly different perspective. Right. Right. Yeah. He has a number of different
like things, which is community and your activity level and the foods you eat and having a purpose
and kind of these- He's into beans. Beans. They get the beans, right? Yeah. But that may not
necessarily, I guess, be the only solution, right?
If you follow these kind of core tenets that he has from the blue zones, and we're also
seeing that some of those blue zones are no longer blue zones, I think, or they're diminishing
their blue zones because of the way people are changing their food intake or things like
that, I think, right?
Like the place in Japan.
And there may be more blue zones that haven't been discovered yet.
Interesting. And so what are the new things that you're observing that most people are
noticing about people that live well into their hundreds?
All right. So let me take you on a little bit of a journey into our gut. Now, everybody knows that
gut health is important for overall health.
And even the people who are the experts, you know, and I've gotten into this space now, we don't know entirely.
We don't have the whole answer. All right.
And you know you're talking to a real scientist when because real scientists tell you we don't know everything.
Right. All right. So but what's good scientists do is they observe.
We take a look at what's going on
and we see what is common,
what we've come up with ideas.
And so what's really interesting
is to think about gut health,
not just in terms of somebody in the middle of their life,
like a 30 or 40 or 50 year old person who, you know, has inflammation and
how do I actually get over my autoimmunity? That's important too. But I
got interested in it because we're beginning to understand that people who
have dementia actually have problems with their gut health. And what is the
connection between your gut and your brain? Well, that's a gut-brain axis. But
what if the problem with Parkinson's, Alzheimer's,
vascular dementia, what if the common denominator
actually isn't the little sticky plaque
or the little single molecule that people have been diving on
and billions of dollars have been spent?
What if there is another factor
that has been hidden in plain sight, which is our gut
bacteria.
Wow.
And how the gut impacts the brain.
The brain.
Yeah.
And until recently, we didn't have the tools.
We didn't have that, the tools in a toolbox to be able to look at it.
But today, and this is pretty new, we can actually take a sample of poop,
okay, send it off to a testing machine, and I'm oversimplifying, obviously.
And get the lab details on the bacteria, right?
And get the lab details, and we are able to do the crime scene investigation of our poop
to figure out what bacteria are in there.
And we get a pretty good approximation, and we can find out what are the standouts.
Okay.
So, look, there's 39 trillion bacteria.
You can't count every single one.
39 trillion?
Yeah.
In your gut microbiome.
Wow.
So we can't get every single one.
But if there are standouts, oh man, you've got like four or five really bad guys that
are like popping out in high levels.
We know you got a problem.
Or if you're missing a handful of really good guys, all right, we're beginning to say, maybe
these good guys are playing a bigger role.
And this is the story that's emerging on dementia, that your gut bacteria, and by the way, it's
not just in your poop, your gut starts in your mouth.
And we're beginning to realize that gum disease
and bacteria that are either growing or not
growing in your mouth might actually be one of
the trigger points for dementia.
Gum disease.
Gum disease.
Wow.
Gingivitis.
All right.
What is so, okay.
So it sounds like it starts with the mouth and
then it's the gut.
Cause what you put in the mouth is going to be
in the gut as well.
For food, yes.
But all throughout, from your mouth
all the way to your tailpipe, you've got bacteria growing.
Yes.
By the way, so the two biggest concentration of bacteria
when you talk about gut bacteria, one is in your mouth.
Our mouth is packed with bacteria, good bacteria.
When bad bacteria overgrow, you get bad breath, you get cavities,
you get gum disease, you get all the things that you know pretty quickly, right?
Sure, sure, sure.
Okay. So there's a big concentration in your mouth and we're still beginning to figure
out what those are. Your lower gut, which we classically think as gut bacteria, your
gut microbiome, you know where it is in the gut? Do you know like what part of the gut,
anatomy wise? Like what section of the gut?
The lower gut?
Yeah, lower gut.
I have no idea.
So imagine your gut from mouth to end, anus, 40 feet long.
Is that what it is?
Yeah. The last 25% is your colon, right?
You've heard of colon cancer and everything else or colonoscopy.
So that's the last part.
It's like, it's basically where it's like everything gets all the stuff
gathers before you get rid of it.
But that's actually where the gut bacteria is.
And it's in a particular part, a little sack in your colon called the
cecum spelled C E C U M. And you know where the S in your colon called the cecum, spelled C-E-C-U-M.
And you know what's near in the cecum?
It's the appendix.
Now, a lot of people have had their appendix out.
Okay, we used to think it's an unnecessary organ.
Maybe, just maybe that appendix plays a role
that we didn't suspect.
What's that role?
We don't know it, but we suspect it might play some air traffic control role for your gut
microbiome.
Wow.
All right.
So what I get excited about is new discoveries about our body that we didn't know.
By the way, we're talking about gut brain.
Do you know that recently we've discovered that your brain has its own microbiome?
We got bacteria that grow naturally,
healthily in our brain.
Wow.
And it's 20% of the same bacteria that's in our gut.
It's actually found in our brain.
So they're connected.
We believe so.
Because we used to, we used to,
I mean, correct me if I'm wrong,
but we used to treat like Alzheimer's and dementia
as focusing on the brain, correct?
Like let's look at the brain and see what's wrong
or what's off and try to treat the brain.
Versus now you're saying, well, it's the gut,
it's the whole body that's connected to the brain,
so we have to look at everything.
And we're beginning to sort of ask new questions
about what might be some of the contributing factors,
not just the tiny little plaques in Alzheimer's disease,
because by the way, we've actually made
a little bit of progress in that area,
but after billions and billions of dollars,
we haven't made enough.
Really?
Right?
I mean, if you think about it,
if you want to return on investment,
you would not actually call Alzheimer's research to be good
because for the bang for the buck that we put in there,
we're actually getting very little bang. We still don't know how to reverse Alzheimer's or prevent it, I guess, or?
Not really. But I'll tell you that what I'm excited by is this idea that maybe there could,
this is the theory, could there be some bad bacteria or the absence of some good bacteria
Could there be some bad bacteria or the absence of some good bacteria in your mouth even?
Okay. Or the lower gut that actually is a trigger for Alzheimer's or Parkinson's. Wow.
You know, by the way, there is a bacteria, a probiotic has been researched to show that it can
actually really slow down the symptoms of Parkinson's disease.
It's called Lactobacillus plantarum,
and it's a probiotic called PS128.
And it's surprising that a probiotic
could have such a profound effect on the brain.
What is that called again?
PS, like Paul and Sam, 128,
and the actual bacteria is called Lactobacillus plantarum.
Okay, so I'm just sharing with you discoveries,
okay, about the brain.
And so what I got interested in terms of longevity,
I'm not a neuroscientist and I'm not a dementia specialist,
but I am somebody that is sort of really good at framing out.
If there's a connection between gut and brain, maybe we should be looking at the connection between
gut and longevity. Interesting. And that's where some of the really exciting new stuff is coming
out as well. And so what is the main things that you've been able to observe then about the gut
and how it relates to people that live over a hundred? So first of all, people who live
and how it relates to people that live over 100. So first of all, people who live to 100
are called centenarians, right?
Cent like 100.
And we think that if you could live to 100,
like that's 100 candles on your birthday cake.
Like that's a big deal.
That's a big deal, right?
That's a big, that's the big birthday.
That is.
All right.
Now I have to tell you, my great uncle lived to 104.
Wow. Okay, I was at his 100th birthday party.
Come on.
And I saw 100 candles on his cake.
That's impressive.
Yeah.
So I know it can happen in my own family.
Did he have the energy to blow all the candles out?
Not only did he have the energy to blow the candles out,
he planned the party himself.
Wow.
OK, he invited the guest list.
He actually, I mean, he made the guest list.
He planned the meal. You know, he hosted the thing.
So, it's possible.
Yeah. Okay.
Now, most people think that, you know,
living to 100 would be like a crap shoot, a long shot.
Like, oh, if I could, in a healthy way,
and I lived to 100, it'd be great.
But you know, I've can do some research on this.
It turns out today,
you know how many people live are 100 years old now?
I think you said it was close to a million or over a million.
Today, there are 722,000 people
who are centenarians living in the world.
Almost a three-quarters of a million of people that are 100.
That's a lot of people.
That's a lot of people, a lot more than most people suspect.
And what that means is that it is possible
to actually get there, which means that we can begin
to study these people.
And that's what we're like, I think some of the most exciting
and provocative stuff actually is.
And people are studying their gut bacteria.
And now we can actually study the poop
and the microbiome of people who are 100 and older.
So centenarians are people who live to 100.
But it turns out that there is something
called a super centenarian or an ultimate super ager.
And these are people that live to 114 115 years old. All right. And like
they're really interesting. So a research study was done out of Italy,
looking at people across the lifespan from young adulthood, you know, like 20
to 4040 to 7070 to 9090 to 100. And then, and then like the superagers, okay.
Like a hundred to 115 or 114.
And in today's technology, all right.
Like, believe me, I think that wearables are great.
I think that, you know, biohacking devices are quite amazing, but I think it's even
more amazing that we can actually study the gut microbiome
of like these superagers.
Sure.
So the question is, is there something in the gut microbiome
in superagers, a hundred and above,
that pop out as important?
It's not present in people who don't live that long.
Okay.
It turns out there are four bacteria that are standouts in people that live to 100 and
beyond.
Does that mean there are four bacteria in people that live 100 and beyond in their gut
bacteria that people under 100 don't have?
They have more of it.
Gotcha.
They have more of it. Gotcha. They have more of it. Like they're like, for them, it really stands
out as, as super big spike.
Okay.
These four bacteria, you want to hear about them?
Yes.
All right.
They've got names that, one of the names you might
have heard of, I think we talked about it on my
last time I was on a podcast, but there is four
bacteria.
One of them is called Odorobacter.
Okay.
Odorobacter.
Odoribacter. Okay. One of them is called Odoribacter. Okay. Odoribacter. Odoribacter.
Okay.
One of them is called Ocelobacter.
One of them is called Christensenella.
And then the fourth one is our old friend, Acromansia.
Okay.
And we've talked about acromansia before.
Which it's been making the rounds as a important gut bacteria.
I think the last time I was here,
I was telling you that there have been discoveries that if you
have cancer and you're on immunotherapy,
which jacks up your own immune system to attack the cancers, not chemo.
It's one of the most natural ways of approaching cancer.
It's, it's resulting in complete responses, meaning stage four to stage zero.
Okay.
Wow.
Turns out acromansia having this gut bacteria may wind up being one of the
critical pieces that you have to have to connect the dots to, for that to happen.
Okay. To really get a great response. To help you reverse cancer. Yeah. Help your own immune system reverse cancer. Wow. Okay. Interesting. Gut bacteria talks to your immune
system. 70% of your immune system lives in your gut. All right. And so you've got the
right bacteria. They know how to speak the right language to your immune system to tell it to do
what it's supposed to do. 70% of your immune system lives in the gut. Yeah, exactly. Where's
the other 30%? Scattering different tissues in your body. Really? Wow. But you know, by the way,
you know where the immune system lives in the gut? It's actually in the wall of the gut.
Think of your gut as a garden hose. Cut that garden hose open and look in the cross section.
There's a little empty stuff in the middle open and look in the cross section.
There's a little empty stuff in the middle.
That's where the bacteria live.
That's where your immune system is.
Your immune system lives in the wall of the garden hose, inside the wall.
And the bacteria live inside the cavity of the garden hose. Wow.
And they talk to each other like college students, shouting at each
other through a cheap wall in a dorm room.
So the immune system is kind of like the insulation
in a house, is that right?
In the walling of the house.
The immune system lives in the walls.
In between the dry wall of the house.
Yeah, so it's kind of like the insulation.
Exactly, exactly.
Inside the dry wall.
Yeah.
And whatever's in the house is the bacteria.
Exactly.
The people, the dogs, the cats, all that, you know.
All moving around.
Plants, whatever, yeah. Exactly, so what do the dogs, the cats, all moving around. Plants, whatever.
Exactly. So what do we eat that affects our gut microbiome, the healthy bacteria, directly
affects our immune system. And impacts our brain. And then it impacts our brain. How
much of what we eat impacts our brain? More than we think. More than we think. Like either
giving us clarity and focus versus cloudiness,
giving us-
You know, that's what I'm working on right now.
And I do know that there are people
that are working on this.
So, you know, you laid it out the right way, Louis.
You eat something, it goes into your mouth,
it tumbles down through.
Yeah.
Whatever our human body, our human cells don't absorb,
goes on to feed our gut bacteria, okay, Or poison our gut bacteria in the case, maybe.
So, you know, you put something good in your system, it's going to do something good.
Put something bad in your system.
It's going to like mess up the bacteria.
All right.
And then our bacteria then begins to talk to our immune system, our brain.
It helps to work on our, our healing mechanisms as well. I study
antigenesis, how our blood vessels grow, that circulation. I've done research,
there's one bacteria called Lactobacillus ruderi. And we found that if you have a wound in the lab
and you feed these animals with a wound, this probiotic in their
drinking water, you'll actually double the rate of wound healing from the inside out.
Really? Yeah. It's like Wolverine. So you become Wolverine. Without the claws. So
it just, there's a probiotic that you can drink as a human now also? Well, it's a
you can, even you can, it's a tablet you can chew it. Yeah tablet or you can chew it. Or a tablet, you can chew or swallow.
Lactobacillus ruderi.
So, Lactobacillus ruderi, by the way, is an amazing bacteria because it's normally in
the gut.
It's a healthy gut bacteria.
So, you know, like we pulled it out and made it into something, but it's normally in the
gut.
It used to be present in everybody.
After the 1930s and 40s, with the advent of antibiotics coming out, like it became,
maybe it's there, maybe it's not, not surprisingly.
Okay.
And so a lot of people don't have it.
Um, but this bacteria lowers inflammation, improves your immune system.
And by the way, we do know for a fact, this is one bacteria that texts messages
your brain to release a social hormone called oxytocin.
Oxytocin is the social hormone that your brain releases when you are super happy to see somebody.
Go to the airport to meet a friend or a relative you haven't seen for a long time.
You give them a big hug.
You feel great.
Yes. Oxytocin.
Wow.
Um, oxytocin is what your brain releases when you have a kiss.
I'm not talking about like pecking the cheek.
I'm passionate.
Yes.
Deep passionate, like French kiss.
Oxytocin.
Oxytocin is also what your brain releases when you have an orgasm.
Okay.
So this is a very important brain hormone.
This bacteria makes your brain release it.
Okay, now.
And this isn't a drug, this is just like a robotic.
No, this is like, I'm just telling you normal,
well, I'm telling you, this is a normal physio,
I'm talking about the physiology,
like how does it normally works?
Okay, by the way, moms would give the babies,
her babies, this bacteria because, and this is like a crazy story, that
normal gut bacteria at around seven or eight months of pregnancy, there'd be a signal sent
to the gut.
Hey, you know, the cake's almost done.
All right.
Bun's almost ready to come out of the oven. Right.
All right.
And then these bacteria would hit your ride on a blood cell.
It's like calling an Uber.
Send it to the baby.
And then take the bacteria, your normal blood cells would take the bacteria, drop
it off at the nipple, right?
Uber.
Okay.
Destination.
And then when the baby takes their first suckle, they get the rush of the bacteria.
That's another way that moms actually give babies there.
They get the injection of bacteria, including lactobacillus rudoroi.
Okay, now this bacteria...
So it's important to do breastfeeding then.
Oh yeah, it's part of the reasons.
You also get immune cells and a lot of other good stuff from breastfeeding
Side note, how long should a mother breastfeed a newborn?
You know, I think it's it's very individualized based on the mom and the baby
But like I would say that the the categorical yes
And there's a medical reason not to do it is you definitely breastfeed
That's like that. That's like the non-controversial thing.
100%.
100%.
Breastfeed.
Don't go right to a bottle or formula or something like that.
No, because mom...
I can tell you that the companies that make formula, they can't mimic mother nature.
They cannot.
They can try, but they can't do it.
Not anywhere close.
Right.
So unless there's some reason the mother is unable to do it.
Yeah.
I mean, there are legitimate medical reasons where it's impossible, there's complications,
all that kind of stuff, and I totally get it.
Then you gotta make accommodations for it,
but still, it is always better for the baby,
for the mom to actually breastfeed.
By the way, so I'm diving into all this stuff.
You find all this fascinating stuff out about the gut microbiome and from the beginning
of life, like babies, all the way to the far reaches of life, like these superagers, these
four bacteria, by the way, the Odorobacter, the Ocyllobacter, the ocelobacter, the cristinella,
the acromansia, they all do, they all play functions in the body.
And we're figuring them out.
They improve your metabolism.
They lower inflammation.
They help your immunity.
They lower your cholesterol.
Okay.
They help your brain health.
Wow.
So all the things that we know are important these bacteria
seem to be
Doing the job in the superagers and there are foods that we can eat
To grow these bacteria to cultivate these really oh, yeah
What are the key foods that we can eat to cultivate the best bacteria to help us live longer? So
You know among all these four, let me kind of just throw a few out there for you.
It turns out pomegranate is really good.
It's got bioactives like elagetannins that actually help your gut nurture the acromansia.
Okay.
It turns out that chili peppers can do the same thing.
Black raspberry turns out can do the same thing.
Oh, by the way, for acromansia,
here's like a new discovery as well.
So I'm all about like my science background
is all about discovery and like pushing
the frontiers of things.
You know acromansia, it's a bacteria.
A bacteria has a shell around it, like a beetle has a hard shell around it.
Recently they've discovered that around acromansia, the shell of acromansia, there's a piece of the
acromansia that they gave it a name, it's called P as in Peter, Peter nine, P nine.
All right.
They've now discovered that that P nine bacteria, the P9 fragment of acrimansia,
actually causes your body to secrete its own GLP-1.
Which is the fat burning.
Which is the same thing that we use for prescription weight loss drugs. Your bacteria
has been doing this. Your healthy bacteria has been doing this behind the scenes this whole time.
Interesting.
Right. So this is what I'm saying is like, you know, we learn a lot from pharmaceuticals,
but we might actually learn a lot more from what the gut bacteria are doing. Mother Nature's kind
of like... So fascinating. So it seems like how much disease stems from the gut? More than we think.
Yeah. You know, probably a good number of our neurodegenerative diseases like dementia. I think that a
Lot of diseases of aging for sure the chronic diseases
We do know that diabetes is from oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, absolutely
Cancers are from the cancer probably cardiovascular disease, you know, like the big ones, you know all the big ones
are
diabetes cancer cardiovascular disease, you know, like the big ones, you know, all the big ones are diabetes,
cancer, cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative diseases, probably even lung diseases.
Because the society is talking a lot in the last few years about mental health.
Like it seems like there's a lot more anxiety, depression, ADHD, and these types of mental
health conditions or diseases that are accelerating in mass
numbers.
Based on what I'm hearing you talk about, it almost sounds like if we stop thinking
about mental health, not stop thinking about it, but focus more on gut health, it sounds
like it connects to the brain and the mind and will create more alignment in ease versus dis-ease.
More, it's a new frontier. It opens up the avenue for more solutions. And by the way,
because the gut also connects to other parts of our body as well, you know, again, remember I
told you, like I'm all about the common denominator. Pull that bow back and send a single arrow through
as many things, many problems as you can. Imagine if we could actually tackle mental health,
mental wellness, and physical wellness all at the same time.
And, you know, gut bacteria clearly plays a role.
It's not, you know, it's not the only thing,
but, you know, it is the undiscovered country.
Because there's a, who is the doctor?
Dr. Emren Mayer, I think it is.
I don't know if he's got a book called gut brain connection I think somebody that's
talking about these things as well and it seems like a lot of the things that
are stemming from the brain disease or challenges is in the gut yeah and it's
also linked to longevity it sounds like it's exactly exactly well this is what
we're beginning to really I would say say, unravel and take, you know, go into the layers
of the onion to say, all right, if gut health is important for you in your, you know, normal
active adult life, which we now know it is, what role could it play towards actually fostering,
supporting, maybe even triggering those signals for longevity. I mean, maybe, listen, I mean,
so I always talk about our body like this.
We're all different, you know, we've got different genetics,
we've got different, you know, like, of course,
most people say they've got different metabolisms,
but it turns out that when we are born,
it's like taking a laptop out of the box.
Our operating system is all set.
When you and I are born,
my operating system and your operating system,
pretty much the same.
Our OS was exactly the same.
Exactly.
All right.
And so why is it that our,
I mean, maybe your metabolism,
my metabolism are closer than,
more different, but, you know,
cause we take care of ourselves,
but why is it that people develop such divergence,
so different metabolisms, for example,
or maybe longevity patterns?
And it turns out, you know, just like your laptop,
you know, if you take care of your laptop,
you turn it off at night, you clear the case.
I'll take the software.
Yeah, you update the software,
you make sure that you pad it when you're traveling.
Clean it.
Clean it, all that kind of stuff.
And let's say I'm not so careful.
I drop it.
It stays, gets really hot in the car.
I spill coffee on it or whatever.
You know, what do you think is going to happen to our operating system?
Or I download all kinds of stuff.
Let's go break.
Well, what's going to happen is that your computer operating system and mine are gonna diverge.
You're gonna go this way, I'm gonna go that way.
And actually, probably for our,
definitely for our metabolism,
but probably for our longevity as well,
you know, that's actually what happens
that we start to diverge our patterns.
We're all born the same way.
And the reason I'm bringing this up,
because I think for anybody who's listening to this
or watching this, people tend to think I'm the fate of my genetics.
There's nothing I can do about it, so screw it.
I'm just gonna do whatever I wanna do.
Eat whatever, drink whatever, yeah.
What I wanna really emphasize is that
we are all hardwired to actually heal.
We can get back to that healing,
we can heal to get back to our original state,
which is designed like the laptop
to function its entire life of the device
with an intact operating system.
What do you do with your computer?
Hopefully you don't have to reinstall the operating system.
Take good care of it,
but if you don't take good care of it, clean the cache,
do a virus scan, like clean it up. Take good care of it. And that you don't take good care of it, clean the case, do a virus scan, you know, like clean it up.
Yeah.
Take good care of it. And that's kind of how I think people should think about longevity, I said. It's not like just set a number.
Okay, this is not like booking a seat in the movie theater online.
I'm gonna get that number and that's what I want. Okay. Good luck. You know, I think that you know, it's a journey
We need to focus on today and keep focusing on as far as we can actually see and keep doing that
You know, it's like longevity. You know, there's a quote from E.L. Doctorow
He was a novelist who once said like
Writing is like driving at night. You can't see beyond your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way. And that's kind of how I think about longevity, living as long as you can
go. I mean, you know, but you want to actually make sure that you're enjoying yourself and
you're fully aware of what you're doing along the same path.
Yeah, 100%. And seeing what's in front of you, not just only focusing on how do I make
it to 100 or 110, just enjoying the moment.
The rise is important, but honestly, like,
so is what's directly in front of you.
Sure.
If someone watching or listening has maybe neglected
their health for many years, and they're now living
in excess weight or maybe even obesity,
and they've been on a pattern in a routine of eating
poorly, drinking a lot of excess alcohol, whatever it might be, and just
not taking care of their health.
And you were to prescribe just a 90 day game plan to reset their
metabolism and try to get the right things going again.
and try to get the right things going again, what would you prescribe that individual,
and how much do you think they could actually recover
and start to heal from years of not taking care of their health?
First of all, I think that we're able to recover a lot of our health
and heal ourselves by making small moves.
And this is really important.
Not extreme moves.
Big moves are, some people can do them,
most people can't maintain big moves, all right.
Small moves, almost anybody can actually do.
And of course, people are very complicated
and that the scenario you described
as somebody who's like, you know,
been super unhealthy their whole lives
and, you know, not done the right things
and are overweight and they're alcohol,
I mean, I think you were stacking, you know?
I mean-
Maybe it's not that extreme, but maybe it's, you know,
20 to 40 pounds overweight.
How about this, like the typical person
who hasn't taken care of themselves
for most of their life.
Maybe not too extreme.
What can they actually do, you know?
And maybe it's not 90 days.
I would say, hey, I think you should take a look at things
that you can actually do in a month or two.
Give yourself a little runway.
Take it easy on yourself, because stress
and putting too much pressure on yourself
doesn't actually help.
But some of the principles, I will tell you,
that is supported by evidence,
scientific evidence and clinical evidence,
is number one, I would say,
switch to eating more of a plant-based diet
with whole foods, all right?
So I just said a mouthful there,
because what I'm saying is that,
eat more foods that you are buying whole and fresh
and cook them yourself.
Not processed.
Not processed, okay.
So you can cut down on your ultra processed foods
and focus more on your whole fresh foods.
Immediately, you're gonna be flooding your body
with more of Mother Nature's pharmacy.
That's pharmacy with a F, not a pH.
Yes.
All right, and that's to start healing and prompting
your gut to start doing it as well.
But you're going to start getting a lot of stuff
that is not prescription.
Before you go to the next point, can you make a distinction?
If you can explain to people, because I don't think people
truly understand, when you eat one processed meal,
what is happening with a processed food,
whether it's ultra processed or just processed and not its
complete whole food that you cook? What happens when it
enters the mouth of ultra processed food or something
that's processed and goes through the gut and out? What is
happening to your body with that versus just single ingredient whole foods cooked and in the system.
First of all, I think that this idea that the word, I mean, we're now beginning to have
this conversation about ultra processed foods as a society, right?
And it's damn well time that we actually did, All right, because we do know that ultra processed foods
aren't good for you, but the word process
and ultra processed often gets confused.
So let's start there.
Okay, so raw foods are, I mean, whole food ingredients
are like going to the grocery store
and just eating the food without doing anything to it.
Banana, apple.
Exactly.
Spinach.
Oh, right. Carrot. Right, like the salad bar. Single ingredient it. Banana, apple. Exactly. Spinach. Oh, right.
Carrot.
Right, like the salad bar.
Single ingredient.
The salad bar is a great example
of really just like whole individual ingredients
that you put into a bowl and just eat them one by one.
Most foods that we cook, by cooking them,
we're processing.
Okay.
I don't know if you've ever seen,
so anything that we do to manipulate food is processing.
So if you ever made pasta by yourself, you take a big pile of flour and you crack some
eggs in it and you just take your fingertips and work it and you then roll it up and roll
it out and cut it up and okay, so that's processing.
So that's different than going to ultra processing, which is having factory, extrude the ingredients, shape them into animal crackers
or whatever, and then adding flavors.
Food colorings.
Adding coloring, adding stabilizers, adding elucifiers,
and then throwing in all these chemical ingredients
that you can't pronounce, or you have no idea what they do
in there, that's ultra-processed.
OK, so the difference between
Something minimally processed first ultra processed what happens to the gut?
The bacteria in your gut and the body and immune system with having those different options Yeah, and I'll tell you what we know as a release of longevity. So first of all
I try to break it down really simply
our body is like your car.
When you put our food is our fuel.
Uh, when you go to the filling station, you get a choice.
You're going to actually put in like, you got four different kinds
of fuel you could put in.
All right.
If you put in good quality fuel, it, the car is going to drive better.
Over the long haul, it's going to drive better.
Every now and then you put in some crummy cheap fuel,
it's all right, you're not going to notice.
But if you do that day in and day out,
you're going to notice it for sure.
All right, so you put something good into your body,
your body is going to respond really well.
You put something bad in your body,
your body is also going to respond accordingly
in a negative way.
So simply, in simplest terms,
that's actually what the difference is between ultra process,
which isn't really good for you,
and your body's gonna revolt,
and it's gonna trash your body from the inside out.
In ways, some ways we know,
and other ways we don't even know yet.
By the way, the whole conversation about ultra plastics,
about micro plastics, all right?
Hey, you know what?
If you've ever seen like the amount of machinery
and plastic that has to, you know,
the machines that the processed food has to go through,
who knows how much microplastics
are actually found in ultra-processed foods.
It's like leaching through, yeah.
That remains to be seen, you know?
And so what I say is that the least amount of processing you can have for your
food, the more you can be assured that it's going to be a quality food that
you're actually going to put into your body and your body will react well.
So what's going on when you feed your food, minimally processed whole foods,
your body is going to extract immediately as many of the polyphenols
as it can out of it.
It goes in your stomach, it's absorbed into your bloodstream.
Those polyphenols go to town.
The effect of a polyphenol, of eating polyphenols, and there's a lot of polyphenols in foods,
strawberries, blueberries, an orange, an apple, broccoli, all right, all those polyphenols,
basically get into your bloodstream and think about it like starting a symphony
of effects, you know? If you ever go to like listen to a symphony orchestra, it's not
just usually one instrument that goes off. The whole orchestra goes off.
And that's what happens when we eat poly foods with polyphenols. The dietary fiber tumbles down.
We might absorb some of it. Some of it we don't absorb goes tumbles down all the way to your lower
gut. What does it do? It feeds our gut microbiome. We've got 39 trillion hungry little baby birds in a nest waiting to be fed.
Okay.
And the dietary fiber we eat actually feeds them.
How important is this?
And we know it's really important not only because dietary fiber seems to be
eating dietary fiber lowers the risk of diseases like dementia, diabetes, cancer,
improves outcomes for cancer, but for cancer, improves outcomes for cancer.
But for cancer, for example, there was a study from the MD Anderson Cancer Center
that looked at people with melanoma, deadly form of skin cancer, getting immunotherapy.
So they're getting the state-of-the-art treatment, requires their own immune system to go to town.
That's the 70% in your gut, requires the gut bacteria.
Gut bacteria need to eat. Okay. Got to feed them. Turns out for every five to six grams of dietary
fiber, it decreased mortality by 30%. Mortality, death. Okay. Death.
. Decreased it.
Decreased it by five to six grams of dietary fiber per day. Now, what does that look like? Dietary fiber, five to six grams? You get a medium-sized pear has five to six grams
of dietary fiber. Not a big ask. You can do one of those a day.
One of those a day or the equivalent to get the dietary fiber. All right. So, and again, now you
get all the polyphenols and so like powerful effects. How quickly does dietary fiber and these polyphenols, how quickly can they change the fate of your
gut bacteria?
Within 24 hours.
Come on.
You can start getting changes.
So, and I wrote about this in my book, Eat To Beat Disease, you have kiwis, okay, and you measure the gut microbiome and you can within 24 hours,
after eating one Kiwi, you can start to grow more healthy gut bacteria in the
first day.
All right.
By four days, you start growing other bacteria that are healthy as well.
So, you know, like you're asking me, what about the, what about the dude who
actually hasn't been taking care of himself?
Look, this is what I'm telling you.
Go eat some whole fresh foods that you prepare yourself.
Okay.
Cut down some of that ultra processed stuff.
I'll talk about what the ultra processed stuff does in a second.
And you'll start to get these changes.
You're hardwired to do this.
Your body wants to do it.
You know, let it do its job.
Yeah.
Okay.
You'll start to feel the effects or maybe, or at least your body will feel the effects within 24 hours.
Well, you, you're, the changes start fast.
And so, you know, definitely within a few days, you will start to feel
much better. I mean, listen, you ever, you ever go like on a, like a crummy food bender?
And then, right? Like, don't feel good. Don't feel good. And then you say, you know what?
This is, this sucks. I I'm gonna actually like eat healthy now
You start getting it back pretty quick. Yes, like I am so glad
I'm doing this right. So the changes happen fast. So I think you know
So number one it is in within everyone's power to be able to actually make these moves
Okay that count, simply by shifting
to whole good healthy foods.
Because you know, the bad stuff with the artificial preservatives and artificial coloring and
all that, they, you know, the simplest way to think about what they might do besides
dump chemicals into your body is they can kill your gut bacteria.
That's not what you want to do.
You know, killing the gut bacteria, by the way, is like, we're
talking about the symphony, Beethoven's fifth, you know,
we're Handel's Messiah, big choir, you know, in a big
concert hall, you know, like hurting your gut bacteria, like
ultra processed foods, all these artificial things. It's like
sending in, it's like sending in hooligans from a British football game, screaming into a concert hall
and kicking over all the instruments.
Wow, that's what processed foods do, ultra processed.
What are other things that ruin the gut bacteria then besides ultra processed foods?
Well alcohol will do it.
Smoking also can affect it.
I'm not getting enough good sleep.
I'm not getting exercise can also affect your gut.
What about vaping?
Vaping.
Oh yeah.
Vaping is also, I mean, look, cigarettes, vaping, cigars, pipes.
It's all part of the same continuum.
There's nothing better about vaping.
In fact, research has actually shown that the flavoring
that they put in vapes are actually probably even worse
than some of the stuff that you have just in a plain cigarette.
So vaping or smoking or cigars, that doesn't help the gut bacteria?
No, not at all.
Does it impact it in a negative way?
Yeah, it impacts in a negative way.
Really?
Yeah, because guess what?
All those chemicals, instead of eating them, now you're inhaling them
and they go right into your bloodstream.
Instead of from your gut, your stomach,
it just goes right into your bloodstream for your lungs.
And now, you know, everything is affected.
That 60,000 mile channel of highways and byways is delivering whatever the menthol flavor or the,
whatever flavor you've got all over
the place. You really don't want that. How much of a block, if someone is smoking every day or
vaping or doing cigars or pipes every day or they're inhaling some type of smoke, how much of a
dam are they creating in the flow of health throughout their nervous system, their bloodstream, their...
I don't have a number for you, but it's pretty significant.
It's so significant that, you know,
some of the researchers looking at environmental toxins
have been even looking at not just,
not only smoking and vaping, all right,
but looking at even like cooking.
Think about the line cooks at a restaurant. The smoke you mean?
And all the fryer smoke.
Yeah.
The grease and everything coming out.
Listen, like you and I.
Smells good.
We probably have spent more time, we've probably done our time.
Oh yeah.
Standing in the front of a grill.
Oh yeah.
On the summer, right?
Of course.
And we're flipping the burgers or grilling the steaks.
Hey, you know, like that's part of the,
that's part of the, you know,
it's part of growing up, you know,
and doing our thing, all right?
Think about all that stuff that we're breathing.
We know that grilling meat puts carcinogens into the meat.
What do you think we're breathing in?
Oh man. Okay.
Fortunately, you know, like most people aren't
It's minimal.
grilling every day.
But if you're a line cook in a restaurant,
you're going there doing that
Eight hours a day.
at the station, eight hours a day every day.
Okay.
So what I'm saying is that,
like what we expose our bodies to makes a big difference.
So these are choices that we make. And know researchers and public health and policymakers like I think
that there's starting to be a convergence in recognizing that you know
if we want a healthier society and healthier individuals all right we got
to just be a little bit more alert to the fact that what we're exposed to can
have like a really, really big impact
in ways that we didn't think about before. Now's the time to think about it.
Okay. So number one, I think I took you off track for a second. Number one is eat more
plant-based whole foods.
And less ultra processed.
Less ultra processed. Was there more to this? Was there more steps to this?
No, I think that's probably a good first step. I mean, of course there's a lot of little
minis. Second thing I would tell you is don't overeat.
Don't overeat.
Look, we live in a culture of abundance.
The more there is, the more you want to eat.
Yeah.
Eat the access too.
Easy access, OK?
And easy access to the cheap stuff, which
is the ultra-processed stuff, which is definitely
the bad stuff, right?
So not the good stuff.
If you're going to overeat, overeat fiber,
overeat the healthy stuff. You know, honestly, I would tell you, don't even overeat the good stuff, right? So not the good stuff. Forget overeat, overeat fiber, overeat like the healthy stuff.
You know, honestly, I would tell you don't even overeat the good stuff.
And here's the reason why.
Really?
Oh, yeah. Because the fact of the matter is that our bodies are designed to take in food as fuel.
All right. Remember I gave you the analogy, the gas, the car at the filling station, getting your
tank filled up, right?
So that's basically how we interact with our food.
Just like in a car, you don't really think about your fuel until the meter runs low,
the gauge runs low.
Then you're like, shoot, where can I find a gas station?
That's all you can think about.
And that's basically how our body works.
Like we don't think about eating until, you know, our-
Getting hungry.
The fuel tank goes, you know, your tank's running low.
Now like, okay, I gotta get something to eat.
Okay, so that's the same way.
And what happens is that when we go to the filling station with a car, we put hopefully
high quality fuel into our gas tank, which is a metal container in the side of the car.
We fill it up, right?
And what happens when the gas tank in a car
fills up to the top, it goes click,
and now no more gas comes out.
We get out, we put it away, okay,
and then we drive off, right, and our tank's full.
Our body isn't of the clicker.
Wouldn't that be amazing?
If it did. If we had a clicker?
Yeah, if we had a clicker and it said,
okay, you've eaten all you need to fill your tank today.
Stop eating, don't burn it now, don't run.
I'm gonna tell you what the,
we kind of do have a clicker
and I'm gonna tell you what it is.
If you eat slowly, you will actually feel satiated, full,
and if you stop there, stop. Before you're full, you're satisfied before you're full. And if you stop there, stop. Before you're full, you're satisfied before you're full. Now,
this requires a little bit of finesse for you to know yourself. Okay.
Well, also when you're eating, when I eat ultra processed foods, I never feel full. It's like,
I can have two pizzas and candy. And you want more and more. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
And so the clicker doesn't turn on with ultra processed foods like it would with whole foods
where you feel like, oh, I got a lot of good fiber in me.
I got some good grains.
I got some meat or beans or vegetables.
Like I feel satisfied.
So that's the key thing.
Feeling satisfied, knowing you're satisfied and stopping no matter what else.
Like I don't care if you haven't cleaned your plate.
Stop. Stop.
Quit the clean plate club. Yeah, that's good. Okay. You gotta quit it. All right.
In that case, you shouldn't have put so much food in your plate to begin with. Exactly. Right. So
this is my overarching second piece of advice for somebody who wants to take better care of themselves.
Don't put too much food in the plate. Don't feel like you have to clean the plate. Take your time eating so that when your stomach starts to get full,
you'll start feeling that you're satisfied.
You don't have to feel full.
Like we're trained to eat until we're full.
Yeah.
All right.
But you know, like listen, anybody who's been at a big Thanksgiving dinner will know this, right?
So you've been hungry all day, you can't wait for that meal with all the amazing food
and all the amazing family, look forward to it every year.
And you go there and it's time to eat
and you pile your plate up and you're eating, okay?
And you're like, oh my God,
I gotta go back and get more, right?
So you go back and get more,
you take one forkful of that second plate
and you cross that line.
And you're like-
And all this food left over, yeah, yeah.
And then you feel like,
oh man, I don't think I can eat anymore.
And then you are on the couch feeling crummy
for the rest of the day.
That's crossing the line.
You ate so fast, you didn't pay attention, right?
So second piece of advice for people, don't overeat.
Okay, third thing?
Third thing is something that everybody can do.
Like, by the way, Lewis, I'm telling you, all
things are, don't cost a lot of money.
In fact, they will save you money.
Yeah.
All right.
That's the key thing.
You don't have to be, you know, like a super wealthy person and buy all this
and order all these supplements and do all this crazy stuff and track your glucose.
And all the, you don't need to do all this stuff.
This is a simple way to heal yourself and get started.
Cause your body's got the operating system
already hardwired into you.
Yes.
It's an easy first step for anybody.
Now, third thing is every now and then skip a meal.
I do it about three times a week, two to three times a week.
Easiest meal for me to skip is breakfast.
Okay.
I get up, I take, I take my time.
If my work day starts early,
if I got a ton of stuff I gotta do,
sometimes I'm so busy,
I just don't even have time to eat breakfast.
And that's totally okay.
We were told by our moms,
we gotta eat breakfast in order to have,
to learn something at school.
Or have enough energy.
Totally not true.
Yeah.
By not eating breakfast, what we are immediately
doing is extending this fasting period from
overnight when we weren't eating after, you know,
when we went to sleep.
Now you're still not eating until let's
call it lunchtime.
You've extended your quote fasting period,
maybe 12 hours.
Okay.
That's the easiest way to do intermittent fasting.
You don't have to like go into a schedule and do anything else.
I always tell people like, don't bother going into these crazy plans.
Just skip a meal or two.
And if you, and even if you don't do it every single day, which, you know, it's
probably hard for everybody to skip breakfast or skip lunch every single day.
Uh, but if you do it two or three times a week,
okay, you'll be fine.
These are the easy steps.
This is the third thing I would do.
Fourth thing I would do is say, get on your feet
and go for a walk after dinner.
Okay.
And by the way, when I'm saying a walk, I'm
saying like a, like a brisk walk.
Like, uh, you know, don't drag your feet, walk
until, you know, like you're feeling it, you
know, like you're feeling like you're getting some good exercise.
If you can do it with a friend or a family member, even better catch up on
things.
If you don't have anybody to walk with, Hey, there's something called podcasts.
Yeah, exactly.
Listen to school of greatness.
Yes.
Okay.
Listen to an episode.
Listen to this episode.
All right.
And by the time it's done, you'll have actually gotten some pretty
good exercise.
Yeah.
Movement.
If you can squeeze it in to do a workout
plan or join a gym or go swimming or cycling,
more power to you, but I'm saying you can do it.
Walk.
The really, really easy way anybody can do is
just walk, unless you're in a wheelchair.
Okay.
Uh, this is something you can do to actually
start to gain your health back.
All right?
That is the next thing.
And then the final thing that I think is a start, because you can't stack too many things
on is try to get some good sleep.
Yes.
Just get some good sleep.
And by the way, you know why?
Because when you sleep really, really well, and look, even if you don't sleep well now,
there's at some point in your life, you did get good sleep. So we all know how to do it, all right?
When you get good sleep, deep REM sleep, dreaming sleep,
what happens is that your body regenerates itself.
Your stem cells get, start to regenerate.
Your brain cleans itself out.
By the way, did, did, uh,
have you heard of the glymphatic system in the brain?
I've heard it, but what does it do?
Okay, so there is aphatic system in the brain? I've heard it, but what does it do? Okay.
So there is a hidden sewer system in our brain called the glimphatic system.
You've heard of lymphatic system, but the glimphatic system is they say
glimph because the cells in our brain are called glia, G L I A.
So glimphatic system is a sewer system that's normally closed during the day.
And so, you know, like here we are during the day, you know, we're doing this podcast, we're doing other things, you know, you prep before you got to do
some stuff afterwards, me too.
All right.
You know what's happening?
We're building up, um, toxins in our brain, oxidative stress, all kinds of
stuff is going on in our brain when we sleep tonight.
Okay. Hopefully I'm going to get some brain. When we sleep, two night.
Okay.
Hopefully I'm going to get some good sleep and hopefully you too. Yes.
All right.
When we get good sleep and only when we get good sleep, the
glymphatic systems open up.
It's like the sewers of Paris drains the toxins from your brain.
All right.
And that's how we re regenerate the freshness of our brain. That's why they say, get a good night's sleep before an exam. All right, and that's how we regenerate the freshness of our brain.
That's why they say get a good night's sleep before an exam.
All right, and if you don't, by the way, you get brain fog.
You know why you get brain fog?
Because you've kept those toxins in.
Wow.
If someone, say, has one glass of wine or one drink of alcohol before they go to sleep,
and they say to themselves, that's not that much, just one glass or one drink of alcohol before they go to sleep. And they said to themselves, ah, it's not that much, just one glass or one drink.
How much is that impacting the brain
to not be able to recover, flush out those toxins,
and feel fully rested?
Different for everybody.
Okay. Okay.
Now, I think in general, what I would say is that
I have an opinion about alcohol, okay?
My opinion about alcohol is this.
From the time that humans started to grow grains and ferment them, all right, we've
been having alcohol and alcohol is part of human ritual. We celebrate birthdays and funerals
and wakes and holidays with it. So to me, I think that, you know, drinking some wine, having some
alcohol is really part of our humanity. All right. The problem that comes when we actually
start really abusing it and drinking too much of it. And here's the reason. The alcohol
in all alcoholic beverages, the ethanol, okay, which is present in all of them, that's a
toxin. So whether you drink a little or a lot, you know, the bottom line is still a toxin.
So the more you have, the more toxicity your body's got to purge.
Every now and then, it's probably not a big deal.
Like have a great glass of wine or bottle of wine on your birthday.
Don't drink the whole bottle.
Sure, sure.
Enjoy it with some friends, okay?
Like social drinking in that context, I think is okay.
But if you're doing it every night, just one glass.
What I would tell you is this.
Your body's got to work against that to clear it, and everybody's body's different.
Your liver might work a little bit more efficiently than mine, so you're going to clear a little
bit better.
And the faster you clear it, the better the sleep you're going to get.
And by the way, alcohol itself is a brain toxin, so it knocks out a few neurons.
You got to regenerate those, so you're going to regenerate them when you're sleeping. Right?
So it's all interlinked. And so I don't like to character assassinate any food, really.
I think, you know, like, you know, you got to, you got to enjoy, if you're going to want,
you want to live for a long time, you want to aim for longevity, you know,
life is for the living, so you gotta live your life.
I'm a big believer in that.
But just, but you gotta be aware
of what it is you're putting into your body
and how your body's responding to it.
So again, these four bacteria that are in the gut
of people that are living well beyond 100,
we talked about those before.
You give a few different foods that can support you
in, I guess, the fourth one.
Yeah, there's more for all these bacteria.
Like, let's not go through every single one.
This is like still a relatively new area of research for me.
But I'll tell you, I was surprised to discover
that resistant starches can grow some of them as well.
You know what a resistant starch is? Starch, right? It's a carb, right?
Like rice and all this other kind of stuff. Banana, all right?
When you actually change the starch so it becomes a little harder to digest,
like you refrigerate, like day old rice, okay, becomes a resistant starch.
A potato, you're going to roast some potatoes, all right? like day old rice, okay, becomes a resistant starch.
A potato, you're gonna roast some potatoes, all right?
You stick them in the fridge, the next day,
the natural chemistry of the potato, the starches changes.
You got some resistant starch.
Resistant starch can grow some of those bacteria
that are found in ultra-agers, super-agers.
Interesting.
Okay, also some natural foods, green bananas, bacteria that are found in ultra-agers, super-agers. Interesting. Okay.
Also, some natural foods, green bananas, resistant starch, plantains, resistant starch.
So any roasted potato, stick in the fridge, have it the next day.
You actually have created your own resistant starch.
So those actually also can help grow some of the healthy gut bacteria as well.
Amazing. What I mean, what are the things that are blocking us beyond the
processed foods, beyond smoking, alcohol? Here's actually a question I
have for you about this. If you're eating all the right foods, but you
say, take a Tylenol once a day, or take ibuprofen once a day,
or take some type of chemical compound that is a drug,
even if it seems like it's safe over the counter,
what does that do to the gut microbiome
when you take a Tylenol, Advil, ibuprofen,
or some type of pain killer?
We don't know, and it's gonna be different
for different medicines.
Like I will tell you that
some medicines might actually be very harmful. Okay. And I think that we're just still at the beginning of discovering, like our consciousness has only been recently raised as researchers to
think about the gut microbiome. There's a lot more work to be done. But-
Few years in. Yeah.
We're just a few years in, but I'll tell you, there are some surprises.
And I know that on your program, you've actually had people coming in and talk about longevity
drugs like rapamycin and metformin.
You know that metformin has been discovered to improve your gut microbiome.
Really?
Yeah.
So medicines aren't always bad.
Some of them might actually be good.
We're just starting to figure this out and understand it.
Yeah, interesting. I guess I'm curious if there are side effects that would also hurt.
Maybe they'd help in some way, but then hurt in some other way, I'm not sure.
We don't really know yet, and I think that's really part of this new frontier.
I'm really excited about it because I think that, you know, when I went to medical school
and I was learning and studying and reading all these books and, you know, like we're digesting
4,000 years of medical knowledge, you graduate medical school with your stethoscope around
your neck figuring that, you know, like, okay, I probably know most of what there is to know.
Heck no.
We are still discovering new cells in the body, new organs
in the body, new pieces of our physiology and how our body works that we didn't even imagine. So
that's what's exciting to me as a medical researcher, as a physician, as a scientist.
And then, you know, like part of what I do is, you know, as I write books, I like to translate some
of the most exciting, but also pragmatic,
like practical things that we're discovering
that you can actually do something about.
This may sound a little woo-woo to this question,
but how much do our thoughts and our mindset
impact our gut, but also our overall health?
Oh, I think it's huge.
As it relates to the gut,
we do know that it's a two-way street. So if we're depressed
or like some other thing is going on in our brain, inevitably the gut's going to be affected
in some way. As I said, we don't have it all figured out yet.
But it's impacting it.
Probably not for the better.
So stress, overwhelm, anxiety, depression, bad thoughts.
And it may actually, it may be a...
A gut signaling the brain?
A signaling back to the brain, you know?
Like two people playing pickleball,
you know, like batting, you know,
like nasty things, nastiness back to each other.
That could well be happening, okay, with brain and gut.
We do know that it can be good, you know?
There's beneficial gut-brain
interactions. So it makes sense that there might be some negative ones. But I can tell you that
I think that too often we disconnect mental wellness with physical wellness. We call them
two separate things. You know, the psychiatrist or the therapist deals with this and you know,
medical doctors say, oh, well, I deal with the liver or I deal with the kidney. Yeah.
You know, what we're beginning to realize is there's all this interconnectivity. And again,
back to what I do. I'm all about the common denominator of health and the common denominators
of disease. If we can actually take a science-based approach to look at, you know, how everything is connected.
It's that idea of like draining the Pacific ocean and seeing how the islands are connected.
We get a lot more mileage out of that than just taking an inch wide and going a mile
deep and thinking that you've got the answer.
Yeah.
It almost sounds like if you're eating unhealthy foods, ultra processed foods, it's more than likely going to have
an impact on the way you think because you're going to feel a certain thing or maybe the
signals are sending something up.
This is not enough.
I need more nutrients.
I need something else and therefore it's going to create some type of fogginess in your thinking
or in your mind.
And if you're thinking your mind is a lower energy,
a lower frequency, thinking, tired, it's going to send it back to the gut. It seems like it's kind
of connecting at the same time. So when you eat something healthy, hopefully it's impacting
your mind or your brain to think better. And if you're thinking better, hopefully your gut
is being impacted in a better way also.
And that's connected to longevity because one of the goals that we all want to have
is we want to be clear in mind.
We want to have good cognition.
It's not just about memory.
It's really about decision-making.
What am I going to do today?
What am I going to do next week?
And making good decisions, right?
I mean, you know, like I just think that rather than pick a number, you know, like, I just think that, uh, rather than pick a number,
you know, to 150 or whatever, let's think about this whole journey and everything
we need to do to enjoy where we're going.
You're going to go on vacation, right?
You want to, you want to really plan your vacation.
Where are you going to eat?
What are you going to pack?
You know, what's the weather going to be like?
Like all these, all these components I think are, at least from my perspective,
longevity is not just about the big number.
It's really about your health span and the quality of your life along the way.
And that's to me is really the exciting thing is really the science of that
enjoyment along the way.
I'm, I'm a big believer in joy and in pleasure and in making life worth living.
100%. And if you could, I've got a couple final questions for you, but if you were to focus on a
few supplements you think people should be taking to just non-negotiables that you think
it's going to help their gut, their lifespan, their everything. What would those few supplements be?
I can only tell you what I do.
Okay.
All right.
Because I don't think I can really fairly address, this should be for everybody, the
non-negotiables.
But I'll tell you for me, I know that it's hard for me to get enough vitamin D. So I'll
think of vitamin D supplement.
I know it's, even though I enjoy seafood and I like, you know, plant-based sources of,
of Omega-3s, it's hard for me to get enough.
So an Omega-3 supplement is good for my brain, good for my heart.
It's good for my muscles.
So I take an Omega-3 supplement.
I think those are for me, non-negotiable.
I just don't get enough.
And I think most people don't get enough either, honestly.
Because I do work in this area, you know, I have an unfair advantage of seeing the results of
research and thinking, oh, wow, why don't I do this if I've seen this?
I do take some probiotics, and it's all based on the research that I've actually seen.
So that bacteria I told you, L lactobacillus ruderi,
you can find it in food.
Sometimes it's in yogurt.
It's in sourdough bread,
but I don't wanna eat too much sourdough bread.
It's a carb.
Lactobacillus is what makes the sourdough bread tangy,
which people like,
but you can't eat that much sourdough bread.
Lactobacillus ruderi is also in the Italian version of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese.
So good.
Big orange wheels.
It's a starter bacteria for it.
You don't want to be eating too much of that.
Shave a little bit on, but you're not going to be eating like mouthfuls of it.
So I can't get enough of that.
And I've seen enough research from what I've done to know that it's good for
my immune system, it lowers inflammation. I've seen really good data in animals from
the lab that it reduces the development of colon tumors and breast tumors. It also improves
your metabolism, your lipids. It text messages your brain for that oxytocin. So-
What's that one called again?
Lactobacillus ruderi.
And by the way, it's lactobacillus ruderi is called R-E-U-T-E-R-I.
I'll give it to you so you can put in the show notes.
Yeah, please.
Lactobacillus ruderi.
And I'll tell you, I actually order the kind, like this is
the stuff you get on Amazon.
I get the kind that you can chew.
Okay.
Children's chewable version.
You know why?
Because there's other data in humans that this healthy bacteria in the gut.
Remember I told you the gut starts in the mouth actually kills the
bacteria that causes cavities.
Really?
I brushed my teeth.
Now I'll chew up a couple of these babies.
I'll swish them around and I swallow it. Good
for the upstairs, good for the downstairs. I'm in. Right. And remember I told you, we're
beginning to see links between gum disease, gingivitis, bad bacteria in your mouth, and
dementia. Okay, so, you know, I didn't have to convince you very hard on that one. No,
I'm in. All right. I'm in. You take these every day? I do. And then, you know, and then I happen to be
involved with the research on acromansia.
And I know that there are people say it's been
so talked about on, you know, on social media
and YouTube and podcasts.
I'm like, I do the research on it.
Okay.
So I, and my colleagues are doing the research on it.
So I'm looking at it and this bacteria actually
is really, really important.
And I'm a cancer researcher.
So I know just how important that can be.
So I do take that probiotic.
But I also don't rely on probiotics.
From my acrimancy, I also drink some pomegranate juice.
And I'll have dried cranberries.
And I try to make, I use supplements as a top off,
which is what supplement means.
Yeah, yeah.
All right, but I try to get most of my-
Of foods.
Things from foods, yeah.
Yeah, so what is that one called?
The acromansia?
Acromansia, A-K-K-E-R-M-A-N-S-I-A.
That's the probiotic name or not?
That's the name of the bacteria and the probiotic.
Oh, it is, okay, cool.
Yeah. Okay, cool. Yeah
So those four things are the main that you take vitamin D omega-3 and these two probiotics
Yeah, you might throw some other stuff in there, but those are the main those are the main ones
I do got you, you know, I mean look
different
Everyone's gonna have different needs
I might
add some, you know, based on research that's coming out. So
I you know, I try not to create a little, you know, a box of things that to say, you have to do this, of course, you know,
you're not going to be healthy. This is what I do. And people
always ask me, so I'm happy to share it with you. That's
great. You've got some amazing books, Eat to Beat Disease
and Eat to Beat in Your Diet, that cover all the research
that you've done and give people way more tips
than we've talked about here.
This is a great starter.
And you're on YouTube every week.
People can check out YouTube slash Dr. William Lee
to see your content where you dive into the research
and you share more.
And you're doing it, what, two, three times a week right now?
Yeah, three times a week,
and then we actually add more content whenever I can.
And the way that I treat my YouTube
is that I look really closely at what people,
my audience and people who hear about me,
they wanna ask me.
So I get lots of, I collect information,
like what are the questions that people wanna know?
And then I create my YouTube content
based on answering what people wanna know.
What's the biggest pain that people are facing
around their health today that you've been answering?
Confusion about what they should do.
They get so much misinformation,
it becomes confusing for them.
And so what I always try to tell people to do is that
I'm trying to give you information
that's based on the science that I know to be true as well as we understand it now. You can count on me to be a trusted source of
information. I'm a scientist, so if I don't know it, I'm going to tell you I don't know.
Yeah.
That's okay. Because we can't know everything. And I think that, and just like what we talked
about today, I'm a pragmatic, but I'm a practical person. Do what's practical. You don't have to do what's expensive.
You can't, you know, this is not health is not elitism.
Health is universal.
It's something we can all do because we're all hardwired that you heal. We're all hardwired to have good metabolism.
We're hardwired to have our health defenses.
So if you have been off the path, don't worry, you can get back on it.
You know, just, you, just follow your own signals
with a little bit of guidance and you can get there.
This is powerful. I want people to go
subscribe to your YouTube, check out all your books,
DrWilliamLee.com
You're going to be updating people there.
You have a newsletter, all these different things people can check out.
Also, I want to get a link
or a list of all the supplements you talked about
and add it to the show notes. So I'll of all the supplements you talked about and add it to the
show notes. So I'll get that from you later and I'll add it to the show notes on YouTube and
all the different audio platforms. But this has been very powerful. I appreciate you for
revealing some of the new research that you're discovering and you're seeing that I haven't
heard anyone talk about, which is kind of understanding the gap, the gut bacteria connection
talk about, which is kind of understanding the gap, the gut bacteria connection to longer term health and longevity. And I think it's really important that we need to start exploring more
of this. And I'm assuming over the coming years, you're going to be talking more about this on
your YouTube channel about what you're discovering and sharing the research and the science that
people can have for themselves. Yeah, it's so exciting what we're actually finding out
in terms of how to live long and live well.
To me, that's the alignment.
You want years and quality at the same time.
That's what I'm focused on like a laser beam.
Dr. William Lee, thank you so much for being here.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for inviting me.
Again, powerful.
I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy.
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