The School of Greatness - How to REVERSE Aging With What You Eat Daily
Episode Date: November 28, 2025Dr. Michael Greger reveals that the number one cause of death in America isn't cancer or heart disease alone, it's our diet, which kills more people than cigarette smoking every year. His grandmother ...was given a medical death sentence at 65, confined to a wheelchair with end stage heart disease, yet she lived another 31 years to age 96 simply by changing what she ate. This personal transformation inspired him to abandon traditional medicine's drug and surgery approach and dedicate his life to uncovering how food can prevent, arrest, and even reverse our leading killers. You'll walk away understanding that only 25% of your lifespan is determined by genetics, the rest is in your control through lifestyle choices you can start making today.Dr. Grerger’s books:How Not to DieThe How Not to Die CookbookHow Not to DietHow to Survive a PandemicThe How Not to Diet CookbookHow Not to AgeThe How Not to Age CookbookLower LDL Cholesterol Naturally with FoodIn this episode you will:Discover why the American diet is deadlier than cigarette smoking and how simple food swaps can add 14 years to your lifeLearn the five core foods that Blue Zone populations credit for living to 100 with vitality and how to incorporate them into every mealUnderstand why eating breakfast and skipping dinner is more powerful for longevity than the reverse, based on your circadian biologyMaster the potassium salt switch that clinical trials show can reduce your risk of premature death by 40% with zero downsideBreak free from the confusion about supplements and processed foods by learning why whole plant foods contain thousands of compounds science hasn't even discovered yetFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1856For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Jessica Knurick – greatness.lnk.to/1845SCDr. William Li – greatness.lnk.to/1410SCGlucose Goddess – greatness.lnk.to/1575SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guests.
We have the inspiring Dr. Michael Greger in the house.
Good to see us.
Oh, so glad to be here.
Welcome.
Welcome.
This is exciting.
This is exciting.
Your research has been really out there in the mainstream a lot lately.
A lot of documentaries.
Your books have been blowing up.
And the most recent one, How Not to Age, the scientific approach to getting healthier
as you get older, I'm really fascinated by because most people don't think they can actually
get and improve their health the older they get. They just feel like they have to deal with
chronic pain, illness, disease. They have to take medications to just maintain a level of ease.
So is it actually possible to stop aging or even reverse aging with foods as we get older?
Dian appears to be the most critical element. And that's,
really the book is about this kind of good news that we have tremendous power over our health
destiny and longevity. The vast majority of pre-witcher death and disability is preventable
with a healthy enough diet and life. Really? Only about 25 percent, based on studies of identical
twins, only about 25 percent of the difference in lifespan between people is due to genetics.
Really? So for what we can do over the majority of which we have some control, we can look to,
for example, you know, these blue zones, these areas around the world with exceptional longevity,
and kind of look at the Venn diagram and what they're all doing.
According to the global burden of disease study, the largest systemic analysis of risk factors in history,
the number one cause of death in these United States is the American diet.
Really?
Bumping tobacco, smoking to number two, cigarettes, not only kill about a half million Americans every year worse,
our diet kills many more.
Come on.
So, but that's good news because, I mean, we.
We have the power.
Right?
It's never too late to start eating healthier, to stop smoking, to start moving.
So I mean, it's really a positive message that I was excited to learn when I finished the
book.
So when we change our lifestyle, when we change our eating habits and our nutritional habits,
we can actually reverse our aging or age better, is what I'm hearing to say.
We can age slower, edge slower.
Okay.
And because aging is a significant risk factor.
for most of our leading killers.
So my first book in this series, How Not to Die,
was, you know, first half of the book,
just 15 chapters, each of the 15 leading cause of death.
Talking about the world, Die It may play in preventing,
arrest, and reversing each of our top 15 killers.
Say, wait a second.
I mean, if death is from disease,
why isn't How Not to Die?
Kind of all the longevity book anybody needs.
But it's because aging is a risk factor
for multiple different disease.
So, for example, if all cancer were cured tomorrow,
It would only add about three years to the average lifespan.
Wait a second.
Why is that like our second leading killer?
It's because if you don't die of one age-related diseases, you'll just die of another one.
So the only reason you didn't die of a heart attack, ah, because you died of cancer the month before,
but you were going to die anyway from something else.
So by slowing down the aging process, then we can reduce the risk of many different diseases
at the same time, to stroke and the dimension, cancer, heart disease, which rise exponentially with age.
Really?
So something like, you know, having a high cholesterol can increase your odds of having a heart attack or number one killer of men and women by as much as 20-fold.
But an 80-year-old has 500 times the risk of having a heart attack compared to a 20-year-old.
So age, but I mean, of course, the reason we focus on things like cholesterol is because it's a modifiable risk factor.
But what if the rate of aging were modifiable to?
And so that's what I really cover in the book.
So what would the five main keys be to?
aging better. Yeah, so diet, number one. And so if you look at these blue zones, they all
center their diets around whole plant foods. So they're minimizing the intake of meat, dairy,
sugar, eggs, junk, maximizing the intake of fruits, vegetables, legumes, beans, split, peas,
chickpeas, and lentils, nuts and seeds, herbs and spices, basically real food that grows out of the ground.
These are really our healthiest choices. That would be number one.
One died.
So number one died.
So that accounts alone for about half the difference in high spend between blue zones
and the rest of the world.
What are the average blue zone age at death versus the average, you know, age of death
of non-blue zones?
Right.
It's about 12 to 14 years.
12 years, difference.
Difference.
So women 14, men 12 years longer.
And so have up to 10 times the rate of so-called centenarians, those that get triple digits,
live to be a hundred or older.
And it's not just about, you know,
adding years to your life,
but life to your years.
These people are active.
So they're at a hundred and they're enjoying their lives,
they're participating in life.
And so what's the point of living longer
if you can't do it, you know, with vibrancy,
with vitality, right?
And so in this country, I mean,
even our lifespan is going down.
So actually, the peak of life expectancy,
2014, the United States,
started going down every year since,
even before COVID, shaved a few years off our lifespan.
Now, there are certain pockets that are blue zone pockets.
Right, but in general, and it's because primarily the obesity epidemic.
Yes.
So we are raising the first generation of Americans set to live shorter average lives than
their parents, right?
And this was before COVID and continues to drop down.
We are 39th in life expectancy around the world.
So like Slovenians live longer than Americans.
So we've got a lot of work to do.
But the good news is, again, we have power over how we live and what we eat.
So diet would be the main thing.
What would be the second or third thing, would you think?
Okay.
And so then smoking cessation critically important.
No, so what else?
Smoking versus vaping?
Ah, well, the concern, the primary concern about vaping is the nicotine addiction will lead people to smoke.
And so it's safer than smoking, but because people who vape tend to smoke.
that, unfortunately, you know, these kids getting addicted to nicotine
can face a lifetime of cigarette addiction
and then dramatically cut their life short
from something like lung cancer.
Okay, so smoking.
So, yeah.
So it's really, remarkably, you know, 80% of the way there is the simple,
basic, common sense lifestyle behaviors.
I know it's a big book and I go into all the details.
Don't want people to get kind of lost in this, you know,
or intimidated, it's really the basic.
So, you know, a decade of life is possible just through not smoking, not being obese,
exercising even like 20 minutes a day, five servings of fruits and vegetables, really basic stuff.
Now, you want to go beyond that, you want to tweak those 20 percent.
I've got, you know, hundreds of cool things you can do with the book.
But let's not lose sight of the real core tenants.
So you can imagine some smoker was like, oh, look at this fancy.
supplement. I'm going to take it. I'm like, no, no, no. Let's back up.
It's not going to minimize the smoking. Right, right. So, I mean, that's, that's important
to emphasize. In fact, the conclusion of the book, I'm like, all right, let's step's back. Let's put
this all in context again. It's really the core tasting, basing tenants. And then, yeah,
there's all sorts of cool new science out there that you can tweak around the edges, but I don't want
people to get lost, really. Wow. Okay. And what about fasting? Because you mentioned fasting,
briefly, and I know you have a section in the book about intermittent fasting and fasting,
but also I think there was a quote in your book that's, you know, fasting can have benefits,
but if you fast too long, you die.
Right.
It's the ultimate in unsustainable diet, meaning guaranteed to kill you if you do it long enough.
Like what?
You can't say that about any diet, right?
But so there's all sorts of interesting intermittent fasting regimen.
So one thing that fasting does is to boost something called autophagy, which is kind of
house cleaning process within the cells.
Killing the zombieed cells, right?
Oh, well, that's a separate.
That's cell with senesitis.
That's a whole severing, but this is more inside the cell,
the accumulation of debris that contributes to the aging process,
and we can boost autophagy with exercise or with fasting.
We can fast or go fast.
Unfortunately, it doesn't really ramp until 36 to 48 hours of fasting,
which really is too long to go unsupervised.
normally your kidneys dive into something called sodium conservation mode
such that people can fast literally for months on water only
but if that response breaks down
then you can suffer a serious electrolyte abnormality
which only manifest with vague symptoms like dizziness or fatigue
that could go unnoticed until it's too late
so that's why one really should only fat if you're fasting over a day
it really should be done under medical supervision.
They can do urine tests, they can do blood tests,
just to make sure everything's going to plan.
Otherwise, you can run to really serious stress.
Do you feel like doing a 24-hour fast
is okay for people to do on their own?
So although we're not going to get that boost
and not toftity in that short of a time,
and you often hear like even a few hours,
like time-restricted feeding,
you know, decreasing the feed in window daily.
We can improve autophagy.
That's in rodents.
Unfortunately, rodents have this really,
high metabolisms such that they can lose massive amounts of their body weight little
than a day or two and a few days it can be fatal but unfortunately that doesn't translate
into humans really really only get this boosting after two days really kind of yeah two days
and then we're concerned about that being done outside of kind of medical super
interesting is there benefit to doing the intermittent fasting okay so but there is some certainly
there's so many different types and talk about the pros and cons to be so this alternate day fasting
and 5-2 fasting, 25-5 fasting, mimic fasting, yeah.
Right, all that.
There's all sorts of, and there's pros and comments of each.
I think the best, kind of the bottom line,
the best evidence is around early time restrictive feeding,
meaning collapsing ones feeding, daily feeding window
to at least 12 hours or less,
but critically important, that window was early rather than late.
So if anything, we're skipping supper, not breakfast,
and in fact, we're trying to cram as many calories
earlier in the day as possible,
the exact same food eaten in the morning is less spatening than the exact same food,
same number of calories, eaten in the evening.
Come on.
Causes less of a blood sugar spike, causes less triglycerate.
If you're going to eat junk, right?
If you're going to eat a donut or something, do it in the morning.
Actually, your body, because of our circadian rhythms, is better able to handle it.
Ideally, we should not be eating when it's dark.
Should not be eating after 7 p.m.
Our bodies just has these exaggerated responses to it, or in the very least we should be eating really healthy food.
And so really, so ideally breakfast or lunch would be the biggest meal of the day
and may actually help explain the longevity of the final remaining blue zone today.
There's only one left.
We think of these blue zones.
Right.
These are historical things, right?
Right.
But these are historic blue zones.
Now they're eating KFC like anybody else.
Right.
But there's one left.
And it's the red, white, and blue zone.
It's the only one.
It's Loma Linda, California.
Really?
An hour away.
A seven-day Adventist.
And one of the things that may be attributing to their longevity,
in fact, they're the longest formerly studied population,
longest living in history, living longer than the Okinawa in Japanese,
even during the 50s when they're at the peak.
The Sardinians, all of them.
They beat them all, and they're the only ones continuing to go.
And one of the things it may be doing is because they tend to eat the lunches,
their biggest meal the day.
So they don't have a big dinner.
So they don't have a big dinner.
or they skip dinner all entirely.
I mean, they have lots of other things going for them.
Maybe they have, maybe here and there, but not.
Right.
So their body is, they consider their body a temple,
is kind of a biblical teaching.
And so they really, so they have low smoking rates,
the exercise, tend to have plant-based diets.
So they're doing a lot of things, right?
Mutity, all the things, yeah.
Right.
But that may actually be one of the factors,
even though it's never been kind of put to the test
in an interventional trial.
Based on the studies, they're not eating a lot of dinners,
is what I'm hearing you say.
They're eating either.
light dinners, or they're not eating dinner at all.
They're kind of...
Or they're doing it before seven or...
Or they're doing before four.
Before four, before four, yeah.
What would be the optimal time to stop eating every single day?
Well, so before seven. We want to get before seven.
And so that's what, I mean, that, that intermittent fasting literature around time
restricted feeding was so confusing because some studies show it's actually bad for you,
caused metabolic issues. Others found it had these remarkable benefits. And it's all in
the timing of the window.
The ones that were late restricting, skipping breakfast, and not eating until late,
then they had actually problems associated.
And, you know, it's in that higher cholesterol at the end of a few weeks.
Because if you're skipping breakfast and you're, say, you're eating at one or two o'clock,
but then you're like, you're hungry.
And so you're eating more later in the evening until 9, 10 o'clock maybe.
Opposite that we want to be doing.
But you're still getting that maybe 16-hour window of not eating.
Right.
But you're saying that the time you eat is more important than.
and how much time you don't eat.
There's benefits to both.
Yes.
So just by time-restricted feeding,
even if you do it kind of in the middle,
there's benefits from not time-restricting,
but there's additional benefits switching to a really.
Skipping dinner.
Yeah, yeah.
And that was actually the U.S. military
did these experiments.
The Army did the first experiments
where they actually took people and gave people
2,000 calorie meals,
a single 2,000 calorie meal,
the exact same meal,
either as breakfast and 3,000,
fasting rest of the day or as supper, and they found these remarkable differences, the exact
same food, exact same calories, different amount of body fat, different amount of metabolic
implications of just that single tweak. It's because of chronobiology, the remarkable impact
that our circadian rhythms have on our biology. We typically only think of our circadian rhythms
when we're jet lagged. Like, that's the only time we're even thinking about, you know, our
bodies. But that's just kind of a symptom of this really deep underlying most of our biological
our biochemistry or enzymes actually go on this on this on this clock um and so it really matters
and there's this really devastating literature about um pesticide suicides in india that's a common
way um for people to um to commit suicide but it matters whether they survive whether they do it in the
morning or in the evening because their bodies better able to handle it in the morning
that are able to detoxify because of our circadian rhythms,
you're much more likely to survive a poisoning attempt.
Wow.
And this is just how powerful,
just suggests the power of our circadian rhythms,
really fascinating.
I dive deep in my How Not to Diet book
where I was talking about weight loss.
And that entire field, fascinating.
Never learned about it in medical school.
Wow. Now, for those that don't know,
what is the circadian rhythm
and what do we need to know about it to optimize our life?
Yeah, so our circadian rhythm is the kind of daily rhythm, almost 24-hour rhythm, that so even if you're putting a bunker with constant lighting, your body will still, you'll have this, you know, this cycle as if you were, you know, even though you have no cues from the outside, you have no watch, you have no idea what time it is, you'll start getting sleepy at kind of the same time you normally get sleep. You wake up about the same time you normally sleep.
And so, but in that kind of environment, you can do these laboratory experiments on people,
where it's like, okay, what if we, what if we put you on a 27-hour cycle?
So we put the lights on, right?
But then we just stretch it a little bit, and it totally messes people up.
Wow.
It really undercuts our biology.
We were so meant because then all of a sudden it's chopping it through.
And so it was these kind of experiments that really show the power.
And so what we see is we see these shift workers.
So people.
We're working late nights.
Right.
So, well, if you're only working late nights, that's a problem in and of itself, but it's the people that are shifting.
So they're doing the late nights.
So like, you know, people in postgraduate medical ed's training, these residents who will do nights in the hospital and then they'll do a day.
And that is really difficult.
And so.
Like a double shift.
Double shift.
So there could be many reasons why people that do that kind of work live significantly short in lives.
Wow.
I mean, there's, you know, who is forced into those kind of jobs?
what kind of, you know, health care do they have?
Stress.
There's so many other things that can go into that.
But they really do think that that disruption of circadian rhythm has a serious implications.
If you could design the perfect day and the perfect amount of protein, calories, consumption, sleep,
intermittent fasting window, et cetera, for someone like me, I'm 230 pounds,
I'm 40 years old
I was a former athlete
I train really hard
I'm at the gym lifting
four or five days a week
I'm doing cardio
I'm doing some running
I'm walking a lot
but I also have a busy lifestyle
I travel sometimes
what would be the optimal
if I could
for me to
live longer
still be athletic
and strong and healthy
and feel great
so that was
you know, I talked about this
How Not to Die book,
the first half of the book,
but I didn't want it to just
kind of be a reference book.
I wanted this to be a practical
day-to-day kind of grocery store
guide to make these kind of
practical decisions.
And that's what became
the second half of the book,
which centers my recommendations
around a daily dozen checklist
of all that kind of healthiest
of healthy foods and habits
to encourage people to fit
into their daily routine.
So it's available on a free app,
all my work is free,
at Dr. Gregor's Daily Dozen,
iPhone, Android.
And it's just basically, you know, these kind of to inspire people, to include, so, you know,
12 things that we should be doing.
12 things.
So, you know, 90 minutes of modern intensity exercise or 45 minutes of vigorous exercise every single day.
You know, how much, you know, how much to drink.
So I want people to eat dark green leafy vegetables every day, the healthiest kind of vegetables.
I want people to eat berries every day.
The healthiest kinds of fruits, a tablespoon of grown flaxseed, a quarter teaspoon of turmeric,
kind of on down the list.
Again, just to kind of inspire people to kind of think.
think and they can kind of track their progress kind of make a game out of it um and look on the road
i'm not even hitting you know i'm lucky if i hit half yeah i mean it's just again kind of an
aspirational kind of if you really did have control over your environment uh-huh this is really
the kind of things we want including in uh one's daily retreat so so what would do though the top
five foods that you sheet every day to age longer yeah in terms of anti-aging foods this global
burden of disease study which i mentioned before again the largest systemic analysis funded by
the Bill Mondegay's Foundation, found that the food associated with the largest expected
life expectancy gains are legumes, these beans, split-bees, chickpeas, lentils.
In fact, one thing we can do is booster intake of beans or lentil soup or hummes.
And we think it's because they're the most concentrated sources of prebiotics, the resistance
starch and dietary fiber that feeds the good bacteria in our good.
gut. And that has implications serves of decreasing inflammation, improving our immunity,
improving muscle strength, muscle quality, muscle mass, and frail individuals, be all but just
by changing a microbiome. In fact, you can do these so-called fecal transplant studies where
you can take a sick, healthy poop and put it in a sick person. It's crazy, right? And you can actually
change their biology to make crazy. It's absolutely crazy. But that's how we can prove cause and
effect. Because, like, well, yeah, you feed someone a healthy diet. How do we know their gut bugs
anything to do with it. Ah, well, we can, we can control for that and you can do it, you know,
and so they, right, so you can make, you know, mice more fit, less fit by giving them,
you know, healthy poop. Healthy poop from a, from a exercising mouse or, you know,
from marathon mouse or a mighty mouse versus the, you know, frail mouse. So you can actually change.
They're eating the same. They're doing the other than, but they just have a different stool
composition. And how do you get those good gut bugs? You feed them the right food. And that's the
prebiotics, what are good gut bacteria eat. A lot of people are thinking probiotics. They're
thinking the actual bacteria themselves, the acidophilus, the bifidobacteria. Those are the good
gut bugs. But if you just take those pills, the reason you don't have those good gut bugs
in the first place is because you're not feeding them very well. So you can try to populate
your gut with as many good bugs as you want. They're going to die off if you continue to starve them,
continue to starve your microbial self, whereas if you just ate the right foods,
the good gut bugs are fiber feeders, if you eat the right foods, then your good bugs
will be fruitful and multiply all on their own and, you know, do all the work for you, and that
work is creating these so-called postbiotics, which are their byproducts of microbial
metabolism of these good foods like butyrate nests, they could absorb through the colon
wall into our bloodstream, circulate throughout our bodies, even cross the blood,
brain barrier have effects on her mental health,
for our immunity.
So dramatically decrease inflammation, you can prevent asthma attacks just by feeding
people's and beans.
I mean, it's absolutely remarkable.
So legumes have prebiotics.
They have the prebiotics.
So that's why we think the food.
In fact, legumes are the primary protein source of every single blue zone, every documented.
That's where they get most of their protein from some sort of legum, whether it's, you know,
brown peas or something or or black beans in Costa Rico or was soy foods in Okinawa or
but it was always centered around not just plant based in general but a plant based source of
protein legumes so beans and so we should be thinking like being burrito chili like how can i
fit beans in my daily diet and that's part of the daily does is like i have any beans today like
can i put beans on my salad or throw some beans on this pasta dish or it's like simply get a can
of you know unsalted no salt added beans you know open in two seconds you always
keep a can of beans in the fridge.
You can just throw a spoonful on to anything, basically.
Yeah.
In fact, someone at a talk was like,
I'd just take white beans mashed into my oatmeal.
I'm like, never heard of that.
But he's like, can't even taste it.
I'm like, okay, yeah, great.
I mean, look, you know, and what's nice about a healthy breakfast
is that regardless of what you do the rest of the day,
you know, God knows what bowl of candy is on your coworkers' desk
or what donut shop your walk-a-buyer.
God knows what stress is going to, you know,
take you down the wrong path.
At least you have a good foundation.
Interesting.
You're a food and you, you know,
feeding you're good one.
Well, anyway, so that's number one on the list.
Legumes.
Okay, now, so these are, they identified the top five foods that associate with the longest
lifespan.
Now, legumes rule the roost on a per serving basis, but actually on an ounce per ounce
basis, nuts are associated with the longest lifespan compared to any other type of food out
there.
What are the three best nuts?
There's really only one.
There's really only one that pulls ahead.
That's walnuts.
Now, see, normally, when I say, like, you know,
eat, you know, cruciferous vegetables or something,
they're like, which one's best?
I'm like, whichever one you'll eat.
You like broccoli, eat broccoli.
You like bok choy, eat broccoli.
Like, you know, look, whatever one you'll get into your face.
That's it.
But with nuts, it really does.
Walnuts really do pull ahead.
And that's because they have more omega-3s and other nuts.
have more antioxidants than other nuts, and they're the only nuts shown to acutely improve
artery function within a matter of hours. And so, in fact, in the pretty med study, which
is this large, randomized controlled trial over years of thousands of individuals, although
mixed nuts certainly did lower cardiovascular disease rates, it was to walnuts that appear
to be the most critical part. And we do want to get unsalted nuts. I know that's not as delicious.
Unsalted. Why unsalted? In terms of dietary risk.
factor for death, excess sodium intake is the way.
So I've been talking about the, all this, I know, but salt is so good, it tastes so good on
something.
I know.
Look, so in terms of things we're missing out on, right, it's the legums, but in terms of stuff
we're getting too much of salt.
There's lots of horrible things in her diet.
There's sugar, there's trans fat, there's saturated.
Okay.
But sodium, salt intake is the number one dietary risk factor for death on planet
or is the single worst thing about humanity's diet, but there's good news.
What about like, there's good news?
Himalayan salt or something like, is their death.
They're all the salts are the same, huh?
I know.
Yeah, but this is pink.
This is from the Himalayas.
This is rainbow color.
This has got a few minerals in it or something.
No, no, no, no.
No, it's all bad.
Oh, no.
But a little bit.
Can you have a little bit?
Well, so we want to stick under 1,500 milligrams a day.
That's the American Heart Association recommendation.
And to do that.
And most of it, and people are like, I don't add a lot of salt.
Most of our sodium intake comes from processed food.
70% of sodium intake is not the salt we add in the kitchen of the dining room.
It's in these processed foods.
These, you know, anything in a box, in a package, and anything, they add salt because it's
a cheap, it's a flavor enhancer, right?
In fact, that's why they add it to a lot of beans.
It's not a preservative.
It's in a can.
It's sterile.
It's because they want to make things taste good.
It's a cheap way to make things, you know, so you can't just eat one.
But the problem is, is that sodium increases risk, not just of high blood pressure, but so many
different leading killers, like kidney disease and ice ice ice, kind of on down the list.
Okay.
But so there's two ways we can go.
So there's lots of salt-free seasonings out there
and, you know, and I encourage me to explore all sorts of new, you know,
and people often, you know, there's all sorts of spices
that anyone would hurt them like saffron and, I mean, there's also,
so I explore the whole world out there and find some delicious taste.
And then the easy fix is switching to the salt substitute potassium salt.
Instead of sodium salt, sodium chloride, switch to potassium salt.
It's a potassium chloride.
It's just a natural mineral mine down to the ground just like the sodium chloride is.
And there are interventional studies.
I talked about one in the book where they took these five kitchens at a veteran retirement home
and randomized their kitchens into either continuing to salt with regular salt in the kitchen
or switching to a 50-50 blend of regular salt and potassium chloride.
So regular sodium chloride and potassium chloride.
And there was a tremendous 40% drop in cardiovascular disease death rates within a matter of years in the reduced sodium group.
In fact, their life expectancy at age 70 in between the two groups was 14 years.
Come on.
Meaning that just by switching to half potassium salt for which you wouldn't even be able to taste a difference,
they effectively made themselves 10 years younger when it came to the risk of premature death.
so something that so there's no downside there's no okay so now if you go with i'm encouraging people to
actually try to switch to full potassium salt rather than the one in the 50-50 blend but then you do
actually taste the difference there's this bitterness to potassium salt that you don't get otherwise
it's more apparent in some foods than others some foods you really can't taste the difference
but any amount that we can cut down and the only other caveat is you need to have your you need to have
Kidneys good enough to get rid of the excess potassium.
And so if you have kidney disease or if you have diabetes,
just because diabetes is such an increased risk of kidney disease,
is it so damaging to the kidneys?
Even if you don't know you have kidney disease,
if you have diabetes, you should first get your kidneys tested
before switching to potassium so.
And, you know, if you're over 70,
our kidney function does tend to decline over time.
So even if, as far as you know, your kidneys are fine,
If you're over 70, I would go super simple test.
You can just send the blood test, get your kidney function tested,
and just make sure your kidneys can handle the extra potassium.
But then if you give them the all clear, your kidneys are good.
Then you can get all the saltiness you want.
You can add extra, right?
You can make your popcorn as crazy stuff, right?
Tears to your eyes salty and with no harm.
Wow.
No harm.
So that's one of the really, one of the simplest tweaks in the book.
And it's like the leading cause of dietary risk factor for death.
Like the worst thing we can possibly eat.
And there's a simple fix to it.
Like, I'm too bad there wasn't like a potassium donut or something.
We just switch over and totally fine.
But that was one of the rare things that's like super easy to do.
So explain that one more time.
So if we have more potassium salt first, then we can have salt?
No, we're going.
So we're swapping out.
So instead of shaking on sodium, sodium chloride, we're shaking on potassium chloride.
There's a bunch of different brands.
as much as you want.
And you can have as much, as long as your kidney, kidneys are okay.
Okay, got you.
Right, you have as much as you want.
And so you can go any grocery store in the salt aisle.
There's all these salt substitutes and it says potassium chloride.
And there's some 50-50 blends.
If you want to start there and move, it's certainly better than adding pure sodium salt.
I'm going to try that.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm going to try that.
And the studies show.
Oh, right.
And not just it's associated with, but these interventional trials, these randomized control trials,
blinded, they don't know who's in which group until they break the code at the end.
And they say, oh my God, significantly less death and disability in the group, just cutting down on the sodium.
Eating the same things.
Eating the same.
Eating the same.
Exactly same things with one single tweak, just switching over what kind of salt they're using.
Amazing.
That's incredible.
Now, why have we heard about this?
Like, why isn't this on, like, blaring?
Because no one makes any money on it.
It's like third cheat, right?
I mean, it's, I think it's cheap.
I think it's more expensive than regular salt, but, like, I don't know, a much of regular salt.
Yeah, yeah.
So, but, I mean, there's just, no one's making money.
I mean, there's just not a lot of money made because it's just like a simple, like a, you know, you probably dig it up your own somehow.
And so there's just no, no, yeah, there's just not a lot of profit to be made.
And so, unfortunately, we don't hear a lot about it.
That is fascinating.
Okay.
So we've heard about legumes, number one.
Yeah.
Nuts, specifically walnuts being number two.
Palmful a day is my recommendation.
So one ounce.
What if you want to have more?
Oh, look, you can have more.
They're calorie, but they, the longevity benefits plateau out.
at one so you don't get more additional benefit um and they're kind of pricey and they're
calories right they're calorie dead so if you're really active it's not going to matter so 10 to 15 a
day so so it's 10 halves 10 halves comes out to be 30 grams or one house okay gosh so that's but
I mean look you're not key you just grab a handful and and um and every day um uh or or at least
three times a week I mean um the benefits are that great are that great and that's and that's that's that's
in the Adventist cohort, the Lomelan Inventus cohort,
they think it accounts for two years of extra life.
Come on.
It is one of the only foods.
There's only two foods that have ever been associated with
increase in literally years, plural, a single food.
And nuts is one of them.
How do they measure this that, no,
that nuts and beans are going to make you live longer?
Okay, so what you do is you take hundreds of thousands of people.
You follow them, their diseases, and their diets over time.
So you keep doing these dietary services, exactly what are you eating?
You can do these random call you up.
Okay, what do you eat in the last 24 hours?
Go through.
Sometimes you make them take pictures.
Sure, sure.
And so you fall with it.
And then you fall exactly, you know their doctors and so you know what have they been
diagnosis, what are they dying of, you know, what are their autopsy show?
And so you can follow them over time.
That's what's called observational research or epidemiological research.
Now you cannot prove cause and effect with that kind of research because there's confounding
factors.
maybe the people who are eating nuts
are health nuts
and maybe you know
nut eaters are working out more
maybe they have other
eating other healthy stuff
maybe instead of
instead what's the other thing
you're eating instead of nuts
maybe you're snacking on some really
it's some potato chips right
right and so maybe it's the benefit
it's not so much the nuts
but you're not eating potato chips right
so there's all these confounding factors
now there are statistical methods
that you can use to try to control for that
so you're basically
comparing nut eaters
who aren't smoking and exercise,
blah, blah, blah, to nut eaters that
the non-nut eaters that also don't smoke,
don't it? And so there be, and that's why you need
this big number. Right, right. And so like the
NIH, our peace study, the largest study
in history, we're talking over a half million people.
And so with that
that much data, you can crunch
the numbers and really kind of tease out,
wait a second, with all
these other factors controlled for, the
people are eating this many nuts
are living this much longer. That's pretty
crazy. And then you can turn
to the most powerful evidence we have, which are interventional trust, where you randomize
people to two groups, and you give them a smoothie, one with nuts and one flavored with nuts,
but no actual nuts in it. So you make people, you know, walnut flavored smoothie versus
an actual one of a smoothie, and neither of the researcher nor the experimental subjects actually
knows which is which. And you test it before, and so you really can't tell, right? And so then,
and then you can measure acute reactions. You can measure their artery function literally within
and hours of consumption, and you can see what's happening in their cholesterol, what's
happening. And so then you can, so these are kind of, these are called surrogate endpoints.
So what we'd like to know is let's randomize people to these smoothies for 10 years and see
you actually dies. Right, right, right. Okay, you can see how logistically that's difficult
to do. But what we can do is we know that, you know, the amount of cholesterol in our blood.
It's really good indicator, a risk factor for, you know, heart disease. And so anything that lowers
cholesterol, ah, okay, so we have the observational evidence.
show a decrease risk of heart disease among not eaters.
And then we have this short-term data.
So, look, it improves artery function, decrease the cholesterol.
No wonder we're seeing these endpoints in the opposite.
So you put all the evidence together.
You're like, wow, nuts really appear to be healthy foods, right?
That's how you do this kind of research.
So fascinating.
This is fascinating.
Oh, yeah, good stuff.
Good stuff.
Okay, we're still on the five things to eat every day.
Legumes, nuts, no salt.
No salt.
No salt.
No salt.
Unsalted.
Or we are keeping our salt intake as low as,
possible under 15,000 milligrams.
That's not no salt, but it's really, and mostly it's about, if you just avoid processed
foods, you're going to go a lot of way there.
Way less salt, yeah.
So eating fresh foods, yeah.
Number four and five, what would those be?
And so then it's eating more whole grains.
So you were having an oatmeal for breakfast, right, instead of baking and eggs.
What about the whole, you know, grain brain theory and then like how grains are bad for the brain?
Right, right.
You know, what type of grains affect the brain in a healthy way versus a bad way?
Yeah, the kernel of truth was kind of a pun for all grains, is refined grains.
Refined grains are terrible for us.
So when you take something like whole wheat and you strip away all the fiber and you're left with, you know, with white flour,
you do the same with brown rice to white rice or you kind of strip out the nutrition,
and you're left with basically kind of sheer carbohydrates.
So you can take something like a sugar bee where most sugar comes from these days, actually not from cane.
And you basically take all the nutrition where you're left with table sugar, right?
I'm assuming just like pure calories.
And look, you only have no value.
2,000 calories in the calorie bank every day.
You cannot be wasting your calories on these empty calorie foods.
And so where is, and most grain consumption in the country is sadly these refined grains.
So going after grains, it makes total sense because that's what people are reading.
But, of course, a whole grain's got caught in the kind of friendly fire.
Right, right.
So what are the grains we should be eating?
So, so, yeah, whole grains, ideally whole intact grains.
So like oat groats or steel cut oats, the more closely to how they kind of grew out of the ground, the better.
Or, you know, whole grain rye, you know, so we want whole as the first word in any kind of grain products.
Steel cut oats or whole oats.
Still cut oats.
Fantastic.
Or even oak groats, which are.
what steel cut oats are before they, yeah, oak groats is before you cut it,
an oak grope cut two or three times turns into steel cutouts.
But that's the original and that.
And if you haven't tried it, they are delicious, super chewy.
Oat Oat Oatts?
You buy, that's what, oh my God.
Someone turned me on to Oakroats and I was like, I'm never going back.
Really?
They're so good.
And they're so much more healthy and they're, they're, I can't come back to mushy oats.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Oak. Do you cook them?
Do you, so you cook them now, they take a long time to cook unless you have a pressure
cooker. So if you have one of these like electric pressure
cookers out of the market now, then
it's super quick. 20 minutes you press a button,
they're done. And you can make a whole meal. But it's like
oatmeal, it's like a... So it's like, it's like,
but it's, it's chewer, you're hard, you're
more delicious. And no matter how well you chew, what, the reason that's so much
better for you is because these bits
of, uh, go, you know, don't get absorbed in our small
intestine, end up in our large intestine and act as this
prebiotic bounty for a good gut bugs. But the more
you refine it, the
The more you process it, the more that gets absorbed high up in the small intestine,
and you're basically leaving your colon bugs to starve down there.
And that's why the more whole, the better.
That's where the dietary fiber is.
That's where the resistant starch is.
That's where we can feed our good gut bugs, and they feed us right back.
Wow.
Okay.
So that's number four.
What would be the fifth thing?
Okay.
The fifth thing are foods they want people to reduce.
They want people to reduce meat and soda as the two most important things to cut down.
in one's diet.
But interestingly, the top four
were actually things people aren't getting enough of,
right? Do you add those things?
Right. And so it's possible
that really the benefits of a plant-based diet
is less about what you're cutting out
and more about just including
the healthiest of healthy foods out there, right?
Yeah, I like that philosophy for people
because if you can include these things
in your system and your daily routine,
you're going to be less hungry for the other sugary process.
things. So maybe you have a little bit of it every now and then, but it's not 80, 90% of your
diet. Exactly. It's about, it's, that's the kind of behind the daily dozen thing. It's like,
but in the end of the day, if you actually check off all those boxes, you are kind of naturally
crowding out these less healthy options. And it turns out over 50% of calories in the United
States come from ultra-processed junk. Most of the food we eat are, is just junk. And so, right,
We're just kind of crowded saving for the special occasion, right?
Doesn't matter what we eat on our holidays, birthday, special occasions, but on a day-to-day basis,
we really should try to eat healthy.
And that is, you know, centering our diets around these natural foods from fields, not factories,
these kind of unprocessed food.
Now, I'm curious because we have about 50, 50, 50 men and women that watch and listen, right?
Amazing.
But I'm curious about what, if you could specifically create a super supplement
or a stack of supplements every single day for men that they took first thing in the morning.
Maybe three to five key ingredients, whether it was in a powder or liquid form,
what would be those things to have men be optimized, healthier, stronger, more vibrant men?
What would those ingredients be?
They would be foods.
They wouldn't be supplements.
They wouldn't put it in the pill.
Now, look, can you want to take some berries, free dry them, and make them into a powder?
fine. If you want to call that a supplement by just eating a spoonful of freeze-dried
strawberry powder, fine, do whatever you want. It really comes out of food. We can't, we are just
don't know enough about biology and the human organism to be able to tease out what it is
about these thousands of different food components, then we can extract it out and make money
in a pill. Now, if people don't, that doesn't keep people from dry. I tell you, right? That's how
you make money. Unfortunately, the system is set up with these kind of wrong incentives.
those, right? The worst thing to sell is produce, right? It goes bad. So the most profitable foods
are, unfortunately, the least healthy foods, right? I mean, what you want is a snack cake that sits
on the shelf for a few weeks. That's how you make money. Right, right, right. I mean, the produce
rots on the shelf. It's like the worst thing. It's like a week. It's good for a week. It's a loss
leader for these. It gets people into the store, so they'll buy the really, the stuff that actually
makes profit. If you want to make money, you sell brown sugar water in a bottle. It's like
pure profit. It's all money.
So it's not like the head of these soda companies.
They're sitting around thinking, how can I contribute to the childhood obesity epidemic?
Right.
They're just like, how do I maximize, you know, profit for my shareholders in the next quarter?
Sure.
And anyone who doesn't think that way gets a conscience, they'll be booted out the next day and replaced by somebody you will.
Right.
I mean, and it's not, there's not some diabolical thing.
It's literally just that's how the system works.
Sure, sure.
And so, like, even a sweet potato grower is not going to put an ad on TV for sweet potatoes because they're not branded.
Like, you'll just buy their competitor's sweet potato.
Like, the system is not set up.
You're never going to see an ad for sweet potatoes on the Super Bowl because there's just not enough money to be made.
Well, pistachios has done a good job.
And avocado, wasn't there an avocado one, too?
Wasn't there?
Yeah, but pistachio nuts have, like, blown up.
They branded pistachio nuts somehow, right?
They're everywhere.
Look, look, I'm all in favor.
I want big broccoli to swoop it.
and start putting up billboards everywhere.
Exactly, right?
Right.
If only they had the money, right.
But you mentioned prebiotics being like a key thing for everyone, I guess.
So what would be, you know, if you were to create, like if someone was going to get three to five supplements, let's say, or the nutrients that they want to have, whether it's through foods or maybe they didn't have access to those foods, but they can get these prebiotics.
What would these ingredients be for men to optimize their hormones, their muscle growth?
or stamina, all these different things.
Yeah, so why not, look, if it's the prebiotics that are good for you, why not take
prebiotic pills?
Why not just take a prebiotic powder, right?
Problem is that, you know, we talk about dietary fiber, but actually that term dietary
fiber is literally covers thousands of different compounds, right?
And so there's actually thousands of different dietary fibers, and they each feed the growth
of different probiotic, good bugs in our gut, and so it's actually this diversity of all
these kind of this indigestible plant carbohydrates that's what dietary fiber is
indigestible by our small intestine makes it down to our large intestine so we cannot
be replicated and so things so there's been experiments using something like
cillium always a very common common fiber supplement it can help with relaxation
help with like releasing the stool regularity right but does not have all these side
benefits because it's not actually digestible fermentable by a good gut
bugs it just kind of goes through us and
And so we have yet to capture the complexity of the natural food matrix in actual kind of pill form as much as people have tried.
And so, yeah, any time some, you know, new study comes out saying berries are great for you and it's probably these anthocyan and pigments, the bright colorful pigments in berries, then instantly supplement manufacturers like, boom, there's like anthesin and supplements at every dose possible.
Sure.
Of course.
But the food form.
of these nutrients is the best form to get them.
And there have actually been studies that have actually put things head at the head.
So it's like, oh, I bet tomatoes are good because lycopene that reg pigment, that, you know,
that's why, you know, people, men who eat more tomato products have lower rates of prostate
cancer.
It's probably the lycopene.
But when you actually give people lycine supplements, it doesn't work.
Wow.
And so it's like, okay, well, there's thousands of other things in tomatoes.
Let's try something else, right?
But it doesn't stop people from making lycopene supplements.
It's kind of all the ingredients combined in the tomato or the apple or whatever that gives you the full compounds that helps your body digest.
It's a symphony.
And in fact, there's actually synergy.
So when you take there's a famous study that was done on pomegranate and you can fractionate out the pomegranate into, you know, different based on kind of different compound weights.
And when so when you give, you kind of drip one component of pomegranates on cancer cells going, human cancer cells growing in peatriots, you know, drops your growth like 20% and you do another combat.
But then you add together and you have, and one plus one is greater than two in that they
somehow work together and they should have greater drop than all the individual components.
So really the whole, I mean, I would like if there was a supplement, if there was a pill,
and there certainly are supplements out there that help people getting in and out of with sunshine
and take vitamin D and alcoholics, having pregnant women have certain, I mean, there's absolutely
needs for supplements, right?
but there's in terms of longevity in terms of like I went through and I went into this book thinking I would be recommending some of these supplements that have made a lot of news just because you know I'd heard such positive things about them but when you look in the literature and I would love to because it's like that's such a great hook like take this one supplement and it's got to do X I would love to be able to say that but they fell one by one boom boom boom but what I did find is that these just ran
foods I had never heard about like cardamom or you know strawberries one example or um or mushrooms
have these things that I and there's just like normal natural foods have these extraordinary effects
it's kind of not as sexy you can't just like take it a little bill but in one hand look it's it's
delicious like you're good I mean it's not as convenient right right but again it really comes down
the food and it's just not a lot of money to me then it's just and so we just don't hear about these
studies because there's just no corporate budget driving is for motion.
Yeah.
This is fascinating, man.
This is powerful stuff.
I've recently heard more about glucose.
This is becoming, you know, more popularized online or at least talked about in the
media more as kind of like the more your glucose spikes throughout the day, the faster
you age as well.
I don't know if you've seen anything in the studies around that.
No, no.
And I'm also heard from some experts that either having a little bit of vinegar in the
morning or before a meal helps decrease the spike in glucose. Is that an accurate finding that
you've seen too? I've got a whole chapter on glycation, one of the aging pathways, and recommend
two teaspoons of vinegar with every meal. That's one of the, absolutely. And one of the reasons is
because it, what does this am, something called AMPK, because the vinegar is acetic acid in water by
definition. And the, by metabolizing the acetic acid requires energy and the energy drain actually
bumps up AMPK, which is boosted by exercise, boosted by calorie restriction is one of the
kind of anti-aging pathways. And we can get that boost by just simple vinegar. And it decreases
our blood sugars, decreases body fat. You can randomize people to get vinegar, to get to the
did vinegar drinks. Sure. That kind of gross. But they used acetic acid versus another kind of
acid. Tasted exactly the same, but it wasn't acetic acid. And saw a significant difference in
visceral body fat, which is the most dangerous body fat, coiled around our internal organs,
infiltrating our organs. And they did CT scans.
It was, I mean, they're conscious people randomized to different kinds of, different kinds
of, well, one vinegar or placebo vinegar, and they did this and saw significant loss.
Pounds of body fat different, same amount of calories. Same amount of calories. Just by having
vinegar? Vinegar. Now, the problem with the problem with the vinegar strategy is that it gets
cleared from our system within 46 hours.
That's why you really got to do it at every meal
if you want to get that constant boost. Every meal?
I know. Okay, so how do you do it? How do you do it?
Tell me. So you can like...
You put it in a tall glass of water. You put a little bit, yeah.
So put in some tea.
Deluded. Put in some water. You've got to do. In fact, it can be
dangerous taking straight. You can burn your esophagus.
So very important, do not
drink vinegar straight.
Wow. Sprinkle on a salad, sprinkling on a salad. And
there's all these flavored balsamics
out there. So with savory sweet,
there's like dark chocolate balsamic.
There's Italian seasoning, balsamic.
So you can get either curry, there's ginger, there's, um,
or you can just do apple cider vinegar.
Totally apple cider, straight.
In fact, in fact, you can get the benefits from white distilled vinegar that they use
for cleaning the bathroom floor.
I mean, so because it's the acetic acid, but just in terms of making things flavorful,
making things fun, there's ways to add it to your meals.
I mean, it sounds kind of gross to begin with, but you just kind of get, you just find
creative ways to include vinegar and it has significant effects on long-term blood sugar control.
And on fat loss, too.
And on fat loss.
And not just any kind of fat loss, visceral fat loss.
I mean, people hate that jiggly superficial fat, but that actually has very little metabolic
implications.
You can do massive liposuction on people, get rid of that, get literally over a dozen pounds
of that superficial fact, no effect on metabolism, no effect on insulin resistance, no effect
on triglycerized, no effect.
If you lost that many pounds of fat, period, like if you were doing exercise, you're doing
better diet, you would get tons of benefits.
but that superficial fact that we hate seeing in the mirror,
that's not what we should worry about.
It's the internal fat.
Look, if you want it for cosmetic purposes, whatever.
But if that internal visceral fat called around our organs under the abdominal
musculature that's kind of bulging out the belly, that's the serious stuff.
The good news is your body's smart enough to know that's the most dangerous fat.
And when you lose weight, that's the first fat to go.
So the preference, that's why people lose fat.
They're like, why is my arm still jiggly?
I've been losing all this weight.
It's because your body's smart enough to.
know, look, we'll get there. Let's do the important stuff first.
Wow. So what would you say the main keys of losing fat, visceral fat and kind of the
external fat? Well, the single intervention that created the greatest loss of body fat that
didn't restrict calories. Obviously, you can lock someone in a closet. You can lose. Starve someone.
Right. Or you can change someone to a treadmill. Right. Okay. But that no.
exercise component and no calorie restriction, no portion restriction, eat as much as you want,
the most effective body fat at six months and 12 months was this whole food plant-based diet,
was centering your diets around, and it's really kind of a calorie density factor.
I mean, these healthy foods.
It's not a restriction.
Eat as much as you want.
Right, but there's so few calories per pound per mouthful, per plate in these foods
because it's like you can eat a wheelbarrow of leafy.
You couldn't even maintain your weight.
I mean, you literally could not fit enough in your stomach.
You only have, you can only fit about a quart of food in your stomach at a time.
And so, like, you know, that's, you know, you can get 2,000 calories.
You ate, you know, two pines of strawberry ice cream.
That would fill up your stomach.
You'd be full, and you'd get over 2,000 calories.
All the calories you need for the day.
To do that same thing with strawberries, 44 cups.
44 cups of strawberries to get 2,000 calories.
Like, you couldn't even fit.
That's like filling your stomach to bursting 11 times a day.
You couldn't even do it physically, right?
And that's this concept of calorie density.
And so that's why, you know, something like oil, you know, people drizzle oil on something.
A lot of calories.
That is the single most calorie-dense food on the flight.
Even butter has a little water in it so it doesn't have that much calories.
One table is for 120 calories.
So you drizzle it on, you wouldn't even taste it.
I mean, you'd see it'll be a little glistening or something.
You just add to 120 calories.
What, are you crazy?
For that same 100 calories, you could add like, you know, two cups of blackberries or something.
That would actually fill you up a little bit, right?
And think all the nutrition you'd get with that.
that, right? Instead, I mean, oil may have some fat solid
and it seems a little vitamin E or something, but I mean,
the nutrition has really been stripped away, right?
Wow. And so, and so the caloric density. So by staying away
from junk food, which is designed to have maximum calories
per bite, you know, can find the fat and the sugar to just
absolutely like you have teeny little, you know, you get a hundred calories,
just a teeny little bit, you have these massive platefuls of food,
eat all you want and not have to worry about it. And that's really, and then
you're just getting mountains of nutrition for
actually very few calories, and so you can say weight loss in a healthy way.
I mean, you know, the goal of weight loss is not to fit into a skinnier casket, right?
Not to make it lighter for your pallbearers.
Right, right.
We want healthy.
How about we lose weight in a way that doesn't work with your health, you know?
Wow.
Yeah, and when you get these calorie dense foods with all the nutritional value, it sounds like
there's so much healing properties within these foods that I'll.
allow your system to self-regulate, your skin to recover, your gut to recover, your brain to start
functioning better, isn't that right?
And calorie dilute foods, not calorie-dilute foods.
The calorie-dilute-dense foods are the junk food, right?
So not calorie-dense, but calorie...
We want nutrient-dense.
Nutrient dense, lots of nutrition per calorie.
And so what has more nutrition per calorie that anything on planet Earth, these dark green leafy
vegetables, right?
Massive amounts of nutrition.
Actually, for very little, it has those nitrates.
Those athletic performance enhancing ergogenic nitrates
actually helps slow our metabolic rate
and the candle that burns half is bright,
burns twice as long.
That's the other food associated with literally living years longer
dark green leafy vegetables, nuts, dark green leafy vegetables.
And we think it's because the nitrates,
normally you only get that kind of metabolic slowing
with our resting metabolic rate
with severe caloric restriction.
But instead of walking around starving all the time,
you can just eat a big salad.
This is exciting.
This is exciting.
So we mentioned intermittent fasting, you know, eat in the morning.
Don't skip breakfast if you're going to do that.
Most important meal of the day.
Really?
Most important meal of the day.
This is what doctors were saying for many years.
Yes.
Don't skip breakfast.
But then in the last seven years, everyone's saying doctors were wrong.
Yeah, yeah.
Skip breakfast.
Allow the body to have autophagy, allow the cells.
I know, I know.
Extend the window where you're not eating as long as you can.
Right.
And that's been the new science.
So the new studies that have been out where, you know,
skipping breakfast is actually better for you because it's boosting testosterone.
It's doing all these other things.
So what?
I talk about that backlash and that back and forth.
I actually have videos about it.
It's so funny because you start out the video and be like, yeah, breakfast.
And they're like, oh, okay, breakfast.
Oh, and then we're back to the beginning.
It's so funny.
And so many things in the book like that, like weed germ or something.
That's like, didn't that go away in like the 70s, right?
Like the healthish?
And then it's like, oh, then we were, then there's this thing called speridine.
It's most construing in wheat germ, out of all things.
All of a sudden, wheat germ is like back on the menu.
But it's just so funny.
There's like this, we had some kind of ancient wisdom, even before we knew why that
did actually support these food.
So, yeah, no, it turns out.
Now, it's true about that feeding window.
We do want to try to squeeze it.
But critically important is when we're putting that window.
In the morning and that lunch.
Early time restrictors because of the circadian rhythm.
That's it.
You got it.
So what is the difference between, I guess, bad cells and zombie cells?
Oh, this is cellular senescence.
So this is one of the aging pathways that cover 11 aging pathways,
kind of our 11 best opportunities for slowing the sands of time,
ending each with kind of impractical takeaways.
This is the part one of the book.
It is kind of the nerdy section.
It goes really deep into kind of the interesting biology mechanisms.
But, you know, really do kind of like, okay, but here's the bottom line.
You can skip all this.
You know, this is the foods to eat.
This is the activity to do, blah, blah, blah.
So, yeah, in the silhoust, in essence chapter, very fascinating.
So our cells in our body only divide about 100 times before they stall out.
The so-called hayflick limit.
We used to think cells just kind of, you know, divided forever.
But they only divide 50 times.
And this is good because that's a protection against cancer.
We want cells to naturally kind of put themselves out to pasture,
being replaced by new cells from the stem cells.
Right.
And, you know, the cells can become damaged along the way.
Okay, so the only, and so at the end of those about 50 doublings, what the cells do is they release these inflammatory mediators, which signals the immune system to come and kill them, basically come and wipe them out.
This is basically their kind of little suicide way.
Sure, sure, sure.
They're like, okay, so they release these inflammatory compounds, signal the immune system, and then comes and clears out these so-called zombie cells that are no longer participating in the body actively spewing this.
what's called senescence associated sapsed.
But, okay, the problem is, this works great when we're young.
Unfortunately, our immune system starts to decline with age.
And so what happens is our immune system's ability to clear out these cells
decline such that our body's tissues get littered with these senescent cells spewing out inflammation.
And one of the reasons why levels of inflammation climb with age.
So you can do these kind of blood tests of systemic inflammation like C-reactive protein
and, you know, tumor necrosis factor, I.L. 6, et cetera.
And they all go up.
And so it's a term inflamaging.
And a big part of this is these cells, which our body should get rid of, but unfortunately,
our ability to do that declines with age.
And so, two-pronged approach.
First, we prevent cells from going prematurely senescent.
So they should make it to 50, but if they say,
suffer damage to their DNA from free radicals, from oxidative damage to their DNA as a protective
mechanism because it could cause mutations or something, they kind of go out to pasture early.
And so we can decrease oxidatives just by flooding our body with antioxidant, rich foods,
like to berries and greens and really healthy foods.
Okay.
So one, so we prevent the premature senescence.
That's the first thing.
And the second is we look for senolytic compounds, ways to clear these zombie cells from our bodies.
There's been a number of drugs that have been put to the test.
Unfortunately, these drugs have kind of some severe side effects.
And so there are certain medical conditions in which synethin cells play a key role,
in which case the benefit risk analysis might actually support uses some of these toxic drugs.
But for kind of the general public, we're really left with senilitic compounds in natural foods.
There are three of them that have been shown to clear senescent cells in the body.
One is facetin, which is really only for.
found one place in concentrated form. That's the strawberries. So that's why I end up in the book
in that chapter recommending fresh frozen or freestried strawberries into your daily diet.
Now, normally I would have put, like if you're putting some on your own meal or something,
I would have put like blackberries. Blackberries have five times the antioxidants is strawberry.
So look, if you like them both, you know, why not? But I didn't know about Phasetan,
which is really only found strawberries. So if you're not any strawberries, you're really not
getting into your daily diet. And so I've been eating a lot more strawberries.
Okay. The second, some called Quercetin.
Corsetton is found in onions, hail, tea, and capers.
And actually play a role in Mediterranean diet help.
And that helps explain these remarkable stages where they give people onions
and see remarkable benefits, literally within an hour.
You know, you can randomize people eating onions.
In fact, you randomized people to eat high quercetin onions
versus bread to be low quercetin onions and show that it does appear
to be this one compound.
And so, of course, there's quercet and supplements everywhere.
It's not clear.
We don't know.
What's the best onion?
Well, it's, so it's actually lowest in the, in the sweet onions.
So like the, of course.
Like the tastiest onions, it's a low amount.
So like the, okay, but so yellow onions have more.
Red onions have the most.
So red onions are better than white.
So red onions really are the best.
So look, and look, you can basically, anything you can do with a red onion, you can do
with red onion.
So it's like, there's just no excuse.
Same thing with cabbage.
If you're making something with cabbage, don't go for green cabbage.
Go for red or purple cabbage.
Has these anthocine in berry pigments.
One of the cheapest sources of these berry pigments is in red purple cabbage, right?
Super cheap.
And you get those benefits for brain function, eyesight, artery function, inflammation, blood sugar, cholesterol.
You get those berry benefits in this kind of savory form.
Is raw or cooked red onions better?
Either way.
Either way.
Can you eat too much?
I'll wait, your breath,
your partner may.
In fact, you need to have any, I mean,
your entire, your sweat can start, I mean, you can
really, you can really start as well,
like, but has there become like too much,
like, you know, if you have a half an onion,
there's only, there's only a concern in, in supplement
form. So, the supplement manufacturers
come out, where it's like, you could not eat this
many onions, and then we're playing
with fire. But yeah, there's never been any.
In fact, some of these benefits, I'm seeing these
remarkable clinical benefits were seen after
eating like one, two onions a day. I don't know how one
does that without. Wow. I mean, that's, that's a lot. But you can get benefit even from
literally a teaspoon of chopped onion. You can get, you can get, you can get, put it on your food
and just eat it. Right, right. So, and so, and this is all the Allian family vegetables. So it can
be like green onions or, you know, so like scallions or onions, garlic. It's all in this kind of
same family and they have these, these, this beneficial compound. The third compound, it's a
tough one to get. It's called Pippolongamine, only found really in one place, which is something
called Pauley or long pepper.
It's in the black pepper family.
You get in Middle Eastern spice stores.
And it's basically kind of tastes like black pepper
with a little kind of sechuan heat to it.
But it's a scintic compound.
You really can't find anywhere else.
So I encourage people to put some of that
in their pepper grinder to add that to the Daily Dine.
That's amazing.
Now, you went to medical school, right?
Oh, yeah.
In medical school, they don't teach you this stuff.
They don't even teach you the basics.
Right.
They don't teach you about nutrition.
They don't teach you about foods.
None of that, right?
Maybe there's, like, one hour class on this stuff I hear from other doctors, right?
So how did you get into this world of nutritional science as well when most people today look at doctors skeptically when they're speaking about this because they think, oh, they're not a nutritionist.
They're not a scientist around foods.
So how did you get into this world?
Yeah, yeah.
Absolutely.
In fact, having an MD.
after your name, is basically advertising the world that you know nothing about nutrition,
that you are completely ignorant about the entire field of nutrition.
So the average doctor these days gets four hours of nutrition training.
Out of thousands of hours of preclone instruction, I actually chose the medical school
with the largest nutrition training in the country.
They actually have a nutrition school at Tufts, 19 hours.
But that's the most.
Out of thousands of hours.
Right.
And most of it is basic biochemistry of vitamins and like scurvy, polygraphic, stuff we don't
even see anymore.
and it's like crum cycle.
So it's not actually clinical nutrition,
using nutrition diet to actually prevent
a rest of reverse disease.
That's missing in even those few hours
that people get.
Okay.
And so then doctors graduate
without this powerful tool
in their medical toolbox.
To actually heal.
To actually help people.
Instead, you know, for about 80%
that walks into the primary care
doctor's office are these chronic diseases,
lifestyle diseases, like the high blood pressure,
just type 2 diabetes,
and the obesity and the heart disease.
And yes, we have drugs that can slow down the rate at which our diabetics go blind and lose their kidney function and lose their lower limbs.
But not reversing it.
But not actually make our patients better.
That's why we went to medical school, right?
We want to actually heal people.
But instead, I mean, it's just so frustrating because unless you treat the cause, the underlying cause, you're not actually going to reverse the disease.
The root.
Right, the root cause.
But that's the exciting thing about lifestyle medicine.
Okay, so how did I get into this old lifestyle medicine thing?
Proud to be a founder of American College of Lifestyle Medicine,
now the fastest growing medical specialty in the country.
Very excited.
Okay, it all started with my Korean mother.
I was just a kid.
When my grandma was sent home in a wheelchair, basically to die with end-stage heart disease,
sure I did so many bypassed surgery, she basically kind of run out of plumbing at some point.
So confined to a wheelchair.
crushing chest pain. Her life was over at age 65. Oh, man. And then she heard about this guy
Nathan Pridikin, one of our early lifestyle medicine pioneers. And what happened next is that she
detailed in Pridikin's biography. It talks about Francis Greger, my grandmother. They wheeled her in
and she walked out. Though she was given her medical death sentence at age 65, thanks to a healthy
diet, she was able to enjoy another 31 years on this planet until age 9.
to continue to enjoy her six grandkids, including me.
That's why I went to medicine.
That's why I practiced lifestyle medicine,
why I started the website, Nutrition Facts.
org, why I wrote the book, How Not to Die,
why all the proceeds from all my books
are donated directly to charity.
I just want to do for everyone's family
what Pridican did for my family.
Wow.
Now, did you think about that going into medical school?
Absolutely.
That was a...
So you knew going to medical school.
They're not teaching me the things I still need to know.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So when did you learn all the stuff about lifestyle, nutrition, diet, foods?
Was it all after medical school?
No, the big pivot was in 1990, before medical school even started, and that was the publication
of the Lifestyle Heart Trial from Dean Ornish and colleagues.
So what Pritkin was doing, he was reversing heart disease by the thousands.
But back then, we did not have the technology to actually look inside people's arteries.
So it was a clinical diagnosis.
You have chest pain when you walk upstairs, you got heart disease.
Okay, so we put you on drugs and we cut your chest open, we do bypass, we stents, whatever.
Okay, then Pridicant would take these people and then put them on his diet and lifestyle program
and all of a sudden chest pain goes away.
And so he reversed heart disease.
Now the medical profession was like, no, no, no, heart disease gets worse, worse, worse until you die.
That's what's the thinking at the time.
And so if your patient is fine, he never had heart disease in the first place, right?
It must have just, right, it must have been something else.
And so that was, so he was kind of remained on the French until
Dr. Dean Ornish came along.
He used something called quantitative angiography
where you inject a radio pig die
into the arteries, right, you do these x-rays,
you can actually see the inside in the arteries.
And so for the first time,
was able to prove the reversal of heart disease,
opening up arteries without drugs,
without surgery, just a healthy plant-based diet
and exercise.
And so that was really,
and it was published in the most prestigious
medical journal in the world.
So it was like unassailable science, randomized controlled trial.
Of course, the people in the control group who were told to continue to eat, whatever their doctors told them they continue to get worse.
That's what happens normally.
Whereas you've got this reversal on average in those.
And so it's the only diet ever been proven to reverse the progression of heart disease in the majority of patients.
Wow.
So it's like, look, if that's all the plan basis guy could do, reverse the number one killer of men and women.
Like, shouldn't that be kind of the default diet until proven otherwise?
And the fact that can also be a cell effect in preventing and resting or reversing
other leading killers like high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes, which silly make the case
for, you know, plant-based eating really kind of unassailable at this point.
And so, but then here I am.
So now, I had already knew about this from my grandma, right?
But here it wasn't black and white publishing, you know, the most prestigious medical journal.
And so, you know, you just imagine all of medicine changing.
Here we are decades later.
It was 1990s, over three decades later, hundreds of thousands of Americans continue to die
from heart disease, a preventable, arrestable, sometimes even reversible condition, which we've
known about for decades, just because this is yet to really penetrate into the medical field,
and that's because of the incentives are wrong, actually, you know, hospitals make money
cutting people open.
And these are the golden goof for big farming.
to lifestyle drugs, where instead of 10 days on an antibiotic to save your life, it's take a drug
every single day for the rest of your life.
That's how you make money, right?
But the only drug you need that for is these lifestyle diseases, wherever you continue to treat
yourself like this.
Well, of course, you need something.
And look, if you refuse to improve your life, then these drugs can be life-saming.
I mean, so, but even better, why not try to reverse the disease by treating the underlying cause
in the first place?
finished medical school did you start going right into this nutritional side of learning as well
well so yeah so i started out in clinical practice like but then i realized like even though you know
i don't know how many people you could pack into a day you know how many people are i reaching right
so people are dying everywhere and so then i so i started you know giving lectures um and going around
to medical schools and trying to train the kind of next generation of doctors but even then like
how many people can you reach you know you reach hundreds right so that i
started, it was actually so long ago, it was like a VHS series,
we started making, well, when I tape these lectures, right,
and then send out these VHS days.
We started into the DVDs until finally was able to put it online.
Yeah, of course.
And then it can reach millions with that same kind of medicine.
So now, I'm so, I had to give up the clinical practice.
So I feel like I'm still practicing medicine,
but just on kind of a broader scale, writing, research, speaking,
all that, just getting this information out there.
It's like, in a certain sense, we really don't need any more research.
Like, we have enough to, like, save so many,
lives and there's always unanswered questions. I love the research, but we have enough now
to really reverse the course of the way our country's headed. So it was a lot of your learning
then based on just studying research papers and clinical trials and then kind of assimilating
the research and say, hey, this is the findings. Why don't we start trying these things with
patients and see the results? Yeah. So it's all really the gold standard of what we know in medicine
and comes from this so-called pure-viewed medical literature, right?
So these are the studies in these peer-review medical journals
where at least this is kind of bar to entry.
Like on the Internet, you can say anything.
Right, right.
Earth is flat, whatever, right?
And look, you can say there's crazy things published
in the peer-reviewed literature as well.
But at least there's kind of a bar to entry
where fellow scientists actually look at your work
with kind of a skeptical eye
and make sure you're just like not totally making stuff
out a whole cloth, right?
And so that's where we look to.
And so there's been decades, decades of this,
this mountain of research building up,
but it just hasn't kind of gotten over
to the general public, again,
just because there's not money to be made.
Right, so new blockbuster drug,
oh my God, there is a press release,
there is ads on TV.
Everybody knows about the new drug,
which could have even a fraction of the benefit as the,
and so I feel like we're in a very similar situation
to kind of smoking in the 50s.
In the 50s, we had already literally...
Doctor recommended cigarettes.
Decades of research, starting in the 30s,
linking one cancer in smoking.
And so yet, the average per capita cigarette consumption in the 1950s,
4,000 cigarettes a year,
meaning the average person walking around smoked half a pack a day.
Average person.
Most doctors smoked.
The media was telling people to smoke.
The American Medical Association said smoking in moderation.
That was fine, right?
Right?
And so by the time, 1964, when the first surgeon general's report came out,
and smoking rates went up, up, up until 1990s.
1964, then in one of the most remarkable public health victories of all time, basically,
smoking rates have come down every year since and down this tumbling lung cancer rates.
It's just the most beautiful graphs in all public health.
And what happened in 1964, the first Surgeon General's report, just this acknowledgement
by the powers that be that, okay, yeah, smoking isn't good for you.
And they cited 7,000 studies, right?
So you'd think maybe after the first 6,000 studies could give people a lot of it.
heads up or something right so but up until so i feel like we're in the same
situations where there's this absolute amount of evidence it just has yet to kind of make it into
the public consciousness make it kind of bypass these barriers into and so that was really like
that's my role is i'm going to take right it's not it's not me saying this right it's just like
this is what the established science is already there but there's just kind of no sexy money to be
made right and it doesn't make those headlines no one wants to see broccoli on the cover
sure sure right it's just like it's like has everything working against it except who profits
the people i mean you the people profit yeah your family profits i mean longevity profits so that and so
and so that it's just crossing that gap getting that information out to the public i mean you
mentioned that 1964 was when this you know they came out and said smoke is essentially bad for you
right um 60 years ago is that right 60 years ago we it seems to me like 80 percent of
of Americans know that sugar and processed foods
are not healthy for you.
It seems to me by now there's enough information out there
that people at least have that awareness.
But they haven't stopped the consumption or the behavior.
What do you think it's gonna take for people
to change the behavior and the habits
to consume healthier foods so they can actually live longer
as opposed to suck to the addiction of feeling
tasting good. Well, you know, towards the end there with the smoking, in the smoking crisis,
most smokers had an inkling that smokers not good for you. But what the industry's tact was
was just to muddy the waters. They knew they were going to lose in the end. They're going to confuse
you, right? And so, in fact, there's this famous memo which was uncovered in the tobacco trials,
this internal memo called Doubt is Our Product. So this is a PR company that worked with
with Phil Morris to, we don't have to convince people smoking is good for you.
We lost it.
Okay, all we have to do is introduced out.
Yeah, maybe it causes lung cancer.
Maybe it doesn't, right?
And that's all you need for someone who's addicted to smoking.
To be like, well, look, they say it's okay, right?
And so now it's the same thing, right?
It's like we are bombarded by ads for fast food, for junk food, for candy, for soda, right?
At the same time, the science is so clear, but we're getting these mixed messages.
and you know when you're everybody wants to hear good news about their bad habits right and so when
there's like well this person says alcohol's good for you i mean right and so even if all these
people are and so that's all you need is that is and then you just kind of continue down your path right
and so that's what the 1964 did was just like okay the scientific consensus now
anyone who's telling you that smoking is not bad for you is a paid shill of the industry
And it's like, this is the established science.
Although, you know, it's hard to imagine that even happening these days.
What if the CDC, the government came out and said, you know, yeah, it turns out that
processed meat, baking them, hot dogs, lunch meat, we determined that they increase the risk
of colorectal cancer.
In fact, it's a known human carcinogen.
It's true.
Group one carcinogen, meaning we are as sure that processed meat causes colorectal cancer
as we are that plutonium causes cancer and tobacco causes cancer and asbestos cause cancer.
we are sure causes the cancer.
And yet, you know, we're sending kids to school with a baloney sandwich or something, right?
We wouldn't maybe smoke around our kids now, but we're sending, and colorectal cancer
is the single deadliest cancer among non-smoker.
That's our number one can.
If you don't smoke, you're number one cancer nemesis in terms of dying to colorectal cancer.
And, right, and we, okay.
So, so this science has been established, has not yet to.
But what if the CDC, the government finally came out, put it on their website, okay, yeah,
process made we probably shouldn't be feeding this to people in today's media world you know back
then like we like to i mean certainly me i like to think of the internet is this right democratizing
force like you know we all this idealistic view of like now like the truth is going to float to the
surface right if everybody in free marketplace of ideas right um and so you know back in the night
back in the 1950s tobacco could absolutely control the message they can pay off the doctors in fact
the American Medical Association, even after 1964.
Even after the Surgeon General report came out,
they refused to endorse it.
And it turns out later, they got a $10 million check
for the tobacco industry.
Wow.
Which they didn't disclose.
Anyway, okay, so look, you could pay off the doctors.
You can control the message.
You control the media, right?
Now, which is in part good.
There's no longer that kind of monopolistic control of the message, right?
But there's confusion.
But what is replaced with with confusion.
So even if these days we had the quote-unquote authorities, the experts that came out and said X, Y, Z, a lot of people wouldn't believe them.
Now, for a good reason in many cases, because there's been so many, you know, terrible, you know, you know, crises with drugs that were promoted and then turned out to be terrible and pulled from the market.
And look, all the authorities were telling people to use these drugs.
Anyway, so it's hard to imagine a similar kind of aha moment with diet that we saw with.
this kind of clear surge in general thing.
And so there's always going to be the sugar pushers.
And there's always going to be these people that are muddying the waters,
just enough to introduce enough doubt that people will kind of throw up their hands
and eat whatever craps put in front of them,
which is how the industry makes money.
I've got a few questions for you left,
but I'm excited for people to check out your book,
How Not to Age, the Scientific Approach to Getting Healthy as You Get Older,
And I think a lot of people think about, you know, how do we, how do I make my biological age, right?
Yeah.
Reverse, essentially.
You can't reverse chronological age.
Right, right.
But how do we make our cells younger, right?
How do we make our body ourselves younger?
Is that the difference between chronological and biological age?
Exactly, right.
The calendar age just keeps going on a four until we get a DeLorean or something.
But then there's the, right, but just because we happen to have this many births.
days doesn't necessarily mean our body is functioning as if it could be worse.
We have accelerated aging and that we really should have the heart and the kidneys and the liver
of a 50-year-old, but they're actually functioning like a 60-year-old.
We actually have the muscle mass of a 60-year-old.
We actually have the – or, alternately, we take care of ourselves and we have tremendous
power of this leeway or, yeah, I've had 50 birthdays, but, you know, I have the aerobic
capacity of a 40-year-old.
I mean, all these been – and so that's this difference.
lots of different ways to measure of biological aging.
And it's just a fascinating field of science.
But the bottom line is that we really have tremendous control over that leeway.
That's cool.
And literally just, and it's never too late.
I mean, so there's the first days that came out is like, okay, well, if you started age 20 and you do the X, Y, and Z by age 50, you'll have all these benefits.
And it's like, yeah, that's great, but you should have told me that 30 years ago, right?
Sure, sure.
But then they found, wait a second, even in the 80s, this is the latest that's been done,
but even in people's 80s, there's still literally years left on the table, healthy years left
on the table just by simple, basic lifestyle changes.
And so those few things I mentioned before, not being obese, not smoking, regular aerobic
exercise and more fruits and vegetables can over the subsequent four years, if you're between
the ages of 45 and 64, decrease your risk of all cause mortality by 4%.
40%. Wow. Meaning your risk of dying by anything over the next four year. By 2028, you want to
reduce your risk by 40%, just do those four things. I mean, that's, that's, I mean, so that's
like, we have tremendous power over, you know, look, you still get by a boss. I mean, there's lots
of things. Sure, sure, sure, sure. So don't wear a seatbelt, smoke alarms, all that, right?
But in terms of what's the most common cause of death, we actually have so much control.
And unfortunately, we just don't hear that message. What are the four main things?
Okay, so not smoking, not being obese, regular exercise, which really comes out to like 22 minutes a day, which was what the cutoff point was, and five daily servings and fruits of vegetables, minimum, right? And that's not a lot. And we're not talking about cutting out meat. We're not talking about any of these like dramatic changes, not all or nothing. Like, just like these really core kind of, yeah, we heard about five. But it's like, wow. I mean, that makes this massive amount of difference. Now, you want to go beyond.
on that and like you know tweak even further yeah we got also there's certain
fruits and vegetables that are even better than other versus but right right let's not get
lost in the weeds here let's do the simple things that's that that'll get us most of
the way there wow this is fascinating Michael I'm so grateful for your your
excitement and passion around this and your wisdom and knowledge a couple fun of
question this one this one is something I ask everyone towards the end of our
conversations it's called the three truths so I like you to imagine a hype
You get to live as long as you want to live.
Oh, ah.
You get to continue to write all the books and speak, you know,
200 times a year like you do a lot of the times to spread this message.
And you experience life the way you want to.
All your dreams come true.
But it's the last day for you.
Far in the distance.
Yeah.
And in this hypothetical scenario,
on your last day, you have to take all of your work with you.
No one has access to this book,
or this conversation, or anything you've ever written or said it, ever.
ever oh you're killing me it's gone to another place okay but before you die you get to leave three
things behind three lessons three truths yeah yeah uh it could be about your work it could be about
personal life could be about whatever you believe that you would want to leave behind these three
lessons to the world what would be those three truths for you um well i mean certainly a truth
for me you know it's always hard to give advice to other people right obviously
But it's certainly been true for me is my, what I've dedicated my life to, this kind of reducing
unnecessary suffering in the world. That has given me having that, having that motivation,
having that vision, having that base truth in my life has like, so even if all my good works
were to nothing, it would have benefited me to have woke up every day.
day and been able to look myself in the mirror and be like, you know, there's just so many
horrible things happening in the world. But like, I did my part. And so that would be the
message. It's like if you can configure your life to not just do what you're good at
and not just to, you know, but to do something meaningful for others and to kind of look
outside yourself, if you can. Look, there's so many people struggling with basic, you know,
I had this privileged ability to be able to look outside
because I had my basic needs met.
So that would definitely be one of the truths
is to incorporate some kind of selfless acts.
Look, and that could be philanthropy, right?
I mean, you could be, you know,
it doesn't have to be even devoting your career to that.
But, you know, like tithing, you know, even 10% to,
you know, there's so much we could do with, you know,
like bed nets for malaria and stuff.
You can save, literally save people's lives for, you know,
small amounts of money, right? If you actually saved someone's life, if you went into a burning
building and you pulled out some kid, that would be the biggest day of your life. Like that,
you would remember that. That would be like your crowning achievement. You would never forget that.
Your life would have been worth it. Right. You can do that with a check these days because now we have
a system where we can get money anywhere in the world to places that really needed. We have
preventable diseases and we have tremendous poverty that can be alleviated. And it's like,
that's this amazing. We have this amazing power that we never really had in our species before.
to help, you know, we have this tendency,
obviously to help people around us,
people are close to us,
we see something and we want to reach out
to something local.
I totally understand that.
But, I mean, you know, poverty here is nothing
like poverty some places in the world
and you won the dollar can go so much far.
So far, yeah.
And so that's, you know, that's another thing
that I've really learned is that you can help.
I mean, you can be that like crazy hero
that actually saves somebody's life.
Amazing.
Regardless of what you do in your life,
by, you know, giving just a little bit.
I mean, like, we really have tremendous control.
I know we don't like to think about these horrible things,
but you know how you don't think about this little horrible things
is you actually do something about it.
Right.
We don't want to think about it because we have this guilt, you know?
And so you don't have the guilt when you feel like I am part of the solution.
Taking action, yeah.
I am taking action, and I'm actually, in fact, I'm helping.
And even if I could help more and I'm not helping as much as I possibly could,
look, I'm helping more than like 90% of the people are out.
Right.
Like, even given 10%, how many people actually give 10% of their income, right?
Particularly people who are making enough that they wouldn't really even notice the 10% in the end of the day.
Yeah.
And so the fact that, you know, there's this, really this beautiful culture of giving in this culture in this society.
You know, it just came back from Europe.
And there just really isn't this, like, thing of, like, donating to, like, nonprofits.
And there's just not that kind of, like, you know, the billionaires there are just, like, keeping all the money themselves.
Whereas, you know, billionaires here
are doing these massive projects
and I know we love to hate on the billionaires.
And people are still hating on them.
Yeah, I know we hate on them, but, I mean,
do you actually do some good things they can do
and we should be like applauding them when they do it
and not just like, God damn, why didn't you?
Exactly.
Oh, yeah, okay, well, yeah, and they should.
But still, still.
Of course.
Okay, so that's your first one.
Okay, so first through lived your values.
And the second way, you can, I mean,
we want to separate that out.
to actually act on those values,
even if it's not in a career,
you can do it with money, with resources.
Another core truth.
Third truth.
Could give me a truth that is in all that otherworldly thinking,
you need to hold a place for love, self-love,
and not only self-love,
but, you know, surrounding your people
and surrounding yourself.
And we're just kind of,
we're these social beings.
We just evolved to be,
you know, to be able to have to have the,
and as much as like, you know,
I'm just like workaholic for the whatever,
I've really learned too late in life, I'm afraid.
Really?
And that, you know, I really have to,
you know, you put on your own mask
before you help others.
And it's not because you're selfish,
is because you can't help others if you're not taking care of yourself.
And so, yeah, and so making sure, and to really cultivating love in your life.
Wow.
Is something that I wish I would have emphasized earlier.
And it almost seems like selfish to me, right?
It's like, what do you mean?
I mean, but there's so many people out there that I can be helping, right, to like put all my energies into like one person or into, you know, it seems almost like, well, of course, man, of course I want to help because I'm.
close to them but it's like that almost seems like you know unfair but um but the wisdom i've
learned later the truth that i would path on to my earlier self would be to really to that has
to be a priority wow because that's so much of that is life it's from kind of a like a lifelong
perspective it's the feeling of the work i've done but kind of on a day-to-day happiness
like on a literally like how are you feeling right now on a day-to-day that's it's the loving
those are great truths those are beautiful do you have love in your life right now i don't have
enough love in my life unfortunately um so what action are you to take this year well yeah well yeah
well that that has been yeah well i mean that this is i'm a tough person i'm a tough person to love
just because you know i'm i'm so kind of your time commitments to your work yeah i'm so neglectful
of my of my relationships with friends and family as much
as I love them because there's just like the world's on fire that I can do something about
it and like I feel myself and the more uniquely positioned I am to help like before when I was a kid
it's like I'm I'm like bulk mailing envelopes for the local like homeless whatever right it's like
but like if I wasn't doing it somebody else could do it but the more I get like well if I'm not
specialize right it's like well if I'm not if this if I don't get this done it's not like
somebody else is just kind of scoop swoop to do it and so I feel this like additional burden to do it but
So but, so speaking tour
This is your third true
This is one of your most
If you could like to think of three things to do in the world
So that's well
So I'm going to meet a lot of people
On this speaking tour
And hopefully I will find a love of my life
On the road
So you're setting that intention
I'm sending that intention out into the world
Okay, great
All right
There you go
But you could also do that with friends and family
I can also be a little more attention to right
It's true
It's hard
When we get us so obsessed into our
our mission. It's hard to remember to text or call or, you know, I understand that feeling.
I love you, Mom. That's good. It's good. Give her a call today. That's right. That's right.
I want to acknowledge you, Michael, for your commitment to your mission. Your commitment to wanting to
put together great work where you're finding all the best research you can find in packaging it so
we can understand it and, you know, sharing your findings so that we can hopefully live.
healthier, longer, better lives
so that we can enjoy the fruits of connection and love
with people around us.
And I want to acknowledge you for acknowledging that as well.
That's something you get to work on in your own life.
That's right.
I think, you know, saying that truth and owning it
is a great thing to say.
And so having that intention this year, I think I'm excited.
Hopefully by the end of this year, you send me a photo.
I'm reporting back.
Absolutely.
The love in your life, whether it's one person
or friends or family, you know, just more love and just more love
in general. You get invite to the wedding. Let's go. Let's go. People can get the book,
how not to age the scientific approach to getting healthier as you get older, make sure you
guys grab a copy. You've got a few other great books as well. Where can we follow you,
support you, and learn more about your work as well? So all my work is available free at
nutrition facts.org. There's no ads, no corporate sponsorship, strictly not commercial,
not selling anything. Just put it up as a public service, as a labor of love, as a tribute to my
grandmother that's beautiful that's so nice man i love it uh final question for you what's your
definition of greatness oh is uh is living true to your values living true to your values
whatever those values are you know you should do the right thing but are you actually doing what
you know you're not like being convinced otherwise no no you know what's right and are you actually
doing in the back of your mind right you you know you could be a little bit a little more
to your inner self, but are you actually doing it?
Are you going all in on it?
Right?
Ah, ah, that's, that's greatness.
It's like being your own superhero, basically.
It's like, and no one knows what you're capable of, but you.
Yeah, then, and you know, and people could be like patting you on the back.
Oh, my God, you did awesome, but you know, you could have studied a little more.
You couldn't have done this a little more.
Okay, now, it's that feeling that like, no, no, I put in the work, and I, and I, and I
did absolute, look, I could have done better, but I don't have the capacity to do better,
but I did the absolute best I could.
And look, it doesn't matter what the outcome is.
Did you really do what you know it was possible?
That's greatness.
Michael, thanks so much for being there.
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 of today's episode
with all the important links.
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Share this with a friend on social media and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well.
Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review.
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And I want to remind you if no one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you
matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
