The School of Greatness - Live Longer By Optimizing Your Immune System w/Mike Mutzel EP 1187
Episode Date: November 10, 2021Today’s guest is Mike Mutzel. Mike earned his B.S. in Biology from Western Washington University in 2006 and completed his Master of Science degree in Clinical Nutrition from the University of Bridg...eport in 2015 and is a graduate of the Institute for Functional Medicine. He is a Functional Medicine consultant in the natural product industry and has worked as a nutritionist over the years.He runs the YouTube channel High Intensity Health where he talks about all aspects of health and shares what he’s learned in the medicine, nutrition and fitness industry over the last decade.In this episode we discuss the biggest benefits and negative effects of fasting, what you can start doing to reverse your age, why getting out in nature is so important, what happens to our body when we eat, how to make your immune system bulletproof and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1187The Wim Hof Experience: Mindset Training, Power Breathing, and Brotherhood: https://link.chtbl.com/910-podA Scientific Guide to Living Longer, Feeling Happier & Eating Healthier with Dr. Rhonda Patrick: https://link.chtbl.com/967-podThe Science of Sleep for Ultimate Success with Shawn Stevenson: https://link.chtbl.com/896-pod  Â
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This is episode number 1187 with Mike Mutzl.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome back, my friend. Today's guest is Mike Mutzel, and Mike earned his BS in biology from
Western Washington University in 2006 and completed his Master's of Science degree in
clinical nutrition from the University of Bridgeport in 2015, and is a graduate of the
Institute for Functional Medicine.
He is a functional medicine consultant in the natural product industry, and he has worked
as a nutritionist over the years.
And he runs the YouTube channel High Intensity Health, where he talks about all aspects of
health and shares what he's learned in the medicine, nutrition, and fitness industry
over the last decade. In this episode, we discuss the biggest benefits and negative effects of fasting, what you
can start doing to reverse your age, why getting out in nature is so crucial and important,
what happens to our body when we actually eat and what is actually happening in the
body as we're eating, how to make your immune system bulletproof,
and so much more.
And if you're enjoying this, feel inspired by this, feel moved by this, then make sure
to spread this message to a friend, share it on social media, make sure to tag me and
let me know that you're listening, post a link out of there as well, so other people
can be inspired by this free message as well.
And I want to give a shout out to the fan of the week from Miro, who said,
I have been on a healing process for three years now, thanks to this podcast. I appreciate the
insights one gets from each episode. And I think Lewis is one of the best interviewers there are
and manages to make powerful interviews with each one of the people in the podcast. Seeing a man so
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Thank you for your work, Lewis, and team greatness is having a huge impact on so many.
So Miro, thank you for the message.
And my team actually picks out the fans of the week.
And I always tell them, even though people might be talking about me and some of these reviews, that it's really a team effort.
We've got an incredible team here at Team Greatness who's helping with all the messaging,
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at any point during or after this episode.
Okay, in just a moment,
the one and only Mike Mutzel.
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness. Very excited about our guest, Mike Mutzl in the house.
Hey buddy.
My man.
Thanks for having me on.
It's great to be here.
Excited that you're here.
You're a master of research around a lot of these things and nutrition, health and wellness,
but specifically fasting and longevity recently and just how to optimize our overall health
through fasting and living longer.
And it seems like everyone wants to know
about fasting these days.
And I saw a video of yours recently
that said some research might suggest
that fasting at the night
could be better than fasting for breakfast,
where everyone talks about just skip breakfast
and go into lunch and do the 16-hour window of fasting, the eight-hour feeding
window, the intermittent fasting. But I saw a video that said skip dinner, not breakfast. Is that
true? Yeah. So how is fasting at night better than in the morning? Well, I mean, this is phenomenal
and it has to do with the circadian clock system. So have you talked about this on the show before?
Not too much. Like how our body
resonates with nature and the environment. And so we have these intracellular clocks that regulate
gene expression and metabolism. And to me, it's just super fascinating. And it turns out that
humans didn't evolve eating at night because that's when apex predators like back in the day,
grizzly bears and cougars and cats and things that would hunt us would be out hunting at night.
At night. So we'd want to be cooped up in our safety.
So we would eat when the sun's out and fast at night.
Now, the only caveat to this rule is in Latin America.
They eat at midnight.
It's like you start your appetizer at midnight, right?
So it's tough, you know, because that can, eating, I think there's all these cogs in
the wheels of health and socialization and connection is a major cog. So that's sort of the caveat when recommending this. So if you tell people, okay,
start eating at 8 a.m. and as a study that we'll talk about showed, they cut off the feeding window
at 2 or 4, that becomes socially impractical, right? So they stop eating at 4 o'clock.
Correct. And you fast all night. Until 8 in the morning. But they noticed a lot of improvements and not changing any of the diet.
The control group ate the same amount of calories,
but they started eating at 8 in the morning and stopped at 8 p.m.
But they didn't achieve all these longevity benefits.
We'll talk more about autophagy,
which is this process where your intracellular components of your cells are recycled.
It's linked with various disease reductions,
for example,
myocardial impairment, dementia, cancer, autoimmunity. So this is a favorable process
that we should strive to increase. And the group that cut off their feeding window at, you know,
between two and four had a dramatic increase in autophagy and all these longevity biomarkers
were increased. So it makes more sense just practically, if you can do it most days,
you know, if you're going to socialize on the weekends, maybe you eat a little bit later on
the weekends, you know, with your buddies, your girlfriend, your friends, all of that.
But during the week, if you can make it a habit to eat earlier and start your fast earlier,
that's the important thing. So wait a minute. For those that do intermittent fasting where
they skip breakfast, but maybe they eat until eight nine ten
o'clock at night right they still do an eight hour feeding window but they finish at eight or ten
versus those that eat breakfast and skip dinner which group overall would extend their longevity
markers probably the latter group the group group that ate breakfast and skipped dinner.
Really?
That's what multiple studies are showing
because it turns out that these longevity-related processes,
like we mentioned autophagy,
we can talk about mTOR and these different pathways
that are signals that signal and enhance the processes
that make us live longer and prevent disease initiation.
Those increase and are kind of
part of our circadian clock system. So the timing of your meals and your fasting really do matter.
Now, let me just pause here because if someone is getting good results, let's say someone listening
is like, hold on, this guy's telling me to like now eat breakfast and I've lost all this weight.
Please don't change what you're doing. For the people that haven't gotten the benefits
that they expect with these intermittent fasting protocols,
and this is common in the fitness industry too,
do the opposite of what you've been doing.
Like change it up a little bit.
And this happens, you know,
sometimes the guru on YouTube or Instagram or whatever
does something this way.
We all want to do it exactly like the guru,
but we are different than the person, than the guru.
So do what works for you and your schedule,
but there's a mantra I come from,
I know you have a competitive athletic background,
I did competitive cycling.
And the mantra there, because-
Wait, is cycling competitive?
Like, yeah.
It's very competitive, actually.
Yeah, I mean, so, and it's all based
based on power to weight ratio, right?
So the lighter you are and the stronger you are, there literally a metric the power that you put out watts per kilogram
will determine who wins grand tours like tour de france anyway so the mantra was eat early sleep
early so eat early sleep early that was it that was like for cycling like if you wanted to build
more power more endurance be shredded be lean really so that you're not carrying extra weight
on the bike.
So that means starting your fast earlier in the day. So you would go train in the morning,
go train hard, eat fuel, have pasta, carbs, all of that. But you basically didn't have dinner.
You had like a big lunch early and that was it. When did you usually stop eating?
Well, back then I didn't know much about it. This was like early 2000s, but this was like, you know, Lance Armstrong and even older generations, this was
like tacitly implied in the culture of those sports is you want to like get a fast going
because that will keep you lean. It'll burn. It'll burn the fat. Exactly. So, I mean, this whole
intermittent fasting phenomenon has really blown up in the last three to four years and there's
apps for it and there's millions of people that are in communities around this.
But what the research is saying is that to,
is it to burn more fat,
to live longer, potentially?
The research is saying just skip dinner now,
not skip breakfast.
Simple as that.
Simple as that.
Or have an earlier dinner.
Earlier dinner.
Like six o'clock, five o'clock.
Totally reasonable with the family.
You know, I have a young daughter, nine years old, and she's super hungry after school. So
instead of like saying, no, honey, we're going to go play and do all this stuff and then we're
going to eat later, I just give her the food then. So then she's not even that hungry for dinner.
It's not like I'm trying to get her to lose weight necessarily. I just want her to get into
the habit because the most important thing, you know, for people listening right now,
sleep is arguably, and I know you've talked a lot about sleep
Yeah, it's key when we eat a big dinner. You know, let's say you're doing the intermittent fasting thing you fast till 2 p.m
Start having all this food. Your sleep is not as good if you start cut off your feeding window at 10 p.m
You know, you're digesting the meat that you had or the olives or whatever healthy foods and you're not getting a good night's sleep
So then this sets up this vicious cycle when you're not sleeping good, then all your appetite regulatory hormones, leptin, ghrelin,
insulin are all skewed up and skewed. And then you want to eat and consume ultra processed package
crap because then your sleep was messed up. So, and our sleep naturally kind of gets a little
wonky as we age. You know, people have sleep disorder breathing. We should be breathing
through our nose when we're sleeping, not our mouth. A lot of people, we gain weight around the neck and so forth, and that
causes us to breathe through our mouth, which leads to all these changes we can talk about later.
But anyway, so the point is the way to remedy all of this, at least make a big dent in this,
is to eat earlier. Man, is there any negative side effects of fasting?
Well, that's a great question. You can overdo anything. You can drink too much water,
you know, so that fasting can easily get you into a calorie deficit. And so, especially for women
that come from a history of like disordered eating, anorexia, bulimia, if people are really
lean, like, you know, for example, if you're 8% body fat, fasting for 18, 20, probably not good.
You're going to start to tear away muscle.
Now, fasting is unique in the rise. And if we talk about sort of the recipe, if we just back up a little bit in the physiology for people, one of the benefits of fasting comes through
you're dropping your blood glucose levels, and that leads to a reduction in insulin,
and that increases a related hormone to insulin called glucagon. So that signals your fat cells
to start releasing stored energy.
What does that mean? Burning the fat? Essentially burning fat, right? So that energy that's being
released can go to your brain to help you think and make thoughts, and it can go to your liver
to create energy and so forth. And that helps with fat loss, which is great, but it also helps with
all these processes of longevity that we've been sort of talking about. And then in the process,
when you're burning fat, your body makes ketones. Your liver makes these things called ketones,
and they help suppress appetite and prevent muscle from being catabolized.
So they're anti-catabolic. They're actually used or being studied to be used in individuals who
are bedridden or have cachexia to give them exogenous ketones. Like let's say you have to
get a surgery, you break your leg or something like that, and you're better and you can't move. You don't want to catabolize all your
muscle that you've spent a long time building. So you could take these exogenous ketones that
would help prevent muscle wasting. So that's kind of cool. Anyway, the point of me giving that
backstory is with fasting, you naturally have more of a suppressed appetite because these ketones
help to suppress your appetite. So if you're already underweight it may lend itself to be
more and more underweight and as we age we naturally lose muscle anyway and
muscle helps us burn fat so you the point is it's a dance it's a balance
figuring out what you know how much fasting you want to do and then when you
refeed try not to diet at the same time so don't have the iceberg lettuce with
boneless,
skinless chicken, right? Like have like a ribeye steak or some good food.
Really?
Yeah.
Okay. Don't be too extreme with everything in your life.
Exactly.
That's not sustainable.
No.
Yeah. What would you say are the five biggest benefits of fasting?
So the biggest benefit that I've noticed, and this is great for entrepreneurs, is mental clarity.
You know, as we age, everything atrophies
in our body, but especially in our brain too. We start to notice that words are harder to retrieve
and memory changes. So that's, to me, the biggest benefit. Another benefit is a reduction in blood
pressure. So especially for men, heart disease is probably what's going to harm most men and
compromise their lifespan. So you get a reduction in blood pressure.
The third benefit that everyone wants is you lose body fat.
It's easier to lose body fat.
So that's a huge benefit.
And I think the fourth, and this could be depending upon who you are, the first benefit is more energy.
You know, I love food as much as anyone.
But if I were to have, you know, we're filming this around two or three, two 30, right? If I would have went and had a big meal, I would be lethargic right now,
unable to really, you know, I'd want caffeine, which would have affected my sleep negatively
tonight. So I just haven't had breakfast or lunch or anything. So I'm just going,
haven't eaten today. Nothing, no calorie, no coffee, no tea, coffee. And I did have some
exogenous ketones though. What is that? You just put it in the coffee, just tea. Coffee. And I did have some exogenous ketones. What is that?
You just put it in the coffee?
Just had it separate.
So these are the-
The powder is the pill?
Is this a-
Comes in different forms, but this one is a liquid.
It's a ketone ester.
This is pretty cool.
I have to give you some.
Give me some.
Yeah.
What is this?
Honestly, it lights up your brain.
So because our brains obviously need a lot of energy, but if you're fasted, your blood
sugar drops. So your brain relies upon fat for oxidative
to make memories and to retrieve words.
And these ketones just go right into your brain
and like fuel the brain.
And they're pretty cool.
So you haven't eaten today, you had black coffee.
No like no oat milk or anything or no almond milk,
just black.
Just black.
Then some liquid ketones.
I just want to make sure I'm showing up, right, to share good content.
I want to thank you for having me on the show.
And so it's like, dude, I want to make sure that I reciprocate and deliver value.
Okay, and the fifth thing, fifth benefit, what did you say?
We talked about energy, fat loss.
Did we talk about blood sugar yet?
Blood sugar, clarity, fat loss, more energy.
Blood pressure, I would say is one. Blood pressure, yep. Blood sugar.
Yeah, and then longevity, I would just say. Longevity.
Many of the processes of aging, if we think about reframing how we think about aging,
we think that aging is this sort of phenomenon that just happens no matter what, but we can dramatically influence the rate at which we age biologically.
And part of the processes in these intracellular signaling molecules and switches and genes that impact our aging process are beneficially augmented, shall we say, by way of fasting.
And so there's a lot of synergy and parallels between all those metabolic processes that are upregulated when we're fasting. And so we support our natural,
we sort of turn the thermostat down on the rate at which we're aging.
Is there a way to reverse aging?
It depends on who you talk to. If you talk to David Sinclair, there is some different
ways to go about that. There's senolytic therapies. And so it's a way to go about that. There's a senolytic therapies. And so it's a, it's a way to change
the way our cells are functioning because there's this process known as cellular senescence,
which means that our cells, we have a finite ability to sort of replicate in ourselves function.
And when they achieve the end of their lifespan, they undergo this process known as senescence.
And when our cells start to senesce, they release all these pheromones, so to speak. I'm really
simplifying this. They release pheromones, so to speak. I'm really simplifying this.
They release pheromones that recruit other cells to become more senescent.
So it's like this vicious cycle, like a snowball rolling downhill.
So once that process starts, it can become problematic.
And that's why you see people, they might have a little prediabetes and high blood pressure,
then they can't remember where their keys are, and then pretty soon they're in a nursing
home.
And we've seen this in our family members and friends.
Well, we can augment that by purging those senescent cells.
By killing the cells.
Yeah, those particular cells.
And you do that through fasting.
Is that through autophagy or what is that?
Well, through autophagy, but also this emerging field
in aging biology known as senolytic therapies.
So there's different drugs actually some drugs
that are using cancer but you just use them short dose like two days with quercetin disaptinib and
quercetin has been used um there's drugs like metformin and there's drugs like like rapamycin
we can talk about that are have a really low side effect profile that people are sort of microdosing
we've heard about microdosing lsdSD and mushrooms and all but these are where people are micro dosing longevity drugs
Wow to sort of pulse to not totally drive down longevity because we still want to grow
I we want to build muscles
But if we can slow down this process of biologic aging and we can just function better
And this is I think one of the most exciting I think honestly you and I in like five years
We'll be taking metformin like every other day or every fifth day to just sort of put a damper on some of these pathways that are linked
with cancer. What would you say are the top three ways to reverse aging then? Is fasting one of them?
Fasting is up there. And if you were to interview all these health experts, most people would say
fasting is the number one thing, but I honestly think exercise is the number one. To reverse aging.
To reverse aging, because we talked about,
and I know it's a big word, cellular senescence.
So these are cells that have reached
their end of their function.
They should apoptose and die and go away, but they don't.
And then they recruit other cells
to become bad cells with them, essentially.
It releases this secretome, secretory phenotype,
and it can be measured,
and this can be measured in the blood.
Really?
And this just makes you look older.
It makes your organs older, your skin older,
your face older, all those things, right?
Exactly, yeah, and it compromises your heart function,
your high blood pressure, poor memory.
Hurts your immune system, everything, right?
The immune system's the biggest one.
In fact, this is how biologic age is often assessed,
is by way of the immune system.
So the immune system, obviously it's hot
with everything going on right now,
but it's really involved in how we repair.
So if you're not repairing when you're sleeping,
and your immune system is repairing, changing,
say you damage your muscles by working out, right?
Your immune system is going to help repair that.
And our immune system can accumulate
a lot of these senescent cells.
We've heard about antibodies a lot on the media lately, but there's what's known as your T helper cells are really important for the immune system, but also aging in general. And these cells are
prone to accumulate a lot of senescent T cells. But if you and I go out and burst train, if we
go out to the beach and we lift weights and do some CrossFit or go hiking, we purge those bad
T-cells. Through exercise. Through exercise. Any type of exercise or is this more high intensity
training? Can you just walk and this does this? Is that to be? You know, this is a great question
because I don't want to prevent anyone from gardening and just walking. Any exercise is way
better than no exercise. However, intensity matters.
Really? How much intensity? How long?
I would say at least, and this is what the research shows,
75 minutes combined over the course of a week.
75 minutes of intense, intensifies, what's that mean? Resistance training,
training to failure is that, you know that heart rate getting above a certain level?
What does that mean?
A very simple way to approximate the intensity
is how well can you breathe?
So if I can't talk to you, then that's intense enough.
So it's like an eight or nine out of 10.
Now, again, this is just in short segments.
This can be a little sprints for 10 minutes here.
This can be going up the flight of stairs
instead of taking the elevator.
This can be walking up a hill.
So if you're going to walk, which is amazing, like so good for all many aspects of your health, try to walk up hills as well, not just flat.
Try to increase the intensity periodically.
Tell your walking partner, hey, we got to speed it up.
See that telephone pole down?
Let's go as fast as we can.
If you're functionally able to sprint that's even
better so periodic sprints are fantastic and again there's all the benefits from the aerobics the
lungs the cardiovascular system but specifically since you asked about aging that's where exercise
in my estimation trumps and i don't want to say it's better necessarily, but it seems that it has a lot of crossover.
And here's what's cool about exercise.
It makes fasting more efficient.
So, exercisers, we have several studies here, if people can't see.
Several studies have looked at individuals who are overweight and sedentary and had them fast for 72 hours.
And individuals who were physically active and lean and had them fast for 72 hours.
And they looked at the initiation of this process that we've sort of been talking about
known as autophagy, which if I haven't defined yet, it's an intracellular way to break down
accumulated proteins and stuff in ourselves to recycle it.
It's triggered by states of low nutrient conditions.
So when we're fasting, when we exercise, well, everyone thinks, well, you got to fast for 72 hours or 36 hours. There's all the gurus have different opinions about how
long you fast. Well, it depends upon how fit you are. So the more physically fit people are,
the greater the initiation of autophagy is when they fast for the identical lengths of time.
So what does that mean? So if I'm shredded 8% body fat, 5%, whatever it is, and I'm fit, does that mean
I need to fast longer to get the benefits short less because I'm fit. I only need 24
hours. I don't need 72. 18 is probably good. 18 hours to get the benefits. If I'm 40% body
fat or 30% or whatever it is, I want to need multiple days is what you're saying to get
the same benefits.
Why is that?
Well, it has to do with the muscles.
So if we think about what tissues are impacted by fasting,
it's your liver primarily in your muscles
and then your brain,
but your liver and your muscles are sort of necessary
in terms of the adaptations from exercise.
So if you and I start training
and then you look at sort of the proteomics or
metabolomics, which is a way to see how bodily tissues are responding to exercise, you would
see our liver and our muscles are like changing, right? And that's why exercise is so good for
fatty liver disease because it helps to prevent the accumulation of fat in the liver. So yeah,
the act of moving your muscles changes how your muscles function and in a fasted state,
they're already primed to deal with conditions of nutrient deprivation from exercise.
So should we exercise and fast at the same time or is that too much where you're like,
okay, I'm exhausted now I need some energy?
It totally depends on...
So here's my personal perspective on this.
And again, my biases are I'm not trying to lose weight.
I'm trying to preserve muscle as I age.
Because I know that as men and women, you lose muscle as you age.
So I'm trying to maintain muscle.
So I do my cardio in the morning fasted.
Cardio.
So 30, 60 minutes of running, biking, swimming, jogging, whatever.
I mean, honestly, it sounds silly, Lewis, but I bike my daughter to school.
And we're sprinting.
We're having a good time.
We're joking around. Hey, I'll beat having a good time. We're joking around.
Hey, I'll beat you to that telephone.
We're doing stuff.
But my heart rate is like up.
And that's enough cardio for me.
And then we'll do some stuff later in the day, walking or things like that.
And then I weight train after I've had some food later.
After you eat.
That's just my thing.
Yeah, yeah.
But again, I've been lifting since...
I don't look like a bodybuilder.
I'm not bragging.
But I've been lifting since in high school, right?
So I kind of, but if you're brand new to this, I would say give fasted exercise a try.
See how it, you know, it's just like a different diet.
You know, keto works for some people, plant-based works for others.
I would say try fasted because that recipe we talked about, low glucose, low insulin,
high glucagon, you accelerate that process when you do fasted exercise fasted exercise gotcha and what's more powerful in your your
mind or the what is the Sutton the research saying fasting or specific
types of diets without fasting it's an awesome question I don't know that it's
possible to disentangle it you know because to get the benefits of fasting
you get that metabolic switch like low glucose and all that. And if you're eating McDonald's or Pop-Tarts and foods
that jack up your blood sugar, it's going to be hard to get some of the benefits and to trigger
these autophagy related processes that we've been alluding to if you're eating that sort of food.
Now, that being said, if that's all you can afford or your whole family eats that way and you're kind of stuck, still fast.
Like it's better than not.
But you want to try to eat as much unprocessed, ultra-palatable, like get rid of the packaged foods and eat more real food.
Like if it comes in a box bag or a can, try to eat as little as possible of that and make your food from scratch.
That's kind of a – but everyone responds differently. Some people love high carbs and eat rice and do well. I like
more of a low carb approach. It's, I don't think there's any one diet that's going to be applicable
to everyone and benefit everyone the same. So how does the body create autophagy? Is that only
through exercise and fasting or is that other ways you can do that? Yeah, that's a great question.
Well, autophagy is super complex.
There's all these different subtypes of autophagy.
But the autophagy that we're kind of alluding to
with regards to longevity,
I believe most of that is initiated
by low-glucose, low-insulin environments.
So if you do a fasted walk in the morning,
you're gonna see probably a bump in your autophagy.
If you skip dinner, by the time you wake up,
the autophagy initiation genes will have been upregulated.
And this was actually a study,
I think it was researchers at University of Alabama,
actually, they stratified, kind of alluded to it,
people in two different groups, one ate the same amount
of calories over 12 hours, one ate between eight and two.
And they did these microarray studies
in the muscle tissue in the liver,
and they actually found that autophagy was significantly increased in the group that
stopped eating after 2 p.m. Wow. They're eating this isocaloric diets and all that match for their
body weight. So that just shows me that same calories at different times. Yep. And the autophagy
was higher when people stopped eating at two. Right. And not only the autophagy was higher when people stopped eating at two right and not only the autophagy was
higher but there was a bunch of other genes related to autophagy signaling like mtor and so
this is a sort of a break on autophagy it's a it's an enzyme it's a kinase and this inhibits the
process of autophagy now some people might say oh my gosh i want to inhibit autophagy all the time
you want mtor to also grow and repair.
So if you and I both go work out, we've been fasting, we would want to probably eat some
protein.
Well, part of how protein helps us recover is mediated through mTOR.
So it's not this binary thing like one of these things is always bad and one's always
good.
It's the context.
Yes.
And you don't want to overexpress mTOR all of the time.
That can accelerate your aging.
So snacking every hour, having protein shakes and then chips and cookies, that's going to
overload this growth process and lead to things like cancer, dementia, heart disease.
Really?
So eating frequently throughout the day is typically not good or is it okay for some
people?
Generally, so if you're a 20-something fitness model and you're training
your butt off, you can get away with it. But when you get older, and there's been several studies,
what they call them like nibbling versus gorging studies, where they have people just eat one meal
versus all these small little meals. When you're eating all the time, you think about food all the
time. And you're digesting all the time too, right? I'm assuming, right? Exactly. And you're having this constant surge in glucose and insulin,
and you're just preoccupied with food.
I know a lot of your listeners are business owners
or want to be business owners.
So you can focus more on your business and your family,
like things that matter in life,
as opposed to always like,
well, it's two hours, I gotta have my shake.
And you become food obsessed.
And that is a behavioral addiction
that can compromise your your life and productivity so what's your routine look like on a on a normal
season of life yeah when you're not you know splurging or something or whatever I don't cheat
day but what's like a normal routine look like yeah so in terms of feeding exercise and fasting
and sleep awesome question Lewis so I get, meditate first thing in the morning.
So I think mindfulness meditation is huge.
I do a little Wim Hof, hyperventilation, retention, breath work.
I have a cold plunge.
I go in that, and that just sort of sets the day.
And then I have some black coffee.
But my rule is I can't have coffee before I meditate.
So that's just my rule because I would obviously just want to have the coffee and then go about my day and not do any of that.
But I just have espresso, black coffee.
You know, our family, you know, we bike to school and stuff like that.
I'll come back, do like an hour or so of work.
And by then I'm starting to get hungry.
It's like 9, 10 o'clock.
I usually have breakfast and that includes protein and fat for me.
So I'll have two meals a day.
And my feeding window generally again and
I'm not saying this is good for every single person but it's between you know
ten and something like ten and six on most days so it's like two meals a day
now if I train really hard or if I feel really hungry you know I'll have a snack
you know maybe like one or two o'clock and that can be some raw milk or a nut
milk with some whey protein, something along those lines.
And then dinner, generally low carb.
But during the fall, that's when squashes and tubers,
they're all, so I know it sounds weird,
it's not really sexy to talk about eating seasonally.
That's all humans ever could ever do.
That's true.
So you finish, you have dinner around five or six,
you finish around six typically?
Yeah.
It's pretty good, it sounds like a good lifestyle I mean it's pretty simple you know you
have to make two major meals a day and if you want a little snack I mean that's
fine right but stop it stop at six seven o'clock latest is what you suggest
exactly now if if I have friends that are doing a cool dinner I'm not gonna be
that weirdo like already ate before you know so that's the thing so balancing
that with social connections because social connections I think are
as important as any of the stuff that we've been talking yeah so one two
nights a week you know if you're having a dinner at 8 o'clock here you're fine
you're just trying to eat quickly and then just like drink water the rest of
the dinner or something totally or make sure I go for a walk after you know
going on a walk after a meal is such a great way to drop that glucose level.
Yeah, it's amazing.
What does it do to the body?
Well, so after we eat, I mean, it's funny,
so I love food, so I just want to preface this,
but eating is stressful in the body.
And so your eating raises glucose, it raises cortisol.
Everyone's scared about cortisol from adrenal fatigue
and all that, but when you eat,
you disrupt the homeostatic balance. And so your body is trying to mitigate some of that. And walking can help
do that and bring down that post-meal blood sugar level. So I think one of the easiest things people
can do, especially if they don't have the money to eat healthy food, or if you have a cheat meal
and go to McDonald's with your buddies, you go to Chick-fil-A, whatever, go for like a quick walk
afterwards. And it can really kind of bring that glucose level down. What if you got a chick-fil-a whatever go for it like a quick walk afterwards and it can really kind of bring that
glucose level down
What if you did a run or an actual workout right afterwards?
Well, okay, so if you do something super intense, maybe you haven't digested everything good
Yeah, she might want to wait a little bit. But yeah, there's nothing wrong with with necessarily doing that. But is there optimal times to
Work out that but is there optimal times to um work out during the day so i think cardio in the morning
is better and you're more powerful from a resistance training standpoint you have more
strength when your body temperature raises later in the day so in the afternoon so don't do lifting
or high intensity in the morning well i hate to add all these caveats yes yes but dude if that if
you have three kids and that's the only time you can do it.
Do what you wanna do, yeah.
Like Steve Weatherford, that's it, right?
He's up at five in the morning, just do it.
Machine, yes.
Don't change what you're doing.
Right.
But if you have the flexibility to split hairs, sure.
Do your cardio in the morning or your walking
and then hit the gym later in the day.
And do you think it's good to do multiple workouts
throughout the day?
You know, like a 20 to 30 minute walk, run, bike, swim in the morning, and then 30 to 60 minutes gym, class, whatever in the afternoon?
If your schedule allows that, I think that's awesome.
Why is that?
Well, because you're training different energy systems.
You give your body the ability.
Because when you're doing cardio, right, what you're doing is you're using your mitochondria,
you're tearing down, it's just different pathways.
And your body temperature is a little bit cooler.
So I do think from a physiologic standpoint,
it is good to split it up.
And do two a day if you can.
Yeah, maybe not every day,
but like three or four days a week,
I think that would be ideal.
And then-
How much cardio would you say for the normal person?
20 to 25 minutes.
Just a jog?
Jog, walk.
It doesn't have to be high intense, like as fast as you can push, three mile run or something.
It can be a jog.
What would that do?
Just a 20 to 30 minute jog in the morning, first thing before you eat.
Yeah.
Well, first of all, mental clarity is huge
because you're gonna clear the cobwebs,
you're gonna drop your glucose.
It's good for the body's inflammatory response.
You're gonna decrease chronic inflammation.
You improve the distribution of your microvasculature.
So as we age, our cardiovascular system gets compromised
and we can get edema, we can get varicose veins
and all that.
So just moving, you're exercising this critical tissue.
What are varicose veins?
Those really thick veins that stick out in those?
They're unsightly.
What is that?
Why do some people have that?
The vascular integrity, the capillary integrity can be compromised.
Like some people are just genetically prone to that,
but it does happen more as we age.
It happens to women after they give birth,
they get hemorrhoids and all the pressure.
So that's where walking is really critical because when you're moving your muscles,
it massages all that tissue. And another facet of inflammation is when our lymph,
so we have blood and we have our lymphatic system, which really mirrors our cardiovascular system.
We want to move that lymph around. Stagnant lymph is a major problem. So if you go sit on an airplane or a train
or even a road trip, it's good to just go for a quick walk,
like five minutes.
So last night I went in at Burbank
and the rental car place, it's a good hustle.
So I decided just to run because I've been sitting
for so long, not that long, but like three and a half hours.
And just to move that around to just like-
Five, 10 minutes is good, right?
Easy, yes.
I wasn't sweating, it wasn't that big of a deal.
But we don't think to do that stuff.
We're like, oh, I'll get the Uber.
I'll take the elevator.
I'll take the escalator.
These small little acts sprinkled in throughout the day.
You know, it's just like, you know, if you ask someone, well, hey, when do you read about your bed?
You know, if you can read 10 minutes three times a day, it's probably better than sitting there trying to squeeze it in right before bed.
Yeah.
Because you're going to be tired., you're gonna have, you know.
Sure, sure.
So cardio in the morning,
little workout in the afternoon, fasting.
What happens to the body when we eat?
Yeah.
Like you said, it puts stress on the body.
What happens to the body?
And is it better to work out before or after eating like before workout or
like an hour and a half after which one is better yeah everyone has different perspectives on this
but um but again i just want to clarify i love eating and i'm encouraged eating however we need
to realize that eating can be a stressor on the body and that's how we can mitigate especially
eating on unripe more unreal food, more refined food, right?
But it's better.
So what happens in the body when we eat?
Say we have a big meal.
What is the process of eating?
What does it do when we digest?
How long does it take for us to kind of get back to focus?
What is that process?
This is a phenomenal question.
Well, what's interesting, and this leads into a tip, you know, practical tip with eating, is the more mindful we are when we're eating,
the better we will process that food, and the better our blood sugar will be in the post-meal
window. So if you and I start cutting up garlic and ginger and oregano right now,
we're going to start to salivate, right? Just even thinking about this, right? That's known
as the cephalic phase of digestion
okay so digestion really starts in your brain and that cephalic phase if that doesn't get initiated
so let's say you're eating you're on instagram you're on your you're on instagram and you're
driving and you're eating i saw someone doing this in the way over oh my gosh so your brain's not
thinking about processing food so you could eat that same meal when you're in a relaxed state and
you cook the meal with your significant other or family member and
Have a totally different post meal processing of insulin glucose
Inflammatory response because you're relaxed or you're preparing it or you're preparing for it to be ready
Exactly because your brain is signaling to your gut food is coming
So we're gonna increase and there's this whole field known as the incretin.
So these gut hormones, they help insulin do its job in the post-meal window.
So they help mitigate blood pressure.
And these incretins are so important that they're actually a big target when it comes
to managing type 2 diabetes.
In fact, a lot of, if we think about bariatric surgery, I know I'm all over the place, but
it'll come back to your question.
What is the surgery?
Gastric bypass.
So to lose weight by manipulating the stomach.
By making it smaller, taking out some of the stomach?
Correct.
So that's what a lot of people think.
They assume that when you get bariatric surgery, the mechanism of action of how it's losing,
how it's attributed or ascribed to losing weight is by making the stomach smaller.
But a huge mechanism is changing these gut hormones and amplifying them.
It's turning up the thermostat on these hormones that we can amplify by chewing our food, slowing down.
Really?
Talking.
You and I talking.
We put the fork down.
We're engaged.
We cook the meal together.
We smell the meal.
We're going to have a much better post-meal processing of that compared to if we just shoved it down and we're driving on a 405 eating.
Right, right. So digestion starts in the brain. Fascinating. Huh. that compared to if we just shoved it down and we're driving on a 405 eating right right so
digestion starts in the brain fascinating huh yeah so it doesn't all just happen in the gut and just
process all in the stomach and the intestines down here it starts with the brain and the process
before you eat correct there's eating wow pre-meal insulin. And so that's why when people are new to fasting, to dovetail it back, if they've been regularly
eating at say, they always eat breakfast at nine, they always have lunch at 12, if you
skip breakfast, it's normal to be a little bit jittery because your body starts to remember,
Sally has a meal at nine.
So there's a little pre-meal insulin release and that's going to drop your glucose.
So if you suddenly skip breakfast, and this is a hurdle that people have logistically when they start fasting they're like i've tried
it i'm all jittery and i can't do it part of that is because there's this what's known as a second
meal effect and this anticipatory anticipatory effect of eating so your body adapts so it just
might take a week or two to get used to it exactly take some time and maybe you just have instead of
a monster meal,
maybe you have some macadamia nuts or cashews
or a little something.
Or half a banana or something, yeah, interesting.
Huh, I'm gonna have to try,
because I love breakfast, but for the last few years
I've been doing the intermittent fasting more
in the morning, obviously.
And so maybe I'll try the not eating after seven
or something and try it out for a few weeks, yeah.
Yeah, I would love to know what you notice, changes. But again, if that's working for you, then maybe don't stop. Yeah.
If it's working. Yeah. Why is it so hard for so many people to lose belly fat?
It's, it's a good question. I don't know that anyone totally knows the answer. Like
five years ago, I would have told you it's all about the gut. It's all about your gut hormones.
It's all about the gut microbiome. But now we know that stress and
cortisol is an issue. We know that hormones. So if I give an overweight person testosterone,
particularly if they're a male, they will start to lose more abdominal adiposity or fat around
their fat tissue. And then it's stress. You take two different people and you look at their
cortisol levels. One's lean, one's overweight around the middle. Generally their cortisol levels are a little bit higher. So I
Think it's it's multifactorial. There's a lot of things going on and that's why we can't just focus on just calories alone
Mm-hmm, of course energy balance matters
but we need to look at the body as this interconnected network and there's all these different pieces of the puzzle and
We now have some of the data to show that so
Well, I think if we focus on more eating more whole-grain food
We cover some sort of that microbiome piece if we focus on stress reduction and eating in a mindful state
We sort of cover that cortisol piece and going to bed and rising at the same time of the day making sure we're getting enough
Sunlight, you know as crazy as it sounds
I mean, there's good data to show
that just 20 minutes of midday sun exposure
can help you sleep better that night.
We never hear about it, right?
People want to take the Tylenol PM
or the antihistamines or the whatever,
but very simple things are accessible
and they're not very expensive.
What about mitochondria?
Why is this such an important thing now?
What is it and why is it so important?
Yeah, I mean, the way, the analogy that,
maybe it's not the best analogy,
but if we think about our house and relate that to a cell,
we have billions of cells
and our house has a furnace, it has a dishwasher,
it has different appliances that make the house
able to be hospitable.
Well, your cells have these different intracellular components
and the mitochondria help take that energy, Like we're going to both eat dinner tonight. We can't directly
utilize the glucose from a sweet potato or the fat in say an avocado. We have to break that down
into a form of energy our body can use known as ATP. And it turns out that our mitochondria help
facilitate, well, they are what are needed to make that process work.
What's ATP standpoint? ATP is like when I move in my muscles,
adenosine triphosphate. It's how the human mammalian cells function. That's the currency.
If we think about cash, this is the ultimate currency that enables transactions. By transactions,
I mean movements, thinking, creating thoughts. They depend on this ATP.
So we hear about, oh, the brain loves glucose.
Well, the brain doesn't directly oxidize glucose.
It needs it in the form of ATP.
So anyway, that happens mostly in the mitochondria.
And it turns out that our mitochondria can become rusty and squeaky if we don't exercise, if we never fast.
Because we talked about autophagy is a way to,
autophagy is increased when we exercise or when we fast,
where there's a way to sort of cause autophagy
to our mitochondria, it's known as mitophagy.
So mitophagy is a way to sort of take
those rusty mitochondria that should be recycled,
you know, it's like these papers,
you put them in the recycle bin
and we can use them for something else.
Mitophagy helps to break down those intracellular components within the
mitochondria so exercise enhances that fasting enhances that so they're really
important what is the thing that you've learned in the last two years that's
been a breakthrough for you and your sleep your performance your health your
emotional mental well-being what's the thing you've noticed?
Because you've been performing at an elite level for many years.
You've been doing this since high school.
You've been studying this.
But what's something new for you in the last couple of years?
Yeah, this is a great question.
I mean, you always get excited about the newest things, right?
But I think really honoring the circadian clock system in the body
and being much more vigilant.
Because I used to stay up late and do research up until like 2 in the morning, then sleep.
And having these irregular sleep-wake cycles, especially as I age, I've noticed that I'm much more sensitive.
And I perform much better if I just say, look, Mike, you're going to bed at 10.
And then in that process, if it's getting dark as we get into fall here, making sure
that I'm cutting off the screens beforehand, at least two hours.
Yeah, wow.
So that, I mean, it sounds so simple.
You're like, dude, that's it.
Like, really?
That's all I need?
But how many people actually do it?
That's the thing.
You know, I had a late fight last night.
I saw all these people on their phones, like just blaring.
You can see the blue light, right?
That is augmenting a lot of their aging process,
their hunger hormones.
It's impacting a lot of different things.
So just being, I would say, being more conscious
of how I treat my body's circadian clock system.
So you're saying if we're looking at TV screens
or phones, we're more hungry?
Are we gonna be susceptible wanting a snack or something?
Probably the next day, because it screws up your circadian clock system. And all these hormones and
all the men and probably all the women will recognize men's testosterone rises in the
morning, right? Like it's very predictable. All these hormones rise on a circadian clock
rhythm. They're influenced by our internal clock system. So when we're on these screens,
we screw that up. so we might pivot it
one hour here or two hours there and so that then leptin is another one of these hormones like
testosterone that oscillates in this manner and if we augment leptin then you and i will start to
crave crappier foods we're going to want the cookies and the treats whereas we might have
had the willpower to say you know what i'm not going to have that if our leptin is off because
we went to bed at two in the morning or we're watching Netflix too late, then we can
succumb to those cravings that ordinarily wouldn't be a problem because our circadian clock system is
off and leptin can be imbalanced. Wow. Because there's a few books out now about this circadian
rhythm, right? Like the rising and sleeping with the sun and this and this i
mean i'm not sure which my mom was telling me about one recently actually i'm not sure which
book was called but how important is kind of this philosophy of you know once the sun goes down like
you start getting ready for bed and when the sun comes up it's time to get up to me i think this is one of the most important
facets of health and if you go in nature and just look at what deer do what bears do
even what and what drilled this home for me is we got backyard chickens a few years ago
and i was like every night no matter what these chickens when the at a certain time the daylight
they're in there because they're they're prey right they're right they're hidden in their
little hut yeah and they go to sleep.
Every night.
So it's like if we want to survive, we can't circumvent this critical process.
And we have.
And the advent of screens, of phones, of Uber Eats, of all of this, we're seeing a worsening in our health.
So I think it's one of the biggest things.
And we've been talking a lot about fasting and autophagy and all that.
So I think it's one of the biggest things and you know We've been talking a lot about fasting and autophagy and all that well those the all these processes linked with longevity
That we're all trying to hit and increase to make our aging processes slow down. They depend upon the circadian clock system
You cannot disentangle
Longevity related processes from this critical circadian rhythm
So that reminded me of the importance then of time restricted feeding as opposed to intermittent fasting which focuses on the number of hours you fast
Time restricted feeding focuses on when you eat and when you fast
So say one more time the last part. Yeah, so
Intermittent fasting people hear about 16 a 10 24 or whatever time restricted feeding is a subtype of intermittent fasting
That focuses on the hours that you feed and the hours that you fast.
Okay.
Sorry, the time of the day.
Time of the day.
Not 16 and 8, but when you do that.
Exactly.
Got you.
So again, I think a really easy window for most people is like 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Okay.
Like if most people ate during those times, even if they're eating crap,
they would probably improve their health.
Really?
Yeah. Don't eat crap, but if you just eating crap, they would probably improve their health. Really?
Yeah.
Don't eat crap, but if you just did from 10 to six,
and that's the only time you ate.
You would probably notice your pants feel less tight.
Really?
You would probably notice that you're a little bit more
on top of it mentally.
You might notice better digestion,
and hopefully better sleep.
A lot of people can't sleep.
Wow.
So don't wait till one or two,
which is what most people have been doing
with the intermittent fasting is like,
skip breakfast, wait till afternoon,
then from noon till eight, or two till 10,
eat, it's like 10 to six.
Pushing it.
It's the same, so it's the same.
Because the research is showing
that if you eat farther away from when you sleep, if you eat farther away
from when you sleep, if you eat farther away, I guess,
than when you're going to bed, the better it is for you.
Exactly.
The closer you eat to sleep, what does that do to you?
It makes it harder to burn fat.
So there were several studies actually in overweight women
where they had them have a little snack before dinner
or after dinner or not, and by but they but they have the same
calories what they did is they they divide let's just say it's like a thousand calorie dinner
they had one group have an 800 calorie dinner and a 200 calorie snack so it's the same amount
of energy but they had the dinner one group group a will say had the dinner had the snack
went to bed they trapped him for eight weeks the group that just had the dinner but no snack
lost more weight same calories but it's just the timing and the distribution of those
calories in relation to the sleep window. Huh. So they had the snack, what, 30 minutes after
dinner or something or later? It was like an hour after. Gotcha. Interesting. Same amount of
calories. Exactly. Wow. So that's where, again, calories matter, energy matters. But when the so-called calories in, calories out model of obesity was sort of elucidated, energy balance, they call it, in the fitness space, we didn't know about these circadian rhythms and circadian clocks.
We didn't know about all the microbiome.
So now that we understand this new biology, we should acknowledge and recognize that these things are influencing our metabolic health.
Wow.
that these things are influencing our metabolic health. Wow.
If someone's listening or watching right now,
thinking this sounds amazing,
but it also seems overwhelming,
and to do it on their own just seems daunting.
What would you suggest?
Is there accountability or coaching they can get?
Is there groups online where people are doing this
for support?
What can they do to have a community to support them?
Yeah.
No, this is a great question.
I'm a fan of the app.
So there's a few different fasting apps.
I like the Zero app.
I don't know if you've used that.
Peter Atiyah and company developed that one.
So that's super simple.
And you set the time then on that.
You say, I'm only going to eat between 8 and 6.
Exactly.
Is that right? 8 and 6? Yeah.
Yeah, something like that.
And then what? It kind of reminds you of when to eat or has a community?
How does that work?
Yeah, they have, I think, an online Facebook group they do.
Yeah, a lot of these...
I used to have this Facebook group, this Metabolic Monday thing,
but it just became logistically hard to support it and all that.
But I know there is fasting groups.
There's a big fasting community, which is great.
But I think an app is helpful.
And then get your family on board.
I mean, I don't know anyone who doesn't want to lose weight and have more injury and feel better.
Right, so just support each other and your family or find a friend who wants to do this with you.
Exactly.
And how can they support this with each other?
Just check in once a day over text.
you. Exactly. And how can they support this with each other? Just like check in once a day over text. Like what's the best process you think for getting people on a four to eight week process of
doing this fasting cycle of going to sleep at a better time, eating earlier? What do you suggest?
That's a phenomenal question. I suggest making the private public. That's what I found with
goal setting. So if people just keep it to themselves,
like I'm doing this thing,
but I'm not going to tell anyone,
then they don't really have any accountability.
But if they like put their foot in the sand and say,
hey, this is what I'm doing.
So take a picture,
even if you only have 100 Instagram connections or whatever,
it's fine.
Just say, hey, this is what I'm doing.
Here's why I'm doing it.
And post about it because,
and you talk about this a lot,
when you start to identify with the person that
You want to be you behave like that person and so start to really even if you even if you're morbidly obese
And you're really overweight. It doesn't matter just start somewhere and make the private public
I've seen a lot of benefits doing that and you can do that with business with all these things
So I mean that's how I got into it right started sharing the research like I you know just said hey guys here's this new fasting study and then when the time came to have
cookies and ice cream i'm like i can't share the study and then also not do this thing right so do
you give yourself a cheap meal or how does this work for you yeah i mean so i love like organic
red wine and stuff like that so like like saturday night i have some wine um my wife used to have a
raw food company so we make like these almond flour cookies and this and that.
You know, but it's not an everyday thing.
But nutrition adheres to the 80-20 principle.
So you don't have to eat like a monk or whatever every single day.
You can have some buffer room.
And this is where exercise and this is where compressing that feeding window comes in.
It gives you a little buffer room to where I have friends who are like dude if I look at ice cream I put on 10 pounds
Right, right. So if you're eating like a standard American that is true
But when you start compressing your feeding window when you're walking when you periodically do maybe a 24-hour fast
You can get away with more stuff. Mmm
How often should we do a 24 48 hour fast?
Well, I think it depends on your body fat.
I think it depends on your age.
So it's more important for a 60 year old compared to like a 39 year old.
The older you are, it's more important to fast for longer periods.
For longer because the risk of cancer, the risk of dementia, all of these diseases that
are improved when we fast, the risk, you know, aging is a disease.
We've looked at it like an inconvenience,
but it really is a disease.
And we can decrease the prevalence of that disease
by fasting more.
So I think everyone over 40 should fast
at least one day a week.
Wow.
It's tough, I know.
24 hours once a week.
Unless you-
Is that no food at all? Is that coffee? Is that just water?
What does that look like? Well, so the studies allow for like up to 300 calories even up to 500 calories
So you could do a like a one meal a day and oh mad one day a week
I think that's way better
I mean if you look at that and let's just back up a little bit
You know some of the studies look at calorie restriction as a way to enhance longevity.
So one way to get into a calorie deficit is to restrict how much food you eat.
But who wants to do that?
You're like, oh my gosh, I'm at 2,000 calories or 17.
It's hard logistically to do.
So one thing, you can get into a 20% calorie deficit over the long haul by not eating one day a week.
Super simple.
You don't have to count calories on those other six days.
I think it's a huge...
Is that what you do?
Not every week.
So I'll be honest with you.
I would, for like a year,
I was every single week, every Monday.
Wow.
We'd have dinner Sunday night as a family.
I wouldn't eat until Tuesday morning.
Wow.
So it was like 36 hours or something, right?
Is that?
Yeah.
Exactly.
More like 36.
Wow.
And what do you do now? Once a month or something? doing that every day every every week what are you doing now oh now
yeah now it's like once exactly so like yesterday um like this will be my basically intermittent fat
like my 24 hour type fast really i haven't had food since you know um it was like yesterday at
2 p.m really gotcha so you'll have a dinner tonight or what yeah i'll probably go for a hike after this and then go to Air One's or something like that.
Or would you wait until breakfast the next morning and try to push it a little more?
Well, here's the thing.
I noticed I was getting a little too skinny.
Okay.
You know, so it's that balance.
Too lean, huh?
Yeah.
I was like, I don't want to be the skinny guy.
What's the point of being like having increased lifespan, but you're a stick figure, you know?
So muscle matters.
So finding that balance, what's going to work for you.
So now it's more like an OMAD one day a week, meaning one meal that day.
One meal.
Earlier.
So yeah, but finding that balance, that's what I think is helping.
Now, if someone is morbidly obese or pre-diabetic or has heart disease,
maybe a 48-hour fast every week.
And being consistent with that every week as opposed to a lot of people get excited,
this January I'm going to do a 72-hour fast.
Imagine if you ran a marathon only once a year.
You're better off running two miles a day
compared to just one big event
because of that consistency.
So that's my philosophy.
I could be wrong on that.
How old are you now?
39.
What do you think will shift for you from 40 to 50?
Is there anything you'll do differently?
Shoot, that's a good question.
I don't know the answer to that question, Louis.
I mean, maybe I might crank the fasting a little bit more.
Cancer doesn't run in my family, but I do have this tumor biomarker that's elevated.
I randomly happened to test this, and it could be nothing or it could be related to early cancer.
So just to sort of keep an eye on that, that's what has encouraged me and inspired me to dive into the science on fasting.
encouraged me and inspired me to dive into the science on fasting, but also personally,
I'm just interested because we know that fasting is a way to help improve cancer biology. And how important is a strong immune system at all ages of your life? And what would you say
are the key factors to enhancing the strength to make it bulletproof, your immune system?
to enhancing the strength to make it bulletproof immune system?
This is a wonderful question.
Well, not having glycemic variability.
So if you and I go and have a soda right now and we test our glucose,
we're going to go up to probably 140, 160 and come back down.
You want it to be more neutral.
Like a wave, not a big spikes.
Exactly.
So less fluctuations. How do you do that?
Cutting out sugary foods and processed foods?
The processed packaged stuff.
So sugar without fat, you know, is going to do that.
So liquid calories, you know, soda pop, candy,
things like that are going to jack that up.
Milkshakes as well.
So just having more real food,
reducing glycemic variability, improving our sleep. So making
sure we're adhering to those circadian rhythms. I know it sounds like we're beating a dead horse
here, but exercise is going to be one of the most important things. And I can share with you study
after study about individuals who have poor outcome when it comes to viral infections,
compared to individuals who have good outcomes in their exercise habits. Kaiser Permanente here in
Southern California did that 48,000 subjects with COVID. They looked at their exercise habits
and individuals who regularly exercise were much less likely to go to the hospital, end up in ICU
or die. From exercise? Just straight up exercising. This was another study in Sweden. Sweden found
this and other several studies in China and South Korea.a so the data is is emerging that being sedentary it compromises your immune system because when we're sedentary
our baseline level of inflammation increases and so if we think about it you know let's say we're
playing really loud music in our in in this room we're not going to hear if someone comes in or out
and that person could be a burglar for example it's just hypothetically right so if you have
more static background inflammation,
because you're not exercising, you're eating processed food,
when that pathogen you're exposed to,
whether it's influenza or SARS-CoV-2 or whatever,
then your immune system is not gonna have the bandwidth
to do what it should do and take care of that pathogen early.
That seems to be the problem with these infections
is the immune system is not mounting an appropriate initial response.
And the virus or the bug circulates, and then it becomes just, there's a lot of collateral damage.
Right.
And our immune system freaks out.
So if we can enhance, if we can prevent that smoldering inflammation with exercise, with raw food, with stress management, with sleep.
Yep.
That's the key to increase the strength of your immune system.
And what about gut inflammation?
Because that seems to be a big leaky gut,
and gut inflammation seems to be a big topic these days.
How do we, I guess, really clear up the inflammation in our gut
so that we can process our food better and be healthier that way?
Yeah, this is an awesome, awesome question.
Well, it turns out that when we eat a lot of processed fats
with carbs together, that creates that inflammation.
In the gut. In the gut.
Processed fats with carbs, is that what you're saying?
Right, so let's think about the foods that are problematic.
So if we think about French fries, fried oil, carbs.
They're so good though.
I know, that's the thing.
But if you just have a
couple yeah maybe go for a walk yeah afterwards go for a walk yeah and you know and if it's a
one day a week thing or whatever you're with your significant other i'm fine with that um if we
think about pizza so you got cheese which turns into liquid fat and carbs my favorite food corn
dogs right like it's tough you know Or if we have a soda with something
else, right? That's like the ultimate disaster. What do you mean? Soda with what? Ice cream?
Oh yeah, soda with ice cream, root beer float. Oh, that's so good. Corn dog. Like, dude, you're
at, it's, you're just, look. You're stacking on inflammation. You are. And so you got to mitigate
that. Now, if you train your butt off. It's a good workout. Yeah. You're fasting, whatever. And so you've got to mitigate that. Now, if you train your butt off. It's going to work out.
You're fasting, whatever.
And this is like once a month.
This is every other week.
It's not a big deal.
But you don't want to regularly do this.
And sadly, people regularly eat that stuff.
And it's reflective in their visceral adiposity, their belly fat.
Their liver accumulates fat.
So the liver is, you know, a lot of first absorption happens from the small intestine to the liver. And so it's this first target. And so if we start to, you only have one
liver and once it goes, you are really screwed. And a lot of people, there's a pandemic of fatty
liver disease and most people don't even know. So you don't test their liver enzymes, which are
really accessible. You get your blood work, AST, ALT, GGT, three tests we should should all know and this is not esoteric you go to
any doctor anywhere in the world you can measure these those are and you asked about like who
should fast if your liver enzymes are increasing you should fast more so liver is a huge metabolic
organ and by exercising and fasting we can reduce the amount of fat that's stored in that organ. And what about eating after exercise?
Say we did the eight and six, right?
We eat in that window.
We do a little cardio in the morning,
and then we say, you know what,
we're gonna do a workout at whatever,
seven o'clock at night.
Is it good, is it a bad thing to train hard on the muscles
and tear them down and then not eat protein afterwards? Is that okay? Or should you work
out at four and then eat at six? I would do the latter. That's what I would suggest.
Work out at four. If you have the time and the flexibility, work out before,
then have protein afterwards. Why is that? To help repair. So in the post-exercise
window, you're very insulin sensitive. So that's the other thing. We talked about the soda and
stuff like that. So if you just crushed a workout and had a soda, it's not going to have the same
effect negatively on your blood glucose levels as compared to if you've been sitting all day and
had that soda. So exercise causes your muscles to be like a glucose sponge. And what's cool about having
like a post meal, post exercise meal is you're much more insulin sensitive. So you're going to
take those amino acids and they will help repair the damage that we did to our muscles from that
workout. Got it. Okay. So that's important. Some people do that. They, they train really hard,
but they don't eat enough. And then they wonder why they're not getting stronger.
So again, it's this balance.
It's tough.
And that's why it's so hard.
It's like building a business.
Like, you know, there's a lot of things that you've got to do right.
And you've got to ask people, ask mentors, ask friends, hey, what do you do?
What's working for you?
Do you have a coach or do you just kind of do this all on your own?
I don't have a coach when it comes to health stuff. This is your obsession, though.
This is what you do.
Yeah.
And I've been, you know, I've had a lot of clients over the years
used to work with a medical doctor,
helping overweight people.
And I was a personal trainer back in the day.
So yeah, and I'm not saying
I'm the world's reigning expert at all.
I make a lot of mistakes too and stuff like that.
But I think with some of these approaches
that we've been talking about,
we can get a lot of people
trending in a better direction.
I love this, man.
What else do we need to know?
Anything else about optimizing for today's time where it's so much on our phones,
so much late-night TV movie watching, so much poor eating, minimal exercise?
Anything else you think we need to address here?
Well, I guess there's two things.
And the first one, especially for the men listening,
donating blood. And because as men are, we don't have a natural way to sort of get rid of blood,
like women menstruate. And so they lose blood naturally. Back in the day, you and I would
have been out hunting, we'd be exposed to parasites and ticks, and we would naturally have
thinner, less viscous blood. But I found, found and this is I can almost predict this with the clients that I work with
I would say about 90% of them have thick hyper
Viscous blood and we can easily help humanity and help our own longevity and health by donating blood periodically
What does donating blood do for us in our health?
Well, it reduces the viscosity of our blood, the thickness. And so blood-
You don't want thick blood?
You don't.
It can be, it's more sheer stress for the heart
and the blood vessels.
The pumping in and out, right?
Yeah, and blood's moving around and it's circulating
and that can create sheer challenges there.
And so we think about eating fat.
This was the mantra people used to think about in the 90s.
You eat fat, creates cholesterol in your vessels, narrows the vessels, you get a heart attack.
Well, it turns out that when your blood is thick, that sheer stress can cause that same atherosclerotic formation,
which is the formation of plaque and the narrowing of the arteries.
That can lead to a heart attack or dementia or a stroke.
And so a lot of men are in a better position health-wise if they periodically donate blood how often you do it
Once every six months, right?
But you might want to you know, just get some blood work to see so there's a test known as your hematocrit and hemoglobin
a lot of men this is close to 50% and
So if you look at say we talked about cycling earlier and stuff like that
Like those guys would do blood doping to get their hematocrit high.
Some of them were oxygen and everything.
Someone stroke out because their blood is so thick.
They would get a stroke.
They would.
A lot of people have died or had strokes and all that because their blood is so thick.
They're placing so much stress on stress from action and sometimes they'd be dehydrated.
Wow.
Some guys would stroke or anyway.
So the point is we want thin-ish type blood.
You want your vatican around maybe 42, 43%.
And the only way by doing that is donating or...
Well... Is there nutrition or exercise that allows it to thin or no?
I mean, exercise would help because you're kind of damaging those red blood cells.
And so they're going to break down over time.
So that does help. But for a lot of men, honestly, just periodic,
just put it on the calendar. Like, hey, around Christmas, 4th of July, donate blood. Now,
if you're anemic, you don't want to do that. If you're a menstruating woman trying to get pregnant, you don't want to do it. But postmenopausal women, they're not menstruating
anymore. Their iron can creep up as well.
And so iron can be a pro-oxidant.
It can accelerate degradation of the brain.
It can lead to Alzheimer's and stuff like that.
So it's just a good health thing to sort of get in the habit of doing.
What was the second thing?
You said donating blood for guys.
You were to say there's two things.
One is for men, donating blood. Yeah. Gosh, I can't remember what else I you were to say there's two things one is for men donating blood yeah so um gosh i can't remember what else i was gonna say i think it was was this go out and go camping
why because it gets you more in tune with this whole chicane clock system that we've done
and it gets you in tune with nature and i i and this sounds woo-woo right this sounds
but that has been the big and you asked me hey Mike what was the biggest thing
that you've changed why I got with my family you know hey we had the best
conversations we're not on their phones we have no cell phone service we're
exercising we're in nature there's research in Japan Shinrin Roku or forest
bathing like this is real tangible Like it reduces your inflammation.
So periodic, even if it's over the 4th of July
or even if it's over Labor Day weekend once a year,
getting out in nature, it just reframes your perspective.
And it detoxifies you, so to speak,
and all that work's been overused.
Yeah.
From the news and the stress.
And it puts you in touch with your rhythms.
Because when you're out camping,
you might be having a drink or something around the fire.
But you're not crushing buckets of ice cream on Netflix, right? You're watching the Sun, you know, what's in the stars?
So yeah, and you can't believe you're tired cuz you're out in the dark all night and you're like, okay, it's time to go to bed
exactly, what about
Grounding what does that do for people? Look it sounds it's totally woo woo man
But there's data showing and I did this before you know
There's a building just south of here and I took my shoes off
They have little couches out there in the courtyard and I just got some Sun and and and grounded myself
How often you do that?
You know, I try to walk barefoot a little like a little bit every day, you know
I don't make it like a I'm not like fanatical about it, but I think it's just good periodically.
All animals touch the ground.
We're animals.
I mean, I know birds stand on trees and stuff like that,
but we should be touching the ground, and we never do.
And we have cell phones on our hips all the time.
We have Wi-Fi going on.
So if nothing else, it's just a great way to help our electricity
and our circuitry and our circulation.
And again, it might sound crazy, but studies have actually shown improved circulation and blood flow in people who ground.
Really?
So there's grounding maths.
There's all sorts of experts out there.
But the best thing is just go out in the grass and the dirt and just walk around barefoot for a little bit.
Take your shoes off when you're walking on the beach.
It couldn't be simpler.
Yeah.
And we all know we feel better when we do this. Yes. You go on vacation. What do you do? You go to the beach.. Take your shoes off when you're walking on the beach. Like it couldn't be simpler. Yeah. And we all know we feel better when we do this. You go on vacation. What do you do?
You go to the beach, you take your shoes off, you're in the sand. You feel amazing. You think
it's because you're having a mocktail or, you know, margarita, but it's all of these things.
It's the sun, it's the fresh air, it's the grounding. So yeah. I like this, man. This is
exciting stuff. Your site is highintensityhealth.com. What can we learn more when we exciting stuff your site is high intensity health calm what
can we learn more when we go to your site you know Louis first of all thanks
for having me on the show I really appreciate this opportunity I share a
lot of the science details on these things but I try to keep it practical
and just what I found is there's so much good research but it's not really being
talked about.
And I'm just like a weird nerd.
Like I love to read the research.
So I just like to break it down and be like, hey guys, so here's what the study's found.
Here's how we can validate healthy lifestyle change.
So that's what we encourage people to do.
That's cool.
Your social media is fun as well.
You got a lot of cool memes on there on Instagram, metabolic underscore Mike.
Mike Mutzel over on Twitter, Facebook as well.
What's the main platform you're on the most?
What do you like?
Probably YouTube.
YouTube.
What's your channel there?
I didn't see it there.
High Intensity Health.
High Intensity Health on YouTube.
You're putting out videos once a week or?
Like at least five days a week.
Five days a week you're putting out a video. I try to.
Wow, man.
Stepping it up.
I like it.
I mean, I just found like the platform will push your your video to the feet right more frequency. Yes on Instagram
It's like kind of gone after a day where this is yeah stays more relevant frequently, which is cool
I'm a big YouTube fan. We've been going hard on YouTube
Thank you
And if you guys are listening and you haven't subscribed to our YouTube go to the YouTube right now and check out Mike's
High intensity health on youtube also anything else
we can do to support you and uh be a part of your mission this is all good man i mean if anyone
you know starts fasting and gets benefits i'll check on the comments on this youtube video okay
like i would love to know where people are at and what how fasting or exercise how that's improved
their health you know the comments you can really get a good kind of pulse with the zeitgeist you
know see see what's working for people.
Absolutely, okay, cool man.
This is a question I ask everyone at the end
called the three truths.
So I'd like you to imagine a hypothetical scenario.
You live as long as you wanna live,
but it's your last day on earth,
and you gotta turn the lights off.
And you accomplish all your dreams and goals,
but it's the last day.
But for whatever reason, all of your content
has to go somewhere else.
It's not here on this earth anymore.
No one has access to your five weekly YouTube videos
and your content, and this interview is gone.
But you get to leave behind three lessons,
I like to call three truths, to the world.
And this is all we would have to be reminded by your work
and your message.
What would you say are those three truths for you?
That's a great question.
I would say really value your relationships.
People really matter.
The person that I would want to be with
would be my daughter.
So relationships really matter.
The second one would be slow down.
Anything great takes patience.
You know, businesses and professional athletes develop over time slowly.
The third thing that I would say is we are part of nature.
You know, so whatever your business is, whatever you're, you know, if you're gunning it and you're driving till 3 or 4 in the morning and you think that you can circumvent these biologic rhythms that we talked about,
that's going to come up and bite you in the butt.
So living in harmony with nature,
being patient, valuing your relationships,
that's what I would say.
That's a great question.
That's good, man.
I appreciate it.
I want to acknowledge you, Mike,
for showing up and constantly doing this research.
I think it's important
because there's so much information out there.
A lot of us don't know what is accurate, what is helpful for us, what is beneficial for us now and long term.
So I acknowledge you for being obsessed with the data, the research, the science, and then teaching it to us in practical, fun, insightful ways for us to actually be like, okay, I'm not too overwhelmed.
Let me go do some of this.
Yeah.
So I acknowledge you for doing that, man.
It's a pleasure. I acknowledge you for walking the talk.
You do the research and then you're living it as well.
You're not just telling people and going to sleep at 4 a.m. every night
and all that stuff.
So I appreciate you showing up for your audience by walking the talk.
It's really fun to see that, man.
Final question, what's your definition of greatness?
Yeah, I knew this was coming.
I think being consistent.
So if we think about Kobe,
we think about great athletes, great entrepreneurs,
they just showed up every day, day in, day out,
and they were just consistent.
And everything that we've talked about here,
just be consistent with your walking.
They can achieve a great physique, a great health,
great mental clarity.
So instead of trying to always jump onto the latest fad,
just be consistent.
Pick one thing that we talked about today
and just be great at that one thing.
It can be exercise, feeding, whatever.
That to me is what I think leads to greatness
or it can, one attribute of that.
There you go. My man.
Appreciate it, brother.
My pleasure, buddy. Really appreciate it.
My man.
Thank you so much for listening. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you
on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for
a full rundown of today's show with all the important links. I really love hearing feedback
from you guys, so share a review over on Apple and let me know what part of this episode resonated with you
the most. And if no one's told you lately, I want to remind you that you are loved,
you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.