The School of Greatness - The Best Treatment For Weight Loss and Preventing Disease w/ Dr. Jason Fung EP 1361
Episode Date: December 12, 2022Dr. Jason Fung is a physician, researcher and New York Times best-selling author currently practicing in Toronto, Canada. His books, including The Obesity Code, The Complete Guide to Fasting, The Diab...etes Code and The Cancer Code have challenged conventional thinking about these diseases, and introduced dietary strategies to manage them. He is the co-founder of The Fasting Method, which provides the education, tools and community needed to successfully implement intermittent fasting.In this episode you will learn,The deeper reasons why people eat too much.How dopamine from food affects your body and brain.The major factors surrounding Obesity in children.The top 5 foods to help burn fat faster.For more, go to lewishowes.com/1361Check out Jason’s prior episode here!The Science of Intermittent Fasting (Foods To Live Longer & Reverse Type 2 Diabetes): https://link.chtbl.com/1031-podHow To Prevent Cancer With Your Food: https://link.chtbl.com/1030-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Watch your calories, watch your calories, watch your calories.
And I think it's a disastrous sort of idea because the thing about calories is that...
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.
In your opinion, what is the best way to stay consistent
in maintaining weight loss and preventing disease?
Yeah, that's a great question. And I think that it gets to some
of the, you know, environmental aspects of weight, because the way we look at it is that, you know,
a lot of people think that it's just about knowledge, right? It's just about knowing what
you're supposed to do, right? And the thing is that that's probably, that's just the beginning. It's not the end, right? It's like saying,
don't eat cookies. That's good advice. It doesn't mean I'm not going to eat cookies,
right? Because there's all different reasons why people do it. And so just knowing something,
just knowing, oh, I could fast. Well, yes, you could, but will you, right? That's the real key.
And you have to realize that there's actually a lot of other things that go into it.
And one of them is the environment.
So the environment that you find yourself in plays a huge role into how well you're
going to do in this.
And that's important because you can change your environment, right?
So, you know, I was saying, think about two situations, right?
your environment right so you know i think think about two situations right in the 1970s you're in the meeting at your office and you're bored but there's nothing to do so you sit there and listen
you don't eat because what are you going to do get up and walk out and get yourself a cookie
everybody be like what the hell are you doing right and compare that to the 2020s where you
have a meeting 10 30 somebody orders bagels and cream cheese, right?
And they stick them in front of you at the meeting.
So you're not actually hungry, but you're bored.
Boss is going on and on.
So you eat that bagel, right?
So it's a completely, it's not that you didn't know that the cookies, bagels the whatever was good for you nobody thought
that but the environment's so different because one of them is so like you're not moving from
your seat because you know your whole company's there your boss is there the other one oh i'm
just gonna eat that way i'm you know i'm gonna pass the time right so the environment plays like a huge role uh same thing you know 1970s it's coffee you take a coffee right
you go to you know the the little thing you get your coffee there's nothing else so that's all
you get coffee 2020 you didn't go down you go you know, local coffee store, there's more than coffee
there. Everybody knows that, right? And all the coffee has, you know, 50 grams of sugar and whipped
cream. Exactly. You got the caramel, this and mocha, this, and those all have sugar. And then
you got your donuts and your muffins and things. So it's not just coffee. So what was the difference
between the two? It certainly wasn't the knowledge. So it's not just coffee. So what was the difference between the two?
It certainly wasn't the knowledge.
And it certainly wasn't the willpower.
The difference was the environment is very conducive on one side to weight loss by forcing
you to not eat.
And on the other side, it's just very easy to, right?
And this sort of environment means that you can change it.
So if you're an office manager, you can say, guess what?
We're not having any food at meetings anymore.
It's not allowed.
It's not allowed to eat at your desk.
If you want to work, you work.
If you want to eat, you go to the cafeteria, right?
There's no candy on the bowl, like no candy in the office.
That's just not what we do because it's not fair to people trying to lose weight.
Those are easy rules. But now all of a sudden, you've tilted your odds of success much higher
because if you're spending eight hours in the office, you actually have no thing and no more
of these office birthday parties with cake, right? That everybody feels obligated to go and have a
little bit of cake that you really didn't want in the first place, right? And again, it's the same
thing, right? You say, okay, we'll celebrate celebrate but we're just going to have fruit or whatever it is
right whatever you want to do once you once you understand that it's the environment that's more
important than you know purely the knowledge then you can make those changes or you can get yourself
a curing machine and say okay we're going to make the coffees here so that you don't have to go down there, right? So there's all different things you can do. The other thing you have to
think about is the sort of deeper reasons why people are eating. So if you think about things
like emotional eating, right? There's lots of different reasons why people eat. And hunger is
really just one of them. You eat because
you're bored, you eat because you're stressed, you eat because, you know, you're sad, for example.
So this is a very interesting thing. If you look at refined carbohydrates and sugar,
what we know is that you eat, you know, sugar, some people, the dopamine in their brain lights up like a Christmas tree, right?
What it means is that they're being flooded with these sort of feel good chemicals. So if you're
all of a sudden sad, you broke up with somebody or whatever it is, you're a little sad at work,
you're looking for a little happiness, well, you get yourself some sugar because you know that it's
going to make you feel better. That's what comfort foods are, right? Comfort foods are like, you know, sweets, like,
you know, cookies, chocolates, ice cream, you know, or starchy foods like mac and cheese and
stuff, right? Nobody's like getting themselves a piece of salmon, right? That's not comfort food.
It's like, it's delicious, but it's not comfort food, right? So
the point is that if you just say, Oh, just don't eat, well, you're not understanding why people are
eating, right? So maybe the environment is not right for them. Maybe they're eating because
they're emotional, like they're sad, they're depressed, they're, you know, bored, whatever,
then you can fix that. It's like, Oh, if you're they're you know bored whatever then you can
fix that it's like oh if you're bored let's figure out what you want to do or if you're sad let's
figure out something that you can do instead um or whatever it is right and so that's that's that's
you know that's that's a couple of things that you really have to think about and then the third
thing you really have to think about is habits, because habits are huge. And I
think this is, you know, people have started to realize how huge habits really are, because
if you have something that's not fun, then as long as you make it into a habit,
then you'll still do it. And you don't have to think about it, because once it's a habit,
it doesn't require willpower so if
you think about brushing your teeth for example we all brush our teeth twice a day nobody thinks
it's fun nobody really wants to brush your teeth you do it because it's a habit you feel incomplete
if you don't right you get up and you don't brush your teeth you feel a little weird right so you go
and brush your teeth because that's just what you do. But that's the key, right? You make your habits, and then the habits make you because then
you derive all the benefits of brushing your teeth, that is less cavities later on. But you
did it because you created that habit deliberately, right? So time restricted eating, intermittent
fasting goes along with those things, right? If you create that habit that, hey,
you don't eat breakfast or, hey, you're going to stop eating after dinner. After a while,
you're the one that's going to derive the benefits of that because you, yes, the first two weeks
of trying to create that habit, maybe it's a little hard, right? But after a while, you do
that for the rest of your life. You think about the 1970s again, because again, there's a little hard, right? But after a while, you do that for the rest of your life. You think about
the 1970s again, because again, there's a time where there's not a lot of starvation, but there
is not a lot of obesity either, right? What was the obesity metric at in the 70s compared to where
is it now? I think it was probably like 15% sort of thing compared to like 60, 70% now.
Wait, 60, 70% obesity now? Is that an American?
Overweight and obesity. Yeah, overweight and obesity, right?
So what does overweight and obese mean?
So we use a body mass index, which is basically it's a height versus weight sort of calculation.
basically it's a height versus weight sort of calculation. 20 to 25 is considered normal. Now,
25 is 25 to 30 is considered overweight, but that, that actually catches a lot of people who are just on the muscular side. So it's actually not a great metric, but those are the definitions.
And then you go over 30 is obese. And then they've had to add a couple of, they've had to add a few,
like over 40 is like morbidly obese and stuff because people were going up and up and up on that scale.
So over 30% body fat is considered obese currently?
No, it's a body mass index, which is like weight over height sort of thing.
So the higher it is, the more your weight, but you have to
divide it by your height so that, you know, you're comparing apples to apple. But anyway, it's not a
great metric, but it is a standard sort of metric that we use. But based in the 70s on the same
metric, there was only 50% overweight or obese, whereas now it's 60 percent overweight yeah it's a lot higher and then yeah it's it's it's
sad and it's it's especially stark in childhood because of course uh why is that i see so many
kids walking around now that don't look healthy they look extremely overweight and obese as
five eight ten twelve year olds and when when I was a kid growing up in the
80s, early 90s, there was a lot of sugar available. And we and I remember having a lot of sugar. But
I also remember being outside constantly running around playing sports and activities and being
outside. It was less being inside on the phone and less on video games. It was more about playing.
Is that one of the main factors? Or what is the main factor of so much child obesity?
I think there's been a couple of major factors.
I think one of the major factors was probably the increase.
So it was the increase in sort of processed sugary foods.
So if you look at when the obesity epidemic really went got going,
it was sort of in the late 70s, just as we got the food pyramid, right? That was the big change.
Interesting. So is that is that mark? Is that marketing then? Is that just sharing marketing
ideas and saying this is what you need to have in your in your meals and have more breads and
more carbs and more cereals it was it was the u.s uh u.s department of agriculture so the usda came
out so what happened was that up before 1977 so the first food pyramid it was is the dietary
guidelines for americans was 1977 and before that it was very uh much the government wouldn't tell
you what to eat your mom told you what to eat much the government wouldn't tell you what to eat.
Your mom told you what to eat, right?
The government didn't get involved with that.
And 1977 was the first time that they decided, okay, we're going to put out national guidelines.
So the problem was they couldn't agree on a lot of stuff because there's this whole anti-fat movement that was going, right?
And the reason for that was in the 50s
people were getting heart attacks so you know 50 year olds they'd get a heart attack
and people didn't know why they said why are all these people getting heart attacks and um
so a couple of researchers uh said it's because they're eating more fat and it wasn't actually
true that's the problem because if if you look at the diets of
Americans, they hadn't changed much over the previous 100 years. So they're eating the same
amount of fat, they're having more heart attacks. When you look back, it's actually pretty obvious
what was going on. People were smoking like crazy, right? All the way from 1900 through the World
Wars, people were just smoking, smoking,
smoking. Of course, nobody knew it was that bad for you. And by the fifties and sixties,
people were having the heart attacks. And remember the cigarette companies were saying,
that's not us, right? Everybody smokes, your doctor smokes, right? So, you know, remember
for years they had just denied everything. So that that was all that all came out in the litigation, you know, years later, but people were smoking. That's why they're having heart attack. But at the time, this is 60. Nobody knew why they're having heart attack. So there's this one group of people who said it's because people are eating fat. Dietary fat causes heart disease. Eat fat, get heart disease.
heart disease. Eat fat, get heart disease. The problem was that if you look at the percentage fat in the American diet in the 50s, it was the same as it was in 1900. So that didn't make any
sense at all. But it sort of made, it seemed like it made sense. So that's why there's this whole
group of people that said, it's the fat. And so therefore, but there's a lot of debate. But in
1977, the government says, we need to put something down down and the sort of anti-fat movement was like well it's the fat so once they said it's the fat that
was it right it was official government policy to go low fat the problem is that you know if you eat
less fat then you're going to eat more carbs because there's only three macronutrients.
There's carbohydrates, there's fat, and there's protein. You can't increase protein that much
because if you eat pure protein, it's a little bit gross, right? So super lean meat and stuff,
it's just not that good, right? So it is hard to eat just protein. So you wind up getting less fat
in the diet, you have more carbs, which is fine if you're eating broccoli,
but not so fine if you're just eating a lot of white bread. But that's what happened, right? So
the original food pyramid was all seven servings of bread and rice and potatoes, right? So then
people started to gain weight, because, hey, it's, it's a lot of carbs, right? So, and refined carbs is the main problem. So, uh, as people started to
gain weight, they, uh, you know, that was the sort of a big turning point. Um, because now everybody
was teaching this in the schools, right. And every, the dietician had to sort of toe the line
and say, eat less fat and eat more protein. And then the government really
encouraged processed foods. They spent a lot of money telling food companies to process food so
that you can get the fat out of that, right? So you get these low fat foods, right? But they're
highly processed. So they took everything out and then they stuff sugar in to make it taste better.
So they took everything out and then they stuffed sugar in to make it taste better.
So what happened was that everybody was eating refined carbs and sugar, right?
So, you know, refined carbs and sugar is basically a cookie, right?
That's what you know, right?
It's like cookies and donuts.
That's refined sugar and carbs, right?
There's no nutritional value.
Not nutritional and not good for your waistline.
So people started gaining weight. And then the other thing that happens when you eat a lot of refined carbs is that it doesn't keep you full.
So if you think about it, if you eat steak and eggs at breakfast, you don't really feel like
eating something at 1030 because it really keeps you full. When you eat a couple of slices of white
bread and jam and orange juice, by 1030, you're just ravenously hungry. And there's
a good reason for that because there's certain things in the diet that make you full. Those are
satiety hormones. So if you eat a lot of protein containing foods, you release a peptide YY,
which is a hormone that tells you to stop. Same thing with fat, it releases cholecystokinin,
it tells you to stop. So you eat a steak, those hormones start going up,
and then eventually you just can't push through. That's why they have those competitions, you know,
eat a 16 ounce steak and we'll give it to you for free. They don't give out a lot of free steak
because it's very hard to push past that. If you eat a lot of unrefined carbs with a lot of fiber,
while it stretches your stomach, that tells you
stop eating. So all hormones tell you to stop eating. Well, what happens when you eat that
highly refined carbs plus sugar, which is the white bread and jam? Well, there's no protein,
there's no fat, and there's no fiber. So you don't feel full. You could keep eating that stuff
and you just won't get full, right? It's just like
if you have a big buffet and somebody says, here, have another pork chop. You go, right? It's like,
well, I can't do that. But somebody says, here, drink some Coke. You're like, okay, why? It could
have the same number of calories, but it has no satiety signaling. It's pure sugar. So that's the
difference, right? So then people
started eating all the time. So you had this huge change in the population where all of a sudden
you're eating carbs, you're eating sugar because we're all focused on the fat and we're eating
constantly because if you eat your white bread and jam at eight o'clock, 1030, you're looking
for a low fat muffin. And so you're eating five, six times a day. So before, you know, when people used to say don't snack,
now everybody says you need to snack, because people are like saying I have to eat six times
a day. But I'm eating the right foods, the white bread and jam, the low fat white bread and jam,
right? Therefore, eating six times a day must be good but it never was
so that's sort of how that whole thing developed and then of course we realized eventually that
the low fat thing was just a scam the whole thing was just wrong is that the government saying this
is that some other yeah the government's like, like if you look at the dietary guidelines, they get updated every five years.
And they've completely taken out that stuff about fat.
So before they said, oh, you should eat maximum this percentage of fat.
So if you remember, so America was super low fat and they were gaining weight like crazy.
And the French didn't have that they're eating their
their butter full creams you know foie gras you know fatty fatty foods cheeses so cheese yeah so
they're eating all this fat so in the 80s and they're skinny and they're skinny but everyone
was saying well they're skinny because they're smoking all day but they weren't getting heart
attacks so there's something there.
Well, that was the whole French paradox, right? That was what we called it.
There's a whole debate about why aren't these French people getting heart attacks because they're eating so much fat. They should be getting heart attacks, but they're getting like a third of
the heart attacks that the Americans were. And the answer was that all that fat, you know, the fat
and their butter and cheese and stuff, it just wasn't that bad for them. Right. And the answer was that all that fat, you know, the fat in their butter and cheese and
stuff, it just wasn't that bad for them, right? And that's what eventually the study showed. Then
you started to realize, we started to realize that, you know, stuff like nuts, which are very
high in fat, was not bad. The Mediterranean diet with its olive oil was not bad. Salmon was not
bad. Avocados weren't bad. So in the 80s, avocados were completely like, oh, my God, how can you eat that?
Right. And it goes from that to a superfood. Right. So it's full of fat. Avocados full of fat. Right.
And, you know, this whole low fat thing and sort of turn around. And then, you know, we realize that even stuff like butter, that's not that bad for you.
you know, we've realized that even stuff like butter, that's not that bad for you, right?
So butters come back, we used to get people on margarine. But the whole thing is that by going to these sort of high, highly refined carbohydrates, and, you know, sugary foods, that's what sort of,
I think, fed the obesity epidemic. On top of that, you're eating foods that basically didn't make you
full at all. So therefore, you're just eating that basically didn't make you full at all.
So therefore you're just eating more because there's nothing to stop you.
Right.
So if you didn't stop, you're just going to eat more and you're eating more often.
So it was this perfect sort of, you know, you're eating really fattening foods.
You're eating more often than usual and you're eating more because there's nothing to tell
you to stop.
So it's like, okay, well, what's going to happen? Well, you're going to gain weight, right? So it
was never about willpower. It's all about this sort of thing that was set in motion by the
government suddenly decreeing that we should eat processed fat-free foods. That was basically what
the dietary guidelines in 77 said.
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a disclosures at masterworks.com slash CD. I'm curious, Jason, what is the thing in 10 years
that we will say we got wrong in this decade? About nutrition, health and fitness, fasting,
you know, obesity, what, what is the thing that we will get wrong? Because it sounds like every
decade or two, there's something we the government says, doctors say nutritionists say this is the thing that we will get wrong? Because it sounds like every decade or two, there's something the government says,
doctors say, nutritionists say,
this is the way.
And then up 10, 20 years later,
that's not the way.
What is the thing in this space right now
that people are saying,
this is the way,
the government is preaching this,
doctors, institutions are saying,
this is it.
And in 10, 20 years,
you think we're going to discover. we we jump too quick to that conclusion. And the data is showing now that there's actually really negative effects to this belief. Is there anything you think might come out?
very prevalent is this idea of sort of calories in calories out sort of thing. I think it's actually one of the most destructive ideas in weight loss. I think it's because it's so deceptively
sort of simple. If you look at most academic centers, so I was just showing that the American,
like a lot of the guidelines are just like, your calories, watch your calories, watch your calories.
And I think it's a disastrous sort of idea because the thing about calories is that calories is a measure of food energy, right?
That's how much energy is released when you put a piece of food into a sort of measuring device called a bomb
calorimeter. And it's like, okay, this cheesecake has 200 calories, because when you burn it, you
get this amount of heat generated, right? That's how you measure that, right? And so people say
stuff like, oh, you know, it's all about calories and calories out, right? that's something you hear all the time or calorie is a calorie and it's it's it's really sort of um very simplistic and it's actually not very helpful
because you can have two foods right you think about two foods you have one which is um you know
cookies which is 100 calories or 200 calories and you have say santa just 200 calories so equal amounts of calories the minute you eat
the cookies you release the hormone insulin okay and the insulin is a hormone that tells your body
what to do with those calories so the insulin tells your body to store those calories it moves
it right into the fat stores right so the whole thing is that if all that
energy moves directly into your fat store, so these highly refined carbohydrates, sugar goes
way up, insulin goes way up. When insulin goes way up, it is literally the thing that is telling
your body, put those calories into storage and you store the calories in your body fat. That's all it is.
Body fat is just a store of calories.
So imagine you take the 200 calories of cookies.
Now, the 200 calories of salmon doesn't raise insulin.
So you take the 200 calories and your body just burns it, right?
It uses it.
That's going to make a huge difference in terms of obesity, because in one
case, you're just storing the whole damn thing. The other one, you're using it. You've got energy.
You're generating body heat. You're feeling good. The other one, you took the 200 calories,
you shoved it all into body fat. Your body's like, oh, I have no energy to use. So you're
feeling a little bit, oh, I have no energy. I'm a little tired and I'm a little hungry. So let me go eat something. So it wasn't the calories. It wasn't
the number of calories. It was the response to the calories, which is related to the hormones
that are released. So the strange part is that what we're saying is that food contains not just
the food energy, but it also contains instructions as to what
your body is supposed to do with those calories. And both of them are very, very important.
Whereas the calories people say, well, it's just a number of calories. Well, once you get past that,
you know, once you put it in your mouth, you can measure the difference in hormones between the two foods.
And you have to pretend that that's completely irrelevant because if you're eating, if you're
told to eat the refined carbs and sugar, which is what, what we're told, then you're setting
yourself up to a situation where insulin is going to go way off. And that insulin is going to tell your body to store fat. It's it's that's its job,
right? That's literally its job. You told your body to do that with your choice of food.
So I don't see why that is considered irrelevant. So not just the amount of calories, but you have
to also look at the hormonal response because our body is, is completely dependent on hormones. Tell us what to do.
The other thing that insulin does, of course,
it tells you that you need to put energy into storage, right?
It's only when energy,
it's only when insulin falls that you can pull the energy back out, right?
So what we say technically is insulin inhibits lipolysis.
That is, if insulin is high, you can't burn fat
because your instructions are to store fat, right?
You can either store fat or you can burn fat, right?
But you can't do both at the same time.
So if you want to burn fat,
but you're keeping your insulin levels high
with the choice of foods,
then, hey, it's not going're keeping your insulin levels high with the choice of foods, then,
hey, it's not going to work because insulin's high. You're not going to be able to move the
energy from the fat back out. What would you say are the top five foods or food groups to support
in burning fat faster? I think you really have to look at the sort of very low carbohydrate
foods, because of course, they're going to provide you the energy. So things like, you know, salmon,
of course, fatty fish is very good. Eggs are very good. Avocados are, you know, very good.
If you want to do carbs, then things like beans are very good because of all the fiber
and stuff like they're unrefined. So then they have other things that that will work. But those
very low carbohydrate foods, a lot of people find very useful to encourage fat burning, because
if you take salmon and eggs, for example, you're going to get that energy, the calories from that,
which is energy, but insulin is not going to go up. So your body is not going to say, okay, well, let's put it into storage. It's just going to burn it, right? You're going to stay in that sort of fat burning state. And you're going to be able to use those calories because that's what you've allowing your body to still access the body fat for energy, and it's going to keep you full because, again, it's going to release hormones like peptide YY, like folicistokinin, that will keep you full as opposed to the white bread and jam, right?
The problem is, you know, people like to eat those refined carbs.
They're cheap, right?
They taste good.
They taste good.
They're cheap.
They're donuts
right so the you know and and that sets up a situation and there's a lot of people who say
well it's just calories right so you can eat ice cream for dinner right i mean if you told your
grandmother that she'd say you're stupid right like you can't eat ice cream for dinner even if
they're the same number of calories because again one of them is going to go straight into stores, which is body fat, leave
you hungry.
The other one, you're going to feel full.
You're going to feel good.
You're going to have energy to do whatever you need to do, right?
So your grandmother was totally right.
You can't just say, oh, both are 800 calories.
So instead of eating my dinner, I'm going to have an ice cream sundae, right?
Because that is literally what people have been telling, telling people, like, it's all about the
calories, right? It's like, no, that's like the worst advice you could give. It's about the quality
of calories. It sounds like it's about the quality. It's about the choices because uh you know what we're saying is that certain
calories are more fattening than other calories that's all like some foods are more fattening
than other foods and that doesn't seem to be that controversial a statement but by the time you get
to the universities and stuff people are like oh it's all calories it's all calories it's like
and why don't you kind of live in the real world where people are actually trying to live this way?
Because that advice is horribly wrong.
Now, there's a lot of people talking about fasting, like you said.
You've been talking about this for years, and it seems like more and more people are learning about the benefits,
are practicing fasting in different various ways, and are
seeing results in their own health or with potential clients they work with teaching
about fasting.
I'm curious, how does fasting, since I've talked to you last in the last year, I think
it's been a year and a half now, how does fasting support weight loss in a healthy way?
And is there any new research that's come out since we last talked?
Yeah. So there's, there's been a little bit of research and it's been a sort of spits and starts,
but fasting is very simple when you don't eat, right? So any period of time you're not eating
is fasting. That's just what it is. If you don't eat, your body needs to take the energy out of
its body stores.
That's all you're trying to do. Right. And it's normal. It's natural.
That's how we survived as a species, because we had the ability to store calories for a time that we weren't eating.
Otherwise, you'd die in your sleep like every single night. Right.
But you don't because you can store it. So body fat is a store of calories.
The reason fasting is so effective is because
you're allowing the hormone insulin to fall. So therefore now you're opening up the floodgates
of energy. So you're like, oh, your body might have a hundred thousand, 200,000 calories of
energy sitting in its body fat stores, depending on how much weight you're trying to lose,
but you can't get at it until you let insulin fall. So if you're nibbling
all through the day and keeping your insulin high, you're eating, you know, the crackers because
they're low fat, but you're not going to be able to access body fat because you've kept your insulin
high. You've basically told your body store energy, don't burn energy. So once you start to release
the, you know, let the insulin fall, then you can start to release energy. And that's all you're trying to do with the fasting. So it's a hugely important thing to do, and has always been
part of a sort of traditional way of eating. So if you think about the 1970s, again, you finish
dinner at like 6pm, you know, and you maybe eat breakfast at like 8am, right? That's a 14 hour period of
fasting that people did every single day, without even thinking about it. In other words, they have
14 hours that they're dragging calories back out of their body. That doesn't happen anymore because when you do studies of, um, you know, how people eat now,
uh, on average, they eat for, um, I think it was like, uh, six, um, 14 hours and 45 minutes.
So if you started eating at 8 AM, you wouldn't finish until 10 45 PM on average. That's the
average length of time that people are eating in other words you're the
only time people are actually fasting is when they went to sleep right that's the only time
so it means people is eating considered consuming liquid drinks also that are non-water yeah that's
calories if there's calories then then it's it's considered energy. Right. So what, what, what of course was happening was that in the past,
people would be like, you know, if you want a bedtime snack,
your mom would say, no, you should eat more at dinner. Right.
There's nothing to eat right now. It's like, Hey, eat anytime you want.
Right. There's food everywhere. You can buy food everywhere.
You know, stores are everywhere.
And that's mainly played a huge role in, in that. Right.
So there have been a few
small studies a few studies of fasting that have come out in the literature it's a it's a bit of a
mixed bag some have shown really good success and then others have have not because again they've
sort of um done it a bit wrong they sort of did they mixed fasting so they'd say fast one day and then eat
more the next day it's like that's not really what you're supposed to do and i always think
it's like why would you design a study like that like if you're gonna fast one day what I'm trying to do is say, you know, if you drop a meal, I want to take your body to
take the calories that you would have eaten in that meal. I want you to take that out of your
body fat. That's what I want you to do. So you're pulling that energy back out. You're basically
feeding yourself on body fat because body fat is a store of food energy. It came from the food you ate in the past,
right? You turned it into fat. Now you have to bring it back out. If the next day you overeat,
you're simply going to fill up the fat again, right? So why would you do that? But there's a
number of studies that alternated fasting with overeating. And I'm like thinking that's crazy.
And of course they didn't show any benefits. okay like come into the real world please like i never tell people when you're eating eat extra
like why would you do that and then there's another study uh that was took a it was very
prominent and then new york times said oh there's no benefits. But the problem was that, um, is the, you know, they,
they look at fasting and they, they said, okay, we're going to go, you know, increase the amount
of fasting. And the problem was they increased it by like 14% or something like that. And the
number, and they needed to show almost a 40% increased, um, efficacy with the fasting to be positive which is a high bar like increasing
fasting by you know 15 time wise like i think they went from like 14 to 16 hours so there's a small
increase in the fasting time but they expected this huge massive increase in the effectiveness
of weight loss but it's like again welcome to the real world. You can't get a 15% increase in your fasting time, which results in a 40% decrease in weight above what the other people do, right? It's like, if you increase fasting by 15%, the best you should really hope for is a 15% increase in your efficacy.
48% increase in the efficacy, but they needed 40. So they said, it doesn't work.
Okay, well, that's not exactly the way I would interpret it. So there's been a few studies.
I'm curious, then what I feel like a lot of people have tried it in the last year,
you know, especially people on the who are consumers of the show who watch on YouTube or listen on audio. They've heard me talk about fasting.
They've heard me talk about my experiments of doing, you know,
two-day fast, one-day fast, three-day fast,
and bring on different experts talking about fasting and the benefits.
I'm curious, from all the things that you've learned over fasting
over the last, you know, many years,
and what you've seen people trying to come out and talk about lately, what are your three best strategies and or practices
for fasting that people can practice for the next seven days that is sustainable,
maintainable, and doable? And it will also get added benefits.
And it will also get added benefits.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that in terms of fasting, one, make it a habit, right?
So habits are what makes it easy, you know, tough stuff, not so tough, right? So if you are, you know, make it a habit to sort of do a 16 hour fast, right?
you know, make it a habit to sort of do a 16 hour fast, right? Say my eating window is between this and this. Do it consistently so that it feels normal to you. And therefore, when you step
outside that you feel a little bit uncomfortable, just like that day, you don't brush your teeth,
right? It's like, you feel a little bit like something's off here, because that's the thing,
right? So you do it consistently. And I think that's one of the big,
you know, big things that happened in the 70s.
That is, they had that 14 hour period of fasting
without thinking about it, right?
So it was never onerous because they just did it, right?
It's not like I have to not eat after dinner.
That's just what I do, right?
It's a
huge shift in the way you think about things two is uh sort of staying busy so that you don't think
about the food and there's you know certain things that you can do and something that that are good
and some things that aren't so good so one of the things of course um is trying to avoid the
triggers so if you decide okay once a week i'm going to do a 24-hour fast i'm going to eat just So one of the things, of course, is trying to avoid the triggers.
So if you decide, okay, once a week, I'm going to do a 24-hour fast.
I'm going to eat just one meal that day.
That's fine.
But then you have to make sure that you schedule something into that period where you would be not eating.
So if you're doing something else, you're not going to eat.
For me, for example, for years, I would just schedule, you know, I would do writing.
I would write like my books or I'd do a podcast or something like that.
So it's easy because if it's 12 o'clock, I need to go do this podcast.
I'm not thinking about lunch because I'm doing this podcast or to the library or somewhere where
it's quiet, then I do some writing. I write my blog, right? And it's like, oh, okay, well,
now I'm not missing it anymore, right? So put it on the schedule and make sure that you have
something else that's going to sort of take your mind off that makes it easier for yourself,
right? And that's, you know, that's the key. And then the third thing I think is to really plan ahead of time how you're going to deal with the hunger, right? Because if the hunger comes, you have to have a plan. Like you can't just show up.
I'm having a challenging day or I'm sad or I've, uh, and I'm so used to grabbing for the chips,
the snacks, the cookies, the crunchies, what's the best practice to keep people's discipline at a high when they feel like all they want to do is much. Yeah. There's, there's two things. If,
if you're in a place where you can do it, um, do something active, especially outside,
because of course, then you're taking yourself away. So
going out for a walk or a run is great, because exercise, like, it does two things. First of all,
you can schedule it. Second of all, when you're actually exercising, you'll almost never be
hungry, right? Like think about the last time you played tennis
or basketball or soccer you're so fully into the game you're not thinking boy i'm really hungry
like almost never like like it almost you know you almost can't do it right like you you know
you've you've done plenty of stuff you never think in the middle of a game, boy, I could really use a burger, right?
You're thinking, how am I going to score, right?
Or whatever you're doing, right?
So putting a pickup game of whatever you like to play, right?
Does wonders because you know the hunger is going to go away.
You're taking the time where you're in the past, you would have
taken something. So lunch hour, for example, you're taking that time. And three, when you make a plan
to play a game of tennis with your friend, you're not going to back out. You're not going to just
say, ah, forget it. I'm going to go for a pizza because you're going to let your friend down.
So that keeps you accountable to yourself. So it's like, okay, so once a week,
and this is great when people are trying to say,
lose weight together.
It's like, okay, let's figure out what we like to play.
Is it, you know, yoga?
Is it riding a bicycle?
Is it going for a hike?
Is it like, whatever it is, let's do it together.
And let's do it at a time
so that we get through this period, right? And that's
how we help each other, right? We help each other by doing these sorts of things. And of course,
that's sort of the secret of how people fasted in the past. Like you think about groups of people.
Now there's all sorts of religious fasting traditions. So around Lent, for example,
around Ramadan, Yom Kippur, whatever it is, there's fasting.
Well, literally millions of people are doing it.
Why?
Because they're doing it together.
It's just a lot easier.
If your family is not eating, you're a lot less likely to eat because it's just the norm.
So doing things together in a supportive group, that's important. Like it's the way we get things done. We're humans, we're social beings, right? when their environment continually challenges them to stay disciplined?
Maybe they don't have the ability to remove all the sugary foods
or they're working in an office where they can't say,
hey, can we get rid of this stuff?
How does someone with a room full of distractions
manage to stay disciplined and have willpower?
Yeah, that's a tough one. Because, you know, I don't think, you know, a lot of people think obesity or weight gain is about lack of willpower.
But again, I don't think it is, I think it's the change in sort of the norms, that is the eating
norms and the environment, which is led in the processed
food has led to that. So if you can't take yourself out of the environment, then you really
have to look at alternative ways to, you know, again, you have to plan for it. So if you know
that there's going to be something like, you know, in the meeting, there's going to be food,
right? And you don't want to eat
because you don't want to gain weight, then you have to decide what are you going to do to sort
of counteract that maybe you're going to get a tea, right? And then that's all you'll have. So
at least you'll have something to sip on putting your mouth because, you know, you need something
in there. It's just like the way people used to when they stop smoking, they chew gum, right?
Because you need something in there to take take away the sort of thing. So it's, it still takes willpower,
but it takes a little less because you're still getting something, right? Or you have to decide,
okay, well, how, you know, you have to decide, what am I going to do to sort of minimize and
maybe I'll step further away from where things are um you know if you're sometimes
you have these meetings where you're you know in the auditorium and the food's at the back i'll
sit at the front so that it's going to be embarrassing for me to get out and and get
some food because it's going to look so bad right whereas if you're back you just grab it and then
go back to your seat right so so there's there's there's ways but it's really still about trying to figure out how you're going to mitigate those effects um of what you're
of what you're trying to do because the temptations are always going to be there right and and you
have to realize the foods are made to be tempting like nobody's trying to make their foods not not
appetizing so yeah i feel like it's going to be a chance i mean i feel
like there's so many emotions that tied towards the discipline of eating with all the marketing
messages with all the stress that people have it feels good to eat and consume it takes away some
of the pain it takes away some of the emotional challenges that people face. And I can empathize with parents.
I'm not a parent, so I can't speak into how it might feel having kids who maybe are a handful
or maybe have a lot of emotional and energy.
And it's hard to manage that.
It's hard to manage your job and your relationships and, and your own health. And so I know a lot of parents probably know what's good for the kids,
but they maybe give in sometimes because it's just easier to just give them candy and have some
peace. So I understand, even though I'm not a parent, but I can see how that challenge
could come up. What can parents do? Because it seems like parents have a massive
control on what their kids eat, you know? Yeah, yeah. Until a certain age.
Until a certain age. I think that parents on the one hand, there's a lot of challenges there. But
on the other hand, they're very motivated. So that's good, because they want to do good for their kids, right. So and I think that's where a lot of, you know, a lot of parents
have actually made those changes, so trying to cut out sugary drinks, cut out some of the snacking,
because remember, back in, you know, not that long ago, it was all about giving snacks um so i had you know my kids are older now but they used to
play soccer um at night you know and and it was always like for years it was like oh at halftime
you have to give them some juice and cookies yeah some oranges yeah slices and stuff like that um
why but i was always thinking i like thinking like i played soccer when i was a kid i had so
much fun and nobody chased me around trying to give me juice and cookies because i probably
wouldn't water yeah and i probably would have just asked i probably would have preferred to
play truthfully right because there's so much fun right um all these games are fun for kids and and and so so one is
limiting the the drinks so you know you see water has come back in sort of a big way sparkling water
still water like you you know 15 20 years ago it was all juices and pop now you see water available
everywhere so that's good cutting down the sugar, cutting down the refined
food. So making sure they have good choices. And the other thing, of course, is that if you're,
again, if you're in a situation where you know there's going to be stuff that's tempting,
just to sort of spoil your appetite, right? Make sure you're eating something good before you go
in where there's a lot of stuff that's bad, right if you're full you're going to be less tempted than eating other stuff so if you're going into a place where there's
just going to be tons of stuff make sure you have a good dinner first or a good lunch first so that
when you're going in you're not like oh cookies chips right and it's like you know so i think
parents have already made some of those good changes the thing about the
snacks which i thought was strange um was so this always happens actually so my my when my kids used
to go on these field trips and stuff you know you'd get this letter to the parent and it's like
we're going on a field trip to whatever museum you know they're going to take the bus
make sure you pack two snacks for them like like why are they not eating lunch or am i not feeding
them dinner like which one because there's no other reason that they need a snack and the problem
with this and this was just a few years ago is that it sort of institutionalizes the fact, right, that you should
be eating all the time, right? But you shouldn't, because there's no reason to. Why would you want
somebody, remember, when you eat, you're going to store energy, which is body fat. There's no way
around it, right? It's calories, especially these refined snacks. Snacks are the worst,
actually, because they tend to be refined carbs, like cookies, because they don't spoil, right?
Nobody's packing a piece of salmon for a snack, right? It's like a cookie, right? Or a cracker
or something, right? So it institutionalizes the fact, to parents and to kids, that snacking is a
good thing, and that you should eat two snacks in between sort of lunch and dinner
and it's healthy for you but it's not you really shouldn't because that's the period of time that
you should have been using the energy you you ate at lunch so remember like if you wanted an
after-school snack in the past in the 70s and i grew up in the 70s your mom would say no you're
going to ruin your dinner right right? Want a bedtime snack?
No, you should a more at dinner, right? And dinner, of course, was, you know, the fully cooked
meal, home cooked meal, it was the proteins and the fats and, you know, the good stuff that you're
cooking, you know, that you spent time cooking, not the packaged cookie that you put into the,
you know, into the snack box. But yeah, it's, it's trying to
get back to those basics. And I feel like we don't, we're just, we don't have to reinvent the wheel,
you just have to look back at what we did in the 70s. And you'll get your blueprint for what
you're supposed to be doing three snacks, unprocessed foods, cut the sugar, and make
sure you have a period of time at night
where you're going to use those calories that you took in during the day, right? Because if you don't
give your body time to use those calories, how is it going to use those calories, right? So in the
70s, from six o'clock onward, you're using calories, right? Now it's like 11pm practically before you start using calories.
Up until that point, you're taking in calories. So how is that going to work? So realizing that
this question of how often you eat, the frequency of eating, when you're eating is almost as
important as the foods that you are eating, right? that was one of the big things i talked about
in the obesity code which people never really thought about was that there's two things in the
in in weight weight loss weight gain right the foods that you're eating which is the diet
and the period of time that you're not eating which is your fasting period and the fasting
period doesn't tell you what to eat when you're eating, right? It just tells you how long you should go before the next meal. And that's really
important because you can use it with any diet, right? And so those two things are really important.
So not just the quality of the calories, but also this idea that you have to really make sure
you're paying attention to the fasting period so that your hormones, your insulin can drop and you can start using those calories.
And that's really, really, you know, a underappreciated part of sort of weight loss.
So what's the, you had like a formula in there that you said about two minutes ago.
You said no snacking. You said a few other things. Can you share that formula again? So what's the, you had like a formula in there that you said about two minutes ago, you,
you said no snacking. You said a few other things. Can you share that formula again?
Yeah. So one, you want to cut down the sugar because sugar is not good. And I think everybody
agrees on that, right? Cut down the refined foods. So this actually applies mostly to carbohydrates,
but refined other stuff is not good either. So refined fats,
for example, are not good for you. So fans fats were pretty clearly bad. Refined meat,
like bologna and hot dogs and stuff are not really good for you either. So you want to eat
whole foods, right? So whole foods, you want to eat no sugar, you want to eat, you know, plenty
of proteins and fats, and then you want to make sure you have a, you know, cut out the snacks and have a decent
period of fasting.
And that really just gets you back to 1970, where people were still eating white bread,
right?
White bread.
I know I grew up in that period.
Nobody ate whole wheat bread.
Nobody ate whole wheat pasta.
It was white bread.
It's white pasta, right?
But you didn't eat all the time
that was the big difference right and it was the same everywhere you went you know and the irish
were eating potatoes the chinese were eating rice the japanese were eating rice you know
those are all carbs refined carbs right bread rice potatoes um but they were doing okay because
they weren't eating all the time they give give their bodies a break from eating, right?
Where now we don't give our bodies a break from eating.
We think that it's healthy to constantly eat.
We've lost the idea that there's that balance between eating and not eating.
Like, why wouldn't you think that that's important? Like balance everything else in life, right?
Why wouldn't you want to balance eating and not eating, right?
Don't you think that's like fundamentally important?
Like I think it is, but up until sort of, I wrote the obesity code, people just thought
fasting was really bad for you, which is sort of odd, you know, because it's like up until
then they're everywhere saying, oh, fasting's so bad for you, right? You're going to do so bad. It's like, you know, we've's like, up until then, they're everybody's like, oh, fasting's so bad for you, right? You're
going to do so bad. It's like, you know, we've been doing it
for a long time.
So I'm curious then what effect does fasting have on reducing
our chances of getting life threatening diseases? And also,
which diseases are most people at risk if they don't fast and
improve their their diet uh type 2 diabetes is
probably the biggest one and the reason is that it's a huge one it's become an epidemic so lots
of people have it if you look at pre-diabetes and diabetes which is uh sort of um and you do big surveys, it's actually about 50% of adult Americans, right? So it's
very common to have prediabetes and diabetes. And the problem with it is that it causes all kinds of
other problems. It increases your risk of heart attacks, strokes, cancer, it's leading cause of
blindness, leading cause of non-traumatic amputations, leading cause of kidney disease, all of those things. And, you know, in trying to
understand type two diabetes, you just have to understand that it's basically your body has too
much sugar. That's it. So if you have too much sugar, remember, excuse me me your body really has two sources of energy it can use
it can use sugar which is mostly glucose and it can use fat and when your body stores energy
it stores it as sugar or stores it as fat makes sense right so if you have too much fat then you
have obesity if you have too much sugar, then you have obesity. If you have too much sugar, you have type two diabetes.
Interesting.
But the situation, the solution is the same.
So think about it.
Your body has too much energy, both situations.
Obesity, you have too much energy stored away.
And type two diabetes, you have too much sugar, which is also too much energy stored away
because both fat and sugar are sources of energy for the body.
So if you think about trying to reverse type two diabetes, because again, this was, I wrote about
this in the diabetes code. And I said, it's a reversible disease because your body doesn't
have too little energy. It has too much energy. So think about this situation. Think about your
car. Suppose you go to the gas station three times a
day, you fill up. Now it's full, but you still keep pumping gas in, right? So it's spilling out,
it's spilling out, it's spilling into your back seat and it's now making you sick. But what are
you going to do? Well, here's what you wouldn't do is keep going to that gas station three times
a day, right? It's ridiculous. You have to do two things. One, stop putting gas in and to drive that car around
so that you use the gas that's there. That's what you would do. Now think about the gas,
burn the gas. Exactly. Think about your body. Your body has too much energy. What are you going to do?
One, stop putting it in to let it run without putting it in for a while.
That's intermittent fasting. That's all you have to do. And think about the situation. You've got
a disease state, which has become an epidemic, which contributes to heart attacks, strokes,
cancer. But you have a solution, which is completely free, and has been used for thousands
of years, which is not anything more complicated than let your body run off of the fuel that's
already sitting on there. Is it fun? No, it's not. Is it healthy? Yes, it is. And those situations very healthy. And people used to say,
well, people won't do it. It's like my job as a doctor is not to tell people what they will and
won't do. My job is to tell them how they should get healthy. And I'll help them. Right. So if
fasting is a good solution, which I believe it is, then I'll help them whether they do it or not is up to them.
Right. But the point is that it's it's it's free. It's simple. It's been used for thousands of years.
It's available to everybody. You don't need special equipment. You don't need a special diet. You don't need a special anything.
special diet. You don't need a special anything. Everybody in the world can do this at any time,
like literally like today, tomorrow, anytime they could do it. It's not like, you know,
I have this great drug for people. Yeah, but it's up to cost $500,000, right? That's crazy.
No, fasting is not to do that. You're going to save time. You're going to save money and you're going to get healthier. So what could be better than that? Like, it's a crazy situation where we have this huge healthcare issue. But the solution is completely free, which explains why there's so few people telling you to do it, because who's going to make money on it, right? But that's not my concern. My concern is telling people what they need to do to get healthy, right?
What do you think is the biggest mistake people make when it comes to fasting then?
I think the single biggest mistake is sort of overeating afterwards.
So you fast for a period of time, then you say, oh, well, I deserve that ice cream.
It's like you could do it, but you're going to sort of
get a lot less benefit. You're like, you got a great benefit from the fasting. Now,
you know, you're losing some of that because you're eating the foods that you didn't eat.
That really is a temptation for people to do. And I think it's natural, and we've all done it.
But the point is that after you fast, you should really just eat as
normally as possible. So if you eat, you know, a normal breakfast, normal lunch, normal dinner,
the next day is your fasting day, you don't eat breakfast, you don't eat lunch,
you should eat a normal dinner, don't try to eat all three meals crammed into one, right?
That's not the point. Like the point is to drop those meals and let your body take the energy
from your body fat so you drop breakfast your body normally gets 500 calories from there you
want to take it out of your body fat same thing for lunch if at dinner instead of taking a thousand
calories you decide to stick in 2 000 calories well you've negated a lot of the benefits that
you should have gotten because that energy is going to go in
right so so the good thing is that it's hard to do that so when when you restrict the time
and you don't tell people what to eat or how much to eat they actually naturally eat less
so so it's actually an interesting thing because this gets to the question of hunger. So there's, you know, in terms of weight,
weight loss, there's sort of two big issues that trip people up. One is metabolic rate and two is
hunger. So hunger, people think that hunger will just go up like this with fasting. It's actually
not true. So you can actually measure the hunger hormone called ghrelin, which is basically it goes up high and you get hungry.
So when you fast, ghrelin is high.
So if you normally eat lunch, you're hungry.
So ghrelin is high.
What happens when you don't eat lunch?
You skip your lunch.
Well, a couple hours later, your ghrelin level actually falls back to baseline.
So you don't feel hungry anymore.
No, your hunger goes back to baseline level.
So if you eat lunch at 12, you're hungry at 12.
Now you skip lunch, you're hungry at 12, you're hungry at 1.
By 4, it's no different than if you ate or didn't eat.
So people are like, what happened?
Well, your body took the energy from your body fat stores.
It took the 500 calories from body fat. You You took the 500 calories from body fat. You
basically fed yourself off of that body fat. So why would you be hungry? The answer is you're not.
And that's why it goes right back to baseline. Same thing happens at dinner. If you do multiple
day fats, it's actually even more interesting because ghrelin actually, after day one to two,
it actually starts to go down and down and down. So your hunger actually disappears by like day three, day four.
People just aren't hungry anymore because they're fueling themselves on the body fat.
And I think it was actually a sort of protective mechanism because if there is a prolonged
period where you aren't eating, I think the body evolves so that you wouldn't be constantly
distracted. So people on
these long fasts do very well because they've gone into the stage of fat burning because they're
fueling themselves purely on the fat and their hunger is gone. So they're actually feeling pretty
good and they're losing weight. They feel productive. They have more energy. Yeah. Yeah.
There comes a point where there comes a point
where i feel like i did a three-day fast i think maybe i did three and a half days and i remember
thinking okay i'm kind of feeling a little bit tired like i could use some food now yeah maybe
it's just because i haven't you know pushed it beyond that before so it's just every day i have
to learn how to manage it but it's it's it takes a bit of getting used to because most of
us are not used to it. And that's, that's more, that's probably the biggest obstacle. Um, because
we're in a culture where the norm is not sort of 14 hours of fasting. The norm is like eat until
you go to sleep and eat as soon as you wake up. Right. And that was one of those big destructive
myths, which was that breakfast is the most important meal of the day, which is fine. If you like breakfast, it's fine.
There's nothing wrong with that. But the problem was when people took that to mean that if you
weren't hungry in the morning and you didn't really like breakfast, because you weren't a
breakfast person, you should still eat like fruit loops, right? Because you had breakfast. Okay, now that's not the point.
Eating sugar and, you know, refined carbs is not a good strategy. You're better off not eating.
But then remember this whole thing where, oh, you have to eat breakfast, have to eat breakfast,
have to eat breakfast. Like, no, you don't. Your body knows what to do. If you're,
what do you think it's been doing all through the night? It's been taking the energy from your body knows what to do if you're what do you think it's been doing all through the night
it's been taking the energy from your body so if you don't eat it will continue to take energy from
your stores your blood sugar or your body fat one or the other unless your body fat is so low that
it's going to get tripped up so that was the thing and then people used to say you know eat 10 times
a day they keep your metabolism stoked, right, which is another
complete sort of myth. That was the other thing. So hunger is one of the big things that trips
people up and weight loss and fasting provides you a way to sort of get around that. The other
one is the metabolic rate, which is the number of calories you burn. And people think it's all
about exercise. But in fact, exercise for most people that i deal with are which are older people it tends to be a very small part of the number of calories they eat in a day because
you know when you exercise it's just your skeletal muscles as opposed to the uh you know your heart
and your liver and your lungs and your brain they all need energy as well and the point is that when
you you can do these studies where you measure the metabolic
rate of somebody who is fasting. So you take them on day zero, then you'd give them nothing to eat
for four days. Then you measure how many calories they're burning after four days of zero food.
And they wind up burning 10% more calories per day after the fasting. And it's like, yeah. And the reason is that when insulin goes down,
other hormones go up. So in fact, you have a release of noradrenaline and you activate the
sympathetic nervous system, which is in fact your fight or flight response. So when you're fasting,
your body is not shutting down. your body is actually powering itself up
but fueling itself on your body fat which is perfect because everybody thinks you need to
eat to get energy but when you're fasting you actually have more energy because your hormonal
state is primed for that you think about the lion who just ate, just sort of dopey, just wants to sleep.
Or you think about the hungry wolf. Hungry wolf is not falling down. Hungry wolf is zoned in.
It's sharp. And it's because of the sympathetic nervous system, because they're zoned in and
they've got energy to burn because they're fueling themselves. A human is the same. So when you
fast, in fact, you're actually increasing the sympathetic tone,
which means that you have more energy, not less energy. That's why your body is burning
10% more calories. You can also measure the VO2, which is the amount of oxygen that it's using.
So it's sort of the same thing. And it's up 10% after four day fast.
Four day fast.
Yeah, this was a four day fast. So days. Yeah, this was a 40 fast. So it happens, you know, for shorter periods,
you also see this increase in tone. So it's like people think you're going into starvation mode,
but it's the exact opposite. You're actually activating your body. So these were some of
the myths that, you know, people used to have about fasting. And it's like, no, this is people,
you can do this. It's actually, there's a ton of good stuff that happens when you're fasting.
If you're in this sort of category
where you have type two diabetes,
where you have an excess of energy,
or you have obesity, which is an excess of energy,
you got to use it.
Everybody thinks it's about exercise,
but in fact, it's sort of a minor effect
unless you do a lot of it.
So again, keeping in mind that I typically treat
like 60 year olds, 70 year olds, they're not sort of running eight hours a day sort of thing.
Yeah. What's, when is it a bad time or the worst time to fast?
I don't think there's a bad time. Sometimes people ask me, is it better to fast early or late? So
right, if you're going to skip a meal, should you skip breakfast or should you skip
dinner?
That's a really interesting question because for the same 16 hour fast or whatever, you're
going to have different effects.
In fact, so it's better if you're trying to lose weight, it's actually better to drop
dinner.
The problem, and there's a reason for that because one dinner tends to be bigger. And two,
for the food that you eat at dinnertime, you're going to get more insulin release, right? So if
you eat the same meal at breakfast and at dinner, and you measure how much insulin is released,
you get more insulin than it's that dinnertime. So your body, I'm not sure why I think it's because
your body, I think, in the in the morning, uh, so it's,
remember it's a seesaw between insulin and these counter-regulatory hormones, like, you know,
growth hormone and noradrenaline and so on. So it's sort of a seesaw, right? That's why they're
counter-regulatory. So insulin goes up, these go down, insulin goes down, these go up in the
morning. These are already up, right? The counter-regulatory hormones are already up. You
get a burst. This is part of the circadian rhythm. So you get a burst that like 4 a.m.
So that's why you don't need to eat breakfast because your body's actually already dragging
glucose out of your system. It's pretty burning energy. It's already getting you ready for the
day. So this is up. So therefore, when you eat, this is a little bit blunted. Whereas during the, you know, after that, during the day, these go down. So therefore, when you eat, this is a little bit blunted. Whereas after that, during the day, these go down.
So therefore, if you eat, your insulin just spikes up.
But the practical sort of effect of that is that if you eat the exact same meal at breakfast
and at dinner, you get more insulin effect, which means if you have more insulin effect,
there's more instructions to your body to store that energy, which means that you're going to gain more weight, right? So it's actually better
to drop dinner. Problem is that it's a lot easier to drop breakfast because, you know, a lot of
people aren't hungry at breakfast and nobody misses you at breakfast, right? If you don't eat breakfast nobody cares but a lot of people that's their family social
meal friends family dinner so it's a lot harder to drop dinner as opposed to breakfast so therefore
you have to you have to balance the two which which is more important right you know should
i drop this or that it's like a long fast it's hard to do not because they're, they're so difficult,
but because there's always something that comes up like, you know, Oh,
come out and let's have dinner. Right.
And it's like, you don't want to do exactly. It's a social thing.
So even though I could have skipped dinner,
I won't because I want to see my friend. Right.
I'm not going to skip dinner just because, you know, you know, yes, I, you know,
there's the meal, but there's, you know, the interaction.
Yeah.
What would you say is your biggest challenge then?
You're, you know, an expert at this.
You're a doctor.
You've been studying this.
You've been helping patients at this for many years.
Where is your struggle when it comes to fasting, healthy eating,
preventing disease and weight loss? I think the biggest struggle has been
this whole COVID thing has been a real disaster on the sort of weight gain eating thing because you know again it's it's the idea that eating has a lot of
components so one of them is enjoyment right so it is delicious so you enjoy it that's why it's
part of every human celebration right when you take away everything that you enjoy doing except for eating yeah it's like well you
know you can't travel and you can't go to the gym and you can't go to the park and you can't go
here and see your friends you can't see your family remember there's that time oh you shouldn't
get together for christmas no no thanksgiving this year right it's like, yeah, that's a lot.
And so I think what happened,
the only thing you can do is get food from the grocery store and take out.
So then what do you do?
You eat, that's all.
Because not because you really wanted to,
but because there's nothing else to do
and you have nothing to give you pleasure except eating.
So it was a disaster because the diets
just went terribly wrong. Mine did too. And you're the expert. I knew what was happening. I just
couldn't stop it because it's like, what am I going to do? I have all day sitting here.
And the only thing I can really do is eat, right? Yeah, yeah sure I can do jigsaw puzzles and stuff and
I did that too and I read some stuff but you know the the interaction was it's it's big like
the amount of like because there was a there was a huge long period of time where I didn't like I
didn't see my family I think for like a year and a half like immediate family
yes but my brothers my sisters my nephews my it was a long long time and I didn't see some of my
friends for like a year and a half two years it was long right and so and the stuff that, you know, I used to, I used to enjoy, it just shut down.
Right.
It was, it was crazy.
So, so even you with, with all the research and all the knowledge and all the expertise
and all, and all the willpower and all the discipline, even you struggled with it.
It was a struggle.
It was a struggle for, yeah, for, I think everybody.
And the weight gain was like, I think my son gained like a lot of weight and luckily he,
you know, then he went away and he's lost it all and stuff.
Right.
But, you know, I remember some of his friends who were like skinny, they gained like 60
pounds.
These are high school kids, right.
And they were like up 60 pounds and stuff.
I was like, Whoa, what happened to you?
Luckily they're young.
Right. and so they
dropped it very quickly so you know because again once they found their other things the hockey and
the basketball and stuff then yeah then that's real life but it it took more of a toll so a lot
of my patients just just were a disaster like they're going along fine going along fine i was
monitoring them they're doing
fine with their diets and then booth every single one was like the sugars were skyrocketing weight
was skyrocketing it was not a good time like it's it's better now because a lot of the
restrictions have lifted but it was a good long year and a half at least march 2020 till at least 2022 in canada was like i think the
americans were were better in terms of opening stuff but um yeah it was it was it was rough so
again it's it's the same thing right it's it's it's it's easy to predict that because because
um you know if if every if the only thing you can do is eat then you eat like i can't help
it right and and you know the whole i think a lot of people had a bit of dysthymia which is sort of
mild depression from the social isolation like we know mental health problems again skyrocketed
but i think there's a huge number of people that were mildly
depressed like and i think i had a bit of that and i think it i think it affected everybody
truthfully but you get to the point where you're like what i'm like why wouldn't i eat that's all
i can do to feel good and who am I seeing anyway right exactly
it doesn't matter same three people like I'm not looking good for anything it was a tough it was a
tough and and I think it's it almost it's almost indecent for us not to acknowledge how bad it was like some of these mental health issues
you know they they wind up you know affecting other things like your diet and therefore you get
this right and then you say oh it's all about your food and willpower it's like no no there's
there's so much to go and it's it's it sort of feels wrong not to acknowledge the amount of problems that were caused by this, right?
And I'm not trying to say if it's right or if it's wrong, but there was a lot of problems, right?
I mean, it was very unnatural.
That was the thing, right?
I've got a couple of final questions for you, Jason.
I appreciate your time and your advice and wisdom.
got a couple of final questions for you, Jason. I appreciate your time and your advice and wisdom.
What advice would you have for someone who's watching or listening that maybe is overweight or obese and feel like they've gone too far? It's too hard to come back. I've gone too far.
And they don't feel like they can take control of their weight again. What advice would you have
for those individuals?
I think one,
you're never too far because people have lost a lot of weight.
And two,
I think that it's important to sort of get some help.
Like, you know, everybody thinks you have to do it yourself.
You don't have to do it yourself.
There's tons of people who will help you. So you can get a coach, you can get a fasting coach, you can get somebody who's going to like, you know, it's funny, because in the same thing with mental health, like there's no shame in getting help for that, whether you need a coach, or you need, you know, somebody to talk to, or whether there's no shame in that because you can get help. And, you know, you think about something like, you know, athletics.
If you take an analogy, if you take, you know, the greatest player in the world,
you know, Michael Jordan, he still has a coach.
Because they do stuff for you.
They keep you accountable.
They tell you what you're doing right and what you're doing wrong
because you don't always necessarily know well if and people have business coaches so some of the greatest sort of CEOs they
have business coaches like it's a huge industry um so why wouldn't you take advantage of that
right nothing like if you don't know what you're doing or you need somebody to keep you on
track or you need somebody to give you a decent program if you want to get in shape you go get
yourself a personal trainer it's not like you couldn't watch youtube you know you know how many
fitness routines are on youtube there's probably 10 million of them, right? They're good. And
there's a lot of great programs out there. It's not the same, because they're not there saying,
I'm going to meet you at the gym on Tuesday at 9am. Now, all of a sudden, you can't not go,
right? Because you've made an appointment, right? As opposed to you watch the
YouTube and you decide, okay, well, I'm going to go for a run, but then you're tired on Tuesday at
9am. So you're like, I'm just going to sleep in, right? It's totally different. So all of these
things is, so if you need help, get yourself the help because it exists for weight loss for for all
of that stuff, fasting, you know know we have the fasting method.com
where you can get a coach and whether you need group coaching and groups are very good too because
again it gives you somebody to go through it with you um so we do a lot of group coaching in there
but get yourself the help because it's there's no shame in it the best people in the world, whatever it is they do, have a coach.
So you should always make yourself available to that.
I agree.
I'm a big fan of coaches.
I invest in them.
I've got lots of them in different areas of my life.
And I feel like it's hard to do anything alone.
It's hard to get good results or great results on your own at anything,
let alone many things.
Maybe you're an expert at one thing and you can do that,
but then you need help with the finances or the fitness or the nutrition
or the mental health.
It's like finding support makes you wise by looking for support
and seeking it out.
It doesn't make you not capable.
It makes you wise.
Dr. Fung, I appreciate you for being here.
I want people to follow you over on social media,
drjasonfungthefastingmethod.com, also drjasonfung.com.
You've got some incredible books that I want people to get a hold of the obesity code,
the complete guide to fasting, the diabetes code, the cancer code, all these different things that
it's all linked up at your website. And people can find it there or over on Amazon and things
like that. How else can we be of service to you today? I think this getting the word out is what I'm hoping for, right? The more people learn about it. And I talk a lot about the science of it so that, you know, there's a lot of practical stuff too, but there's also a lot of sort of trying to understand the disease that you're facing, whether it's obesity, whether it's type two diabetes,
trying to understand it, so you can come up with a sort of rational plan of how to deal with it.
I think that's, you know, that's the best thing, right? If we can help people, you know, that's its own reward, right? I mean, if people listen and get better hey i love it love it it's you know
in its privilege um you know sometimes i get these emails and they say oh i listened to you on
you know on the school of greatness and i started fasting and you know i got off all my meds i'm
like amazing that's amazing it feels so good right like, wow, this guy really changed around his life. And I
didn't even know, and I didn't have to do anything different, but these guys were able to, you know,
you know, they took that advice. So it's great. Like you just, it's, it's, it's, it's, you know,
positive vibes in the world. You know, it's like, it's amazing.
That's beautiful.
Well, Jason, I want to acknowledge you for how you keep showing up in the world, how
you keep learning and researching and serving your, your patients and also the people in
the world that watch and listen to you and to this content.
I know a lot of people from our previous interview got incredible benefits and results.
If you guys haven't checked that out, make sure to check
it out. We'll link it up below and everything. And leave a comment if you did already start
implementing some of the fasting principles that Jason has talked about and share your results
below so that we can see. We'd love to see that. So I acknowledge you for continually showing up
and serving people on living healthier lives. And I asked you these two questions before the last time, but I'm curious if they've changed.
So this is called the three truths question.
So imagine it's your last day on earth many years away.
You get to live as long as you want, but then it's your last day.
And you've accomplished everything you want to accomplish.
Live the full life.
But for whatever reason, all of your work,
your written material, your videos, your audio content has to go with you to another place.
So we don't have access to any of your information anymore. But if you could leave behind three
lessons with the world or three truths, what would those be for you? I think the first one would be, you know, in terms of fasting that there's,
it's, it's about balance. It's about making sure that you balance the feeding and the fasting,
and there's nothing wrong with it. Because that was one of the biggest things, I think,
when I started writing the books was, you know, everybody thought it was such a bad thing.
And that was one, for one of the first people that said, let's look at the science of this
whole thing, because it really, there really is a lot of good stuff here. So I think that was
one of the things that I really think, you know, if it could be preserved, I really like that.
things that I really think, you know, if it could be preserved, I'd really like that. Second one is the type two diabetes is a reversible disease. And that too, is one of the things that I fought
really hard against, which was that up until 2021, every major diabetes association said type two
diabetes was a chronic and progressive disease,
which means eventually they would get problems like kidney disease, and me as a kidney specialist
would wind up seeing them, right? And it breaks my heart, right? If people know that it's a
reversible disease, then you're going to attack this problem differently than if it's a chronic
and progressive disease, right? If it's chronic and progressive, you'd be like, well, I can't do
anything about it. I'll just do whatever. Whereas if you know, it's a reversible
disease, then you're going to go, oh, I'm going to do something about this. Right. So that was
one of the things. And, and, and, you know, I think that that's one of the, from a, from a
sort of health standpoint, I really think it can, it can make a huge difference. It's, it's such an important problem that you can
really move the needle in terms of that. So, so those two, I would really like to, you know,
you know, I hope that it would be preserved. And then, you know, the third one, I mean,
you know, I, I kind of think I just wish this whole idea of, you know, calories and calories out,
I just find it so simplistic, I really hope that people try to go past that. Because again,
it's it comes down to people who think that obesity is just a willpower problem.
of people who think that obesity is just a willpower problem. It's such a wrong thing because,
you know, so many people suffer from this disease and then they suffer the ridicule of others because they think that it's all about the personal failing, right? Rather than an environment which
allows this to happen, teaching like, oh, you can't skip breakfast so you you know oh you have to eat 10 times a day
like it's it's it's we who have failed them not them who have failed us right and i always think
that there's a lot of people out there who are always like oh you know it's all about how it's
all about how and they're mostly people in academic centers and they they they pretend
they're very very smart but they're so disconnected with
reality right that it's like and i always think like think about it this way if you have 60
percent of americans who are overweight and obese imagine you're you're a teacher right so you're a
teacher you have 100 students one of them fails that's probably the students fault. But what if 60 or 70 kids fail?
Is it really the kids fault? Or is it the teacher's fault? Because I think it's the teacher's fault.
So therefore, it's not the kids problem. It's the teacher problem. In this situation, I don't think
it's the general public's problem. I think it's the problem with the way that we, we are approaching this disease and because it
affects so many people, um, you know, and every academic sort of academic center is all focused
on calories. It's like, there's more than that. There's this whole hormonal piece. There's the
emotional side of things. There's the habit side of things. There's the emotional side of things there's the habit side of things there's the environmental
side of things like get off of this just eat less it doesn't work like how are you going to fix the
problem if you don't even know what the problem is you're so focused on this problem and i think
that's where a lot of fat shaming comes in and it's like you can't do that right it's it's it's just so wrong
and and there's a lot of doctors out there who are all into this sort of thing right so
you know i i wish that part of things and that's a that's a tough fight i mean there's a lot of
people who push back against you know a lot of people push back all calories all calories you
could eat for dinner right as long as the same. So there are a lot of people who push back on that, but that was one of the ones that I sort of feel.
I hope that still stays. That's great. Final question. What's your definition of greatness?
I think it's to be able to impact people in a positive way and I suspect a lot of people say
that but it's true you say it because it's true um you know it's it gives you something that's just
so you know you just feel good right like when you help somebody, they feel good, but I feel better, right? It's like,
it's, it's hard to, it's hard to get, right? It's, it's, it's why people, you know, contribute to
causes and stuff like that. You're part of something bigger than yourself. So even if you
pass on, you know, you've contributed to this sort of greater good right and i think we need that sort
of idea that there's there's something out there that's greater than ourselves and we've been able
to help people with that right and it gives you more um enjoyment if you will than then for instance
money or fame or anything else can. It's a different type.
And that's why you see a lot of people who make a lot of money.
They give away a lot of money because it makes them feel good.
And it really is.
And luckily for us, that's greatness.
Anybody can make money.
You can make money by being a drug dealer.
It doesn't make you feel good, right?
Right, right.
Jason, thank you so much.
I appreciate you for being here.
Thank you so much.
It was great being here.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode
and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
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And now it's time to go out there and do something great.