Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Dr. Anthony Youn: The Five Pillars of Staying Younger for Life | E315
Episode Date: November 4, 2024When Dr. Anthony Youn entered high school, his jaw began growing abnormally, to the point where he could stick his tongue through the gap between his upper and lower teeth. To fix the problem, he unde...rwent plastic reconstructive surgery. Not only did it profoundly change how he looked and felt about himself, but it also set him on the path to a career in plastic surgery. Today, he’s one of the world’s most trusted plastic surgeons, known for his holistic approach. In this episode, Anthony shares some of his best hacks for maintaining youthfulness, from skincare and nutrition to his favorite non-invasive treatments for naturally slowing aging. In this episode, Hala and Anthony will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (03:07) The transformation that sparked his passion for plastic surgery (04:13) Plastic surgery as a last resort (06:29) Growing his business with social media (13:15) Building multiple income streams as a professional (21:09) Holistic Plastic Surgery (32:51) The Importance of Looking and Feeling Your Best (35:30) Aging Gracefully: Audrey Hepburn's Timeless Beauty (36:21) The Five Pillars of Youthful Skin (37:35) Two-Minute Skincare Routine for a Youthful Glow (40:54) Sunscreen: Myths, Facts, and Recommendations (57:56) Fermented Foods and Gut Health (59:53) Facial Massages: Fact or Fiction? (01:03:49) Botox and Fillers: What You Need to Know (01:06:44) Final Thoughts and Key Takeaways Dr. Anthony Youn is a well-known plastic surgeon, author, and social media influencer with over 8.4 million TikTok followers. Known as "America's Holistic Plastic Surgeon," he advocates for natural rejuvenation, focusing on wellness and non-invasive methods over surgery. His latest book, Younger for Life, offers practical, science-based strategies for turning back the clock through diet, skincare, and natural remedies. In addition to running a successful medical practice, Dr. Youn hosts the popular Dr. Youn Show podcast. He regularly appears on TV shows like The Rachael Ray Show and Dr. Oz. Sponsored By: Fundrise - Add the Fundrise Flagship Fund to your portfolio in minutes at https://fundrise.com/PROFITING Found - Try Found for FREE at https://found.com/profiting Mint Mobile - To get a new 3-month premium wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, go to https://mintmobile.com/profiting Working Genius - Get 20% off the $25 Working Genius assessment at https://www.workinggenius.com/ with code PROFITING at checkout Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at https://youngandprofiting.co/shopify   Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at https://indeed.com/profiting   Teachable - Claim your free month of their Pro paid plan at https://teachable.com/ with code PROFITING Airbnb - Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.com/host Connect with Dr. Youn: Dr. Youn’s Website: https://www.dryoun.com Dr. Youn’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anthony-youn-07a0b223/ Dr. Youn’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tonyyounmd/ Dr. Youn’s Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@doctoryoun Resources Mentioned: Dr. Youn’s Book, Younger for Life: Feel Great and Look Your Best with the New Science of Autojuvenation: https://www.amazon.com/Younger-Life-Great-Science-Autojuvenation/dp/1335007873 Dr. Youn’s Podcast, The Dr.Youn Show: https://www.dryoun.com/podcast/ LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Top Tools and Products of the Month: https://youngandprofiting.com/deals/ More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting  Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala  Learn more about YAP Media's Services - yapmedia.io/
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You can use your body's own regenerative abilities
to turn back the clock.
That's a concept called autojuvenation.
And there are five things really
that if you do really focus on that,
you can look five to 10 years younger.
Guess my age. 27?
Oh my gosh.
I feel like I have so much advantage in the business space because I look younger.
There are so many people who do find that when they look in the mirror
and they feel better about themselves,
that that can really impact their job performance.
You are a huge TikTok star, so over 8 million followers.
How can we leverage social media without it
being about what we look like?
What it comes down to is...
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Young and Profiters, we have an amazing episode for you today.
It's very unique.
We're going to be talking about how we can be younger for life, how we can be young and
profiting forever.
And we've got the best guest to talk about it today, Dr. Anthony Yoon.
Dr. Anthony Yoon is a plastic surgeon and he's also a social media star.
He's got over 10 million followers across all of his different platforms.
He's got 8 million followers on TikTok alone.
So first, I'm going to pick his brain about how his personal brand really helped to expand his business and create multiple revenue streams.
We're going to learn about how he uses edutainment to attract new followers and how he expanded his successful career as a doctor
to now live a more fulfilling life for himself.
We're also gonna talk about how we can look younger
from the inside out, the importance of food and exercise,
as well as the different topical treatments
that we should be using to look five to 10 years younger
at any given time.
I can't wait to dive into this topic
because I personally have such a passion for skincare
and know a lot about it.
And Dr. Yoon does such a great job
of giving really hard information
in a fun and engaging way.
So I think this is gonna be a really enjoyable listen.
Without further ado,
here's my conversation with Dr. Yoon.
Anthony, welcome to Young and Profiting podcast.
Thank you so much for having me, Hala.
I appreciate it.
I am so looking forward to this conversation.
I am a skincare fanatic.
So I love talking about skincare.
This podcast is Young and Profiting.
So we wanna look as young as possible
for as long as possible.
So you are the perfect guest to have on the show.
And so I really wanna focus this episode on two main parts.
Number one is your career and your career journey
as a holistic plastic surgeon, how you got there,
some of the lessons that you've learned along the way.
And then I want to talk about how we can look
and feel our best, how we can be younger for life.
Sounds great.
Okay, so I loved learning how you first got interested
in plastic surgery and I did find
out that in your teenage years, you had a very personal experience with a major plastic
surgery makeover.
So tell us about what you were like in your teens and what that experience was like for
you.
Yeah, Hala.
So thank you.
Basically, I grew up in a small town in the middle of Michigan.
We're the only Asian family.
So my parents immigrated from Korea.
My dad's a physician.
He's an obstetrician gynecologist.
And I developed, and I think it was honestly a mutation
cause there's nobody in my family
that's ever had this before.
But when I got into high school,
my jaw started growing and growing and growing
and it wouldn't stop growing
to the point where I graduated high school
and my jaw stuck out so much that I could stick my tongue through the gap between my bottom and my front teeth.
My jaw stuck out that far.
And so I ended up having orthognathic plastic reconstructive surgery where they broke my
jaw, set it back, they wired it shut for six weeks, and that profoundly changed how I looked
and in the end how I felt about myself.
And so that really was the starting point for me
of my journey into realizing that making changes
to your appearance can really profoundly impact
your self-esteem, your self-identity,
how you carry yourself, and that set me on the path
to going into the field of plastic surgery.
How do you feel that that surgery impacted your future career-wise?
Do you think you would be as successful as you are today had you not have gotten that
procedure?
No, because people would walk into my office, they would see me and go, well, if he didn't
get anything done, why should I get something done?
And they would leave.
It's an unfortunate statement on society. I mean, I joke about that, but there is truth to it
in that how you look, especially as a plastic surgeon,
does make a difference in how your patients look at you.
And even if they decide to choose you as their doctor.
Now, that being said, being a male plastic surgeon
is very different than being a female plastic surgeon.
I go to my meetings and you see plastic surgeons
who are in their 60s and 70s,
they've had male docs who've had nothing done,
they look kind of dumpy,
they may be wearing really baggy loose clothing,
and they've got tennis shoes on with suits.
And then you see their wives
who sometimes are younger than them,
who are very well made up.
You see female plastic surgeons,
they don't show up looking like that.
There is definitely an unfortunate,
it's an unfortunate statement on society
where men can let themselves go to an extent
and people overlook it in a very different way
than if that happens to a woman.
Totally.
Yeah, and that's a whole other,
I guess, subject to that. Yeah, that's a whole other
conversation.
But it's so true. It's like women are judged so much harder, So. Totally. Yeah, and that's a whole other subject. Yeah, that's a whole other conversation.
But it's so true.
It's like women are judged so much harder,
whereas men you're like, oh, he must be really smart
and I want this smart guy to do my surgery.
I don't care what he looks like.
Exactly.
I mean, I see some of the plastic surgeons I trained under
and you just wondering like,
why don't you do some of your own medicine, you know?
Because man, but it's just the way the world is right now.
So for me, having that operation did really change
how I looked at myself.
And so now, you know, I've dedicated my life
to helping people to feel good about themselves,
but using invasive procedures like that
only as a last resort.
I can't wait to pick your brain
about holistic plastic surgery, what that all means. But first,
you are a huge TikTok star. So over 8 million followers, you've got over a million followers
on Instagram. You've done such an incredible job. At what point in your career were you like,
okay, I'm going to just embrace social media and make it a priority?
My career has undergone a lot of different changes. So when I first started my practice,
I basically moved to Michigan.
I did a fellowship actually out in Beverly Hills,
which is like an apprenticeship.
So I worked under one of the top plastic surgeons out there.
And he actually offered me a job and said,
hey, stay here, we're in Beverly Hills.
It's one of the top practices here.
Join me and we're gonna take over the city.
And honestly, it was quite enticing.
You look at it such a great place to operate.
You got celebrities coming in all the time.
But the thing that I felt that I didn't like
was it really wasn't me.
I grew up in a small town in the Midwest.
And honestly, Beverly Hills Plastic Surgery
was just all about the money.
And for me, I felt that there was more to it than that.
And so I ended up moving back to Michigan.
I started up my own practice in the outskirts of Detroit,
suburbs of Detroit, where my wife's parents live. And my practice did not do well initially. I had no patients.
And then all of a sudden, when I was out in Beverly Hills, we filmed an episode of Dr.
90210 back then. Now, Dr. 90210, you may be too young to remember this, but this is one
of the first plastic surgery reality shows. It was on the E network and every episode that aired,
they would re-air it hundreds of times.
And this was back before you were doing a lot
on social media and stuff.
And so my practice started, I had no patience.
Then this episode airs, I'm literally in it for two minutes
where they introduce me and then I leave.
And the doctor though, in that literally two minutes I'm in,
said that he is moving to Rochester, Michigan.
I made him an offer he couldn't refuse and he refused it.
And the next day after that episode aired,
my practice exploded and that buoyed my practice for years.
And so then I parlayed that appearance on Dr. 90210,
literally two minutes into eventually doing a lot
of national television shows like the Rachel Ray show, Dr. Oz,10, literally two minutes into eventually doing a lot of national television shows
like the Rachel Ray show, Dr. Oz.
That was on those shows some of them dozens of times.
But kind of like an actor who starts realizing
that the roles are going to younger,
better looking people at some point,
I reached that point where the producers
weren't calling me as much.
They're picking other doctors who are once again younger
and better looking than me.
And I realized I had to pivot because that was drying up.
And that's when I started looking at social media.
I teach social media.
So I teach people how to grow on LinkedIn.
I'm a big LinkedIn influencer.
And one of the biggest push packs that I get
is that they're like, well, you're like a pretty girl.
Of course you have social media followers.
What about if we're not attractive?
And I always tell them it has nothing to do
with what you look like.
So Anthony, you're an attractive guy,
but you're not Bella Hadid, right?
And I'm not Bella Hadid either.
So talk to us about why it doesn't really matter
about your looks and especially when you are owning
a business or you have a professional service,
how can we leverage social media
without it being about what we look like?
I am 51 years old and I know that there are a lot
of better looking, more muscular plastic surgeons
who are on social media than I am.
Yet why do I have more followers
than any other plastic surgeon in the country?
It's crazy.
Like I'm in Detroit for God's sakes, you know?
And really I think what it comes down to is
I started focusing on social media
probably back in 2017, 2018.
And I was doing Facebook and Twitter and that stuff.
And it was doing okay,
but it wasn't until 2019 and then 2020
when the pandemic hit,
I was one of the first OG kind of influencers,
physicians on TikTok. The pandemic hits, I was one of the first OG kind of influencers, physicians on TikTok.
The pandemic hits, everybody's at home,
and my practice closed for two and a half months.
Now at the time, I had no idea how long
it was gonna be closed for.
I mean, it was a crazy, scary time for so many of us.
And I realized at that point that I needed to do something
to help people.
I volunteered at my local hospital if they needed me,
but God forbid, if it's a pandemic
and you need a plastic surgeon to come in
to treat your patients, like it's gotta be like
the end of the world type of situation.
So thank God we didn't get to that point,
but I wanted to do something to help people.
And I realized that I don't have to put stuff out there
to try to get patients to come in my office
because it was closed.
So I just started creating content that for me,
I thought was fun, that for me I thought was fun,
that was entertaining, that was interesting,
that was maybe educational, but not always,
but that could even just help people pull themselves out
of that horrible, crazy, scary time for 10 seconds,
20 seconds, five minutes, whatever it was,
that's what I ended up trying to create.
And that was when everything exploded.
It was when I stopped worrying about being a,
quote unquote
plastic surgeon that everything really exploded for me.
And I think part of it was that people saw number one,
I'm doing my own social media.
The posts weren't made by somebody else
that were made by me.
It was obviously me doing it.
And then number two, I wasn't worried about having to say
certain things, say things the right way. I don't curse much, but every once in a while you throw something like that in if that's really natural to you.
And that's really when things did really well.
I love it that you infuse humor into your content.
You have this fake feud with I think your best friend, Dr. Lee,
which I just always think is so hilarious when you do those posts.
So talk to us about the importance of infusing humor
along with educating,
because I know a lot of people are learning from you too,
but they're also laughing with you.
Yeah, I think really when it comes down to is
you have to look at it as edutainment.
So anybody can follow 50 other plastic surgeons
who will talk about where the scars go
if you're gonna get a tummy tuck,
or what are the risks of having a face of surgery.
And it gets boring after a while.
So really, I think if you're looking at it
as a true creator, and I think there's a difference
between being a content creator
and a physician who has an Instagram account.
There's a huge difference there.
The way I look at it is that I'm a content creator.
I'm creating content and it is a creative process.
It's not here are my before and after photos
or hey, let me read basically a blog article that I wrote.
It's no, like let me create content
that's going to cause you to be entertained,
that's gonna actually draw you in
and that maybe, yeah, you can learn a little bit from
but honestly, sometimes the learning aspect of it
is secondary to just engaging with somebody.
And so I think that really is key,
is number one, looking at yourself as a content creator,
not as a business person who has an Instagram account
or a TikTok account.
Totally, I love that advice.
And I'd love to get a behind the scenes look at,
you're a huge influencer, like you're competing with huge celebrities. Totally. I love that advice. And I'd love to get a behind the scenes look at,
you're a huge influencer.
Like you're competing with huge celebrities.
It's true though, 8 million followers on TikTok
is nothing to sneeze on.
Like you are literally competing with top celebrities.
How has that actually impacted the finances
of your business?
Have you been able to charge more?
Do you just have like a waiting list of clients?
How has that impacted your business?
So the way I look at everything is we're looking at it
from a multiple streams of income and looking at it
as trying to develop streams of income that are passive
which you have been great at teaching your followers about.
And so yes, when you look at the streams of income
that I have for myself personally
I've got my own medical practice.
So I still operate two days a week. I have a full-time medical practice. So that's one stream of
income. I also have extenders, physician assistants, nurses, aestheticians. So that's another stream
of income for my practice. I have a stream of income then for social media. I get paid
by certain social media companies like YouTube and TikTok. Instagram literally pays me $20 a month.
It's crazy, that's all they pay.
And that's not as much as it used to be.
At one time, it was a lot more than that.
But I also have my own skincare company
and I do brand deals.
So the brand deals have become a big part of it.
So where, let's say, the social media companies
maybe don't pay like they used to, like TikTok,
I make up for that with the sponsored posts that I do. And I turn down a lot more than I say yes to. And so then I have, like I said,
my own skincare line called Youn Beauty. We have skincare and supplements. That's a big
part of another mode of income that we have, stream of income. And then those are the main
things that I can think of just offhand.
When most physicians, they look at, we go to our meetings and they talk about,
you have your practice consultants
and you know what they talk about?
They talk about how do you convert more patients
to have surgery?
How do you get more patients in the door?
How, I've got a two year waiting list.
I don't want more patients necessarily calling me.
I don't need that because it's already a huge waiting list.
Then how do I impact people and help people?
And then at the same time, profit myself off of that.
So good.
It's so inspiring.
I'm sure there's so many people out there
that are doctors, lawyers, accountants,
they've got professional services.
And it's like, you can parlay your experience
into an online brand and then monetize that online brand
and have multiple revenue streams, like you mentioned.
So I didn't hear you say
that you're monetizing your podcast
and you are speaking to the podcast princess.
So if you need support monetizing your podcast,
let's definitely talk about it.
We are working on that.
So yeah, what happened is I had my book come out in January,
Younger For Life, and I've had a podcast for many years,
but honestly, when my YouTube
and all my video stuff exploded,
I kind of put the podcast a little bit on the
back burner, I still did it here and there and stuff. And then
once my book came out, I started really looking at what media in
general, what was going on with the whole media landscape in
general. And I realized that I really need to refocus on the
podcast, because there's so many people that are listening, I
listen so much, it's just for years, I thought that maybe
I could do better with the video stuff,
but now that the video stuff is doing so well,
it's like, hey, you know what?
I've got a little bit of extra time.
Let me focus more on the podcast.
So we are looking now at monetizing it.
It's been growing.
It's back to much better than even where it was
before I started taking time off of it.
And that's a really exciting thing.
You just mentioned time.
You've got mentioned time.
You've got some time.
A lot of business owners who want to grow
a personal brand online, they're like,
well, I don't have time for that.
I'm not an influencer.
I'm an entrepreneur.
Talk to me about how you actually make time
for your content while balancing being an author,
a podcaster, a doctor.
So I think that you have to look at it
as these are things that you need to love to
do.
So for example, for me, I operate every Tuesday and Thursday.
I see patients every Monday and Wednesday and I used to operate Friday mornings.
Technically, I started my practice, I used to operate all day Fridays and gradually I
brought that down to the point where I was just operating a few hours in the morning
and then doing podcasting and social media and video creation and writing books
and all that stuff after that.
And then I realized in the end that said,
if I get up an hour earlier on Thursday,
that can make up for some lost time
on the time I'm operating on Friday.
I'll just do a little bit more on a Thursday.
And now I dedicate all my Fridays
to essentially podcasting and content creation.
And then at the same time, what I'm finding is,
as I'm doing more and more of the social media
and the podcasting and the YouTube
and all that type of stuff,
I'm able to charge more for my surgeries.
I don't take insurance anymore
and so I can really charge what I want.
And that has allowed me to operate less
yet still make the same or more than I did
when I operated an extra day.
And now I spend an extra day.
And now I spend that extra day doing other things.
I still love treating patients, I love operating, but I also love a variety.
If I was one of those physicians that saw 60 patients a day, five days a week, year
after year after year, I would burn out.
It's just not my thing.
I love doing a lot of different things, especially the creative stuff.
And so that's allowed me to essentially add the creative parts in
and actually in the end make more money by doing that.
This is so great because I feel like a lot of people that are tuning in,
they probably feel like handcuffed to their great professional services job.
But you show that you can explore being creative, being a content creator,
writing, podcasting, teaching others,
and do stuff outside what you went to school for
for 10, 20 years.
The issue that people have, I think,
is that there are so many bright lights out there.
There's so many things that you can focus on.
And people then, they get inspired by listening to say,
you know, a podcast, and they say,
well, geez, I want to get on YouTube.
I want to start my podcast.
I want to, no, do one thing that you think you're going to really love.
If you're going to get into this, focus on that, do that really, really well.
And then when that's successful, then start moving into the other things.
Because I think what happens to a lot of entrepreneurs, especially like a physician
is that they see all these bright, shiny objects, they go after all of them at one
time, they do all of them, not so well or half ass all of them
and then none of them really become successful,
then they get dejected.
And so my recommendation really for people
who are thinking about going into something
a little bit different is to think about
what you like to do.
And my first love was always video.
That's why I focus on that.
Even though I've written four books
and I've got the podcast, it's always was a video.
And then once you really do that well
and you're really enjoying it,
if you want to branch out, by all means do that.
But you don't want to be a jack of all trades,
master of none.
You want to start with that one thing
that you know you're going to love
that you can really excel at
and then try to work your way out from there.
Totally.
And it's so important with all these platforms,
they all have different features
and you gotta learn the algorithms.
You just have to figure out how you can get leverage
and grow on one platform and focus there.
And that's a lot of hard work
unless you have unlimited amounts of money
and you can hire people.
But to your point, you did everything yourself
and that comes off so authentically,
especially for your first main channel.
It's so important, I think, to do it yourself.
Totally agree.
And I think too, as a physician and as a creator,
you want to look at whether you are a B2B person
or a B2C person.
So for example, I'm very B2C.
I have some plastic surgeons that follow me.
I think they don't comment on my stuff
because I think that I'm kind of a bit of an outlier.
And there's some doctors who don't like me.
Some of them are who are jealous of me,
but I have a good friend of mine,
and he is a B2B doctor,
where he has all the plastic surgeons and nurses following him,
they comment on his stuff all the time,
but he has literally one eighth,
I think, of the followers that I have,
but we create very different content.
And so when you're looking as a physician
or a professional, you're creating content. The first thing I
encourage you to think about is, are you a B2B person? Or are
you a B2C person? Once you figure that which one of those
out, then you want to create content for that person. None
of my content is B2B. You don't see me creating any content for
doctors. It's all for patients, lay people, maybe nurses, you
know, maybe support staff, but almost none of it is for doctors.
And I know now if I put something out
that's specifically for doctors,
it's gonna crash and burn
because it's such a small fraction of my audience.
I always say niche versus broad,
but I really love the way that you put it,
B2B versus B2C.
Okay, so let's talk about holistic medicine.
You call yourself a holistic plastic surgeon.
How does that differ from traditional cosmetic procedures?
This is a great question.
It's something that I came up with many years ago
as I hit this fork in the road with my practice.
As plastic surgeons, we learn how to cut people open.
And the goal is always to bring people to surgery.
And I realized when I had a patient
with a terrible complication that this was wrong
and that my goal for being a plastic surgeon
should not be to try to bring as many people
to surgery as I can, but it should be,
how do I keep them out of surgery,
yet still help them to look and feel their best?
And so in my book, Younger for Life,
the idea is it's a concept called autojuvenation.
And it's basically how you can use
your body's own natural rejuvenative abilities to turn back the clock naturally, but in order to do
that you have to give it the right tools in the right environment to do so. And I firmly believe
that if you incorporate those types of things and it's what you eat, when you eat, nutritional
supplements, skincare, and non-invasive treatments, when you focus, nutritional supplements, skin care, and non-invasive treatments. When
you focus on those five things, the vast majority of people can look five, even up to 10 years
younger and hopefully not feel the need to have to have surgery. Because if anybody comes
to see me and they say, Hey, Dr. Yoon, I'm thinking of having a tummy tuck or a facelift
or breast lift. What's the worst thing that can happen to me? I answer, you can die. That's
the worst thing because you got to be honest with them. So anything that can happen to me? I answer, you can die. That's the worst thing,
because you gotta be honest with them.
So anything you can do to prevent that,
obviously you wanna do.
Anthony, I'd love for you to guess my age.
I never share my age, ever.
I never share my age,
and I'd love for you to guess my age.
27?
Oh my gosh, I'm 38. Oh, look at you, Oh my gosh. I'm 38.
Oh, look at you.
Oh my gosh.
I really know how to stay looking young.
So I never announced my age guys, because I really get away with looking really young.
Yeah, you do.
Well, but with what you're doing, it's good for people to know that you're 38 because
I think that with age does come wisdom and people believe that you have more wisdom
if you're older too.
Whether that's true or not, I mean, I know people who are 50
who God knows they have no wisdom.
That's totally.
Let's hold that thought and take a quick break
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So first let's talk about what is the difference
between anti-aging and reverse aging?
Cause those are two different things.
Anti-aging basically means slowing down that aging process
because no matter what it's gonna keep moving forward.
Reversing aging is actually looking or being younger.
Now there's interesting things, okay?
There's a difference between a biological age
and a chronological age, okay?
So you cannot change your chronological age.
You know, you're, you said 38?
Yep.
I'm 51. There's no way I can be chronologically 50.
That ship has passed last year.
You can't be 37, that's what you were last year.
But your biological age is basically the age of your body
biologically on the inside and that you can change.
And those are those principles of autojuvenation
by changing what you eat, by exercising,
by taking certain supplements, all that stuff
can actually reverse your biological age.
Now, how much can you reverse it by?
That's a big question.
And there are people who claim to have a biological age
nowhere near their chronological age.
You gotta wonder, there's some people who use that
as a marketing tactic as well.
I know who you're talking about.
And the fact is, is that you can look at somebody on the outside
and have an idea of what their biological age is
because what is on the inside will show on your skin.
The skin is our magic mirror.
I have a good friend of mine, Dr. Trevor Cates,
she said, our skin is our magic mirror.
It is what's on the inside will show on your skin.
The interesting thing is that,
and this is where my book is a little bit different than some of the other anti-aging books by certain
scientists, is that there are people who will talk about different things you can
do to anti-age your body and increase longevity, but a lot of them don't
honestly look that young. And there are studies that show that the younger you
look, technically, the longer you will live.
And there are actually twin studies
that show that the identical twins,
the younger looking of the identical twin
typically lives longer than the older looking of the two.
Wow.
Even though genetically they're the same.
That's so interesting.
So I have a funny story about this.
So Dave Asprey, who's coming on my show again
in a couple of weeks.
I love Dave.
Dave's a friend of mine. Dave's awesome. So Dave came on my, who's coming on my show again in a couple of weeks. I love Dave.
Dave's a friend of mine.
Dave's awesome.
So Dave came on my show a couple of years ago
and I remember when he came on the show, he was like 48.
And so I was like, Dave, you're 48 years old.
You say you're gonna live to 180.
And he like cut me off.
And he was like, Hala, that's ageist.
He's like, I don't align with being 48.
He was like offended that I called him 48 years old. And he's like, I don't align with being 48. He was like offended that I called him 48 years old.
And he's like, I am 27% of my goal of being 180 years old.
I'm 27% years old.
And I always thought of that
whenever I thought about my age, I was like,
man, I don't feel 38.
I feel like I'm like, you know, 25% of my goal.
So I feel with AI and all the advances in medicine and everything
going on, I really truly feel that people are gonna start looking so much younger.
It's already happening. 30-year-olds look nothing like they used to. Like I
remember seeing 30-year-olds and they looked so much older than what 30 and
40-year-olds look like now. Yeah. And I just feel like people are gonna really
start coming forward with their biological
age versus their chronological age.
Like, hey, medically, I'm actually this age.
And I just feel like that's going to really be the future because right now I feel like
sometimes I look really young.
I go out and I feel like I look much younger than other 20 year olds who aren't working
out and eating healthy.
I literally look younger than other 20 year olds who aren't working out and eating healthy. I literally look younger than them.
Part of it is I think this generation are the millennials.
They take care of themselves so much better.
I mean, one of the shows I grew up watching
was the Golden Girls.
And I'm sure you've seen those memes on social media
where you see Rue McClanahan from the Golden Girls
where she was like 53 and then JLo who's the same age.
And it's insane when you think about it.
And J.Lo, as much as I personally, I'm not her doctor,
so I have no evidence of any of this.
I don't think it's just olive oil of why she looks so young,
but I also don't think it's all plastic surgery.
This is a woman who has taken great,
whether you love her or not, or dislike her,
she's taken great care of herself.
She exercises regularly.
She watches what she eats.
I'm sure she uses great skincare.
She protects her skin
and that can really make a difference.
There are genetics though.
Genetics do play a factor in it,
but we believe that's only about 20%.
It's that 80-20 rule
and that 20% of your ageing will be determined
by your genetics.
The other 80% is what you do with them,
is the epigenetics part of it.
And then there's some people who benefit a lot from that.
I think the 80-20 rule is pretty generalized.
If you are really light skinned, you're, let's say Irish,
that's gonna be more than probably 20%,
unfortunately, for you.
Same thing, like if you are African-American or even Asian,
we do get the benefit because of the melanin in our skin
of maybe being more than that 20% genetics,
having us age a bit more slowly than somebody who's Irish
where that's on the other side of it.
So it's interesting, but definitely what you see
on the outside does project what's on the inside,
not a 100%, but a good portion of it.
Is it possible that if your insides are aging faster
that you actually look older than your age?
Can you explain to us what are some of the signs
that your insides might not be as healthy as they should be?
Some very simple thing that we know of
is that the health of our gut, our microbiome,
will really show on the skin.
And there are early studies now showing
that if you've got, let's say, poor gut health,
if your microbiome is unhealthy,
if you're eating a lot of inflammatory type foods,
then that will show on your skin as inflamed skin.
So there are connections between skin conditions
like rosacea, like eczema, even acne,
that do have a connection to the health of the gut.
And so anybody who's truly looking at skincare
and skin health from a truly holistic perspective
needs to do more than unfortunately what some of us
have been doing for the last 50 years,
which is just focusing on sunblock and creams.
Yes, that is an important part of it,
but also the health of your gut
is really gonna show in that manner.
And we have direct correlations and studies now showing that.
So let's step back a minute.
Let's talk about your career journey a bit
because you started as a traditional plastic surgeon.
So how did you then switch gears to be like,
okay, I just want to reset here
and focus more on holistic.
What really reset you?
So I had this patient who I performed a facelift on
and at this point in my career, I was probably, I don't know,
seven, eight, 10 years into my career.
And I thought that I'd hit the pinnacle of success.
I had over a year waiting list.
I had patients flying in from all over the country
to have operations done by me.
And in surgery, there are certain operations
that we look at and we take pride in
because we're able to do them.
And they're typically the more difficult operations
where the patients are very choosy on who does their surgery.
So for example, if you're a general surgeon,
that operation is the Whipple.
The Whipple is like a 10 hour pancreatic cancer operation
that when you're in your training,
if you're so lucky to see a Whipple, you're very fortunate.
And those types of operations are only really done
by the most experienced surgeons because they're so difficult.
In plastic surgery, that operation is probably the facelift.
You know, patients who will pick almost anybody
to do their lipo or even their BBL,
but you know that if they're going to do a facelift on you,
they're going to cut open and lift up your face and stuff
that they're going to be super choosy in their doctor.
So hollered for many years,
I literally graded the success of my practice
based off how many face-lift patients I had on the schedule,
as ridiculous as that may sound.
And I had a patient who flew in to see me,
she had a face-lift done, the surgery went perfectly,
and she developed some terrible complications afterwards,
and it really got me into thinking,
am I doing the right thing?
And I hit this kind of rock bottom, and I started realizing what I'd mentioned earlier about
the goal of my practice.
And so I spent many, many months trying to really look at and rethink what I was doing.
And I started reading books.
For example, in my training as a plastic surgeon, I got almost no training on nutrition.
I never spent a single day with a dermatologist learning about skin.
We didn't get this type of thing.
And so I realized that there was so much
that I didn't know that I needed to learn.
And I spent tens of thousands of hours
basically reading books, studying, looking up studies,
created my own supplement protocol for healing
that since then has been pretty much co-opted
by a lot of other companies.
And I created this whole concept of autojuvenation
and holistic plastic surgery.
And I read books from people who I'd not heard of
until I really started digging deep in this books
by like Dave Asprey.
I read a couple of Dave Asprey's books
and all of these alternative holistic experts
whether they're naturopaths, whether they're biohackers,
whether they're dermatologists,
I was able to get a little bit from each of them
to really come up with what I'm doing in my career now.
So interesting.
And something that I want to call out
for all of my listeners,
some entrepreneurs, executives are listening in
and they're like, well, what do I care about looking younger?
And I have to say that I feel like I have so much advantage
in the business space looking younger. I literally feel like I have so much advantage in the business space looking younger.
I literally feel like I have 10 years extra than everybody else because I look younger
and that is such an advantage. So I'd love to hear your thoughts about
career-wise. Why is it an important thing to try to look and feel your best?
For my career being a plastic surgeon, if I walked in the room and I had huge bags under
my eyes or something like that, then obviously that's going to impact how people feel about
me, even though some of that may be subconsciously.
But also I think I see a lot of people who come into my office who are executives, who
are business people, who are entrepreneurs, and they are coming in to get little tweaks
because they know that what they see in the mirror doesn't match how they feel on the
inside.
So we talked a little bit about how what our inside
is mirrored by what's on the outside.
But there's only so much control you have over that.
And you could be feeling great
and be in great shape for somebody
who's let's say 60 years old,
but you're still gonna have that aging.
You can't, when you're 60, look like you're 35.
It's just not possible, unless you're a freak of nature.
Okay, and there's very few people who are like that.
But if you're like most people, if you are lucky,
maybe you're gonna look five, 10 years younger,
and that's great, but sometimes no matter what you do,
that's gonna be a part of it.
And so there are so many people who do find
that when they look in the mirror
and they feel better about themselves,
that that can really impact their job performance
and how they look at themselves
as a business person, as an entrepreneur.
I've seen so many people in my practice,
whether they have had surgery or not had surgery,
whether they have just done some of the things
that I recommend, the auto-juvenative ways
to turn back the clock naturally,
and it has profoundly impacted their life.
In some ways, they are somewhat indirect, you know?
It's just by feeling good about yourself,
you're going to come across differently to other people.
One way I think about it is we all know how it feels
when we go to a store and we buy a new outfit
and we put that outfit on
and we're still the same person, okay, on the inside,
but wearing that outfit,
we feel in some ways better about ourselves.
Whether you're looking for Jones and for compliments or not,
just the fact that we're wearing something new
and we kind of like it, it makes us feel good.
And that's what we should be feeling all the time
about ourselves in general.
And think about how you feel that way.
You're gonna project that whether it is subtly,
subconsciously projecting it or projecting it
and knowing that you're projecting that.
And I feel like it has nothing to do with being extremely attractive.
It's almost just about being your best version of yourself
and looking fresh and not tired and things like that.
And I think it's healthy too.
I think in the end, health is beauty.
There are people who are in their 70s
who have a lot of wrinkles,
but you know they're healthy and they're beautiful
and they project that that way.
You know, a good example of that is Audrey Hepburn.
She died, I think, when she was in her late seventies.
And when she was at that age, she was still so beautiful.
I don't think she had hardly any work done,
but she was absolutely beautiful at that time.
I have to check out her pictures at 70,
70 years old so I can have some motivation.
She was one in breakfast at Tiffany's and as she aged,
she just aged so gracefully.
Like I don't know if she's had a little work done.
At that time, there wasn't a lot of work being done
specifically, but she just looked great.
And I think that we can project that.
It doesn't have necessarily just be about the wrinkles
and stuff.
It truly is about the health.
So speaking of that, you talked about autojuvenation.
You threw that word out there.
Can you define that for us?
So autojuvenation is how you can use your body's own
regenerative abilities to turn back the clock.
And it was those five things I mentioned earlier
of what you eat, when you eat, nutritional supplements,
skincare, and non-invasive treatments.
And so these are the five things I focus on
in my book, Younger for Life,
because those are the five things really
that if you do really focus on that,
I strongly believe that virtually everybody
can look five to 10 years younger.
So what you eat is gonna be eating
an anti-inflammatory diet.
You wanna make sure you get sufficient amounts
of healthy protein, cutting out the ultra-processed foods.
I'm sure Dave's gonna talk a lot about this type of stuff
when he comes on.
When you eat is gonna be adding a little bit
of intermittent fasting into it.
One thing that we do know is if you want to age more slowly,
the number one thing you can technically do
is calorie restriction, but calorie restriction is no fun.
And so another option would be to do intermittent fasting
or time restricted eating.
So basically just giving your body short periods of time, whether it's 12 hours,
sometimes 16, where you give your gut a rest and you let your body's natural regenerative
mechanisms work itself. It's called autophagy. I think that's important. And then supplements.
I'm a big fan of supplements. Happy to talk about them if you'd like skincare and we can
talk about a good skincare routine and then non non-invasive treatments, there's so much out there that's
so exciting to turn back the clock without getting injected or getting cut on. I'm going to pick your
brain on all of this. So like you mentioned, you've got this book, Younger for Life. In it,
you have a two minutes, five years younger skincare routine. Can you break that down for us?
If you are like so many people and you are confused
about what to do with your skin and you go to Sephora
or Ulta and you're like, what do I buy?
This is the basic thing that everybody should do.
And if you do this, you're gonna be way ahead
of everybody else.
Takes just two minutes a day.
So you start in the morning, you cleanse your skin
with a cleanser appropriate for your skin type.
And so if you've got kind of drier, more mature skin,
then going for a more milky or hydrating cleanser
is important.
If you've got more oily skin,
if you're sometimes on the younger side,
then a more foaming cleanser often is better
for skin like that.
After that, you wanna apply a vitamin C
or antioxidant serum.
Vitamin C you can find, most skincare lines have it.
We've got one called our CE Antioxidant Serum,
but using a Vitamin C serum in the morning
is gonna help protect your skin from free radicals.
Free radicals are one of the main causes of our skin aging
and using Vitamin C will help protect it from that
as well as help with blemishes
and collagen production as well.
And then the third thing in the morning
is to apply a sunscreen.
I do recommend at least SPF 30.
If you're gonna be inside, do you have to wear it?
Not necessarily, but definitely you're gonna be out
quite a bit, then sunscreen is helpful.
That's all you have to do in the morning.
Cleanse, vitamin C serum, and then a sunscreen.
In the evening, gotta cleanse your skin.
If you only wash your skin once a day,
make sure it's in the evening,
because you gotta get rid of the day's worth of dirt
and grime and pollution and oil and all that type of stuff
and definitely makeup.
So wash your skin at night
and then you want to apply an anti-aging cream.
The one I usually recommend as a starter is a retinol.
Retinol is a form of vitamin A.
Most big skincare companies have a retinol moisturizer.
That's a cornerstone for our UN Beauty line,
our retinol moisturizer. Science's a cornerstone for our Youn Beauty line, our retinol moisturizer.
Science shows that those are the most potent
anti-aging creams out there
if you don't have a prescription.
Okay, so use a retinol at night.
If you have real sensitive skin,
if you've got real sensitive skin, then use Bacuchial.
Bacuchial is a plant-based alternative to retinol.
Appears to work very similarly,
but it's more easily tolerated.
And technically that's it.
Maybe once or twice a week,
exfoliate your skin with a nice,
gentle exfoliating agent,
whether it's an at-home peel or like a scrub,
that's all you have to do.
So really that's a two minutes, five years younger.
Morning, cleanse, vitamin C, sunscreen,
night, cleanse, and a retinol.
If you wanna apply a moisturizer on top of that,
if it's real dry, then feel free to do that.
And then once or twice a week, exfoliate your skin.
And that's all you have to technically do.
It sounds really easy, but I'm sure,
I have mostly male listeners surprisingly,
and I'm sure they're listening to this like,
I'm not doing all that.
All right, if you're a guy and you wanna say
you wanna limit what you're doing,
first thing is definitely use a facial cleanser,
not bar soap,
because bar soap will definitely dry your skin out.
Apply the sunscreen if you're going to be out.
If you're not, then at least do a vitamin C serum.
And then at night, you just got to apply the retinol.
You can skip the exfoliating part of it, that's fine.
Just do those things.
You don't want to get to that point where you're 50, 60,
70 years old
and you go, geez, why didn't I do any of this earlier?
Now what am I going to do?
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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That's Shopify.com slash profiting.
So you talk about sunscreen,
and sunscreen gets a lot of hate lately.
People are like, oh, it's a hormone disruptor.
We think sunscreen prevents cancer.
Now people are saying it causes cancer with its harmful chemicals.
People are saying it's the reason for everyone's low vitamin D.
Can you talk to us about maybe what kind of sunscreen we should actually look for?
And then also, how do you feel about these sunscreen naysayers?
As a plastic surgeon, I can't tell you how many people
have come into my office with a tiny little lesion
on their face, it ends up being skin cancer,
then they come back to see me,
they got a huge hole in their nose,
or part of their eyelid is gone,
or part of their lip is gone.
You do not want a skin cancer on your face, period.
Anything that you can do within reason
to prevent that, you really want to do, okay?
Because it can be absolutely devastating to your appearance.
There are certain camps out there that have certain beliefs
and really let me tell you a more moderate,
moderate I think approach to it,
kind of middle of the road approach,
is that there's certain ingredients in sunscreens
that are considered by some to be hormone disruptors.
They are typically oxybenzone and octinoxate.
Oxybenzone and octinoxate are the ones that are primarily considered to be hormone disruptors
that also may be causing potential damage to the coral reefs.
And so if you go to Hawaii, maybe some islands in the Caribbean, they actually won't let
you wear certain sunscreens that contain those ingredients because they're concerned about that.
So I do recommend in general to avoid those.
They're chemical sunscreens.
There's chemical and there's physical.
The chemical sunscreens basically are put onto your skin,
they absorb into your skin,
and then they create a chemical reaction
to help prevent the damage from the UV rays of the sun
from damaging your skin.
Physical sun blocks are made to sit on the damage from the UV rays of the sun from damaging your skin. Physical sun blocks are made to sit
on the surface of the skin
and literally just block the sun's rays
from getting to your skin.
Those are the ones that are gonna be thicker.
Back in the day, there were lifeguards
that would have a little, it looked like white paste
on the surface of their nose.
Zinc oxide, that's the main physical sunscreen ingredient.
That's what it is.
So there are some people who say,
if you're gonna wear sunscreen, use a physical blocker.
And I think in general, especially for children,
that's what I recommend
because they're gonna physically block the sun
and there's no concern about endocrine
or hormone disrupting from them.
The problem with it is, is that if you are a person of color,
then it can make your skin look ashy,
give your skin a whitish hue.
And so that's not necessarily all that great cosmetically then.
And so if you do have darker skin and you want to go with a chemical sunscreen, then
I recommend ones that have been shown to not be endocrine disruptors, like ones with Avobenzone,
Megzoral XL, those are two very popular ones that you can use, I think, very safely.
And so that's the way I look at it is number one, if you want to go out in the sun, you
don't want to get burned, you want to try to avoid obviously the rays from causing aging
of your skin and eventual skin cancer.
So definitely protect your skin.
With your kids use a physical blocker with zinc oxide or titanium dioxide.
If you can tolerate that and you've got skin color that will tolerate them by all means use that too.
If however you want something that's going to feel much lighter on your skin that's not
going to leave that white issue then go with the chemical sunscreens but pick ones like
Avobenzone and Magzoral XL and try to stay away from oxybenzone and octinoxate.
And then answering your vitamin D question, yes vitamin D is so essential and there's so many of us
who are deficient in it.
I myself 100% believe in the therapeutic qualities
of the sun.
I mean, I live in Detroit for God's sakes.
And when we're in the middle of the winter
and you get a sunny day, everybody's outside like,
oh my gosh, it feels so good on our skin.
Do that, it's fine.
Although studies show that if you are Caucasian,
you only need 15 minutes a day
of direct sunlight to your skin
to create enough vitamin D
so that you are not vitamin D deficient.
However, if you have darker skin,
you need more time in the sun to get that.
And so I think that there's a happy medium there somewhere.
I myself don't wear sunscreen every day.
If I'm gonna be out a lot, then I will,
but if I'm just going in and out from the car and stuff,
I don't.
And so I think you need to find what you feel is appropriate
for yourself and definitely for your family.
I totally agree on that.
That was like a sunscreen masterclass.
So thank you for that.
I love to do advanced treatments.
I'm taking my skincare very seriously.
And so I used to go to the salon
and do radio frequency treatments
and they are phenomenal.
I love them so much.
I really don't do Botox or anything.
Like I've just been doing radio frequency.
And I even have at home machines now
from this brand Amiro who I need to get a sponsorship
from them because I'm always shouting them out.
But they have red light, radio frequency, microcurrents.
It's so awesome and I use them all the time
and it's saved me so much money.
So I'd love to just hear your thoughts
about using these at-home machines
or even getting professional spa treatments
to actually build collagen.
I think it's just a little bit more effective
than the topical treatments.
Yeah, I think that those are great.
And I think that right now we're hitting a Renaissance
where there's so many at home devices that can be helpful.
I think the first thing for your listeners,
if you say, hey, what should I start with?
The easiest thing is to get a red light therapy,
either a mask or a red light therapy handheld
or a tabletop device.
So red light therapy, we know the idea behind
red light therapy is that the energy from that red light
gets taken up by the mitochondria of your cells
and mitochondria basically are the powerhouses of our cells
and it causes our cells to create more ATP or more energy.
So essentially the red light energizes your cells
to be more youthful.
And there are studies that do show, not a lot of studies,
but there are studies that do show that using
red light therapy can increase the elastin
and the collagen content in your skin.
So I'm a big fan of red light therapy.
I do it myself at home, not as much as I should,
just because I always forget, honestly.
I do it a lot on my head because I have a laser helmet
that I use, because my hair, God forbid, was thinning a bit.
And so that definitely helps.
So the first thing I would recommend
would be red light therapy.
There are at home, as you mentioned,
radio frequency devices, there are at home
laser hair removal devices and stuff like that.
And I think more and more those are becoming
more and more powerful and safer and safer to use.
But the first thing I would recommend
would be red light therapy,
because I think that one has the most science behind it
and probably the most potential benefit.
And then if you're going into an office setting,
part of the reason why I don't do red light therapy too,
in addition to forgetting about doing it,
is I do do treatments in my office.
And those are obviously gonna be more powerful than those.
And so whether it's certain chemical peels,
one of our most popular treatments is Morpheus-8,
that's radio frequency combined with micro-needling.
And that's a really good skin tightening,
non-invasive skin tightening treatment.
There's so much out there that's really exciting.
Yeah, radio frequency to me, I think is the future.
I feel like there's gonna be radio frequency spas
that open up and so many people don't know about it.
And it's, I think the fountain of youth in my opinion.
Okay, so you mentioned your hair loss.
I recently became single and so I am of the age
where now I'm starting to go on dates with guys
that are losing their hair.
It's a sad statement on us.
Yes, and I could tell it's affecting their self-esteem
and I wanna whisper like, just go to Turkey,
you know, you're rich.
But you actually did not do an invasive treatment.
So talk to us to all the guys out there
that are having receding hairline problems, thinning hair.
What are some options for them?
If you're a male or even if you're a female
and you are noticing your hair thinning,
there is a very step-wise process
I recommend you go through.
And I do put that in the Younger for Life book.
But the first thing you want to look at is stress, okay?
So stress will make your hair get thin. Are you in a stressful time in your life? And if you are, then that's something you want to look at is stress. Okay, so stress will make your hair get thin.
Are you in a stressful time in your life?
And if you are, then that's something you want to deal with.
You know, meditation, yoga, all those things are great.
Getting more sleep, okay?
But if you're like, no, I'm actually not stressed.
I'm happy and stress is not an issue for me.
Then the next thing you want to look at then
is nutritional deficiencies.
Now, you can see a functional medicine doctor
and they can do a ton of labs on you
and see where you have a nutritional deficiency
because a lot of nutritional deficiencies
can cause staining hair,
whether it's iron, vitamin D, zinc,
a lot of different things can contribute to it.
Once again, the lazy approach to it,
which a lot of people will do,
is you get a nutritional supplement like Nutrifol
that basically has everything you need.
And so Nutrifol, not my company,
but they basically have a men's version,
they have a premenopausal women's version,
a postmenopausal women's version, a vegan women's version,
and a postpartum women's version as well.
And these are nutritional supplements
that basically are all in one.
So whatever nutritional deficiency,
they'll take care of it.
So that would be the next thing I would recommend
was be getting on a nutritional supplement
in case it's deficiency related.
The next thing after that is gonna be red light therapy
or a laser helmet.
That's what I use.
Typically you wear those for anywhere from 15 to 30 minutes
a few times a week, and that can help.
After that, you wanna look at topicals, okay?
So obviously the most popular topicals, okay?
So obviously the most popular topical
is going to be minoxidil or Rogaine.
There's men's strength and women's strength.
Here's a little tip, women's strength is BS.
If you're a woman and you want to use minoxidil
and they all have a men's and women's,
they charge more for women's, but it's weaker strength
and women can use the men's strength.
It's so stupid.
So feel free to use the men's version of minoxidil
if you're a female and you're thinning your hair.
If you don't want to put yourself on a pharmaceutical,
which that is a pharmaceutical,
basically it's a medication that side effect
is growing of the hair,
then you can try topical rosemary oil.
There's a small study that shows topical rosemary oil
may have very similar effects to thinning hair as minoxidil,
but with less skin irritation.
And so adding a topical like either rosemary oil
or minoxidil definitely recommend.
If that's not doing it,
and you wanna give yourself a good six months
of doing all of those things,
if after six months you're seeing no change at all,
or it's not enough of a change,
then the next step would be PRP injections,
where they draw your blood, they spin out the platelets,
which are chock full of growth factors,
and then inject it into thin areas of your scalp.
That you do need to do a couple of times a year
to keep it up, but that can really help as well.
That's gonna be the stepwise progression that I recommend.
Treating your stress,
treating your nutritional deficiencies,
red light therapy, topicals, and then none of that works,
then you may want to go to some injections.
And then going to Turkey and getting a hair transplant
is way down the list, unless,
unless in this situation, Hala,
if you've got a bald area,
then none of these are going to treat it.
It's only for thinning hair.
But if you got like in the crown,
you got a big bald patch in the crown,
then yes, that's going gonna be hair transplants.
Such good advice.
I'd love to stick on food for a bit.
So can you talk to us why it's important
to eat a variety of foods?
Well, the number one thing with the variety
is gonna come with your fruits and vegetables.
One of the main agers of our skin,
as I mentioned earlier, is free radicals, is oxidation.
So the way that happens basically is that because we are alive, our body has a
metabolism.
It's like a factory that's creating energy and we've got byproducts of it,
like the exhaust from your car.
These byproducts are called free radicals and they can damage the DNA of ourselves
that they build up to a too large of an extent.
So just the fact that we're alive, our body creates as a consequence of being alive free
radicals and then our body will actually create antioxidants to neutralize these free radicals.
And if you're in a very healthy state, if you're like Dave Asprey, then the amount of
antioxidants that your body is creating is probably very similar to the amount of free
radicals your body is creating and you're in a good homeostasis. However, if you're exposed to a lot of pollution, if
you're eating a lot of ultra processed foods, a lot of deep fried foods and things like
that, if you're smoking, then those free radicals can be much greater than the antioxidants
that your body is creating. And that creates a state we call oxidative stress, where those
free radicals are so numerous
that they're now attacking the DNA of your cells,
that can lead to premature aging
and even potentially cancer down the line.
So what, once again, stops those free radicals,
neutralizes them, antioxidants.
I mentioned earlier when we were talking about skincare,
vitamin C and vitamin C being an antioxidant.
Antioxidants are basically in the pigment
of the fruits and vegetables that you eat.
And so if you eat only, let's say,
orange fruits and vegetables,
and you only get a certain type of those pigments,
a certain type of antioxidants.
But if you eat the rainbow of colorful fruits and vegetables,
now you're getting a wide variety of those antioxidants
and hopefully a lot of them to neutralize the free radicals
and to slow down or stop that premature aging process.
I had a doctor on the show one time, Dr. Gundry, who told everybody to give fruit the boot.
Yes.
And I remember for like six months I didn't eat fruit and my mom was getting so mad at me.
She's like, eat your fruit. And I started and I was like, yeah, I feel much healthier eating fruit.
Yeah. The argument is that fruit is filled with fructose and fructose is a sugar and
sugar is the great ager of our bodies. And so, and so I think you take that belief and
then you can then project it into well, then don't eat any fruit at all.
But the fact is, is that there's so much more to fruit
than the fructose.
There is a ton of fiber and fiber helps to slow down
the digestion of that fruit and the sugar that you get,
the sugar spikes and the fructose and all of that.
And there's a ton of antioxidants,
there are vitamins and minerals,
and there are phytonutrients,
which are even parts of the fruit
that we don't even understand
that are so good for our bodies.
My dad, he eats a big plate of fruit every morning.
He's Korean, he is 83 now.
And I swear to God that you take away
some of the physical movement issues
that he may have as he's getting older,
but he's gonna live to like 100.
And part of it is because every day
he is infusing his body with these antioxidants
because fruits are filled with antioxidants
as well as vitamins and minerals and phytonutrients
and fiber being so good for our body as well.
So I am not one to poo poo fruit.
I'm not a fan of fruit juice and fruit juicing
because now you're taking all that fiber out
and so you are getting the sugar spikes. But if you're eating an apple or an orange or a pear or grapes or berries are great,
those are great fruits that it just does not make sense to me as a physician that those would be bad
for you at all. I totally agree. I totally agree with you. And how about meats? What is your
perspective on meat? Because sometimes I see vegans and they look beautiful.
Sometimes I see vegans and I'm like, you look sick.
You know, they actually look sick and tired.
So I'd love to get your perspective on that.
I consider veganism to be a more of a moral choice
than a health choice in general.
I admire vegans.
I think that their hearts are in the right places and I have friends of mine who are vegan and
some people really I think do great with that.
But I think that there are a lot of people myself included and I went not vegan,
but I went vegetarian for a while and I found that I feel much better if I have some type of animal protein
getting some type of meat for me. There are different perspectives
I think it's important to bring up. I have a good friend of mine, Dr. Gabrielle Lyon, she wrote a best-selling book about how important
protein is to muscles and how especially women as they get older don't get enough protein
and that can be really harmful to the aging of their bodies and I do believe that that
is true. But also when you look at anti-aging scientists, the more protein that you eat,
the less long you live essentially,
because you are in a state where you're building up muscle
and that's technically not the best thing
for overall longevity in the end.
And so there are confounding factors here.
And so the way I would look at it is,
physically as you get older,
you need to have sufficient amounts of protein
for your skin because your skin is filled with collagen
and collagen is a protein,
but also for your muscles because you don't want to have and collagen is a protein, but also for your muscles
because you don't want to have a situation
where let's say you fall, you break your hip
and when you break your hip over the age of 50,
there's like a 20 to 30% mortality rate
in this first several years afterwards.
So as you get older, you wanna be strong
and you wanna be vibrant and you wanna have strong muscles
because that's gonna keep you physically alive longer.
But at the same time, you can overdo the protein to an extent where it maybe isn't so good
for you because now you look at longevity genes and what these scientists are looking
at.
So I think for me, when I look at protein, I look at getting sufficient amounts of protein
so that you feel strong, you feel healthy.
Definitely do weight training.
Resistance training I think is so, so incredibly important as you get older.
But at the same time,
choose your sources of protein very wisely.
Choose grass-fed beef, pastured pork and chicken.
You're limiting the amount of these kind of factory farm
types of meats and fish that you know
isn't necessarily as good for you.
I'm totally agreeing with you on all these friends.
Fermented drinks is something that you bring up
in your book, You Know for Life.
And I actually eat yogurt every day
and I have since I was younger.
And I'm like, maybe that is a factor
to why I look so young, but why fermented foods?
So fermented foods are great for the microbiome.
So fermented foods are chock full of probiotics
which are beneficial bacteria for your gut.
And I mentioned earlier when we talked about gut health and skin health and there being
this direct correlation, you can take a daily probiotic and I do recommend that for everybody.
I recommend at least 3 billion colony forming units a day of a probiotic, but you can ingest
that as well with drinks like kombucha. One of my favorites is kimchi. You know, I'm Korean,
so I love kimchi.
But eating these kind of fermented foods and drinks
I think are good because you can really help support
the microbiome.
And that's something that I think it's interesting, Hala,
because 15 years ago, you'd ask doctors,
oh, what do you think about the microbiome?
And they would poo poo, traditional physicians say,
oh, that's all hogwash.
What are you talking about?
And now we know that the microbiome
is so incredibly important to the health of our entire body.
I'm talking about skin, but their whole body.
And so some of the best foods you can eat
are fermented foods.
Yeah, I feel like gut health in the last 10 years
has just become so popular and well-known
and shaping everything that we do, even like brain health.
I talk about it all the time on my show.
So like I mentioned, skincare fanatic,
Anastasia Fascia Beauty, have you heard of this girl?
I have, yes.
We're all obsessed with this girl.
She does facial massages where basically she's saying,
if you do these facial massages, you look young.
She's got really good results.
We're all hooked.
I spent $250 on her course.
It expired.
I never took it.
I'll spend another 250 to get that course again,
because I want to know what she's doing.
And I do learn a little bit from her here and there
and incorporate it.
And she seems really smart.
So what is your thoughts around these fascia,
I don't even know if I'm saying it right, facial massages?
I think that there's some good and some bad.
I think that doing facial massages
is good for increasing circulation.
It can help to push out fluid and swelling.
I think all of those, that is very, very good.
But I also think that physically
it's not going to change the structure of your face.
And so I do question some of the results and whether those are some of the results when I see I also think that physically it's not going to change the structure of your face.
And so I do question some of the results
and whether those are some of the results when I see,
and I'm not gonna say specifically her,
but in general when I see people say,
oh, this is me before face yoga and this is me after,
look how snatched my jaw is.
Honestly, I can make my jaw look snatched from the side
literally by mewing, by lifting the tongue,
my tongue up to the roof of my mouth,
take it before and after and people will be like,
oh my gosh, look how amazing that is,
but it's like, yeah, I'm just lifting the tongue
up to the roof of my mouth.
And so I think that there is definitely
some short-term benefit for doing facial massage.
It's relaxing, once again, increases circulation,
but when you've seen the actual physical structure
of the face like I have, you know, I do a lot of facelifts.
I lift the skin up to the face.
I see the facial muscles and the fat pads and all that.
It makes zero sense to me that by just doing a certain
massage on the outside is going to physically change that.
It's the same thing when you look at people who have
what are called thread lifts, where these threads,
barb sutures are placed under the skin and they claim
it's gonna lift everything up.
And yes, you may get a little temporary result,
but it is not powerful enough
to actually change the architecture of your face.
So for example, some people have a jowl,
which is fat that hangs down over their jawline.
It's a little fat pad.
And when I lift up the skin to a face,
if I could see that fat pad there,
and sometimes what I'll do is I will liposuction
part of it away to reduce the size of it.
Other people will try to suture it up higher and stuff,
but it makes zero sense to me that by massaging it,
you could literally physically move it
into a different position
when there's so many fibrous connections
and layers of the face and stuff like that.
Unfortunately, there's a lot of information on social media
that it sounds too good to be true,
but people believe it anyway.
I debunked a video recently where somebody said that fillers,
and we do fillers, but I'm also one that's about fillers,
but in a very conservative manner, where some guy says,
if you get fillers in your lips,
it can migrate all the way up to your forehead.
And then people have taken it from their forehead
and they pushed it back into their lips.
And I don't know what he's talking about,
but people believe this and it went viral.
And it's just like, think about it.
Just take a moment and think,
can you actually move something from your lips
all the way to your forehead?
There's so many different things in the way.
It makes no sense.
So I think that's where we have to think
with the facial massage, you know,
is that gonna truly get rid of facial fat by massaging it?
Are you going to cause fat to go away?
Are you going to take platysma muscle that has gotten droopy and excessive and make that
muscle suddenly shrink down in size?
Like, it just doesn't make sense when you really think about it.
There is some magical thinking, unfortunately, involved with some of these cases.
I don't know.
I'm still a believer she does a good job.
I don't want to say anything specifically about her
because I don't know her.
But in general, I think that there's a lot out there
where people make these claims.
For example, I saw this one video I debunked
where a guy had a tattoo on his hand.
And he said, you want to know how to get rid of this tattoo?
You take some sugar
and he just got that generic sugar,
table sugar, you put that on there,
you put a few drops of olive oil and you rub it
and he rubs it, rubs it and he goes for five minutes.
Then afterwards, tattoo's gone.
And he shows no tattoo there.
And it went viral.
It makes no sense because that pigment is in the dermis,
it's in the deeper part of your skin
and rubbing olive oil and sugar
is not gonna get rid of that.
But people put makeup on over it and they try to,
it's just, it's silly.
So. Yeah.
There's a lot of BS out there, I agree.
Oh my gosh.
So a couple last questions here on skincare.
So Botox, now Botox has been going on for so long
and people are doing Botox in their 20s, their 30s.
I personally feel like Botox can make people look older
and that like their skin gets very thin looking
and their eyebrows start to look very far apart.
So I feel like people really overdo it with Botox.
However, I'm not a plastic surgeon expert like you.
So I'd love to get your perspective on Botox.
Botox is probably the most popular cosmetic treatment
in the history of the world.
We do a lot of Botox.
The first question people have is, is it safe?
In my practice, we've probably done 20,000 injections.
We've never had a major complication from it.
So I think it's good, but people can get overdone by Botox.
I don't think it's gonna thin your skin necessarily,
but it can thin the muscles under your skin. Sometimes that's a good thing when people have overgrowth
of muscles like the master muscles on the sides of your jaw, you can cause those muscles
to atrophier to get thinner. And some people actually will like that because it can thin
the job. But I think really in general, it's a paralyzing agent. So it works well for the
upper face. So basically crow's feet on up, it can work really well for me.
You gotta be very careful when you go below
because it can also cause your face to not move naturally.
And so you really wanna use it in a conservative fashion.
So I'm a big fan of it.
I get Botox myself done occasionally,
but definitely it's something where the amount is a big deal.
Yeah, and I'm not gonna lie, I've done it a few times.
I've done it a few times.
I just feel like the people that do it a lot. It could get a little crazy. How do you feel about a jaw filler?
I do a little bit of jaw filler the issue with jaw filler
So the idea is that if you've got a real narrow jawline
Then I think jaw filler can be very helpful for some people to widen their jaw and sometimes by adding filler there
It can even simulate like your skin's a little bit tighter
because it fills the area out a bit.
It's not truly a lift as it's more of a filling out.
The issue I have with jaw filler
and why I encourage people to be very careful with it
is because we've got a certain blood vessel
called the facial artery that comes along the jawline.
And basically it goes right underneath the jawline
and then it curves up right around where the jowl area is to go basically up to the nasolabial folder,
your smile lines up to your nose.
And if somebody is not being real careful and they inject filler into that facial artery,
you can have major, major problems with what we call vascular occlusion.
That can cause areas of your skin to turn black.
It can cause people to even go blind, rare, rare, rare,
but it can happen.
So just be very careful with fillers.
Botox, worst case scenario,
you get a droopy eyelid or something like that.
It goes away after three or four months.
Filler, worst case scenario, you can go blind.
You can necrosis or kill off parts of your lip or your nose.
Just be very careful with filler.
And make sure it's a hyaluronic acid filler.
If you get filler.
Don't do any of these permanent or semi-permanent fillers.
There's no antidote to those and they can be very dangerous.
Anthony, thank you so much for joining the show.
I end my show with two questions that I ask all my guests.
They don't have to be related to the topic of the show.
The first one is what is one piece of advice
our young and profitors can do today
to become more profitable tomorrow?
Focus on one thing at a time, get that thing done, and then move on to the next thing.
Because once you get that source of income or whatever done, you're going to start making
a profit off of that first, then go to the next thing versus having a bunch of projects
that are left undone where you're making nothing off of them.
Love that advice.
And what is your secret to profiting in life?
My secret to profiting in life is honestly
thinking about other people.
Because in the end, if you focus on the needs
of other people, it will come back to you
sometimes exponentially.
So if you only focus on yourself,
in the end you're gonna end up alone.
And so really focusing on the needs of others,
it always works out in the end.
I do believe in karma and I think what you put out there in the universe will come back to you one way or another.
And where can our listeners learn about you and everything that you do?
Well, thank you. Well, I've got my book Younger for Life, but I've got also my podcast, The Dr. Yoon Show,
where we cover all these health topics that we've talked about in the podcast today.
So those are two great places to find me.
Amazing. Thank you so much for your time.
Thank you, Hala.
Well, guys, I hope you loved that conversation
as much as I did.
It was very entertaining for me.
And Dr. Anthony Yoon is so inspiring.
And I think that there's so many people out there
just like him who are in a professional services job
Who are just dying to be creative and to share some of their wisdom with others in a fun way
Anthony shows that even if you're a busy surgeon
You can manage your time and your schedule in a way that allows you to be an influencer and expert on the side
And to make money while doing it
He dedicates every Friday for content creation
and he's raised his profile so much
that he can now charge much more for his surgeries.
But Anthony's goal is to help as many people as possible
and not just to operate on them.
And that makes him all the more credible and compelling.
I loved his concept of autojuvenation
and tapping into our own body's innate ability
to heal and rejuvenate.
You can look 5 to 10 years younger without any procedure or treatment.
And as Anthony put it, the younger you look, the longer you'll live.
And quite frankly, the better you'll do in business, too.
Taking care of yourself and looking your best really matters.
It just does.
And nowhere is that more apparent than our skin.
Our skin is that magic mirror that reveals
how well we're doing, not just on the outside,
but on the inside as well.
And whether it's red light therapy, wearing sunscreen,
or switching from bar soap to a facial cleanser,
there's some simple steps you can take
to improve the health of your skin and your body
and improve your appearance in the process.
Thanks for listening to this episode of Young and Profiting.
If you listened, learned, and profited from this conversation
with Dr. Anthony Yoon,
then please share this podcast with someone
who wouldn't wanna learn how to look
five or 10 years younger.
And if you did enjoy this show and you learned something,
then take a couple minutes to drop us a review
on Spotify or Apple podcasts.
Guys, I read these reviews every day.
They always make every day.
They always make my day.
And if you enjoy this podcast, if you listen to it on your commute, if you listen to it
while you're working out, if you listen to us every single week or every single day,
let us know how you feel about it.
Give us some feedback.
Let other people know how you feel about the podcast so you can help us get more listeners.
And if you did enjoy the show and you learned something,
then stop what you're doing real quick
and drop us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or wherever you listen to your podcast.
Guys, it is totally free to listen to this podcast.
You learn from it every day, every week,
when you're working out, when you're driving,
or however you tune into the show, you're learning.
And the number one way to thank us
is by dropping us a review.
Plus I love to read them, they make my day.
If you guys prefer to watch your podcast as videos,
you can find us on YouTube.
You can also find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala
or LinkedIn by searching my name, it's Halataha.
And before we go, I wanna give a big shout out
to my awesome YapAP Media family.
Thank you so much for all that you guys do,
producing the show, booking the guests,
preparing the research, making the videos,
writing the show notes.
You guys are just awesome.
Thank you for all that you do.
This is your host, Hala Taha,
AKA the Podcast Princess Princess signing off.