ZOE Science & Nutrition - How 'boosting' your immune system increases inflammation and 4 ways to support balance instead | Dr Giulia Enders
Episode Date: May 7, 2026What if boosting your immune system is the wrong goal? Today, Dr Giulia Enders explains how boosting immunity may increase inflammation and why your symptoms are often part of your body’s defence.... Your immune system is not failing when you feel sick. It is trying to protect you. So what should you focus on instead? That’s the idea at the very heart of Giulia’s new book, Organ Speak. Giulia is a gastroenterologist and author whose previous book, Gut, sold eight million copies and helped convince the world that gut health was worth taking seriously. She explains how the immune system really works and why symptoms like a runny nose, cough, or fever come from your body, not the infection itself. You’ll learn how sugar may push the immune system toward inflammation, how stress can weaken it, and why sleep is key for producing immune cells. This episode also explores how exercise helps regulate your immune response. The core idea is simple: health is not about making your immune system stronger. It is about keeping it balanced. By the end of this episode, you will have practical ways to support that balance and habits to help your immune system respond in the right way. If the sneezing, runny nose, fever - all of it - are actually the whole point, how much energy should you spend in suppressing them? 🌱 Try our science-backed and tasty wholefood supplement Daily30 Get our brand-new app and Gut Health Test designed by world-leading gut health and nutrition scientists to build healthy eating habits 👉 Join ZOE Follow ZOE on Instagram. Timecodes 00:00 Intro 02:45 Why being sick feels like failure 04:30 The problem with only treating the gut 07:16 Why your body is not broken 10:25 When your immune system gets overprotective 13:28 The virus may not cause your symptoms 15:36 Should you stop cold symptoms? 16:40 When diarrhoea medicine can backfire 18:05 Should you take painkillers when sick? 18:52 Why immunity is not a war 20:46 The invisible microbe cloak protecting you 22:49 How your body clears bacteria from skin 24:10 Your microbiome is part of immunity 26:58 Is your immune system like AI? 28:00 Why boosting immunity can go wrong 30:36 Are immune supplements worth taking? 31:45 How stress weakens your gut barrier 34:25 The one-minute breathing reset 37:48 Why sleep builds immune cells 39:27 The most important half of sleep 44:16 Do naps help your immune system? 46:40 What to eat for immune balance 48:00 How exercise moves immune cells 49:10 Why exercise when sick can be risky 54:26 Strength vs cardio for immunity 56:00 The immune system takeaway everyone needs 📚Books by our ZOE Scientists The Food For Life Cookbook Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector Ferment by Prof. Tim Spector Good Mood Food (preorder) by Prof. Tim Spector Free resources from ZOE The Hormone Harmony Guide: Tuning Your Body’s Internal Orchestra Eating for Better Brain Health: Your brain-gut blueprint How to eat in 2026 - Discover ZOE’s 8 nutrition principles for long-term health Live Healthier: Top 10 Tips From ZOE Science & Nutrition Gut Guide - For a Healthier Microbiome in Weeks Better Breakfast Guide Mentioned in today's episode Organ Speak: What it really means to listen to our bodies by Giulia Enders Gut by Giulia Enders Association of Stress-Related Disorders With Autoimmune Disease, JAMA (2018) Sugar-sweetened soda consumption and risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, AJCN (2014) Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here. Episode transcripts are available here.
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Welcome to Zoe, Science and Nutrition,
where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
It's 3am and you're wide awake,
streaming nose, sore throat,
and the distinct feeling that your body has let you down.
But what if it hasn't?
What if the sneezing, the runny nose, the fever, all of it,
is actually your body doing exactly what it should?
And what if the symptoms we spend so much energy suppressing
are in fact the whole point.
That's the idea at the heart of Julia Ender's new book, OrganSpeak.
Julia is a gastroenterologist and an author whose previous book,
GUT, sold 8 million copies
and helped convince the world that gut health was worth taking seriously.
Now she's turned her attention to the whole body
and the remarkable language it uses to communicate with us.
Today, she joins us to completely reshape
how we think about illness, immunity, and what it means to feel well.
By the end of this episode, you'll know whether to reach for a decongestant the next time you have a cold.
Why boosting your immune system might be a very bad idea.
And which simple habit genuinely do keep your immune system in balance?
Julia, thank you so much for joining me today.
Thank you for having me.
So we have a tradition here at Zoe where we always start with a quick-fire round of questions.
And we have these very strict rules.
You can say yes or no, or if you have to, a one-sentence answer.
Okay.
Does drinking coke increase your risk of rheumatoid arthritis?
Yes, it does.
Is boosting your immune system a good idea?
Not necessarily, no.
Does a runny nose help you recover from a colt?
In a way, yes, it does.
Can poor sleep harm your immune health?
Yes, definitely.
And finally, what's one fact about the immune system that just blows your mind?
that it is actually comparable to consciousness and far more connected than AI networks are.
It is in a way cellular intelligence at work and at its best.
Whenever I get a cough or a cold, I immediately feel like my body is letting me down.
Like it's a failure, I'm failing, and my immune system is not doing what it should.
And I was really struck that in your new book, you're sort of completely reversed
seen that way of thinking. You wrote a previous book that was called gut. There was a huge hit.
There were about, I think, 8 million copies sold. But particularly for me, I actually read that book
at just the time that I met my co-founder, Tim Specter. And at that point, I knew nothing about
the microbiome. I knew very little about the gut. And your book helped convince me, basically,
that Tim was not mad, that the gut health was really important. The microbiome was really important.
And so this thing was really credible.
What first drew you to this topic of gut health?
It was at first a very personal experience.
I had a skin disease and the doctor would prescribe me, you know, cortical steroid creams
and it would make it better for a little bit, but then it just come back.
And I thought to myself, well, I'm in this body for, I think, another like 70, 80 years maybe,
and I know nothing about it.
And this is a bit odd, isn't it?
I should know more.
So I started reading and trying to find ways to, you know, get my skin healed.
back up again. And then during that time, I read about the gut and I was completely blown away.
It's so intelligent. It's so versatile. And it mediates so many important processes. So then I studied
medicine. And every time the gut came up, I was there, you know, I really listened. And then I thought,
more people should know all these things. They're so helpful and also interesting and sometimes
funny. And well, then that really tipped it off. And so clearly, you know, that took you all the way through.
you became a doctor, you became a gastroenterologist.
But in your latest book, OrganSpeak, you've sort of expanded to other parts of the body.
So you've sort of cheated on the gut a little bit here.
What's inspired you to do that?
It was the work in the hospital.
After I finished my studies, I went to work in a hospital specialized on gut disorders.
And after a while, I just had to come clear and face reality, which, you know, meets you there in the hospital,
which was, I'm not a good doctor if I only focus on the gut.
I'm missing out on all these connection, on all these other things that influenced the gut.
I realized after a while that there was a group of my patients with irritable bowel syndrome
where they would sleep poorly.
And I would repeatedly hear this when I was questioning them in the beginning.
And so I got into reading about the brain and sleep, for example.
And I realized, oh, there is a part of sleep that is really important for a pain threshold
and how much pain we feel.
So this could influence it.
And also the gut homeostasis and how everything is repaired during the night.
in the body everything is connected.
And in research we always try to like tidy it up and separate it all to have like good, nice and clean results.
But you can't do that in the hospital because, you know, they're the human is built back together again.
So, yeah.
And then there were other things like people coming in with belly eggs or even appendicitis more often when the air quality was poor in the city I was working in.
And we had that often because we had lots of cruise ships coming in, it was Hamburg.
So, you know, I started reading about the lung and air quality.
And this is sort of like how I took off.
And things kept piling up and made me want to say something again.
Like that felt with the first book.
So how has that experience changed the way that you think about, I guess, health and disease?
The way I see the body now, I think, is a bit more sophisticated.
Suddenly I started to have this respect for all the things.
Why are they put in this place?
What are they especially good at?
And how can I actually make use of that in my day-to-day life?
and really have a more cooperative and appreciative relationship to these organs.
And this has made me, I think, more appreciative,
but has also, like, drastically changed what I think I am and what others are.
I think it's also important to just see this miraculous, crazy thing of being alive sometimes.
Just let it shine through a little bit.
That has done that to me.
I love just hearing the enthusiasm, but also you don't sound like a typical doctor.
Like, I feel like a typical doctor does, like, carve this up.
into pieces, try and identify the one bit that's broken, and then say, okay, this is the thing
that we need to do in order to...
And that's important too, and I need to do that too at times, but it took me some time to get
to this other thinking.
That's actually why it took me quite a while to write this book.
I really had to learn a different way of thinking, also a bit more associative, I'd say.
When we feel ill or not able to perform as we expected, we often say things like, my body's
broken or I'm damaged.
What's your view of that approach?
it's almost always wrong, even with horrible diseases.
And I'm not saying the body doesn't make mistakes.
The body definitely does make mistakes.
It's human after all.
But the way we often describe it is like it's broken or stupid or dumb or aggressive even.
With the immune system, you'll often hear in a doctor's office, your immune cells are attacking your own body.
And it sounds in a way a bit stupid and aggressive and unnecessary.
But what we know from research since the 90s is a very different picture.
It's more that the immune system is trying to keep you safe all the time.
And it's really all it's there for that's its whole purpose of existence and it does so eagerly.
And sometimes, for example, when experiences a horrible cold or something happening
or notices your body is really not doing well or other genetic factors also,
then it can go overboard a bit with that.
It can be overprotective.
They want to do their best, but they're doing something that's not so beneficial.
And that's happening a lot of the times when it comes to autoimmunity.
And to see it like that is not only a nice story.
It's also accurate to the research we have, but it's also helpful to the way people see themselves
and treat their body when they have this disease.
Why does it matter?
Why is there anything wrong with having this approach that says, like, my body is letting me down?
Well, let me give you just the example I had with this when I really understood this,
and I had a patient and we diagnosed her with a chronic inflammatory bowel disease.
And she had been in our hospital a few years earlier where she had a really severe,
heck affection. So that's a toxic e-coli strain that is very dangerous. And she said, oh, I have such bad luck.
It's always the gut and it's like acting up and doing all these horrible things. Of course, she was
sad. That's not a good diagnosis to get. And I went in there in the afternoon and I said, I wanted
to just talk to you about it again for a few minutes. You've had this really severe infection a few
years ago. And it is something that the immune cells see and witness and they do form a memory.
And when they have been through something like this, they are more likely to react with autoimmunity
and maybe attack gut bacteria that aren't bad after all, just because they've seen something so dreadful, so horrible, almost going wrong.
And now they're just being over-careful.
And while they're doing that, they're attacking all these things that when they just look a bit funny, they go off.
So it is not convenient.
It is not a good thing, but it is them really now being overly, you know, attached to you and trying to secure.
you. And she had a bit of teary eyes. And I think for her it was way better to learn it that way. And also when
we look at all these additional therapies that are now being researched more and more when it comes
to autoimmunity, different diets, you know, relaxation techniques or, you know, all kinds of different
things for autoimmunity, it's all like a to-do list if you don't see it from the right angle. But if you
see it from the angle that the immune system is constantly checking on your body how you're doing and
adjusting its aggressiveness according to that, then all these things make sense because they
give the signal and communicate to your immune cells, oh, I'm actually doing good.
Are you saying that your immune system is perhaps overprotective some of the time?
It's checking on you and figuring out how aggressive it needs to be.
And if, in fact, it's on more than it should be, and this is your example with these sort of
autoimmune situations where it's sort of attacking something that isn't actually bad,
if you can just somehow calm yourself down, like be more relaxed, then potentially
you're sort of sending messages to your immune system
that maybe it can also be a bit more relaxing.
That can genuinely change the way in which it interacts
with whatever's triggering it
and setting off this sort of autoimmune response.
Hi, Professor Tim Specter here.
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To be very clear, you cannot heal an autoimmune disease by just relaxing.
That would be insane.
There's always multiple causes and influences on diseases.
Usually it's multifactorial, you know.
But one factor is also an interaction of the nervous system with the immune system.
Those two communicate.
And we know those routes through good medical research.
And there are these studies with relaxation techniques, stress influencing the cause of autoimmune diseases.
So it is one factor that we can influence.
But there's also other factors.
Like, as I said, maybe a viral disease has tipped it off in the beginning.
or you're genetically more likely to develop autoimmunity because you lack certain signals or structures or have a little less of cells that calm the immune system down usually.
So there's always multiple factors, but one of them is also your body being in a good state and your immune system noticing that.
I think that's fascinating because I feel like I was brought up thinking that is all crazy Californian woo-woo to think that your mental attitude could have any impact on your body.
I was definitely brought up with a very big divide between like the mind and the rest of your body.
I think most of us were.
And this is just what happens when research has the luxury of being more differentiated.
Lots of research that I look at now is, you know, suddenly there's a gut liver axis.
There's a liver brain axis.
There's immune system brain axis.
There's, you know, all these exorcists that are now being called that, they're basically just saying,
oh, now we have the luxury to see all these finer connections and influences as well.
It's also a paradigm shift.
Because we've had this time of, you know, separating everything in science.
And we had to because everything was so, you know, before that, medieval times and everything being a bit more like a story time or, you know, mystical.
And then we said, no, let's separate it and be very rational.
And in order to research it, we have to really divide it up and look at the singular pieces.
And I think now we're actually doing an interesting step.
We're now connecting those pieces that we were so eager of separating in the first place.
I find this an interesting time in medicine.
My wife says I'm a terrible patient.
But whenever I am sick, I catastrophize.
I'm like, I'm going to be sick forever.
It's terrible.
I also complain immensely about the fact that my body is letting me down.
Why am I feeling like this?
I can't do everything I want, which I think is learned behavior from my upbringing.
What should I be doing instead?
The nice thing about being sick or, well, it's not a nice thing, but it's the good-to-know thing.
would say, is that all these things you're experiencing, for the most part, don't come from
the germ that's infecting you, the sore throat, the runny nose, the cough, the fever even.
The microbe or the virus doesn't do that.
It's not coming from the infection?
No, because it would really like to live there unnoticed.
And that would be the best case for it if no one bothered, and it could just be there and do
its thing.
But who bothers is our immune system?
It's saying, oh, I don't like the way this special microbe is.
treating my cells. I'm against that. I don't think it's a good match. So we should, you know,
divide this up here. And in that case, it'll start popping some of the throat cells to get those
out that have the virus in and then protecting the cells around to not get the virus from the
virus spreading. It'll induce little wounds doing that. And it'll make the nerve cells more
sensible with all the inflammation. So that's where your sore throat comes from. Or also the runny
nose is a mechanism where when there's an infection or a bacteria or virus noticed in the cells,
the immune system will trigger the blood vessels to become porous.
And so these porous cells suddenly the fluids from the bloodstream enter the tissue.
And that's good because the immune cells can come with that.
They can go to the place where the infection is happening through those pores and they get there,
get to the trouble spot.
But also all the liquids that are coming out of the blood are then creating this swelling
and runny nose.
And the runny nose will expel whatever is there, just like diarrhea does expel a bad germ,
or coughing does expel, you know, viruses in a load so that you don't all have to fight them.
You're just, you know, getting rid of them, have fewer of them after.
And fever is also aware of the immune system really driving up its own temperature of the body
with the help of the brain to then have the virus or bacteria feel uncomfortable with this change temperature.
and also tell other immune systems cells that are further away,
oh, we're activating this higher temperature mode,
so we might all get a bit engaged here.
So if these symptoms, let's start with the cold maybe,
if the symptoms of the cold are like my immune system doing its job right,
should I be taking any medicines that might interrupt this?
This is debated and there's data on multiple aspects.
And for the very first question,
Which is should I take something like anti-inflammatory drugs when I have a cold?
Some research say don't because it might prolong the cold for another 24 hours.
An estimate and others say, oh, do, because it doesn't really change anything, but you'll just feel better.
Some things are a really good idea, for example, decongestant nasal spray.
Because they'll actually, when it gets too bad with the nose and you can't breathe and eat and sleep,
then really you should take some before it spreads to the ears.
Because the ears go through the same channel.
and if it's all swollen up, they can't really air and clean out.
And so then they'll have a problem soon.
So the decongestant nasal spray, if you use it right, not too much, don't overdo it,
don't take it too long, then it's a really good thing to do when you're being sick.
But when it comes, for example, to things that are toned down the gut when you have diarrhea,
like Loporamid, for example, is the usual thing you take on travels or something.
Then you should really think twice because, as I said, diarrhea will expel the germs out
and help the gut to get rid of them so they don't infect any.
more cells, or less at least. And when you then take something that just stops the motion of the
gut and just lets everything brew and lay around, then that's not a good idea. And we have data
showing that it elevates your risk of post-infectial irritable bowel syndrome and also like having
a bit more pain and like trouble after an infection. So if you really need to take it because
it just have to get on that plane or you're starting to be dehydrated and it gets really bad, then go
head. But if it's not so necessary and you could just really have your gut, you know, sorted out
for half a day or a day in the hotel room, then you might want to go with that, for example.
And it's a mix out of both for anti-calf medicine, because in the very beginning, cough is similar
to diarrhea where it really gets out some of the viruses and germs by coughing them out.
But later on, it oftentimes will fuse into a more of like irritated calf, where just the immune
cells and the cells in the airways are so sensitive. Every piece of dry air or little particle
that you breathe in will then irritate them and make your cough unnecessarily. And in that case,
you can then grab the medicine. You know, I would, you know, put it in these categories.
I'd like to ask about the painkillers because that was less clear to me. So let's say I'm thinking
about taking paracetamol or Tylenol. Yeah. What on balance is that likely to do?
And since the data is not really clear on that, I think everyone can still pick their choice.
also depending maybe on how bad it is.
If it's so bad that, for example, you can't really sleep,
and sleep is very important for healing,
or you just have to, like, get through the day,
then I'd say, go ahead.
Often you have this, like, paracetamol or ibuprofen
is sort of like your twin drugs you can take.
Are you as relaxed with the ibuprofen as you are with a paracetamor?
It's a freedom of choice, I would say, at this point.
I don't have a preferred one to advise,
and people usually have one.
So they say, I react better to that and that,
and then I would always go.
with this. I was thinking back to what you're saying before about like rethinking the immune system.
I tend to think of the immune system as being sort of permanently at war. Like it's constantly
fighting against all these things in our environment in order to keep ourselves safe. Like is that the
right way to think about it with like all our latest understanding of what's going on?
Well, yes and no. There is this part of the immune system that really has to do all these things to
keep unwanted microbes and stuff out. But then it's also in a way kind of old-fashioned, to be
honest, because we've had this research about like invaders and killer cells and so on in like
times of the first and second world war, heavily influenced by the war lingo. And partly it fits what's
happening there. But for some other parts and actually quite large parts, it's not. And we have known like
for a few decades now that the immune system is also really trying to keep us safe through other
roots than just war and fighting. It is keeping us safe through, for example, cooperating with
good microbes, which is a very important part, because if they take up a lot of room, there's not
so much room left for bad germs to land, you know. It is saving a lot of energy by not initiating
unnecessary inflammatory reactions by tolerating and just, you know, nurturing tolerance in order
to have just microbes sitting there that don't do anything bad. They are okay. Maybe sometimes
they're a bit funky, but that's not a problem.
And all of this it can only do because it constantly asks us how we're doing, gets to know us all the time, is curious and learning and builds a memory and, you know, has all these experiences.
An immune system in our old age is educated and very different than one in the younger ages where it will just inflame and have a fever right away.
And in an older age, it'll say, oh, I know this buck.
I don't even care to, you know, inflame anything or have a fever.
It's gone.
Yeah.
In your book, you use this term the microbe cloak.
Can you explain what this micro cloak is and what you mean by that?
Well, what is the cloak?
The fun thing is you can change a cloak, right?
You can take it off and then you can put another one on.
And if it's raining, you might want to use a waterproof one.
And if it's really light out, you might want to lose a very light, nice one or something, you know.
And this is the cool thing about bacteria and what actually our relationship with them is.
Because let's be real from like those millions, billions of bacteria that are out there, very few make us sick.
With viruses, it's the same thing.
Each time we breathe, we'll breathe in hundreds, thousands of viruses, and they won't do anything
to us because they just really don't care to infect us.
To get the full picture, you would have to say they must have other jobs, and it can't be
their main job to make us sick, and really it isn't.
And when you look at bacteria, their main job, numerically speaking, just mathematically,
is really borrowing some of their unique features, like giving them to us for free,
in, you know, exchange for maybe living on us for a couple of minutes, hours or years.
And that is a nice thing, because we can interchange them like a cloak, as I said,
if we go to another country and there's suddenly a weird new food that we're eating,
oftentimes on that food sitting, ready to digest some of the fiber or particles,
are already bacteria.
And while we digest, we keep them for as long as we need them.
And when we go back to our country, then, you know, after a while they're gone because we don't need them anymore.
And this happens also on the skin where there's bacteria and microbes that will produce antibiotics
that will then fight other bacteria trying to get into their space.
So this is what I mean by cloak.
We have all these microbes sitting us and micromanaging our surfaces.
I love hearing you talk about that.
To what extent is that just randomly happening and to what extent is our immune system sort of actively managing this?
The immune system is definitely there to pull some strings, I'd say.
And I love this one paper where they had people put their hands into a jar of bacteria.
I think it was E. coli that they put their hands in.
And of course, then the hand is full of bacteria.
And then they retest after a while.
And they see that most of the bacteria are gone.
And this is also because, well, the skin bacteria and then our immune system and cells producing antibacterial substances.
So, you know, the body takes care of quite a few things if you let it and give it the time.
And of course they have to work together.
The immune system will allow the bacteria when it sees that the cells are okay.
So if there's a bacteria in the gut, for example, and it's producing short fatty acids
that really nurture our gut cells and the gut cells are actually feeling better,
and they have more fuel and energy and they look healthier, so to say.
Then the immune system will be like, oh, whatever's going on there, I'm not getting in it,
because it seems like it's a good deal.
This basically happens every day, every second in our gut.
all the time, also with foods, if we're eating that or that. And then your immune system says,
oh, we had some peanut, but you can be here if you don't do anything damaging. But then microbes
sometimes do the opposite. They do damage ourselves. And then the immune system will get a bit
nosy. It'll be like, what's going on here? Call some colleagues of mine, we'll check it out,
and then we'll all share our opinion and then decide whether we start an inflammatory reaction,
for example. So should we think about our skin and our gut microbiome as part of our immune system?
Absolutely, and I think it's scientifically correct now and regarded as such.
And so how does our immune system tell whether this is a good microbe, and I want it as
like an extended part of my immune system, or this is like a bad microbe, and I need to
try and get rid of it?
There is different immune cells, and there's different ways of how they look at us.
And some will go with very basic ground rules.
Like they'll say, if there's a leakage of interest.
intracellular liquids, like, you know, the plasma of the cell basically running out because a cell is damaged.
A cell war was damaged by a microbe, for example.
And this is a typical pattern where some sort of immune cell will go there and be like, whoa, why is there, you know, a cell leakage?
What happened here?
And it'll create attention and it will catch other immune systems, cells going there.
And they will then, with their way of looking at cells, see if something's wrong.
Other cells, for example, will attach to special receptors where there's always a tiny piece of protein
showing what the cell has been doing throughout the day.
And if this protein suddenly is weird, like one that are actually a virus made and not the cell itself,
then those immune cells will say, oh, something's really wrong here.
And other immune cells will have just receptors for typical patterns of microbial walls.
So they'll say, hmm, this is usually not a good microbe that I have learned, you know, to form this receptor.
against to notice it. So there's very, very different ways of immune cells asking us and ourselves
the questions, how are you doing? And then there's this conversation that all of these immune cells
have with each other. Let's say all of these types are alarmed at the same time or then it's
really going down because then they're super sure that something's wrong like with the viral infection
for example. But if just one of them is alerted and it'll ask all the others and they're like, no, no,
you're maybe just a bit panicky. Everything.
here seems fine for us, then other immune cells will tone it down and not initiate an inflammatory
reaction.
So there's really this ongoing discussion and debate and research is looking at that, like iron
arcone.
This is why I said in the beginning, describe it really more as a way of consciousness.
Because in consciousness and the brain, we network all these cells to create a neural network
that is capable of suddenly saying, I am well or I am worried.
And the immune system just does exactly that.
It connects cells that all have a different way of perceiving information.
And then they will say, oh, I'm not well.
I need an inflammation here.
So let's initiate that.
And then they have a go at it.
So you're saying it's almost like my immune system making these decisions,
like a conscious thinking thing?
Well, yes, because it is a nice term to throw around consciousness.
But what do we base it on?
We base it on how much information is connected and summarized into one.
For example, with artificial intelligence,
we say about 150 million connections are made to create AI saying,
you look handsome or something, you know.
And so when you look at the immune system and the amount of cells,
and then the number of connections that are made between all of these cells,
it is much more than 150 million.
So it's actually way more complicated than AI.
And with that number, actually, it gets much more close to the connections
forming consciousness in the brain.
So this is why you can confidently say it is quite similar.
to that process.
That's really cool.
I think I definitely coming away from this with a sense of how complex it all is.
I'd like to come back to something you said a bit earlier because you said that the immune
system can be sort of set too high and attack innocent targets.
What happens?
What are you describing?
And why does that happen?
There's certainly the time when it just has an inflammatory reaction towards something
in a wound, for example.
That's usually good.
But even there, it can sometimes go overboard a bit.
Like when everything's already done and you're healing up, sometimes it overconfensates.
But then you have it also in things like allergies or autoimmune disease.
And when I hear people say these things like or promote supplements and like everything's just targeted for having a stronger and stronger and stronger immune system, I say, oh, I think you don't have the whole picture because it's really not about just having the strongest army on the planet.
But it's about having a balanced one.
If you had security person around you and they were stoked up all the time,
almost like on cocaine, be super aggressive and super strong,
then this might lead to some risky situation.
You really want them well balanced and really analyzing the situation well before they overreact.
So this is, I think, the same for the immune system.
And if you have all these substances to stimulate it, or let's just say sugar,
because sugar gives all the energy to produce more and more and more immune cells
and with more, more can go wrong.
And sugar also gives it a signal to maybe be a bit more pro-inflammatory because it can afford it.
Studies show that over 20 years or so, if people regularly drink soft drinks with lots of sugar in them,
then they just have a higher risk of having, as you said, rheumatoid atritis, for example.
And so you don't want it on overdrive.
You don't want it doing too much.
You want a balanced immune system.
And of course, I want to really be clear there's other ways to get those diseases.
It's not people's fault or having too much sugar that will then lead to them for sure to get this disease.
So people have genetic disposition.
There's environment like air pollution.
All these things can also lead to that.
So it's not the only cause, but it's just one aspect you might want to be careful with because it pushes it in a wrong direction.
And there's other ways when I think people say, well, should I not at all strengthen my immune system now?
And here I would also interfere and say, no, no, oftentimes it's about not we.
weakening it because, for example, chronic stress really weakens it because the body uses all
this energy for problem solving, for ruminating, and then it takes it away from, for example,
sleep and forming ripe, good immune cells that regulate the immune system.
So when there's a cold season and everyone around you're sick, you might as well strengthen it
with some substances. I'm okay with that, you know. But for the most part, it's about knowing
a bit about it, like having a balanced body, supporting it, not weakening it.
I think many people, when they're thinking about the immune system,
and they immediately go to these supplements that say they're going to boost your immune system.
Firstly, do any of them work?
And secondly, are they all a bad idea?
Because boosting your immune system, you said, like, potentially actually is not what you're looking to do?
So they're not generally a bad idea.
But sometimes the focus is wrong here.
People sometimes lose sight of the big chunk of, like, the 80% stuff, as I like to call it.
Those are the things, maybe your mama already told, you know, get enough sleep, have a healthy diet, don't stress too much, enjoy life a little bit, like, you know, these things, where it sounds so basic and simple, but actually just to take care of these things is already a handful. And it's the most effective. And we know this from so much research and studies now that I don't think there should be any doubt.
You've mentioned multiple times, actually, in our conversation, this concept of stress can, you know, impact my immune system, maybe weaken it or maybe sort of cause inflammation.
And I guess my question is, firstly, did I hear that right?
Yes, absolutely.
And then, I guess, more interestingly, what can people do to manage their stress better in a way that could help to, like, balance my immune system?
you know, reduce a little bit those bodyguards going wild, but equally well, I don't want
them to just like go off on holiday and leave me unprotected.
We can't eliminate all the factors from the outside world, and sometimes they're too heavy,
but, you know, for some aspects we can be mindful of.
And by just, for example, knowing how stress affects the gut, when you have really stressed,
the gut, for example, will tone down its work.
You can actually see it with the camera, the walls of the stomach, for example,
turn pale, paler, than when you were relaxed. And this is because the blood flow is being reduced
a little bit. So there's less blood, so it looks less cheeky, pink. It's more whitish. And less blood flow
means we have less, you know, nutrients, energy coming in, for example, to have immune cells
coming with the blood or, for example, to have mucus build up, because that's a process that needs
proper, you know, blood flow and everything to be developed fully. So when you have less mucus
barrier, protection layer is a little bit less. So bacteria and particles from fruit, food,
they can get to your cells a bit closer and maybe sometimes irritate them even. But if it's just
for a day or a few hours, that's no problem because that's just a good deal. That's just, you know,
trade off a good sacrifice to solve a stressful problem. But if this is going on for days and
sometimes even weeks, you're really taking advantage of an organ being goodwilling, you know,
giving up its own work and stuff just for you to solve this horrible situation.
and then the gut gets problems
and that's when the stress-induced gut
problems often start
and arise from that
mechanism being taken advantage on
or not going on too long.
Oftentimes we see our outside demands
and outside world so clearly
that it's easy to fulfill all of them
but we don't know a lot about
what's going on inside while we're doing that.
For example, during a stressful day
at least for lunch break for 30 minutes
or in the afternoon,
have some downtime, really eat
calmly. Don't stuff your mouth
whole as I really enjoy eating and being there, being present and saying you have pushed back
all your work this whole morning because it was so stressful. Now I'm giving you this time to really do
your thing and then we'll go back to my job afterwards. These things help and sometimes it's
things like actually looking out for your breath because breath is a great mediator between the
outside and the inside world and it can really tell the brain oh now we can calm down when we
breathe slowly, for example. So sometimes it's so simple. It's just one minute at 12 o'clock and one minute
at 4 o'clock during a stressful day, for example. I'll take and just breathe slow for a minute,
and it takes me to a place of like more calm, serenity, and it's just this simple, short minute.
And in studies it shows that you have reduced stress hormones if you just take it.
So, Julia, you're saying even just like this minute twice a day to slow down my breath,
can reduce my stress in the moment and that over time that can have an impact on whether my
immune system is sort of like dialed up too high or it's at a sort of more steady level if the
rest of my life is stressful which I suspect for almost everybody listening to it they're like
they'd say oh yeah my life is stressful it can take the edge off it can't read it can't take away all
of your stress but it does shift a little bit in in an important aspect which is value suddenly you
give your body this value and even if it's just those two minutes. You say at least it's worth that.
And for a lot of people, that sometimes is more than they had before. So two minutes is more
of a value than they had before. Isn't that insane? What does that tell us about our relationship
to our inside world? What about sleep? Because I've already heard you mention that that
influences the immune system. What happens if we're not getting enough sleep? Well, quite a lot of
things. One thing, as we were just talking about, is that sleep is the time when most of the
immune cells are being produced. And this is because during sleep, we're not being disturbed
by all these foods or having to run, more metabolic challenges, stress, signals from the brain,
disturbing everything. No, we're in complete harmony with just regulating our insights perfectly well.
And during that time, cells make remarkably less mistakes. So it's smart of them to pack all
their processes and dividing and producing new cells, put a big chunk of that right there in the
middle of sleep so that they're not being disturbed and need less energy to fix mistakes later on.
So this is one thing that's happening there and also a thing why, for example, shift work can
then be a bit risky for your risk of developing cancer, for example, because if you disturb
this process all the time and cells don't have this calm space to divide with less mistakes,
well, then they can make more mistakes.
It just adds up over many years of working, not within a week or a stressful year even, so.
We get this vast amount of data from everybody who are Zoe members.
Almost everybody reports the fact that their sleep is not as good as it should be.
I think we all know the things in modern life like phones and TVs and electric lights
that I think mean we tend to sleep less than our ancestors were.
Does that mean that if they were able to sleep better, that that would probably help
improve the sort of the balance of their immune system?
I mean, it depends on how severe your sleep disruption is.
The immune system needs especially the first half of the night
because that is when there's most deep sleep.
And deep sleep is the part of the sleep
where the cells have this perfect window to multiply.
And then the second half of sleep is more REM sleep,
processing feelings, finding new emotions.
These kind of things happen more there.
So if you're good in the first half,
then that's good for a lot of physical processes,
like bodily things happening.
Most people have rather hard time
with the second half of the night,
or they wake up and then they have a hard time
falling back asleep.
And I think, well, we weren't even done
with listing all the things sleep is good for,
you know, pain tolerance, hormone, balance,
digestive health, because of replenishing
of the cells there as well.
So it could go on and on and mental health,
risk of dementia, blah, blah, blah, blah.
But the funny thing here is people have all these advises
now.
They have social media and health information
with what you should do, do this, do this, to this, to that in order to sleep better.
And, you know, then they also get scared.
If I don't sleep well, I will get this, this, this, this, this.
And the ironic thing is that sleep is just really out of that territory.
It's not the territory of the conscious mind who lists all the to-do things.
I mean, it can do that before you go to bed.
It can watch not to use the cell phone, not to eat too late, like all these things.
But sleep in itself is really the other parts of the brain taking.
over and also the consciousness being able to give them this responsibility and let go of it
for a few hours, these areas that just have a very different way of going about things.
And I'm actually quite successful at it.
So our consciousness compared to them is so bad at regulating our body, blood pressure, breathing
and so on it, you know, regularly disrupts it in a negative way, to be honest, by all these
stupid thoughts and thinking and responsibilities.
And when they have time without it, oh, they're so really.
relief. They can just do their thing.
You know, there'll be a lot of people listening who, you know, really struggle with sleep.
And one of the challenges is that, you know, as you're going towards bed, you're actually really
thinking about it. It's become this almost like this mountain you've got to climb.
And that therefore makes it hard to get the thing. And I guess I always worry that listening
to the, you know, something like this, they're like, oh, but now I know it's even more
important to get to sleep and actually potentially, you know, we're increasing anxiety about it.
Well, yes, and I think in a way this is a indicator for how estranged the conscious parts
and the outside world-dealing parts of our thinking and brain have become to like the more bodily,
earthy parts of our brain, because there is different parts.
And how estranged our, like whole perception of life and world and ourselves has become
to all these parts of ourselves that are just not connected to the outside,
world that are not relying on getting up at six, but they're actually just worrying about
how is the cell doing there and how are the cells doing there.
And like really the foundation of being alive and these areas that run very differently
and that don't have to do with, you know, if you're able to perform at work or something.
And sometimes it becomes even hard for people to imagine that there's this part of ourselves
that is not about performing and that is not about fulfilling and not about to-do lists.
And it seemed like those two parts of ourselves have really a hard time getting along nowadays.
It's really interesting.
I think in a world before, electric light and phones, basically got dark.
It got really boring.
There's nothing to do.
And I think, you know, you don't have that stimulation.
And I think you just sort of tend to fall asleep, like our children do.
But you never had to, like, be well programmed to say, oh, I've got all this stimulation, but I need to go to sleep.
So I'll go to sleep.
So it's sort of not built in.
So much of what is difficult in modern life is where, you know, the environment is just not well set to how we just evolved to be.
Well, but that's just a process.
The body is very good at adapting and finding always new ways.
And I think probably always in history there was something new coming up that it really wasn't, you know, prepared for.
And just sort of like adjusted and went along with it.
And I think we'll be able to do that here too.
But I think it will be problematic if we tune out.
the knowledge we have about the body.
If we just try to stuff it into this four-corner product of modern life, then it won't
work very well.
And we already see the indicators for that everywhere.
Sleep problems included.
But if we understand it better and move along with it more smartly, then we'll find no
ways, then we find good ways, and then we'll make also modern and innovative things happen
and work for us and not the opposite, us working for them.
And Julia, if I go back to sleep,
You're talking about how important it is for my immune system and creating these immune cells.
Do naps count?
Yes, but if you have a hard time sleeping during the night, then it's sometimes advisable to cut out the naps so that you build up more sleep pressure, as they say, and then you have an easier time really being asleep during the night.
But if you've had a horrible sleep and, you know, you're carrying it through the day, then a short nap can be a really good idea.
And that is, for example, one thing that I think we should make the word adjust more to the body and not the other way around.
For example, young parents, when they go to work, but they've really had a horrible night.
If it's possible to have a room where they could just lay down for 15 minutes and not be judged for it, then the rest of the day they would be able to do much better work,
be much more, you know, bringing things forward, being effective, and then just pretending they're a machine and trying to hide their imperfectness.
You know, work with that you're a human, and that actually when you understand yourself, you can get a lot out of that.
As long as it's not ruining my ability to sleep at night, napping can be good.
Yeah.
And we see that there's also this built-in biological clock, as you can say, where it has proteins that fall apart twice a day.
So one is, of course, when we go to sleep.
But then the other one is especially at that nap or siesta time in southern Europe.
So two times a day there's this offered platform to us where we could actually fall asleep.
And if there's enough reasons to do so, then we will.
Julia, what do you do to make sure you get enough good quality sleep?
I realize that I really have to tone it down in the evenings.
I don't do late, exciting gatherings if it's not my birthday or anything.
You know, that really makes me sleep not so good.
I don't eat too late.
And then during the day, I try to come down once or twice.
Like really, as I said, I usually try to do the 12th and 4 o'clock where I just have a minute.
or sometimes I'll just like even sit and just breathe and take a breather and just calm down
because I think it's so unrealistic to have your conscious mind being constantly super activated
and taking all the responsibility the whole day being at 150 and then at 20 o'clock in the evening
you expected to go to like chill out level how is that supposed to work so I really try to tell my
body you know it's good that you have this but it's not always necessary you can be brainless for a minute
Do you have a friend or a family member who's really hard on themselves when they have a cold?
Why not share this episode with them right now?
It might completely change the way they think about their body's response and maybe even help them to deal with it better.
Can I move on now to diet that you mentioned?
And obviously we talk about nutrition all the time on this podcast.
If you were going to give us like a high level explanation of thinking about the food that is going to sort of balance my immune system,
what would you be describing?
I mean, we have these typical formulations where we say, you know, Mediterranean diet,
have some fiber so that your gut bacteria are well nurtured,
that they don't eat your protective mucus and stress your gut lining,
and that stresses your immune cells, things like this.
It is also about good fats, but that is included in the Mediterranean diet,
and about not, you know, riling it up, as I said, with sugar, for example.
And then we have some foods that are declared as pro-inflammatory,
Usually with all of them, it is really about the amount if you have too much of them, like peanuts, sesame oil, I suppose because of the omigas and there too much like meat, butter, all these things that drive up your blood sugar, pasties.
It's a list, and I really don't usually like those lists too much, but you can pretty much tell.
It's the old story about having some veggies, some fruit, and some.
some like balanced carbs and good fats.
What about exercise, which I think a lot of people will be surprised
is linked to your immune system health.
I think no one will be surprised listening to this
that it's good for your health overall.
But why is that good from immune system
and therefore what kind of exercise should we be doing?
Well, one interesting factor that the immune system will even use for itself
or manipulate in order to like have better outcomes
is just having a stronger, faster heartbeat.
When you get sick, you notice that your heartbeat will get a bit faster.
And, well, it does make sense because the immune system, the cells, they travel through the bloodstream.
So if you have more pumping going on, they get everywhere faster and they can, you know, be pumped around more often and visit more areas in the same amount of time.
If you just pump a bit more.
And the important thing about exercise is that you have immune cells in the venous system and lymphatic system of your tissues.
And by activating muscles, you press them up.
up back into the circulation from the tissue. So you give it a little boost, which otherwise happens
just in a longer period of time. You boost it while moving because you pump everything
faster and with more force. So does that mean you should be doing exercise when you're sick?
No, not when you're sick, not necessarily. That can be bad for the heart, especially when you have a
viral infection. But when you exercise regularly, when you're healthy, then you train your heart
and your lungs to pump around stronger.
And also it makes the whole tissues being have more blood flow,
so more immune cells observing and checking if everything's okay.
And in case you are sick, you have trained, you know, the whole system
to get along with this rise in blood pressure and heartbeat and, yeah,
and also what we see is muscle.
The effect of muscle on the immune system is really interesting.
What's that?
Muscle is a big amount of our body.
well, we have so many big muscles, and they can influence the immune system by regulating it down.
After exercise, for example, muscles tend to be a bit irritated.
And when you exercise a lot, they will learn to reduce this inflammatory reaction towards a muscle being maybe a bit strained, like aching after exercise.
If you have this effect over and over again, the immune cells will start to notice, okay, there's a little bit of aching and maybe inflammatory processes in the muscles going on after exercise.
But we'll fix it and then we'll tone it down.
So they practice this process of toning it down again and again and again.
And that is important to have a balanced immune system that doesn't overreact.
But also, you know, muscles regulate blood sugar and do those.
So lots of indirect effects also.
That's fascinating.
You're saying that if I'm doing exercise regularly, then there's many ways in which it's good for me.
It's like making my heart stronger, which will be really important if I'm sick.
It's creating better blood flow across my body, so my immune system is able to sort of see everywhere.
But also actually, I think you're saying that for my muscles, if I'm regularly doing exercise where, you know, they're sore and aching afterwards, like, you know, it happens to me after I go to the gym, but I guess if we have a run, you're actually saying, wow, that might be good because your immune system is sort of learning, oh, okay, I'm getting to start to realize that I should lower my immune system because I don't want to overreact because this is just a regular sort of normal thing.
And this is part of what you're describing. Often one of the things we need to do with.
our immune system is not to boost it quite the reverse.
We actually wanted to get it to sort of relax a bit more into a more neutral setting.
And be able to do that a bit faster sometimes.
Sometimes just to like cool down faster.
Like in the office when you get a really stupid email and you suddenly are able to say,
I'll just reply later instead of going on about it for two hours inside of yourself.
So the immune system is the same way.
When it gets fed up with something or insulted, then it can either be like,
really stupid, but we'll take care and calm down,
or it can be inflammatory about it for another two days.
You don't want that.
I often feel calmer after I finish an exercise session.
I tend to do a gym session during the day within work.
And I notice often I feel calmer, even though in fact,
I've obviously been straining myself much more than just like sitting in front of a desk,
you know, usually looking at a video screen talking to people.
What's going on and how does that tie into what you're describing about the interaction with, like, calming down my immune system?
Well, this is not only about the immune system.
This is also really about the brain being in the body, having all these things happening, like playful stress.
The experience the brain just had was similar to a disease.
Like it had a high temperature when you were doing sport.
It had an elevated pulse.
It had an elevated blood pressure.
it maybe even had like a surge of like stress hormones like all these things that actually would should be horrible you know but it was sort of a playfulness because it's not really a fever and it's not really something anxiety inducing that drives up your heart rate and it can all stop the moment you're done you can decide when you're done so in a way this is kind of like good for the brain to experience that it can be out of its comfort zone but then come back and especially also the change in temperature as we see in sauna for example and then just
coming back with nothing bad happening, has an effect that is calming. And so it's not only sports
sometimes that can do this. When you do breathing exercises where you breathe really fast for a while
and then you breathe really slow, it's also in a way the same thing. You change the pH value in
your blood and this is stressful for the body and weird, but then you just go back to normal. And so
in a way you tell your body, you know, I can do this. And then the other aspect is sports and exercise
really influencing your brain chemistry. So you see different receptors being expressed
different way of handling some transmitters after sports.
Just, you know, the brain is so isolated up there when it gets really into contact and really
has to deal with reality and the muscles and actually do movements that work, otherwise you
drop the cup if you don't hold it right.
It's sort of like a good thing to get out there into the real world for the brain.
It has this effect of like lifting heavy things when you're stressed.
People like in the army are being trained when they have a really stressful situation
that they couldn't really process in the moment to like,
calm down to like lift something heavy or just hold something heavy or do breathing exercises to
really get into the body and connect the brain with the physical reality to calm down and not by just
laying down or doing nothing. You're describing this positive impact for my body and my immune system.
Is there particular types of exercise that are going to be much more effective than others?
Well, what we see is that the different types of exercises have different effects. So now strength
training is all the rage and people talk about it all the time. And this has a good reason for it,
because when we built a lot of muscle, they can regulate our blood sugar level, for example, better.
And it has also more measurable effects on, as I said, like brain receptors being expressed when you do
strength training. When you do other, like aerobic exercises, durational, like jogging for a half an hour
or longer and you would be able to talk while you're doing this. This is other effects. It will, for example,
train your heart and lungs a bit more. And this can also be good.
against things like anxiety because anxiety can develop just by your body suddenly having a faster heart rate, breathing a bit faster, and this slows down when you have exercise that makes the heart stronger.
So it doesn't have to beat so fast.
So there's multiple aspects that come from different types of training.
And I would always encourage people to really try out and just see for yourself when you feel best.
Because that's also the downside of sports.
People do it and then they hate it and then they just stop doing it.
it because it doesn't feel good. So I think the really first thing to start with is finding
something that feels relatively good and then stick with it and then go from there.
Is there anything that we haven't discussed that you'd really like to mention to someone
who's thinking about how they can keep their immune system better balanced?
The only thing I would really want people to know is just that they have this genius side
of being a living being and that this is also something and that this is counterweight to this
loud, noisy, challenging outside world, that is good to have as well. But, you know, have
this counterweight and know more about it so you can actually really feel and get into that.
I think that's a very good antidote to a lot of the things we're experiencing in this time.
Amazing. I'd like to do a quick summary of maybe some of the highlights on what we've touched,
and please correct me if I get any of it wrong.
No, I'm curious now.
The thing that is most lodged in my brain is this amazing fact that you said that
if you keep drinking like sugary drinks, then actually over 20 years you're basically going to have this like higher level of inflammation.
It's going to boost like these immune cells.
And actually you're more likely to get an autoimmune disease like rheumatoid arthritis.
So it's amazing this like direct link just from like having more sugar.
Diabetes and depression also, by the way.
The other thing I'm really struck by is this idea that the whole language that we use to describe the immune system,
It might be a product of the time when the scientists were first understanding it.
It was like at the time of World War I and World War II.
And so all the focus is on sort of killer cells and thinking about centuries and things like that.
But actually, a huge part of what the immune system is doing is sort of cooperating with these microbes, looking at what's going on.
And actually, it doesn't sort of shoot first and ask questions later.
Actually, it's sort of looking at what these bacteria are doing, being quite thoughtful and deciding these responses.
and in fact the way that you think about it is you think about us as having this
microbe cloak around us, very few of these bacteria are making us sick, and actually
many of them might be like helping to look after us, which is a completely different way
of thinking about it, which I love it.
Then you talked about like rethinking what happens if you're sick.
And so don't think about all your cold symptoms as being caused directly by this infection.
Actually, this is your immune system helping to look after you.
and that can make you feel better about it.
And that also means be thoughtful
before you try and get rid of all the symptoms.
So I am allowed to take a decongestine
if I can't sleep, which is great.
You know, I can take a painkiller
if it's really getting my way.
But, you know, the other example you gave
was like, if I have diarrhea,
you should really try and let that happen
because this is just getting rid of this pathogen.
And similarly, you know, when I've got a runny nose,
actually it's doing a great job getting this stuff out.
So don't be so hard on yourself.
And then I think we talked about
Like, one of the specific things you can do, not to boost your immune system, because you don't want that, but actually to balance it.
And I think you have this really broad set of areas.
You started with stress, which is interesting, that this is actually really important.
And you can see stress.
You said, like, your stomach will look paler.
You know, I obviously, most of us don't have a tube to look at a camera inside your stomach, but you can actually see it.
And therefore, you know, your advice was quite simple.
Have some downtime at lunch.
Like, have a proper break.
And that for you, just like one minute of breathing slow.
at lunchtime and 4 p.m. makes a big difference to reducing that stress.
Talked about sleep, and I learned this amazing fact that deep sleep in the first half of the night
is when most of my immune cells are being made. So it's really important, but even a short nap
can be good if I haven't had enough sleep. And, you know, one of the key things that you do also
is, like, think about, like, not eating too late, not being so excited at the end of the day that
you can't sleep. DART, obviously, and I think that what you discuss is very much the sort of patterns
that we talk about on this podcast a lot.
And then finally, we talked a lot about exercise.
And I think what's really interesting is it's not just all the health benefits we think about,
but actually it's really going to help sort of balance your immune system
and have it in better shape when it is needed.
And that you want to do both strength training.
That's good for muscles.
You talked about the way in your muscles can be really important for immune system,
which is amazing, but also aerobic, because that's not only good for your heart and your lungs,
but actually it can also be lowering your anxiety, you know, to get into it.
So there's a sort of all-round somehow being more balanced as opposed to going and like
finding a supplement that says it's going to boost your immune system because actually,
you know, if I have one takeaway, it's like you don't want to boost your immune system.
You want it to be quite calm but ready to go into action when needed.
Yes, perfect.
I'll end this episode with something I think you'll like, a free Zoe gut health guide.
If you're a regular listener, you know just how important it is to take care of your gut.
Your gut microbiome is the gateway to better health, better sleep, energy and mood.
The list just goes on.
But many of us aren't sure how to best support our gut.
I wasn't sure before doing Zoe, which is why we've developed an easy-to-follow gut health guide.
It's completely free and offers five simple steps to improve your gut health.
You'll get tips from Professor Tim Specter, Zoe's a lot of.
scientific co-founder and one of the world's most cited scientists, plus recipes and shopping lists
straight to your inbox. We'll also send you ongoing gut health and nutrition insights, including
how Zoe can help. To get your free Zoe gut health guide, head on over to zoey.com
slash gut guide. Thanks for tuning in and see you next time.
