Hey, it's friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
(upbeat music)
“I wanna start our conversation today a little differently”
because right now I am holding a spreadsheet of dream guests. You can hear it's multiple pages long from July of 2023. And I'm talking way back in the early days of the show. And at the very top of Mel Robbins list of dream guests,
Dr. Ronda Patrick. Dr. Patrick is a biomedical scientist who's known for her deep research on micronutrients, exercise, and longevity.
But here's what I love about her.
She has this genius ability to make the science somehow so understandable and simple to apply to your life. I'm not kidding. This is why she was the number one expert that I wanted on the show.
Now look, it may have taken a few years to get her here, but she finally flew across country and came to our Boston studios and I had very, very high expectations. But let me tell you.
Dr. Patrick, just blew us all away.
“This is one of my favorite episodes that we have ever recorded.”
And the reason why I can say that is because Dr. Patrick took a topic that I kind of thought I knew a lot about and flipped it on a TED.
Everything she shared is relevant and doable
for you and every single person in your life. And today she is going to boil down extensive research into five core lifestyle changes that she also will make super easy to implement. And that's a tall order and she delivers.
In fact, one of them, you can do in just one minute and I will do it live while we tape the episode. What Dr. Patrick is here to teach you. We'll add yours to your life. It is easy to do and it gives you exponential gains
in your health. It puts you in a better mood. You're going to love this. I cannot wait for you to hear and learn from the extraordinary Dr. Ronda Patrick.
Hey, it's your friend, Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am thrilled that you're here. It's such an honor to be together and to spend this time with you.
And if you're new here or someone sent you this particular episode, I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. Today, you will learn the science of living a longer and healthier life.
Today's guest is someone I've wanted to sit down with for such a long time because if you've been doing all the quote, healthy things and you still feel off, Dr. Ronda Patrick will explain why and exactly what to change. Dr. Patrick is a PhD trained biomedical scientist
who has spent her entire career studying nutrition, aging, and disease prevention. With research, experience spanning mitochondrial metabolism, cancer biology, and neurodegeneration. She completed her PhD in biomedical science
at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center and her graduate research was conducted at St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital. Dr. Patrick's work has been published in major scientific journals, and she's also the founder and host of the top podcast and online platform, found my fitness, where she's known for taking peer-reviewed
science and translating it into practical guidance, with total transparency about what we know, what we don't know. And what's just the Internet hype of the moment. So please help me welcome Dr. Ronda Patrick to the Mel Robbins podcast. I'm so excited you're here.
So excited to be here, Mel. Thank you. I know how busy you are. I really appreciate you hopping on a plane and coming and spending time with us.
Here's where I want to start Dr. Patrick. If the person who's listening is overwhelmed, like I'm overwhelmed by all the advice about health. And they follow your research back approach that you're about to teach us today.
“What might change about their life or their health outcomes?”
I think for the person listening, it's really important to understand that they don't have to do 50 different health hacks to improve the way they feel
and ultimately the way they age.
The way I like to look at health is what are the few behaviors that we can adopt? That are going to affect many different underlying biological processes in our body that will affect these things that we care about. That's going to improve our mood, reduce inflammation,
Improve metabolism, ultimately improve cardiovascular health,
brain health, and just the way you age.
“And I think that if we sort of zoom out and take that approach,”
we realize there's just a few core behaviors that we should be doing that are really not that difficult to do
and that are ultimately going to make us feel better and age better.
And so what are those behaviors? And I'm sort of going to speak in a sort of just 10,000 feet up, like big zoom out sort of picture. Because I think, again, they're very easy for people to do. First, top of the list, move every day.
And when I say move every day, we want to make sure we're getting some vigorous exercise. We're going to talk about what that means. And we're going to challenge our muscles. Very, very important because your body is very resilient.
And if you can put a good type of stress on it, which exercise is, it's going to adapt. And when stress is thrown at you later in life or in the day or in the minute, whatever, your body's already dealt with stress. It's adapted.
And so when that stress comes, you're going to be stronger.
And you're going to be able to deal with it, mental stress as well. By the way, challenging your muscles, doing exercise vigorous exercise. This is challenging many systems. Your lungs, your heart, your brain as well. Because it's hard to do hard things.
And so again, you want to be resilient. And that's what it's doing. Number two, make sure you're just eating a nutritious diet that is giving you the proper nutrients that you need. And we'll talk about that, not that hard to do.
Number three, make sure you're focusing on good sleep.
“You have to be able to repair, recover, rejuvenate.”
And that's what sleep is. Could you just tell the person who's listening, based on your expertise, why they should trust these recommendations and really just focus on this? Yeah, I mean, because there's a lot of research that has been done
by amazing scientists all over the world for decades, looking at what we can do in our diet and lifestyle to improve things like mood and metabolism and inflammation and the way we age. And so we have the evidence here.
We can see what type of robust gains we're going to get.
So I just think the reality is is that we have science
and science has done amazing things for advancing human life and expectancy and also helping treat and prevent disease. And so if you look at the data, it's there. You just have to look at it and I think that's kind of my role. I look at this data and then I help explain it to people.
So it really is that easy, it really really is. And we're going to talk about what kind of gains that you can expect. It's kind of a mind blowing to be honest. Well, I'm ready to have my mind blown
and my life simplified and the gains made easy. So let's jump into the first category, which is moving every day. And I think we've all heard this obsession around 10,000 steps that we should be getting every single day
is that a useful goal? What does the research say, Dr. Patrick? So I think that we need to replace 10,000 steps a day with 10 breathless minutes a day. Breathless, breathless.
And what I mean by that is 10 minutes of vigorous intensity exercise, which means you're breathless. I don't want to throw walking out because walking is better than sitting, right? So what are you comparing it to?
OK, walking is better than being sedentary, not moving. But you know, this 10,000 steps a day originated back in the 1960s from Japan. There was a Japanese group that was trying to sell pedometers. And that's where it came from.
It didn't come from science, didn't come from medical research. It came from a Japanese company wanting to sell a pedometer. And it was very catchy. Now since the 1960s, of course, there's been a lot of research on walking and moving and not being sedentary.
So there are health benefits. But let's talk about why I want to replace 10,000 steps with 10 breathless minutes, 10 minutes of vigorous intensity exercise. And why I say breathless is because it depends on where you're coming from.
If you're already exercising in very fit, breathless for you might be sprinting, might be running. If you're someone that doesn't really exercise a lot, maybe you only walk, then breathless for you might just be walking uphill, going up the stairs.
So it all depends on our starting point.
“And that's why I like to say breathless instead of heart rate”
or any other definition. Because I think we can all relate to. If I am at the point where I can only say a few words, and then I have to take a breath, and then a few words, and then I have to take, you know, you can't talk.
You certainly can't sing.
Breathless would be that where you're just a couple of words in.
“And then you have to take a breath because you're really”
working hard. Why is that important? And why do I want to replace the 10,000 steps a day? There has been overwhelming research over the years. But even as of most recently, within the last few months,
a very brand new study came out. Now, research is done very differently than it was 20 years ago, when we were relying on people's memory. And questionnaires, how frequent do you exercise? And they have to think back and remember.
Now, we can actually measure it. We have these accelerometers on people's risk where they can measure movement, how fast they're going. And so there was this huge study that was published, showing that people that are moving more vigorously,
it's exponential in terms of health benefits, versus moderately moving, so that would be where you're not breathless, but you're not able to sing. So that's kind of like you can kind of talk a little bit, but you're still breathy while you're doing it versus the light activity,
which is kind of like just walking around the house, maybe. So we know that for every one minute of vigorous exercise,
“you have to do four minutes of moderate intensity”
that would be brisk walking, for example, to get the same drop in all cause mortality, dying from cancer, dying from respiratory diseases, dying from cardiovascular disease, right? All non-accidental causes, four minutes.
If you're going to do light exercise for every one minute, a vigorous, you have to do about 53 minutes of light walking, gentle walking around. Wait, hold on a second.
I want to make sure I understand this, because first of all,
I love the idea of replacing the 10,000 steps, because that might take me an hour and a half. And I don't really have that kind of time to walk five miles, right? Because it feels like this goal that's very hard to achieve, if you're somebody that's working and taking care of people,
and you've got a very busy life, which most people do. So when you say Dr. Patrick, okay, we really want to look at the research, and I want to replace this idea of 10,000 steps with 10 minutes of breathless exercise,
which to me, I would love to have you unpack breathless, just so that as we're trying to absorb this information, we understand what you mean by that. And I've heard you talk about the talk test. What does that mean?
Right, yes, so the talk test is really that test of, okay, I'm talking to you right now, right? I'm talking to you, and I'm not breathless, I'm not breathing heavy, you're right, it's easy. I could even sing if I wanted to, right?
So the talk test is you can't sing, but when you're talking, you're a little bit breathy. That is, you know, talk that is moderate intensity exercise. The talk test means if you can talk a little bit, but you're breathy, that's moderate intensity.
That would be like briskly walking. If you are doing vigorous intensity exercise, the breathless type of exercise. Okay, this is a little bit more like jogging, running. This is where you are, okay, mel.
So yeah, this is a vigorous intensity,
“because you have to take breaths quite a few breaths”
in between words. That would be vigorous intensity exercise. So that's the breathless type of exercise I'm talking about. Got it, okay, so I'll give an example. So there's a walking loop by my house, and I would say for three quarters of it,
it's four miles long, love to walk it with my girlfriend's, shout out to my Wednesday walking group. Three quarters of it, I'm chatting up a storm. We are catching up, we're sharing details about our family, dogs are running wild.
There is a hill where the entire hill, everybody's silent, because nobody can talk, because we're going up. Got you, and that's the vigorous part. That is exactly the vigorous type of exercise I'm talking about.
That's the breathless moment, the breathless minute, or two minutes, or three minutes, or four. However long it takes you to get up that hill. Okay, okay, now I just want to make sure I'm tracking, because that's the breathless part,
but you also talked about moderate. And so would moderate be, like this is kind of a long hard walk, but I'm still able to talk to you, and I feel myself sweating, and I'm definitely exerting myself, but I can still carry on a conversation.
That's correct, that would be moderate, where you can still carry a conversation, but you're kind of like this, you know, you're just like, like if you were on the phone, you weren't with someone, or if you were recording it, and like the person listening was listening to it,
yeah, they could tell that you were walking, right? Like right now, it's obvious we're not walking, right? That would be the moderate intensity.
Okay, and the vigorous is so much more powerful.
So I said for every one minute for all cause mortality reduction, you have to do 53 minutes of light just walking around.
Well, that's the piece I wanted to unpack.
So you're basically saying the one minute that I am walking up that hill, and I can't actually really talk, because I'm exerting effort, I'm getting a 53 minute gain in that one minute against the other 53 minutes I'm walking the rest of the loop.
No, okay, other 53 minutes you're walking the loop would be moderate. Okay, that's moderate. Okay, if you were just walking around your house, oh, I see, that would be more light, right? Okay, so this is the thing to understand,
that you could clock 10,000 steps a day. It might take you an hour and a half to do it, you could be walking around your house, you could be getting out of the car and walking into the grocery store, you could be walking around the office.
You're saying one minute walking up a hill is the equivalent to 53 minutes of just kind of walking around.
That's correct. That's incredible.
It's incredible, and it gets, listen, there's more amount. Okay, we're just talking about all cause mortality, okay? Let's talk about cardiovascular-related mortality. I mean, this is the number one cause of death in United States, and many developed countries.
For every one minute of vigorous intensity exercise,
“you have to do about eight minutes of the moderate intensity,”
and you have to do an hour and a half of the light type of just walking around the house. All right, so break that down again. So you basically just said, walking up the hill breathless one minute is the equivalent of eight minutes of the moderates.
You're still cooking, you're still exercising, but you're still with your walking group. Yeah, you're still with your walking group, but you're catching your breath. You have to do eight times more than you do if you're walking up the hill. Whoa.
And if you are just walking around the office, walking around the house, doing some chores, you have to do an hour and a half for every one minute of that walking up the hill. You know what's so cool about this? And also, I slightly hate you a little bit, Dr. Patrick,
is one of my big excuses for not exercising as I don't have time. Exactly. You're basically saying it. You do, yes. Yes, yes.
And not only do you have time, it has to be something that you go, oh my gosh, I have to do this. I have to do this, and I can do this, right? You know, there's other outcomes to cancer as another one, and this one's really mind-blowing for every one minute
of vigorous intensity exercise.
“You have to do two and a half hours of that light type of exercise,”
walking around the office, walking around, you know, your house. So, what is that for cancer? For cancer, mortality reduction. Dying from cancer, dying from all types of cancer. So, there is also what you're saying, Dr. Patrick, if I'm listening closely,
is this isn't just the gains that you're making an hour or one minute. This isn't just the gains that you get by doing one minute of breathless walking up that hill, versus the 53 of stroll around the house.
It's also that there's something powerful about that one minute of walking up the hill,
and what it does to your immune system, I suspect, or to other aspects of your physiology and biology, that have a meaningful impact long-term over things like your ability to fight cancer, your longevity, your longer range health outcomes. That's exactly true. So, what I'm trying to get at is intensity matters, your body responds more robustly,
and adapts more robustly to the more intense exercise. The adaptations to your heart, your cardiovascular system, your lungs, your immune system, your brain, everything, the bigger the stress you're putting on it, which happens when you're doing a more intense type of exercise, the better the adaptations are, and so when life happens, and you're aging,
it's all a stress. Aging itself every day, we're being stressed. We can't see it when we look in the mirror, but it's happening at the cellular level. Your body has adapted to that big burst of stress that it is able to handle all the little types of stress that are happening every day, so much more robustly. And so that's the point here is that why not just do the more intense
exercise, and we can talk about, "Well, I've never done that. How do we get there?"
“And there are definitely ways to do that are very easy. But the point is, you have to understand”
the powerfulness of it. It's mind-blowing. I don't know why more people aren't talking about it. It's so mind-blowing. I just think it's one of the most important things to talk about right now in health, in health, for sure. Well, what's a really incredible paradigm shift? Is if you take the example of how 10,000 steps a day got created by a company marketing a pedometer in Japan in 1960, and we all just like, "Oh good, 10,000 steps a day." That sounds
like a good marker. I'm sitting here thinking, given that this research has been around
For a while, and we know, or at least you know, as a researcher in a scientis...
biggest positive impact on multiple health outcomes for you long-term in terms of the breathless
“exercise. I started to think, as you were talking, I wonder, "Why? Why do I think? I need an hour.”
Why do I think? I need a half an hour. Why do I think it needs to take that long?" And I wonder if it's because, especially as women, we've been socialized to go to an aerobics class that lasts an hour or to a certain class, and there are certain exercises that it's nice to have a long yoga class. But when you're really thinking about, "I've got a little bit of time," and I want the maximum positive impact in terms of my health, this breathless exercise is a complete shift.
It's a game changer for people that don't have a lot of time that want to get health benefits
that feel overwhelmed when they have to think about getting a gym membership, getting in their car, driving to the gym, working out for an hour. It seems like a lot, and they just say, "I can't do it." And so then they miss out. And yes, there's of course benefits doing that. I mean, so in these studies that I'm talking about where people are wearing accelerometers, there are also many other studies that are very tangential, where they're measuring people doing
these types of what are called exercise snacks. So when I'm talking about one breathless minute, perhaps two breathless minutes, maybe three, this is something called an exercise snack. I've talked about it before, but it's essentially like you can either have it structured where you're getting up, and you're doing a minute of bodyweight squats, or you're doing some jumping jacks, or high knees, or burpees, or whatever, fill in the blank, you want to do to get your heart rate
“up and to be able to be in that zone where you can't really talk, but a few words, right?”
Or it could be taking advantage of everyday life. I work on the fourth floor of an office building. I am not going to take the elevator. I'm going to walk up the stairs. I'm not only going to walk up the stairs. I'm going to walk fast up the stairs, or I work a few blocks from my house. I'm not going to drive there. I'm going to briskly walk, or perhaps even jog, or bike.
So you're basically taking advantage of everyday life. I have a grand kid, or I have a child.
I'm going to play tad with them for a couple of minutes. I have a new puppy. I'm going to run around with my puppy. These moments count. They add up. They're cumulative, and we have the research to show that. This is called vigorous intermittent lifestyle activity, Villpa for short. It's these people that are taking advantage of everyday life to really get that vigorous minute or two or three in. Multiple studies have shown that if you do this, you actually get
the same type of benefits as people that exercise. They directly compare. When I say people that exercise, I mean people that are identifying as going to the gym, taking some block of time out
“to go and get the heart rate up. So very different types of ways to get your heart rate up. Right?”
One is just taking advantage of everyday life and just going for. I'm playing tag with my
grandkids, or one is taking time to go to the gym. What do we see? We see that people that do three minutes of it. The three minutes of this breathless. It could be walking uphill for three minutes. It could be playing with your tag with your grandkids for three minutes. Right? Three minutes, three times a day. So we're at nine minutes a day. This is where I get the ten from. We're at nine minutes a day. Those individuals have a 40% reduction in cancer-related mortality, 40% reduction in
all-cause mortality and a 50% reduction in cardiovascular-related mortality. This is even in people that are not identifying as going to the gym and exercising. If you were to ask them, do you exercise? They would say no because they don't count those moments. They don't count when they're playing tag with their kids or grandkids. They don't count when they're going fast up the stairs to get to work. But it does count. Exercise and the way our body adapts to this exercise. It doesn't
matter if you go to the gym or not. Right? It just matters that you're doing it. And so I think again, this is so, it's like take a breath of relief because, and when I talk to people about it, it's like, oh, thank God, some people don't like going to the gym. I love it. I love it. I love it. But not everyone does. Some people literally don't have time. They don't have time. But do you have time to do three minutes after breakfast, three minutes after lunch, three minutes after dinner?
Yes. You have that time. You just have to take it and do it. It's fast. It goes by very fast. I also have for the exercise snacks. I have a free guide out there. How to train guide according to the experts. And essentially, it talks about the different ways to do exercise snacks. What exercise snacks, you know, you can do. How to do them. And also a variety of other training, you know, modalities out there that can help improve your brain health, your mood, and also the way you age.
It's how to train guide.com. If people are interested in picking that up. Awesome. And we will
Link to that in all the show notes with all the resources related to this con...
Dr. Patrick, a couple things. First of all, I really like the name exercise snack versus the vigorous intermittent lifestyle, whatever the last word was. Exercise snack sounds like I could do it. And I want to make sure as you're listening or you're watching right now that you really got the very simple instructions from Dr. Patrick based on the research that it's just three minutes,
“three times a day of this vigorous kind of breathless activity. In fact, you know what I'm realizing?”
My husband Chris will often like first thing in the morning. He drops and does like 11 or 20
pushups or whatever he's doing it. And I'll see him do it in the kitchen midday. And I never really
kind of understood why. I was like, oh, that's kind of interesting in sexy, but I don't feel like doing that right now, but I didn't feel like it counted. I live in the old world where in my mind, it doesn't count as exercise unless I'm in the exercise clothes. And I am doing something for at least a half an hour and that it is a form of exercise that I tend to not like. And what you're saying is no, no, no, no, three minutes, three times a day, whether you're doing squats or kind of jogging
up a flight of stairs or you are going up a hill or you're playing tag with your grandkids anything that gets you in that state. This counts and has massive impacts on all kinds of health outcomes.
“Yeah, absolutely. But how long do I have to do this? Like for the rest of my life is what you're”
going to say, but you know, when do I have 10 minutes a day? Yeah, so look, um, you will feel better
after, okay, you're going to feel better because you're going to get increased blood flow to your brain. So how does forcing yourself to do something that's hard physically, challenging your muscles, doing breathless exercise vigorously, even for short burst of time, how exactly in the brain and body does making yourself do something hard, help you manage the challenges of life. You know, I mean, like, I've heard people talk about the, is it the anterior single, totally, I can't even
say. Yeah, the anterior, or a singular cortex. Yes, I don't know if that's kind of what you're referring to in terms of the researcher, but if you could Dr. Patrick is just explained, when you challenge your muscles, it boosts your ability to handle the challenges of life,
“and the more you force yourself to do hard physical things, the easier your life starts to feel.”
There's a lot of things that happen. One of them is activating that part of the brain as well, which seems to also play a role in protecting against neurodegenerative disease. So we have an endogenous, that just means in our body, opioid system. Okay, opioids, we're usually thinking of, you know, maybe exogenous ones that people take to help with pain relief, right, more for you. For example, we make our own opioids, endorphins, right, endorphins are something that we make.
Those are the feel good opioids that we make in our brain. They make us feel good. You do make that with exercise, but you also make a type of opioid that makes you feel uncomfortable. It's called Dynorphin. It's responsible for that uncomfortable feeling that feeling that's like, "Oh, I want to stop. I can't do this. It's hard." Dynorphin is that uncomfortable neurochemical that's being produced. And what that does is when your brain is making that and you don't give
up, you keep pushing past it, it has this feedback loop in your brain. Where then your brain goes, "Oh, this is that bad." I don't want to call it bad. It's the dysphoric feeling. I better figure out a way to deal with that and adapt and make something good. So that later when I have that uncomfortable dysphoric feeling, I don't feel so uncomfortable. And so what happens is your brain starts to make more of these receptors, receptors or things that neurochemicals and neurotransmitters
and things like that bind to to have an effect. So they make more of the receptors that bind endorphins, they're called mu-opiod receptors, and they become more sensitive to endorphins. This happens only when you're getting that uncomfortable Dynorphin flooding your brain. And so what happens is then, later on when anything happens, that's a little bit pleasant, you're going to feel it better and for a longer period of time. And so that just makes
everything easier when you have that sensitization to these endorphins, which we are making all throughout the day, little things like, "Yeah, seeing your friends smile, all these little things.
They're making you make endorphins." And it's just a matter of how powerful are you going to
feel that endorphin. And so the uncomfortableness of the Dynorphin is what is doing that, but you
Have to engage in the hard, uncomfortable thing that makes you feel that dysp...
That makes that so much sense. So if you force yourself to do and we're just talking about
moving your body, to do some form of exercise, even just for a minute, even for three minutes, even for ten minutes, that what's happening because you're experiencing all of that discomfort is it paves the way for you to now really magnify all of the beautiful and wonderful and uncomfortable things that follow it. Because you got the discomfort out of the way.
“Isn't it amazing? It's actually amazing because I think we've all had an experience and”
as you're listening or you're watching right now. Think about something that you push yourself to do physically, whether it was a 5k or it was some trail that you hike that was harder than you
thought, but you got to the top or maybe you climbed a ridiculous amount of stairs and you get
to the top and you surprise yourself and you're out of breath, it is true that when you look up, the view is spectacular. The rest of the day is downhill, so to speak, because you got the hard thing out of the way. You got the hard thing out of the way and your body adapted to that hard thing and said, "Hey, I'm going to make the good things feel even better because I got to negate some of that hard stuff that I know I'm going to face again." In the old world, Mel Robbins
would have gone straight to the refrigerator and grabbed a snack to make me feel comfortable. Based on hearing all of this research, I suspect that if I were to do a exercise snack instead, and I were to do a minute to three minutes of air squats or go just walk up the hill by my house or climb some stairs or high knees or whatever and I'm breathless in the kitchen, that would have a massive benefit on how I feel right after and my ability to handle the stress
of whatever I'm in in that moment. Is that right? Absolutely right, massive, massive benefit.
“Exercise snack is exactly what you should do in those types of moments. Until you do it,”
you don't realize how powerful it is because you hear one minute, three minutes in the way.
But when you do it, you actually then realize it's so powerful. She's right, the exercise snack. You know, Dr. Patrick, I'm just sitting or reflecting on everything you've shared so far, I'm so grateful that you're here. Thank you for flying across country. Thank you for sharing this with us. I have so many more questions, but I want to take a quick pause because I'm sure you have people in your life that you're thinking about and go ahead and share this link with them while you
take a moment and listen to a few words from our amazing sponsors and don't go anywhere. Dr. Patrick has so much more to teach you and to share with you and unpack for you and we are just getting started to stay with us. [Music]
“Welcome back at your friend Mel Robbins. Today, you and I are here with Dr. Ronda Patrick and she's”
teaching you about the five supplements that she believes every person should be taking. We're digging into the research. We are going through them one to one. So let's keep going. Dr. Patrick, my next question is this. You know, one topic that I hear a lot of people talking about is visceral fat, and I'm not even sure I understand exactly what it is, and is that like when you see a guy that's relatively skinny and then they look like they're kind of pregnant or what I don't
mean to be offensive to anybody, but I don't really understand what visceral fat is. Visceral fat is the kind of fat that you cannot pinch. So the fat that you can pinch is subcutaneous fat. That's the fat that's stored as energy storage. Visceral fat is yes. It is usually around the midsection, this belly fat, but it's the deep, deep belly fat. It's actually surrounding organs, like the liver, the kidneys. It's surrounding the organs, and unlike the subcutaneous fat,
this fat is not just stored energy. It's like an endocrine organ, endocrine organs, like McCormones. It's making hormones. It's making inflammatory molecules causing inflammation that are wreaking havoc on your body. It is something that not necessarily, someone that looks maybe lean, they might actually have visceral fat. So waste your conference is a indirect way of measuring it. So for a woman, if you have a waste, sir, conference of 35 inches or higher, that's a pretty good
indicator that you have a high amount of visceral fat. For men, it would be about 40 inches or higher, but it doesn't necessarily have to be the waste or conference, because some people are lean,
They don't eat good diets.
their visceral fat. Why is it something to care about is also a really important question I think,
“because most people when they think about fat, they're thinking about, well, I don't, you know,”
my looks, I don't look good, but they're thinking about their long-term health. Obesity and being overweight is obviously a major driver of, you know, increasing many different diseases, type-to-day BD's cardiovascular disease cancer, for example, right? But visceral fat is it doubles mortality. So people with a high amount of visceral fat die, you know, sooner, so that you're talking about double risk mortality. It also increases cancer incidents. So people
that are making these inflammatory cytokines, inflammation drives cancer. And so people that have
visceral fat have like a 44% higher risk of having cancer. It's insulin resistance. It's causing
insulin resistance, you know, metabolic dysfunction, but I think what people relate to more is the effects that are happening on a day-to-day basis. So because visceral fat is causing inflammation, it's activating your immune system each day, right? You don't want your immune system to be
“activated each day. You want it to be activated when you're exposed to a pathogen. That's what”
the immune system is, therefore, right? It's there to fight off foreign invaders, whether that's virus or a bacterial invader or whether it's a cancer cell, right? This is what your immune system is meant to do and be activated for. When you have this chronic inflammatory signal that's being produced by your own body inside of your own body, it's activating your immune system, which is extremely energetically demanding. It is taking energy. I mean, when you're sick, you're sleepy,
you're tired. You're fatigued. You have no energy. Well, that's happening to some degree when someone has this chronic inflammatory signal from visceral fat. It is going to make you feel fatigued because the energy is literally being sucked away to your immune system because that's what it needs to activate. The immune system is a lot of energy. So you're going to feel chronic fatigue.
“The other thing it's going to make people feel is they're going to have these energy crashes”
followed by cravings and the reason for that is because visceral fat is metabolically active. It is breaking down fatty acids and these fatty acids because of the location of it right around your liver. It's going straight to the liver and essentially it's the liver's prioritizing that fuel. Rather than the fuel you eat, perhaps you eat of meal, you're going to have your blood sugar, your blood glucose is going to go up. Usually you'll make insulin in a response to that and the
glucose will then go into your muscle or go into out of postissue. What happens when you have visceral fat is that whole process is completely dysregulated because you're constantly making fatty acids. Those fatty acids stop the body from making insulin. So after you eat a meal, the glucose stays around. Your body freaks out and goes, "I better make more insulin." So it overcompensates. Makes a lot of insulin. Then all the glucose goes out of your bloodstream
goes into out of postissue or muscle, whatever. And all of a sudden your blood glucose drops and you are crashing. Your energy goes down. Then your brain is sensing that and going, "Oh my gosh, I need energy. What's the quickest way I can have energy?" And you start to get these cravings for the quickest type of fuel, typically processed junk food. So this is kind of the vicious cycle of visceral fat, causing fatigue, causing energy crashes, causing cravings, and then insulin
resistance sort of in the making and eventually type 2 diabetes. Okay. The thing I want to unpack is how you described it. So I personally found it extremely helpful to understand that there are two different types. One is the kind we can pinch. And the other is this visceral fat, which as you were describing it, is something that is surrounding your organs. It sounded like a invasive species that is coding certain organs and then starting to expand out and in doing so creates almost
like its own little toxic ecosystem around your organs. And I personally, maybe somebody's explained
to me like, "I've never visually imagined it like that." And the second that you described it that way
and that it's the kind of thing that's like dense, like you're not going to fix this with a crunch at the gym. I immediately thought my God, if I have that sort of invasive species and casing my organs, how the hell do I get rid of this? Because I don't want that happening underneath the surface and robbing me of years of my life, robbing me of energy disrupting my metabolic systems. What is the research say, Dr. Patrick, about the specific thing you should do
If this is you or somebody that you love?
It is. It is. It is actually the first kind of fat you lose. If you're on any type of weight loss
program, the way that you lose visceral fat is kind of an entangled in with how you can gain it
“easily as well. And I think they're both important to understand because you can gain it very easily”
quite quickly if you're eating a lot of calories. So they're studies showing that men, healthy young college men, you know, they're eating 1200 more calories a day for five days. They will gain excess visceral fat without even gaining weight. So you get on a scale really not much weight gain at all, but you are gaining visceral fat. And that's important to point out because I think sometimes people think, oh, if I'm not gaining weight, if I'm weighing
myself for a be more than I'm fine, not necessarily the case. So if you're eating excess calories particularly in the form of processed foods, things that don't have a lot of fiber, you're eating refined sugars, really easy to gain visceral fat. Good news is also easy to lose. The ways that you can lose visceral fat for one would be caloric deficit. Any sort of weight loss
program. In fact, it's one of the first types of fat that you lose. High intensity interval training
vigorous types of exercise. That is one of the most robust ways to help lose visceral fat. Again, you will lose it without even seeing that reflected on a scale. So just know that if you are doing your 10 breathless minutes, perhaps you're doing 30 minutes a day, you're adding in some moderate intensity, you're adding in some walking in addition to the 10 breathless minutes, the 10 vigorous minutes that you're doing. That is really has been shown to help lose visceral fat even
“if you don't see that reflected on the scale. Very important to keep in mind. Sleep is extremely”
important. And that is because being an chronically stressed state can cause your body to react and start to accumulate visceral fat. There's studies showing that two weeks of sleep deprivation. So for individual going from nine hours of sleep per night to four hours for two weeks, they'll gain about 11% of visceral fat just in two weeks. Wow. So big, big time making sure your prior, we're tizing your sleep and not being chronically sleep deprived, very important. Also stress.
You know, a lot of that psychological stress being able to deal with that stress better. And again, that comes down to the exercise. It's going to help your your reaction, your cortisol response, to the psychological stress is going to be buffered by that exercise that you're doing. So that's the key. Those are the main things that are really helping you lose fat and the driver's of it. So making sure you're not sleep deprived, making sure you're dealing with your stress
or important. But any sort of weight loss and then doing the vigorous exercises, the most important type of exercise. Resistance training is important. You don't lose as much of this role fat. But it does overall help your metabolic health, which will help you prevent you from gaining as much visceral fat if that makes sense. So engaging your resistance training is a very important part of your exercise program. You want to make sure you're maintaining muscle mass. Those body
weights squats are a way to do that. But you can also do them vigorously and get the best of both the worlds I would say. Dr. Patrick, hold that thought. I have a follow-up question, but I need
to hit the pause button because we have amazing sponsors that I want to give a chance to share
a few words with you. Don't go anywhere. Dr. Patrick has so much more to teach you when we return. So stay with us. Welcome back at your friend Mel Robbins. Today you and I are getting to learn from the extraordinary Dr. Ronda Patrick. Dr. Patrick, let's just jump right back in where we were. I have a quick question though. If somebody's listening to you and they're saying, oh my god, I've been doing everything.
I've been going to the gym. I've been watching what I, I've been drinking my water. I've been trying to sleep and nothing is changing. Dr. Patrick, what is the first thing you would have them audit
“about their lifestyle? I think for someone that really thinks they're doing all the right things.”
First of all, I would ask, are you getting seven and a half to nine hours of sleep? Not being in bed for seven and a half to nine hours. I mean, sleep. I would ask, are you getting bright light exposure within 30 minutes of waking up? For at least 15 to 30 minutes because that is what is resetting your biological clock, your circadian clock. So every organ in our body has a clock and everything is running on a clock. Our metabolism, our neurotransmitters synthesis, making neurochemicals,
our immune function, every hormone production, right? And so you want to reset that clock every morning and the bright light exposure is the reset. It's the master regulator in your brains called the super chiasmatic nucleus region. Light is what is resetting it so that your brain and your body
Know start.
right time. So that bright light is going to make something called cortisol. We've all heard of it.
“We're all scared of it. We shouldn't be. It's very important. It's a hormone that you want to be”
making first thing in the morning and you want to make a lot of it because it's regulating 20 percent
of your human genome. A lot of important things that it's regulating. What you don't want is that slow drip cortisol where it's not getting the big amplitude peak. It's just a little drip drip throughout the day. It's making that stress response and it's disregulating all those 20 percent of genes, right? So that happens first thing in the morning because cortisol actually wakes you up gives you energy. You want that. So the bright light is really important because they also help you,
your body will know when to go to sleep. It'll start to make melatonin. That's that sleepy hormone at the right time. Your core body temperature will dip at the right time during sleep so that you can stay asleep. All these little things you don't think that your heart rate will be going down right. All those little things that's all controlled by your circadian clock. And if you don't reset it, it's not going to be working properly. So bright light exposure. Are you waking up at this same
time every morning? Very much like bright light exposure. That's also a reset for your clock. Your body anticipates when it's supposed to wake up. When you start to get these erratic wake-up times, let's say you're socializing, you're out late and you're doing it constantly. Your brain can't figure out when it's supposed to wake up. And so all these hormones and all these things that are important and on a clock don't happen. So it really affects your sleep. Then I would ask,
are you eating within three hours of going to bed? Because that also really affects your sleep. You don't want to be digesting food when you're sleeping. So if you're eating an hour before you go to bed, it takes about five hours to digest your food. When you're digesting food, you're activating what's called the sympathetic nervous system. That's a fight or flight response. So when your heart rates going up, it's signaling to your body time to be awake, time to be awake. So you might be sleeping,
but you're fighting your body is going, no, no, I'm just adjusting. I'm supposed to be awake. And so your sleep isn't going to be good. You're going to have more awakenings. It's also been shown in studies. You're not going to have that robust cardiovascular reset. Your blood pressure won't dip as low. It'll dip a little bit, but it won't have that big amplitude dip. And that's a very important again for preventing. In fact, there's a study showing that if you don't have that cardiovascular
dip as robustly, you're 20% more likely to get cardiovascular disease earlier in life. So very important. And then alcohol consumption would be the thing I would also ask. Are you drinking alcohol too close to bed? Because a lot of people have this misconception because alcohol can
“help you fall asleep faster. That's why people like to drink alcohol at night. It disrupts your”
REM sleep. So you're going to have and also cause more awakenings in the night. So that would be
the first thing I would ask. I know that was a lot, but it's important because I don't think that
many people are realizing perhaps their sleep isn't optimized. And there are a few core behaviors that you can sort of tweak that will really affect your sleep. And that would be a place to start because if you're not getting, if you're chronically sleep deprived, like I mentioned, you're going to be getting this real fat. You're gaining this real fat. And you're going, why am I still gaining it when I'm, you know, doing some exercise and, you know, you're battling. It's like the battle,
like it's tug of war essentially. Well, first, Dr. Patrick, I want to thank you because when I asked you that question of what would be the lifestyle audit that you would focus on if somebody feels like they're doing all the right things, but nothing is changing about their health or their body composition, I thought you were going to say, look at what you're eating. And so the
“fact that you said, you need to do an audit of your sleep was both surprising to me. And it was also”
very helpful to have you walk through those five questions that you need to ask yourself because those questions around how much sleep are you getting? And are you getting bright light in the morning? Are you waking up at the same time every morning? When are you eating in terms of how close
you eating to your bedtime and then finally are you drinking at night? Those five questions give
you almost like a treasure hunt the answers to the things you need to change in order to get a better night's sleep. So now, Dr. Patrick, I want to shift gears and go into the category of nutrition. And you have a daily smoothie recipe that makes it simple and easy for us to get a lot of the things that we need every single day and once more. Let's do it. All right, let's step out of the studio and head into the kitchen here in Boston. So, Dr. Patrick, you are about to teach us how you
make the smoothie that you have every day. And for those of you that are listening, I'm just going to tell you, I see kale, I see blueberry, I see avocado, I see protein and I see something I can't pronounce. Okay. It's a beta glucose powder made from barley. Before we get into this smoothie, I make
Every day.
And it really comes down to realizing that what we do when our lifestyle and our diet really is
impactful on the way we age and our life expectancy. A lot of people think genetics are the most
“important thing. And when it comes down to what really 80% of how long we live and how well we live,”
has to do with our lifestyle. Hold on, 80%. 80% about 80%. Yeah, I would say about 20 to 25% is genetics. But what I'm going to tell you is to actually come out of Harvard, here in Boston, and it was really, I mean, as a few years ago, but it was really a compelling study because what it did was looked at people's diet and lifestyle and their life expectancy and found that if people follow just like five different lifestyle factors, it could increase their life expectancy between 12
and 14 years. So, women on average that were not doing all five of these lifestyle factors,
which is a big part of it is what we're going to be looking at here. They lived on average
about 79 years. If they did include all five of the lifestyle factors, they lived to the age of about the added 14 years. So, they lived to about 93. What? 14 years? 14 years. If they started at age 50, five different healthy lifestyle factors included all five. They lived to age 93. So, it was a 14 year increase in life expectancy. For men that started at age 50, it was a 12 year increase life expectancy that they were living on average 74.75, 75.5 years. And they went up to about 86
years. And just what are quickly those five? The five are adopting a healthy lifestyle pattern, which we're going to talk about. Okay. Not smoking. Doing three and a half hours of moderate or vigorous intensity per week. We talked a lot about the vigorous intensity exercise 10 minutes a
day that would be 70 minutes a week. And so, you're basically going to add on to that by doing
some of the more moderate intensity exercise. Okay. Okay. So, that was number three. Number four is not consuming excess alcohol. So, women were consuming fewer than one drink per day and men consumed about one drink per day or fewer. Okay. And then the last one is maintaining a healthy BMI. Those were the five lifestyle factors that could add between 12 to 14 years to your life expectancy. And on top of that, those individuals were free from diseases like cardiovascular
diabetes, Alzheimer's disease cancer, right? So, you're living healthy years, which is what you want. Yes. The nutrition part is a big component of this. So, those individuals were eating, they were in the top 40% of the, what's called the alternative healthy eating pattern.
“And what that includes is first and foremost, you have to have four to five”
servings of fruits and vegetables per day. So, those vegetables, what's a serving is the question. Asserving was either a cup of leafy greens. So, you have to have four to five of that. And so, you can see here, this is a measuring cup. This is a cup for those people. Yeah. That person that's chasing. And she's packing, just packing at, yeah, packing the world kale, nothing fancy about it. Right into the one cup metal measuring cup. Kale. And remember, you got to
get five of these per day. And this is why this is efficient. We've been talking about efficient. We've been talking about what can we do? That's easy. That's going to give us the biggest bang for a buck. I find it's easiest for me to get five servings of vegetables if I can at least, you know, get us move the end. So, here's the kale. That's one cup. I'm going to add another cup here. So, you're getting two servings in. I'm getting two servings. I'm probably going to get
around three servings of kale into that. Three cups of kale. Three cups of kale. There we go. And that is, and then I can substitute the rest with my salad. Kale is really high in looting. Looting is that thing that's going to prevent your eyes from making the generation. It also seems to protect the brain. It improves cognitive processing, cognitive speed, fluid intelligence. That's the kind of intelligence that you've accumulated throughout a
“lifetime. And then can still incorporate when you're older. That's what we want. Right? So,”
kale has a lot of that. It also has magnesium. It has calcium. It has vitamin K. It's got a lot of these micronutrients that we need to get from our diet. The next thing I like to add is blueberries. And blueberries are part of that serving size of vegetables. And again, it's about a half cup as a serving. So, if you want five servings of that, you're going to get about two and a half cups of the blueberries. I also like blueberries because they're high in polyphenols,
a specific type of polyphenol called anthocyanins. And those have been shown in randomized placebo controlled studies. That's very important because placebo effect is real. As we've talked about, but the blueberries have been shown one cup a day to improve cognition. That's important. Right? I want to improve cognition. It's been shown in young adults. It's been shown in older adults. It's been shown in adults with mild cognitive decline. So, everyone has every reason to try to
take at least one cup of blueberries a day. So, I'm going to put one cup.
Yep.
And I do have, I do like to usually use organic because I don't want a lot of pesticides.
But I do like frozen also because it keeps this smoothie cold. And it just gives it a better, like you don't want your smoothie really warm. So, I got two cups, two cups of blueberries. I'm not weak. I'm going to do two and a half cups. Wow. Okay. Two and a half cups of blueberries. And then one thing I do not add to my smoothie is the banana. Now, why don't you like bananas? I mean, I love bananas. I love bananas. They're high in potassium.
They're good to refuel. I love to do them before run. It gives me enough fuel without cramping right
“but I used to put them in my smoothies. Dr. Patrick, what happens when you put a banana in a smoothie?”
What happens is there's a, there's something in the banana called polyphenol oxidase. That doesn't sound good. Doesn't sound good. Polyphenols are what I just said are beneficial. Yes. Oxidase, polyphenol oxidase is essentially an enzyme that's breaking down the polyphenols. And there have now been studies that have come out showing, if you add bananas to blueberries, you're not getting as many polyphenols. In fact, it's quite a bit lower.
So, the banana is killing the benefit of the, see, this is why I need you because I am sitting here making smoothies. Thinking, I like the texture of the banana and it gives a little heft creams it out a little bit. But then I'm putting in my blueberries and I just blew it because the banana cancels the blueberries. It's true. I also used to add it to my blueberries
for that exact reason, plus the taste. If you go to any smoothie place, you'll see they always
“add bananas to any blueberry smoothie. Yes, of course. But that's where the avocado comes in.”
Oh, it has now, you're going to get the creamy texture that you want, which is what I also want. Yes. And on top of that, there have been studies showing that the fat. So, this model is saturated fat. In this avocado, it actually increases the bioavailability of the lutein and another carotenoid called zazanthin in the kale by fourfold. Okay, well, hold on. Let me just make sure I'm tracking with this. So, if I sub the avocado for the banana, right,
then the fact that the avocado, which is a good healthy fat source, is going to dance around and mix it up with the kale. That fat source superpowers the benefit of the kale. It does. That's cool. It makes it where you're, so the getting rid of the banana makes it where you're getting all the polyphenols from the blueberries, and then adding the avocado gives you the creaminess, and it helps you superpower and get those crottenoids that are in the kale. There's
so beneficial for our eyes and brains, and making it fourfold more likely to be absorbed. So, you're getting a lot more, and their studies showing us adding an avocado. Carots have crottenoids in them, so you can get the beta-carotene as probably the most well-known crottenoid. You get fourfold more beta-carotene. So, you can even add a carrot in here if you want. In fact, they often like to add carrots as well. So, I'm going to just use my fingers and put that.
That was a good one. I usually do about half of an avocado half an avocado, and you can save the other half for the next day. And then in order to do, I put this little top that's empty on top of the other one, and then it doesn't turn brown. Right. That's going to happen on the lemon juice as well. I'm just going to prevent it from oxidizing a little tent. All right, so this is really the core of this movie. Okay. Now, these are the optionals here. I like to add some protein powder,
particularly on days when I'm really busy, I'm not getting, I know I'm skipping a meal because I'm not getting all the protein that I need for the day, which is about 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram, body weight per day. And so, I'll add some times a little bit of weight protein powder as well. You don't have to do that if you're getting your protein. This is again an optional add.
“I think it's very hard to get the amount of protein we're supposed to get. So,”
I'm going to get a lot like I do. So, I'm going to go ahead and add the protein powder. I do like, I'm not, I have no affiliation with momentous currently right now, and but I do like the protein powder because it doesn't have any fillers that affect my gut. And so, I'm just scooping down to get their scooper because their scooper is the actual serving
size. There it is. It's what funny they're always hidden down there. Okay. So, I'm going to take
one scoop of protein powder, which for this one, 2523 grams. So, here it goes. If you're sharing it, you can do two scoops. So, I think I'll do like a scoop in a half. Does that mean you're sharing it with me? I hope it does. Oops. So, that. Okay. And then an optional add. This is actually a type of prebiotic fiber. You probably heard of that. It's like prebiotic fiber. You've heard of fibers.
And I've heard of probiotics. Okay. Probiotics are the beneficial bacteria. You take those that helps prebiotics are the type of fiber soluble fiber fermentable fiber that feed the bacteria and your gut. Okay. So, that's why it's called a prebiotic. Okay. Reading it. So, it's a type of
Prebiotic.
now added this to my, I would say, regimen, huh? Soon to be smoothie regimen is because this has
been shown in studies. One to lower LDL cholesterol, which is a type of cholesterol that can build up in your arteries and play a role in cardiovascular disease. But what really peaked my attention was the fact that there's studies showing that beta-glucans can decrease the amount of forever chemicals. The PFAS, whatever chemicals that last usually last in your body anywhere between two to five years. They're associated with cancer. It's really terrible. And we're being exposed to them
all the time, even on our fruits and vegetables. They're in the soil. You know, there's something that even kids are being exposed to. So, now I'm something that I've been giving to my whole family. Okay. How much do I need? So, usually I do one gram. And one gram, it says here's three tablespoons. So, I'm going to grab that tablespoon. Oh, okay. One, two, three. Plus a count, sword fiber, which is great. Yes. Okay. Now, the study that showed it reduced forever
“chemicals. It was three grams a day. So, you have to do the three tablespoons, three times a day”
to get, wow, to get that. Yeah. Okay. A lot. Yes. Yeah. Or you can add perhaps you can add more and get it in one serving. But we're going to start with the three. Okay. Then add a little bit of water just to mix it up a little bit. And as I'm standing here over the blender, Mel, I just want to point out one thing and that this blender is made of plastic. Okay. And there, there is a little bit of a concern that plastic lenders can shed microplastics more readily because of the friction
with everything that's in there. So, you should have glass one. If you can have glass, there's also some metal ones that you can buy as well. But here that everybody, we got to get a glass blender around here. Okay. Thank you for giving us the pass. Dr. Patrick. Here she is. About to hit the blend. Everybody, cover your ears. Here we go. That's really powerful. Yeah. I like the quality of the house.
I just want to see what the consistency looks like. Yeah, I think we're good. Excellent. Well, I got two wine glasses since we're not drinking alcohol in my as well. It's polyphenol hour. Yes, there we go. Yeah. And the polyphenols, I feel them immediately. It's been shown in crease blood flow to the brain and older adult. What exactly do you feel? I, it improves my mood and gives me energy. So, I like, I do, I do take this midday. Just do a little glass.
I'm actually kind of excited to try this. Well, everything always stays better when somebody else
makes it. I mean, that's true. So, polyphenol hour. Cheers. Cheers to your health, Dr. Patrick. Let's try her new smoothie recipe. Here we go. That tastes like health. It's not sweet enough for me. It's not bad. It's not supposed to be sweet, though, right? It's not, you can add the extra food. I would add more grease. I think to make it sweeter. And of course, you can never get enough blueberries. You definitely taste the kale.
It has the same consistency as if we had put a banana. It's creamy. Yeah. And I love the purple. And actually, the prebiotic fiber didn't really mess with the consistency to be honest. Well, I don't know, because you're the one that makes us all the time. Right. I would be able to do it differently. It's a really didn't. Okay. Now, if I'm putting that much fiber in my smoothie, do I need to drink more water? Is that going to back me up? No, this is not the kind of fiber
“that you have to worry about that. This is prebiotic fiber. That's a little bit different.”
Because I know if you're doing like, sylium husk or something or the other stuff, you've got to really make sure you're hydrated. Right. It's bringing it's, you've got to make sure you get more water in
you. Right. Amazing. We're going to go back to the studio and talk about what else we could be eating
in the bucket of nutrition. And here's to your health. One of the other things that I noticed Dr. Patrick about the smoothie is that I had five ingredients. And you're talking about those five like healthy lifestyle index factors that really have a massive impact on the quality of your life in your health. The smoothie was terrific. And again, you promised easy ways to apply the advice every single day. What are other foods we should focus on eating? Yeah. So some of the other foods
that are important. First and foremost, getting omega 3 fatty acids. Some people don't like fish
“which is why the supplementation of omega 3 is great. But if you want to take the healthy”
alternative healthy eating index has two servings per week of four ounces of fatty fish, like salmon or macro. Right. So that would be two servings per week, four ounces each. And then
You want to make sure you're getting enough whole grains.
healthy eating index come from oats, barley, quinoa, brown rice, faro, those types of whole grains, women need to take in about 70 grams per day and men need to take in about 90 grams per day.
And just to give you a little background here, 98 percent of the populations, not getting enough
“fiber every day. And that plays a very important role in our colon health and our overall health”
LDL cholesterol as well. And then red meat, processed meat. These are also foods that are on the list. How much should you be eating? And seems like the sweet spot for red meat is about 12 to 18 ounces per week, not going over that. And then almost no processed meats, like less than one serving per week. So really cutting out the lunch meats and the processed meats, the hot dogs, the bacon, that stuff is processed meats and that also has been associated with colon cancer. The other
thing on this healthy eating index is sodium intake. So you want to make sure that you're not really going above. Usually it was like 2,300 milligrams per day, ideally 1,500 milligrams a day.
And I do think sodium intake is really also just a proxy for our ultra-process foods. You want to
really be minimizing that a lot of those have a lot of high sodium. If you're getting foods that are if you're eating out a restaurant, you might have a lot of sodium in that as well. So that's also
“important. And then also making sure that we're not eating and drinking sugar-sweetened beverages.”
So that's zero of those. This is all part of that study where we're trying to really like be at the top 40% of the healthy eating index. And so you want to make sure you're zero, sugar-sweetened beverages per day, including juice. So if you're going to eat fruit, it has to be with the whole fruit in the fiber. That changes the way your body is processing and absorbing glucose. Very important. And then the ultra-process foods are pretty much, it's less than one syrup, one to two servings
a week. They're really, really low on eating the junk food. Dr. Patrick, you mentioned omega threes. And I know that there are five supplements that based on the research, you recommend that everyone takes. What are those five supplements that should be on our list and how much should you be taking? So omega threes are really at the top of the list mostly because most people don't want to eat two servings a fish per week either. And it seems as though to get from a low omega threes index
to a high omega threes index, it takes about two grams a day. So that's a pretty good starting point
for omega threes supplementation. The second would be a multivitamin. And depending on what
the serving size is, I take one a day because that's my serving size. Some multivitamin are three to capsules. So you want to take one of those and that's feeling a lot of nutritional gaps. And then you want to take a vitamin D vitamin D is very important because it is converted into hormone 70% of us are not getting enough of it. Usually a good spot for vitamin D is 4,000 I use a day. So the four supplements would be magnesium. We did get some magnesium from those kale leaves that we
had in this smoothie. Magnesium is a very, very important co-factor for 300 different processes in the body. I personally like to take 250 milligrams a day. That's two capsules of my 125. And that seems to help me when I take it at night with sleep as well. Plus, I'm getting to that goal of about 300. For me, it's more like 350 milligrams a day because I do sweat and you lose magnesium through sweat. So that would be the force supplement. And then lastly, creatine
is something I think a lot of people can benefit because one, it does if you're working out
“and exercising, which you should be after this episode, you know that exercise snacks are achievable,”
attainable, and that you should be doing them every day like you brush your teeth. That'll help you with those exercise snacks. It'll make them easier. You'll be able to do them more to recover quicker. Really? Yes. Yes. They will. Like if I take creatine powder in the morning, how much am I taking? You're taking 10 grams. I do I do 5 and 5. So I do 5 before my workout and then I do 5 after my workout. Okay. The reason the creatine is going to help you with that workout. By the way,
it's going to take about four weeks before your muscle saturate. So four weeks of getting at least five grams a day. Your muscles will be saturated. So if you're starting off fresh, give yourself about a month. Okay. So it's not like magic juice. It's not like magic juice. It's not like magic juice. And all of a sudden, those air squats are a breeze. It'll take four weeks before it builds up in your muscle. And once you get to that build up point, that saturation point, then the five days
is just keeping it there. Keeping it there, right? So what you'll notice is that your air squats will be easier because you can replenish ATP, which you're using as you're doing them quicker. Huh. So that's the other benefit, though. So the five grams after is to benefit the brain, because we now know from research that it takes about 10 grams per day for it to get into the brain. Five grams is greedily taken up by muscle. Once you get past that to 10 grams, it gets into the brain.
There's research showing that there's benefits in the brain, particularly if ...
stressed, like sleep deprivation, you know, in any sort of neurodegenerative disease or I like to
“extrapolate and say just the chronic stress of daily life. So you're taking 10 grams of creatine”
every morning. Yes, I take 10 grams every morning. I split it up in two five grams doses. Sometimes I do 10 if I don't have time, but I do 10 grams every day. That's my baseline. When I'm traveling, sleep deprived, I go up to 20 to 25 grams depending on how sleep deprived I am, because study show that helps with sleep deprivation. If you had to boil everything down, I would love to have you speak directly to the person who's
here listening or watching right now. And out of everything that you talked about, all the research that you shared, the simplified recommendations based on this exquisite research. If the person listening or watching takes just one action out of all of this, what do you
think the most important thing to do today is 10 minutes of breathless exercise. The 10 minutes of
vigorous exercise exercise snacks. That would be the most important thing. And Dr. Patrick, what are your parting words? My parting words are you can do this.
“You can do this and you should do it. And then once you do it, you're going to realize how much you”
can do it and you're going to want to do it because you're going to feel amazing. I love you. I need that on repeat as the alarm every morning. You should do this. You can do this and you're going to feel better when you do this. Thank you for giving us the simple things to do. And for also explaining why it matters and how it is going to make us feel better.
You're amazing, Dr. Patrick. Thanks so much, Mel. I really had a great time looking forward to
the next one. Me too. We're going to be talking supplements. And I also want to thank you thank you for making the time to listen to something that's not only going to improve your health and make you feel better. It'll add years to your life and life to those years. Thank you for being generous with this episode and sharing it with everybody in your life that you care about because everybody deserves the gift that is Dr. Patrick. And in case nobody else tells you,
“I wanted to be sure to tell you as your friend that I love you and I believe in you. And I believe”
in your ability to create a better life. And I know you can because if you follow everything, the simple recommendations that Dr. Patrick just laid out to us, your life will get better. So go do it. I'll see you in the very next episode. I'm going to welcome you in the moment you hit what. So, so excited to be here today. I am thrilled that you're here in our new studio. Wow, nice. Oh, it's beautiful. Come on in. I love you. Okay. Studying nutrition,
aging and disease prevention with research, experience spanning, with research experience, spanning mitochondrial metop, blah, blah, blah. And her graduate research was conducted at St. Jude's killed. St. Jude's children's, blah, blah, blah. St. Jude's children's research hospital. Let me say what? Dr. Patrick's work has pub. Dr. Patrick's work has been published. Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know,
what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode. (gentle music)


